Star Wars Roleplay: Chaos

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Faction Capital Letters [DCN + Friends]



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Aurelian Veruna Aurelian Veruna

"Well, Adelle would not travel far without Phantom," She replied confidently, taking a deep breath as she settled in to enjoy the event as much as time spent with him.

"Naboo and the Republic have new money as well. Certainly, the merchants have made themselves equally powerful. Locke and Key for instance, Arceneau Trade, even Aurora Industries, as indicative of one of the brides," She murmured quietly, "It would not be terrible to make more connections."

A pause, then as she looked up at him with amused affection, she leaned closer in a teasing tone, "Ah, yes... parties and entertainment and the free-flowing alcohol that would provoke even looser tongues." She gave a slight huff of amusement, her thumb brushing against the top of his knuckles in gentle, subtle affection.

"The kind the Prince of Parrlay threw almost every month... or so rumor had it." she added with a distinct wry twist of her lips. "The host to the kin of parties that would have legislation written."

 


The wedding party began their carefully rehearsed march down the aisle. Ahead of them had been the young children, Morrigan and Jaqara. Relation to Taeli and Fio if Ivalyn recalled, the two young girls tossed Galidraani flower petals ahead of the brides, and young Nathaerian or Nate followed with the rings. Ivalyn was nervous, so nervous as she cleared her throat.

Ryssa, her aunt stepped toward her, "breathe Ives, just breathe."

Breathing, right. Ivalyn thought to herself...

The gardens had been prepared long before the guests arrived.

Stone paths curved gently through trimmed hedges and flowering trees, the geometry deliberate without feeling imposed—order grown patient with time. Statues stood watch along the perimeter, not triumphant, but contemplative, as though even they understood that this was not a day for command. Above it all, the sky over Avalonia lay wide and open, pale light filtering through drifting clouds.

The Natasi Fortan Memorial Gardens were quiet now.

Then the music began, soft, measured, carrying more feeling than flourish, and a ripple of attention moved through the gathered assembly. Guests rose in their seats as Ivalyn and her aunt walked toward the aisle.

Pale petals caught the light as they fell, white and blue and silver-hued, delicate without fragility. The scent was clean, faintly mineral, a reminder of home without ceremony.

The wedding party stood ready.

The woman who happened to be Grand Vizier stepped forward from the garden's threshold, her arm resting lightly in the crook of her aunt Ryssa's. There were no titles spoken, no announcements made. She did not need them.

Today, she was simply Ivalyn.

Her gown was restrained and elegant, structured but unadorned, its lines clean and intentional. No insignia. No symbols of office or lineage. The fabric moved quietly with her steps, catching the light in soft, matte tones. She wore no crown, no mantle of authority, only the quiet confidence of someone who knew exactly who she was without needing to declare it.

Ryssa walked beside her with steady pride, her presence warm and grounding, a hand firm enough to guide, gentle enough to reassure. Family, not history, was the anchor now.

As they began down the aisle, the world seemed to narrow, not with pressure, but with focus. The measured rhythm of footsteps against stone. The whisper of petals beneath their feet. The low swell of music threading through the garden air.

Heads turned, but there was no stir, no murmuring awe.

Only attention.

Ivalyn's gaze lifted once, briefly, to take in the space, the statues, the trees, the careful symmetry that echoed endurance rather than dominance. A place shaped by memory and resolve. Fitting, somehow.

Something in Ivalyn softened then, not dramatically, not visibly to all, but enough. Her shoulders eased. Her grip tightened for just a moment around her aunt's arm, grounding herself in the present rather than the past.

This was not a march of state.
Not a procession of power.
Not the inheritance of empire.

It was a walk chosen freely.

Petals fell.
Steps carried forward.
And for this one moment, surrounded by family, history held at a respectful distance, Ivalyn Yvarro walked not as a Grand Vizier, but as a bride.

She was choosing Merryn, today, and everyday after for as long as she lived.
 
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Viers happily listened as Lucy spoke about everyone in attendance. Of course, Viers wouldn't remember any of this; she was often distracted by the lyrical tone of Lucy's voice. She loved listening to Lucy, even when she was explaining the creation of her creatures. Viers' eyes followed each face, trying her best to lock them to memory. Still, as usual, her attention would flicker to Lucy.

The Corellian nodded, agreeing with Lucy that her family members were beautiful, but…

"You're the most beautiful." She murmured between them. Viers nodded again to add emphasis to her words. They had been something for years now, even when they were separated by the Blackwall — Lucy had been the only one who had held Viers' affections.

In turn, she was lucky to hold Lucy's. There were so many better options, people who knew the world Lucy came from. Yet, she chose the kid from the backwater planet orphanage.

The procession started, and Viers shut her mouth for a moment. She had more to say, but figured, with the ceremony starting, she should keep it to herself. One of the brides finally began the ceremony, and Viers could see why Lucy was so enamoured with how everyone looked. She was slowly starting to understand the entire thing, despite not initially understanding the concept that led up to this point.

Why did there need to be a ceremony to devote yourself to the person you cared about the most?

The question continued to tumble in her mind; she wondered if it was just a ritual that needed to be performed to announce it to others. Potentially to detour anyone who wanted to come between the pair. It was an interesting concept, one that she felt like she would never really understand. Still, she glanced towards Lucy and smiled softly… even a bit awkwardly.

"I want to," Viers shifted where she sat, so she could lean in a little closer to allow her voice to remain low. With Lucy's parents in front of them, she didn't know if this was something inappropriate, but she needed to say it.

Her face close and her whisper brushing against the delicate shell of Lucy's ear, "I want to marry you one day…"

Before pulling away, Viers gave Lucy a small kiss on her cheek. Then her attention turned back to the wedding, unaware of the weight her words had potentially carried in that moment.
 








Deep in his bird identification journey, Judah surmised it was a golden pheasant of some kind, but not necessarily from Naboo as he discovered there was more than one type of species across the galaxy. Perhaps before he left he would find some type of resources for this sector of the 'verse instead of relying on the HoloNet.

Music reached his ears and rustling of the guests began. Quickly his device went back into his breast pocket and he stood, buttoning his suit jacket once more. Turning slightly with the other guests, eyes were focused on the bride making her way down the aisle.



 
Lucy stood there so happy for her cousin, the way she looked so gorgeous. She sighed happily as the music began to play. Viers right beside her, and as the music played and the bridal party marched along the aisle. Viers simply began with I want to, and Lucy had heard her but assumed that would've ended with go get a snack, some steak, something along those lines. That is what Lucy expected, especially as her parents were right there, in front of her as they stood there turned to watch the bridal party.

Then Viers had leaned over and whispered I want to marry you, Lucy's brain at that precise moment stopped functioning. Ceased to function properly she swallowed wrong and played it off as a cough. Her sister Thea about thunked a water bottle into her chest. Lucy promptly drank it and looked over at Viers, and then back toward the bridal party and promptly kept standing as they awaited Merryn.

Then Lucy's brain registered that Viers' full sentence was to marry her one day. Lucy exhaled and gave Viers a longing look, a deep smile. She threaded her fingers with Viers and answered softly turning to whisper into Viers' ears. "I'd like that very much," her voice sweet as honey, "to marry you one day, that is."

Serrah, Lucy's other older sister slightly turned her head toward the pair. Lucy cleared her throat and looked at her sister, "mind your manners, Ser, our cousin is getting married."



 
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Jasper Blackwood arrived precisely when he intended to.

Not early, there was no need to signal eagerness. Not late, lateness implied disorder. He emerged from the waiting speeder as the hour settled comfortably into its place, the winter air catching briefly at the dark line of his uniform before the garden’s stillness swallowed the sound again.

He paused at the threshold of the Natasi Fortan Memorial Gardens, boots aligned with the marble seam as if the stone itself had been measured for him. For a moment, he simply observed.

Perfection, as promised.

The Galidraani trees stood like honor guards, evergreen boughs framing the procession aisle with practiced symmetry. White and navy pennants moved with disciplined grace in the breeze, their motion restrained, never frantic. Gold-trimmed chairs caught the sun in neat ranks, every line straight, every angle deliberate. Even the scattered petals, navy against pale stone, felt intentional, as if chaos itself had been issued strict instructions and complied.

Above it all loomed the bronzium likeness of the Grand Moff, her shadow stretched long across the garden paths. Jasper inclined his head the barest fraction as he passed beneath her gaze. Respect was owed, whether the metal eyes could see him or not.

The Imperial Commonwealth of Dosuun did not do excess. It did not do sentimentality. It did, however, understand symbolism.

And today’s symbolism was unmistakable.

A Grand Vizier and an industrial magnate. Statecraft bound to production. Authority bound to capability. Jasper allowed himself a thin, private breath through his nose, something close to approval. It was the sort of union strategists wrote memos about and admirals quietly prayed for. Stability dressed as romance. Continuity framed as hope.

He moved down the aisle with unhurried precision, cloak falling cleanly behind him, rank plaques immaculate, gloves tucked beneath one arm. Conversations softened as he passed, not silenced, but acknowledged. A few heads turned. Some with recognition. Some with calculation.

Captain Jasper Blackwood, Imperial Navy.

He had earned his reputation in corridors narrower than these paths and under stars far colder than Avalonia’s forgiving sky. He had commanded destroyers through contested lanes, watched officers crack under pressure and others harden into something useful. Weddings were not his natural environment, but command had taught him adaptability, and diplomacy was merely another theater of operations.

He found his assigned seat without difficulty. Of course he did.

Settling into it, he folded his hands loosely, posture straight but not rigid. His gaze swept the gathering with the same quiet assessment he would give a bridge crew before battle. Heads of state whispered behind carefully neutral smiles. Executives from Aurora Industries stood out in tailored finery that suggested efficiency beneath elegance. Military officers, Commonwealth and otherwise, sat with varying degrees of comfort, some at ease, others clearly resisting the urge to stand at attention.

The altar drew his eye next.

Frost-kissed blooms from Needan climbed the trellis in disciplined arcs, pale against gold-threaded silk imported from Seoul. It was lavish without being indulgent. Expensive without being wasteful. Someone, several someones, likely had overseen this with a meticulous hand.

As they would have had to.

Because Grand Vizier Ivalyn Yvarro did not accept almost.

The hour chimed in the distance, three clear notes cutting gently through the ambient murmur. Jasper’s fingers tightened once, then relaxed. Cameras shifted. Musicians straightened. The garden itself seemed to inhale.

This was not merely a wedding. It was a statement.

That order could endure tragedy.
That strength could coexist with affection.
That the Commonwealth did not merely survive, it built.

Jasper leaned back a fraction, eyes forward now, expression composed into its familiar, unreadable calm. He was here as a guest, yes, but also as a witness, and witnesses had responsibilities. To remember. To understand what was being promised. To carry the meaning of this moment back into the cold reaches of space, where such promises were tested.

Whatever spirits watched today, Empress, Grand Moff, or silent gods of stone and steel, would see that the Commonwealth had chosen unity over fracture.

And Captain Jasper Blackwood, for his part, intended to remember exactly who stood at the center of that choice as the ceremony began.

 
"It's time. Come with me."

Those words rang in her head from the moment she stepped out of her bridal suite. Such a simple phrase spoken by Lady Raaf, but it carried so much weight. They were very similar to the words she had spoken when she had found Merryn, scraping by in the aftermath of her family's death and the devastation from the Maw's attack. Back then, they had been to uplift her, to give her a new life. Now, they were leading her to someone she truly loved with her whole heart, a woman she had chosen... And none of it would have been possible without the woman she walked next to now, to the woman walking behind them.

"Everything will be fine, dear. Just breathe."

She tried to find her voice, but it was currently lodged somewhere in her chest from her nerves. It was embarrassing, really, just how nervous she was considering everything, and yet... Lady Raaf always knew how to find the right words. A deep inhale, although it caught a little in her chest, and exhale. And again... Steadying herself through one of the many exercises Lady Raaf had taught her over the years. Why was the boardroom or the battlefield so much easier to deal with than a simple walk through the memorial gardens and saying she loved someone and wanted to be with them until death do us part.

Lady Raaf seemed to sense that as she continued, "Reminds me of how nervous I was when I married Fio. Kaine made the thing a whole spectacle at the time. Heroes of the Empire and all that. We did a smaller private ceremony later though, but Celestials above, I was such a... what's the phrase from Onderon... oh yes, such a bridezilla."

The small story made her smile as she waited for the final go-ahead. She could feel her love already moving down the petal-strewn aisle, through the statues of past heroes and servants of the Commonwealth and the First Order, past the various guests and dignitaries that had come to witness their union.

Soon it would be her turn...

To choose her forever.
 
Kurayami stood silent as the greetings and small talk from before fell still. Another arrival, almost late to the ceremony itself. From behind the emotionless guise of his helmet, his eyes watched the proceedings carefully. A rare genuine smaile settled onto his features as he watched the woman whom he considered his family walk down the aisle byr her aunt. He had been to weddings before of course, not in a long while admittedly, but this one really was special. This was a family he had a long history with, and to see Ivalynn dressed up and not having to worry about titles-even for a short while- was something that reminded him of times when he himself had thought of finally settling down.

He shook his head, clearing the memories as best as he could, lest they distract him too greatly from his, perhaps self assigned, job of security. It was a hard role for him to leave to others after all. He had pulled her and her her siblings out of plenty of places they shouldn't have been over the years, as well as her mother and her siblings. It did weigh on him a bit to not see Ariel at the wedding, but he could understand her reclusiveness. Unlike him she had others to worry about.

As he watched he found himself prouder than he could have imagined of the young woman as she gracefully walked beside her aunt. No national pride or any other, just in her.

Celebrants: Ivalyn Yvarro Ivalyn Yvarro | Merryn Sellek Merryn Sellek

Nearby: Rowyna Galeway Rowyna Galeway | Jasper Blackwood Jasper Blackwood | Cyrine Zereth Cyrine Zereth | Domar Domar

Others: Sibylla Abrantes Sibylla Abrantes | Judah Dashiell Judah Dashiell | Lucette Raaf Lucette Raaf | Viers Connory Viers Connory | Aurelian Veruna Aurelian Veruna | Adelle Bastiel Adelle Bastiel | Aselia Verd Aselia Verd | Aiden Porte Aiden Porte
 

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