Star Wars Roleplay: Chaos

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Annihilation Clash of Destiny

Emberlene's Daughter, The Jedi Generalist
OBJECTIVE: Crystal Assembly
ALLIES: Jedi Connel Vanagor Connel Vanagor
ENEMIES: Sith

The aftershock of distant explosions, the sizzle of blaster fire and the silent screams of clashing lightsabers were a persistent hum in the Force, a discordant symphony to which Matsu was only half-listening. Her primary focus was the chamber itself, a cathedral of crystal and energy. The Empire's response, she knew, was a coiled serpent. They would let the invaders wear themselves down against the station's endless ranks of soldiers and zealots before unleashing a calculated, overwhelming tide. It was a predictable, yet effective, strategy for a beast of this scale. But Matsu was not here to be predictable. While Connel laid his more conventional explosives, a worthy and satisfyingly destructive endeavor, the Jedi Grandmaster worked on a subtler, more fundamental level. Her bare hands, palms flat, rested against the cool, pulsating surface of the largest Lignan crystal. To anyone else, it would have felt like a solid, unyielding monument. To Matsu, it was a song of atoms, a lattice of molecules vibrating with infused dark side energy. It was there and she could manipulate it.

Her eyes, reflecting the light of stars from a thousand corners of the galaxy with gaps like polished obsidian, partially altered focus as she plunged her consciousness into the aart of the small. She didn't need to shatter the crystal; that would be messy, unstable, and potentially catastrophic at this proximity. Instead, she began to persuade it to be something else. A low, resonant hum, distinct from the station's own industrial drone, began to emanate from her touch. The air around her hands shimmered, not with heat, but with the visible stillness of fabrics being altered at the smallest level. Under her fingertips, the perfectly aligned atomic structure of the Lignan began to… soften. It wasn't melting in the traditional sense. It was delaminating, its fierce crystalline bonds gently, irrevocably persuaded to release their hold. A fine, glittering dust of crimson motes began to float away from the main structure, not falling but drifting aimlessly, like ash from a silent fire. The fine, glittering dust of the neutralized crystal drifted around her like a nebula of extinguished malice. This was good for a start, a proof of concept on a single component. But the chamber housed a network of these crystals, a symphonic array designed to focus unimaginable energy. To disarm the weapon, she needed to do more than silence one instrument; she had to alter and manipulate the entire rooms contents to sabotage the chamber.

She breathed in as sslowly her mind was contemplating what was there... several scenarios as Connel was there to be able to keep threats that might come here. Things were quiet but she was dividing her consciousness into several aspects to handle the larger scale manipulation. Weaving her mind through the metal aand crystal... and air. Her mind continued to push throughout the stations as she had mapped it previously... there were still more people while she reached the edge of it.. the tram lines and gift shops.. the hanger bays as there were conflicts happening around all of them. Outside she could see more and she was able to focused her mind to observe parts of it while she was becoming larger... observation across it all and she felt Ashin was here.. the powerful darksider was around as well as one or two others who were different then the normal sith and darksiders.... but she still expanded herself reached out to become larger as she wanted to swallow it and mentally her consciousness were checking on more of it. She had other aspects and thoughts worrking on the manipulations of the atomic struggle of the crystals and chamber itself. Alterring the fundamental parts of it would help and hopefully whoever was going after the ritual were making progress.
 
Allies: Herself
Opp: Darth Solipsis Darth Solipsis | Romi Jade | Inosuke Ashina | Odria Kaelthron
Others: Meliant | Hasuras Na-Gerra | Sars Sarad | Arris Windrun

This was starting to drag and not in a fun way.

No one had ever warned Mercy that a Kaggath or any duel, for that matter, could be boring. But that was exactly what Mercy was experiencing here and now. The hints of boredom. That and she was getting concerned that this one would end exactly as the previous one. Herself coming out of it, declaring victory, but unsatisfied by the experience.

Her body angled towards the engagement, aiming to finally strike against Solipsis herself. To interrupt the duel, instead of giving the Jedi more time.

"Reinforcements."

Mercy blinked as Gerra's voice filtered through in her mind.

She glanced away from the battle and towards the gap created from the Destroyer's impact. Out there, with enhanced vision, Mercy could see parts of Gerra's fleet detaching.

Beginning to approach the floating spire instead.

What, you thought, I might not be able to heist the Death Star... so I might as well heist the Dark Lord? Mercy responded to Gerra through their mental connection, colored with amusement. Fine, but do not forget he is mine. I came here to finish the Kaggath, one way or the other. I might be dying of boredom here, but that hasn't changed.
 
The nice Vanagor died, now you get me.
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What is left
UNDISCLOSED
LOCATION - Death Star III



Michael, Gabriel, Azrael, Sariel, Raphael, Jeremiel, Connel, Raguel
[Any text in brackets signifies comm-link usage and not face to face conversation]
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The chamber smelled like ozone and old promises. Matsu’s touch on the largest crystal sent a ripple through the Force that felt like a bell struck at the edge of hearing — a small, impossible thing becoming wrong in the nicest of ways. She was doing something that could not be shouted; she was undoing songs at the level of atoms, and the sound of it was beautiful in a way that hurt.

Connel watched her as she worked. She looked ridiculous and immeasurably deadly all at once: hair floating, eyes like fossilized stars, humming some nonsense rhyme to a door like it owed her money. He could feel the crystals fall away in a shower of red motes where she’d asked them to let go. That was her: chaos with a scalpel.

His job was uglier and quieter.

She sent him a thought — light as breath, impatient. “Keep moving.” he could have moved. He had hands full of things that would have made very loud punctuation marks. Instead he let the thought settle into his chest like a coin. ~“[COLOR]Finish the job[/COLOR]”~, he answered, wordless. The Empire would have its body—if he could spare them the weapon.

He didn’t think of himself as heroic in that moment. He thought of the Vanagor line, of knives slid into the dark, and of his father’s hands teaching him how to be an edge. This wasn’t a chance to prove anything to the Order. This was the only language the Empire respected: pressure. He was going to push where it hurt.

The station’s map throbbed in his head from the stolen comm-chatter and from the small, constant threads Matsu kept opening and letting him touch. Tram lines, service bays, prize corridors where soldiers leaned like bored dogs — they were all routes and rhythms. Connel threaded his way through vents and maintenance crawlways like a thought made visible, pockets of gunfire and shouted orders folding around him.

Connel did not go for subtlety because to him, subtlety is a courtesy to those who deserve it. He set things to make noise, to make men run and make commanders curse the names on their rosters. By doing so, Connel siphoned time from the station so that when the ritual’s dancers tried to pivot, they would hopefully find their feet gone. He rerouted attention; made corridors echo with wrong alarms; and fed false commands into a trooper’s channel and watched units shuffle into tidy little graves of their own making. None of it required finesse — only cruelty, and a mind that liked the way control tasted.

They came for him in groups. Someone always did. They believed in armor and orders and the safety of being many. That did not bother Connel at all. He worked them like a machine. Close, disable, shove, press, leave. A few still tried to make noise. A few thought themselves brave because of a corporal’s braid. They learned quickly that bravery tastes like a snapped bone.

He said very little.

“Orders don’t keep the dead warm.” at the Corporal shouting orders. “You won’t be missed.” at a patrol trying to cordon him off.

Words are a luxury on the edge of a blade. His voice was a thing for necessary things. When Connel did speak, it was the Ariel way: short, flat, cold. Those were the nails he drove before the hammer hit. Men saw the look behind his mask and understood in their marrow that this was not a duel; it was a verdict.

There was a part of him that wanted to show off — a thin, childish part that wanted to stand in the open and be a storm. He swallowed it. Showing off wastes time. Instead I gave them the thing they feared most: certainty. No flourish. No challenge. No mercy.

At one junction, a squad tried to form another cordon to cut off Matsu’s route. He let them think they might hold it. When the first line of men rushed forward, they met the e-web He’d laid earlier — a curtain that answered with hot light and malfunctioning ordnance. Their blasters hiccupped and died. They staggered; they bled radio commands that got routed into nowhere. Connel moved in the gaps, a shadow using their noise against them. One by one they fell into silence, and the silence did what I wanted: it made places for Matsu’s bright madness to pass through.

It felt good. Dangerous things make a certain music in the gut. Connel let it play. If he could not stop the weapon by hands alone, then he would bleed it until it could not sing true.

Another corporal spat at him once — loud, small, cruel. “You’re just a boy playing at a mask,” he sneered. The world narrowed. Connel answered with a hand to his chest, the kind of hold taught to men who break things for a living. He inhaled and found the light cut off. You die for orders, he said, and the sentence was like a last currency. He did not answer.

Each action did not simply take life; it moved weight. It shifted the station’s attention, its resources, its time. The ritual’s priests could not be everywhere, and the Empire could not move faster than he could make them count their losses. If Matsu could braid the crystals wrong, he made sure the empire had fewer hands and less time to fix what she broke.

Between fights Connel breathed in scents of weld smoke and singed hair and the metallic sweetness of blood. He thought briefly of fathers — of mine teaching him how to stand when everything wanted him to fall. Connel thought of the Vanagor creed in a new, harsher light: not the noble sentiment, but the truth it hides — that sometimes you must be a weight on a world to keep it honest.

As the tram screamed on above, and Matsu’s laughter threaded through the lattice of his attention, Vanagor let one thought ride down to her: ~Don’t wait for me~. It was not disobedience. It was promise. If he died in the ribs of that station, then let the Empire feel the hole.

When the last squad Connel had been watching funneled into his trap, the corridor became a theater of short, sharp violence. He danced through it—close, brutal, efficient—each movement a whispered lesson in anatomy. When a trooper reached for a fallen comrade’s weapon with shaking hands, Connel met his wrist with a light that would not go out and ended him without theatrics. When an officer shouted that reinforcements were coming, Connel smiled under his mask. Reinforcements were a resource. Resources can be burned.

Blood was a stain on plating; Connel left it neat. He left no messages. That was not his trade. When he paused at the mouth of the service duct, Connel then looked up at the crystal vault and felt Matsu’s work like distant thunder. The lattice she was reshaping would not fall apart tonight. It would, however, sing wrong when they tried to aim it. That is enough. That is mercy.

Before he folded into the shadows again, Connel found a man who had been the loudest about duty. He gasped in the ruin of a doorway. Connel crouched, level to his eyes, and said one thing ConnelI knew would be carried in nightmares for years:

You let nice things die on Coruscant. This is what you get now.

He understood then that his sanctity of order had been a lie. His last look was not at Connel but at the stars visible in the Death Star’s latticed vents — tiny impossible points of home he would never see again.

Connel slid away, letting the station close like a mouth. He left trails of mayhem small enough to be believable and precise enough to be lethal. If Connel died here, so be it. But the thing Matsu whispered later — the small, private laugh in the Force — told him she would not let him die where there was no meaning to it.

Night and Day(his shortsabers) hung at his hips, dark as a promise. He walked back toward the tram’s roar and toward the red light of the Crystal Vault. The station had been bent tonight. It would not be whole again for a long time.

If the Empire tried to use what they left behind, they’d find their weapon sang like a broken harp. If any trooper lived to tell the tale, he’d have seen a shadow with two blades and a voice like an empty room.

Either way, they would remember that the Vanagor line did not end quietly. They would remember that the Mirror Creed takes no prisoners.




 


Objective 3
DEATH STAR III - HAD ABBADON

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Equipment: The Furnance | The Kotjontû
NPCs: 8x Karsta Raka | 2x Green Warden

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Chapter 4: The Scheiterhaufen
Direct Tag: Phaelissia Phaelissia | Lirka Ka Lirka Ka | Helix Helix
Kandora pulled the trigger, leveled her sights, and fired. Her aim was true, but Phaelissia Phaelissia the machine incarnation that stood before her was truer still.

Still perched over the scope of her blaster, she couldn't help but loser her gaze to the mesmerizing dance of flames that attested to the culmination of their ritual.

She fired once more, and missed. That fleeting lapse of focus cost her dearly.

Before she could readjust, motion behind her sent a jolt of cold, instinctive fear through her body. Her eyes darted to the side, her head turning with them and then came the burning agony of metal rending flesh. A scream tore from her throat.

She stared in horror at Helix Helix the abomination of dark metal that had struck her, a shimmering monstrosity of jagged blades, a cruel imitation of a predator's fang speckled jaws glinting in the firelight.

She had been a fighter all her life. As a child on Eshan, she had known nothing else. She had killed before her age reached double digits standard years. Trenches, duels, skirmishes, she had seen the Empire's titans tear each other apart on Arkania.

And so she knew death. Instinctively, she recognized its arrival.

Even whilst she tasted the sour bile sting her throat, she swallowed her fear and embraced its arrival. For in all her years of conflict, the warmth of the flame she had found at the side of her Saint had taught her that death was not an ending, only a passage. The fire of her God-Emperor would guide her onward into the next great journey.

She turned her head away from her killer toward her final work, just in time to witness it.

A gilded, incorporeal shape, flames flickering, licking, twisting over themselves like sinew and flesh knitting over bone. The outline of something humanoid. Something immense.

All that death, all that worship, all that power, siphoned into this moon sized wound in the Force. Guided by a ritual thought long forgotten, an experiment of belief to breath life into a dead craft, conceived by the Saint of Flame himself.

Kandoras head snapped back under the crushing force of the chakram that ruptured, bone and the soft tissue that laid beneath. She dident feel the second one, that tore her leg off right under her knee. Her eyes closed. Her body fell mute.

But her spirit drifted, knowing she had completed the final task her Saint had entrusted to her.

They had birthed Living Fire.

A towering giant took its first step.

From the pillar of flames, a flickering silhouette of a foot emerged, then a shin, a knee, a calf, and at last, as if the crouched titan were tearing itself from its throne of fire, two massive palms, each the size of a TIE-fighter, burst forth to haul its colossal frame upright.

At last, a featureless face crowned by a burning pyre loomed above the startled congregation, a head wreathed in living flame staring down upon those who had summoned it.

As the final limb tore free from the inferno of broken humanoid coals, the fire recoiled inward, drawing upon itself like a sudden wind sweeping through closing gates.

The chamber drowned in geysers of molten red and yellow. Smoke scattered like frightened insects, swept aside by the rising heat. The temperature spiked, the very air warped, difficult to breathe beneath the oppressive presence of this living incarnation of fire.

The avatar towered before them, its head still bowed, for its full stature rose higher than even the hangar's vaulted ceiling.

At its feet, like a child before its parent, stood Salafir, staring upward in reverence at the product of his devotion.

For a moment, awe shone in his expression, then dread crept onto it. He felt the toll of his expenditure as the full backlash of the ritual surged through him.

The rite had been born of an ancient Sith design, a fragment of forgotten scripture, rediscovered on Athiss and reworked under the Saint's hand. Under the guidance of alchemists and magisters of the Church, Salafir had been chosen as its vessel, the conduit through which catastrophic energy would be channeled. But now, that strain overwhelmed him.

His skin blanched to ash-white, hardening and cracking like parched earth. Splintered fissures spread across his limbs as his flesh calcified. His eyes widened in horror as his fingers crumbled from his palms. He turned weakly to his last remaining comrade, whispering,

"Brother…?"

And then he burst, collapsing into drifting gray ash, his remains scattered by the heated gusts like sand in the dunes.

Nearby, Gazim fell to one knee. His first assault, a full-bodied charge, twisted into a low, desperate swing as his foe Lirka Ka Lirka Ka ducked beneath him, the opposing blade grazing his calf and drawing blood.

He turned toward the giant that now loomed over all of them and rasped, voice trembling in fury and faith alike:

"Burn these heathens."

Those would be the zealot finals words, as the firebrunst that came would sear the giant to the bone.

For the giant of flame required no command. Like a bird knowing north from south, it needed neither guidance nor teaching. It was born knowing its truth. It existed to tear the galaxy asunder.

To ignite worlds. To flare brighter than suns. To consume all until only light remained.

It was bound to a single will, to the distant light that was embroidered into its being, and in that bond it found its purpose.

With a mouth that could not speak, it screamed.

Its blazing form cracked, arced, and lashed outward, and then erupted in a cataclysmic storm.

Waves of fire burst forth.

Heat so fierce that the walls themselves began to weep molten metal, so hot it could set breath aflame, cook organs, and boil bone.

It cried its first mute cry, a whipping and cracking of flames, and in that infernal wail, it heralded its birth to the galaxy.

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Da'Razel watched in sorrow as the life signs of his three children flatlined, their profiles fading one by one from his roster display.

Salafir, the youngling they had been gifted by a local diplomat upon Champala a tribute send as a truce, a Force-gifted child traded for the lives of his people. The ambassadors act of heresy cost them him dearly. The Saint had burned his entire bloodline in penance, all but that boy, that boy of hatred and promise.

Kandora, the veteran, a lost soul who, as few before her, had glimpsed the truth of the God-Emperor's warmth. She had understood the testament of what they sought to achieve, had awoken from the veil of lies, and grasped the divine chaos that ruled their universe.

And Gazim, the silent hulk, the menace forged in the gladiatorial pits where they had found him, the last surviving slave, drenched in the blood of the Mawite zealots who had enslaved him.

Their sacrifice had not been in vain. Never before had Da'Razel felt the Force stir in such a way, not as others described it, not through gentle flow or vision. But now, he felt it: the heart of the giant, the molten core of living flame smoldering within its chest.

Living Fire.

Unbeknownst to him, a lone intruder had managed to slip past his sentinels and stir the conflict in the sanctum beyond the massive gate he guarded. The Saint of Pyre bowed his head in prayer.

He prayed for his lost flock.

And for what their devotion had birthed.

Name: Kandora [Deceased]
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Location: The Scheiterhaufen | Speech


Name: Gazim [Deceased]
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  • Force User: No
  • Appearance: Towering Devaronian, large size, body covered in ritual brands, wears heavy crude armour
  • Strengths: Immense brute strength and endurance, brutal pain tolerance
  • Weaknesses: Slow, lacks subtlety and tactical depth
  • Equipment: Massive Vibro-axe, carbonite steel gauntlets
Location: The Scheiterhaufen | Speech



Name: Salafir [Deceased]
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  • Force User: Yes
  • Appearance: Young Chagrian male, skin tattooed with Sith runes, scorched robes.
  • Strengths: Talented Dark Sider, excellent swordsmanship.
  • Weaknesses: Young, overconfident, unstable in prolonged combat.
  • Equipment: Twin Dolovite blades, medium cortosis weaved armour
Location: The Scheiterhaufen | Speech


Name:
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  • Force User: Yes
  • Appearance: Givin, skeletal humanoid, draped in crimson robes
  • Strengths: Sith Alchemist, supportive healer and enhancer for zealots
  • Weaknesses: Physically fragile, dependent on his lantern for full potency
  • Equipment: Crystadurium Ritual lantern, sacrificial dagger, Ultrachrome line robe
Location: Sentinel of the shrine | Speech




Name: Inquisitor Rael Orvax
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  • Force User: Yes
  • Appearance: Human male of Brentaal IV, encased in segmented armour, black-and-crimson robes, a visored helm
  • Strengths: Formidable melee combatant, disciplined tactician, strong endurance
  • Weaknesses: Heavy and slow, over protective of his cult, easily angered
  • Equipment: Electro-scythe, Dallorian and Ultrachrome alloy armour
Location: Sentinel of the shrine | Speech


Model: Green Warden

Location:
1x Sentinel of the shrine [Deceased] & 1x The Scheiterhaufen
 

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