Star Wars Roleplay: Chaos

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Private Crimson Silence


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Lieutenant - Roman Vossari
Training Field | Tython
TAG: Anneliese Kaohal Anneliese Kaohal
GEAR: X | X | X | X

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Two years without a word.

Roman had waded through warzones with less tension in his chest. He'd eliminated pirates in the vacuum of space, crawled through sulfur-laced rivers under enemy artillery, smiled at death so many times they were practically on speaking terms. And still - this. This left him restless in his bones.

The shuttle that brought him to Tython was unmarked, one of the Confederacy's silent birds, the kind of transport that didn't file logs. He hadn't come as a soldier, not today. No insignia, no rank. Just a man foolish enough to return to the source of his heartache.

Tython hadn't changed. Verdant, patient, overly serene. He always thought the planet was smug. That kind of untouched beauty made men believe peace was natural, instead of something that had to be carved out with blood and compromise. He pulled his hood lower and moved through the trees, a shadow among the shadows.

The training fields lay to the east, away from the Temple. They'd always walked a similar route together. He knew it was where she trained when she wanted to be alone. Roman liked her better like that - sweaty, focused, scowling when she missed her mark. Human.

He found her by the edge of the glade.

Same field. Same determined set to her jaw. She moved like someone born of light, like the Force bent to her rhythm because it wanted to. She always had that rare ease with it. Where Roman strained and fought, Anneliese simply was. A song the galaxy hadn't deserved.

He crouched low on the slope, body wrapped in the Force like a burial shroud. His presence was a pebble sunk beneath a still lake, no ripples. Jedi rarely checked for ghosts when they thought they'd buried you.

She hadn't changed much. Maybe a little older in the eyes. A little stronger. But still - Anneliese.

He watched her flip through saber drills. He could see the slight irritation when she faltered by a fraction. She corrected, adjusted. Breathed.

He remembered the first time she kissed him. He remembered her hands on his collar, tugging him in. He remembered the yes in her voice when they thought maybe they could have a life. Before he left. Before she looked at him like he was some sad casualty. A fire that had burned itself out in the wrong hearth.

He still wrote. Every week. Dozens of letters about nothing: skirmishes, sunrises on foreign moons, dumb jokes his squadmates made.

Roman shifted, standing slowly, still cloaked. He didn't want her to see him. Not really. He didn't deserve that.

But… he wanted her to feel him.

So he exhaled slowly. Like bleeding out.

Dropped the mask.

Let the Force breathe him out like a name half-forgotten.

Because maybe he was a glutton for punishment.
 



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Items: Lightsaber I Engagement Ring I Outfit X X II Equipment X X X I Theme Song I Bloodline Tattoo | Sigil Bead Necklace ( Gift )

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Tags: Roman Vossari Roman Vossari
Morning clung to Tython like a lover reluctant to part — mist soft against the ground, the sky streaked with the warm gold of a sun not yet fully risen. In the training glade to the east, a lone figure moved with quiet purpose.

Anneliese Kaohal danced.

Barefoot on the cool earth, she moved like wind through grass — lean, honed, sharp as a vibroblade. Her body was coiled, tendons shifting beneath freckled skin with every pivot and strike. Each motion was deliberate, flowing from muscle memory deeper than thought. Her sleeveless sports tunic clung to her frame, dark with sweat along the spine and beneath the arms. Loose training pants moved with her, whispering around her legs as she stepped through the sequence.

Her red hair was tied back in a taut braid, though several strands had slipped free, clinging to her temple and cheek. Her skin glistened in the morning light, flushed from effort, golden in places where the sun caught her. But more than any of that — it was the look on her face. That expression of freedom. Fierce. Untamed. Whole.

She stepped into the form again — Soresu feeding into Ataru, her golden saber slashing arcs into the air, each one tighter, sharper. Her breath came even, focused, matching the rhythm of her strikes. She spun low, rose high — not to perform, not to prove — but to remember who she was when no one was watching.

Then came the fire.

It sparked at her core, a flicker of heat that swelled and curled through her arm. Anneliese lifted her hand and let it build — a stream of flame coiling around her like a living ribbon, dancing along the line of her body in tandem with the Force. She turned with it, barefoot still against the dirt, the fire answering her without resistance.

With a breath, she flung it outward.

It struck the training dummy ahead, fire latching on. With a twist of her wrist — the air snapped. Combustion.

The figure exploded, shards and cinders raining down like sparks at the edge of a forge.

She didn't flinch.

Instead, she lowered her saber, letting it dim, and a slow smirk touched her lips — the satisfied expression of someone who'd earned this moment. Who'd bled for it. She turned her face to the rising light and closed her eyes for just a second, letting it wash over her.

And then she froze.

Her breath hitched.

It wasn't a sound — not exactly. Not a presence she could see. But the Force… the Force shifted around her like it had inhaled. Like something long buried had stirred beneath its surface.

A ripple. A fracture.

The unmistakable sense of him.

Anneliese's eyes snapped open. Her heart twisted, her stomach flipped. She turned her head slowly toward the treeline.

He didn't need to move. He didn't need to speak. She already knew. The Force screamed his name in her blood. A presence so familiar it hurt.

Roman.

His name thundered silently in her bones, a beat between past and present.

He was here.

She stood still in the smoke and smoldering ash of what she'd destroyed, hair curling with sweat, chest rising, fists clenched at her sides. All at once her heart surged with fury and grief and disbelief and longing. So many pieces of her rushed forward and recoiled at the same time.

She took one step forward.

And then, softly — like a memory, like a plea, like a curse — she spoke.

"…Roman."

His name left her lips like sin and blessing both. Holy and profane.

She didn't know if she wanted to run to him or set the world ablaze.

But she knew this: she was not the same woman who had begged him not to go.

And he was not the man she had once said yes to.
 

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Lieutenant Roman Vossari
Training Field | Tython
TAG: Anneliese Kaohal Anneliese Kaohal
GEAR: X | X | X | X | X

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Roman stepped from the treeline like a secret too stubborn to stay buried.

The hood fell back first, revealing the face she'd once traced in the dark, lips to jaw to temple. Everything about him was leaner now. Harder. His Confederacy uniform was stripped of decoration, simple and functional, yet it clung to him like a second skin, worn by purpose. He moved with a predator's ease, shoulders broad, stride lazy but precise, like someone who hadn't stopped walking into danger since the day he left her behind.

He stopped just beyond the edge of the glade and smiled.

"You look good, Anneliese."

His voice was low, sandpaper and smoke, carrying across the glade like a line being drawn.

"Different," he added, eyes roaming her with an intimacy that hadn't dulled. "Better, stronger. Like fire learned how to walk upright."

He glanced at the scorched ruin of the training dummy, then back to her. Something flickered in his expression. Regret. Admiration. Hunger. It all lived behind the walls now, but the windows had cracks.

"Miss me?"

He said it like a dare, but his eyes asked something quieter.

He took a step closer. His gaze dragged over her braid, the stray red strands clinging to her cheek, the shimmer of sweat at her collarbone. Every inch of her still known to him, even if her soul had drifted somewhere new.

"I came for a reason, you know. Not the Jedi. Not the Temple. No one else." Another step. Close enough to see the pulse in her neck.

"Just you."

He tilted his head, the grin softening into something less cocky, more real. That rare version of Roman now only she had known - the one who whispered galaxies into her skin and meant every one.

"I thought if I saw you again, I'd walk away clean. Let you be. Let me be. But…"

He lifted a hand, not touching, just hovering, like the Force between them might still bridge the chasm.

"…you still make the galaxy stop moving. And that's a hell of a drug to quit."

He let that hang there. Truth. Weight.

Then, lighter: "So, what do you say? One last spar? Or are you afraid I'll mop the floor with you and ruin whatever mystique you're cultivating?"

A beat. His grin deepened.

"Or you could just kiss me and get it over with."

Roman Vossari. Haunted eyes. Ice in his veins. Heart still burning where her name used to live.
 



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Items: Lightsaber I Engagement Ring I Outfit X X II Equipment X X X I Theme Song I Bloodline Tattoo | Sigil Bead Necklace ( Gift )

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Tags: Roman Vossari Roman Vossari
She felt him before she saw him.

The Force whispered like a ripple against her spine, just as the heat of her last flame died out. Morning air clung to her skin, sharp with ash and sweat, but it wasn't the cold that made her breath catch. It was presence. Heavy, familiar, unwelcome. Her eyes stayed on the blackened ruin of the training dummy. She didn't need to look. She already knew.

He stepped into the clearing like a memory made flesh — one she'd spent years trying to bury under duty, fire, and silence.

She turned only when she had to. Slowly. Measured.

The man standing there wasn't the boy she remembered. He wore new weight in his shoulders, moved with confidence sharpened into something she didn't recognize. The uniform fit him too well — not the colors, but the purpose. Like he'd burned away everything that didn't serve him. Including her.

And still, he smiled like nothing had changed.

Her heart didn't leap. It sank.

He looked at her like she was a sight to behold, like time had made her into something more. But it didn't move her. Not anymore. Not after everything. She'd carved herself into someone stronger through loss, war, and the silence he left behind. She wasn't waiting at the edge of anything now.

He was the one late to the truth.

Anneliese didn't offer warmth. She didn't offer anything he hadn't earned — and he hadn't earned this moment. Not with swagger. Not with lines meant for a stranger, not for her.

She met his gaze and held it. Not cold, not cruel. Just steady.

"You left," she said plainly. "You made your choice."

Of course she'd missed him -- of course she'd longed to be with him... but this person in front of her?

No, he shouldn't have come.

No, she wouldn't play his games — not with a spar, not with a kiss, not with the remnants of something long since broken.

"I'm not doing this Roman, I'm just not. Also -- didn't come here for anyone else? What about all the people that care for you? Do you really think so little of them? What of me? Don't make it seem like you did me some favor by coming here -- as if I'm the pity hand out."

By Ashla it hurt to see him like this — not as he was, but as proof that the version of him she loved was never coming back.

But she didn't run. Not this time. Then, he spoke one final time, mentioning she could just kiss him, and get it over with. Her eyes contorted with visible disgust, her nostrils flaring as she looked at him. "Excuse me? How-- you really thi--, .... -- No Roman. No. Don't ever -- talk to me that way again, enough with this male bravado shit -- you wanna talk, talk. If not, I think its best if you just leave."

She stood her ground, shoulders square, breath even.
 

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Lieutenant Roman Vossari
Training Field | Tython
TAG: Anneliese Kaohal Anneliese Kaohal
GEAR: X | X | X | X | X

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Roman's grin slid off his face like a mask no longer worth wearing.

A flicker. That's all it took. One lashing breath of hers, and the boy underneath the soldier surfaced just long enough to ache.

He held up his hands - not in defense, not in surrender - but to let the fire rage without trying to smother it. As if her fury was sacred now, something earned, and he had no right to interrupt. He took a step back, not out of fear, but reverence. Then slowly, deliberately, he began to pace around her - the arc of a man orbiting what he'd once called home.

"You're right," he said finally, voice roughened at the edges, a little frayed now that the smile was gone. "I did make a choice."

His boots crunched softly against the grass, measured steps echoing the weight of what he wouldn't dodge.

"I finally had one."

He turned his head toward her, not fully - just enough to let her see the man behind the uniform. "I walked away from the Order because I finally had a choice in front of me. Not one predetermined by my father. I made a choice that I believe is righteous and worthy. No one ever asked me if I truly wanted all of this... But I found where I am supposed to be. I thought you would've supported that."

His jaw flexed. The shadows under his eyes weren't just from the trees.

"But don't twist it, Anneliese. I didn't walk away from you."

He stopped in front of her again. Not too close. Not anymore.

"You broke it off. You looked at me like I'd thrown my lightsaber in the gutter and turned into something beneath you. Like I'd traded purpose for violence. You didn't even ask."

A bitter chuckle escaped him. "You talk about how I made you stronger, how you built yourself back up after I left. But what about me, huh? You think I didn't bleed when you went silent? You think I didn't wait, message after message, hoping maybe this would be the one you answered?"

He shook his head, expression tightening. "No one else cut me off. I still check in with them. You? You ghosted me like I was already dead."

He let that land, heavy as the pause that followed.

"So yeah, I came for you. Because no matter how far I went, no matter how deep into the countless troubles this galaxy has, your name still echoed."

His gaze softened. Something quieter now, exhausted but honest. "I thought we had something that could stretch across the stars. That it wasn't about temples or uniforms or titles. That we'd figure it out."

He let the silence hang before asking, low and honest:

"What changed, Anneliese? Because I would've made it work. For you."

And this time, there was no grin. Just Roman Vossari - stripped of armor, the edges dulling under her gaze, not weaker… just real.
 



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Items: Lightsaber I Engagement Ring I Outfit X X II Equipment X X X I Theme Song I Bloodline Tattoo | Sigil Bead Necklace ( Gift )

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Tags: Roman Vossari Roman Vossari
"Roman."

Her voice hit the space between them like a blade unsheathed—low, tight, sharp with control that trembled at the edge.

"I waited for you. Longer than I should've. Through the silence, through the lies, through every excuse I fed myself because I wanted to believe you were still in there. That somewhere under all that steel and strategy, the man I loved hadn't vanished."

She stepped forward once. Not with affection, but clarity.

"But you stopped coming. You stopped calling. You promised me—Roman, you looked me in the eye and promised—and then you just… disappeared."

Her jaw clenched. The heat beneath her skin crawled up her throat.

"And yeah—so no, I didn't respond to those pathetic half-letters you tossed across systems like breadcrumbs. You thought that counted as effort? As showing up?" Her laugh was hollow. "That was you easing your conscience, not reaching for me."

She looked at him, hard.
Her voice sharpened.

"But now you speak to me like I'm some whore off the lower levels? Like I'm a mistake you regret drunk dialing?" She stepped in, barely a breath between them now. "Watch your words, Roman. Choose them carefully."

She drew in a breath, bitter and bright with heartbreak.

"Because you don't get to rewrite this like I'm the one who walked. I didn't disappear. I waited. I asked you to stay. I begged you to choose me—and you chose power. Position. You and your damn choice — as if there wasn’t more than them."

Her voice cracked, but she pushed through it.

"Tell me—just once—did you ever stop and wonder if this would cost you something? Did you ever hesitate? Or did you just trade your soul in pieces until you couldn't remember the weight of it? You think I changed? No, Roman. You just stopped looking."

A beat of silence. Then:

"Don't stand here and pretend you still know me."




 

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Lieutenant Roman Vossari
Training Field | Tython
TAG: Anneliese Kaohal Anneliese Kaohal
GEAR: X | X | X | X | X

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Roman's eyes darkened - not with rage, but something older. Something more guttural. That storm of betrayal that had lived too long without air.

He took the hit of her words - every lash, every sting - and stood tall. Let her carve him open. Let her see the man she claimed not to know anymore. Fine. Let her look.

But when she finished, when her voice cracked and the silence sank between them like shrapnel, he stepped forward - not with gentleness, not anymore - with the cold, bracing clarity of someone who'd reached his limit.

"No."

It snapped out of him like a shot.

"No, Anneliese. You don't get to stand there and spit fire at me like I'm some deserter, like I traded love for blood. You think I disappeared? I was buried under a thousand miles of trying. I trained. I served. I fought for a galaxy on fire because someone had to. And I still - still - found a way to write. To reach out. To let you know I was there."

He pointed at the ground, between them, voice rising now, sharp, unwavering.

"You didn't wait. You gave up. Don't tell me I fed you excuses - I lived every damn one of them. You think I didn't want to come back? You think I didn't ache to? But no, you saw the uniform, the name, the damn patch on my shoulder, and you made up your mind. That Roman? That's not the man I loved."

He laughed, but it wasn't hollow. It was bitter, bruised, furious.

"You want to talk about regret? You think I don't regret what I lost? I do. Every damn day. But I never - never - traded my soul. I didn't become some monster."

He stepped closer again. Chest to chest. Voice lowered, but dangerous.

"I didn't choose power. I chose freedom. I chose purpose. I've helped evacuate refugee camps under orbital fire. I've saved children from slavers, pulled men from rubble, dismantled warlords who slaughtered villages while everyone else here gets to dance around in fields each morning. You call that a power grab? No. I chose to finally matter, Anneliese. And you - you couldn't stand that it didn't fit your image of what we were supposed to be."

His voice dropped to a knife's edge.

"You didn't ask me to stay. You asked me to stay small. Stay quiet. Stay tame. And when I didn't, when I dared to grow into something you didn't recognize, you left me in the dark and called it my fault."

His breath hitched, but his stare didn't break.

"Don't stand there and tell me I stopped looking."

He let the silence howl between them, jaw clenched, breath hot.

"You looked at who I became and decided I was already gone."

And for the first time, there was something raw in his voice. A fracture in all that control.

"I'm still right here!"

But whether that meant anything anymore… he didn't know.
 



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Items: Lightsaber I Engagement Ring I Outfit X X II Equipment X X X I Theme Song I Bloodline Tattoo | Sigil Bead Necklace ( Gift )

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Tags: Roman Vossari Roman Vossari
She didn't move at first.

Not when he stepped in. Not when his words cracked against her ribs like breaking bones. She just stood there, eyes locked on his, unblinking.

Let him rage.
Let him bleed.

And when the silence finally came — when he said "I'm still right here" like it was some last-ditch spell to bring her back — she spoke.

Soft.
Controlled.
But deadly.

"No, Roman. You're not."

She stepped forward, the distance gone now, her voice steady, cold with clarity.

"You're a ghost wearing his face."

Her gaze flicked down, then back up, and when she spoke again, it wasn't sharp. It wasn't loud. It cut.

"You say I didn't wait. That I gave up. But the truth? You stopped showing up long before you ever left."

She shook her head, jaw trembling now, but she didn't look away.

"Letters don't mean a thing when they stop meaning anything. When they become… reports. Half-apologies dressed as purpose. I read them. Every line. And I saw it. How you started signing with rank. How your words dried out. How your handwriting changed — a checkbox to be marked."

A breath.

She wasn't yelling — but there was weight in every word, and it slammed into the silence like thunder.

"And I did ask you to stay. But not small. Not quiet. Not tame. Don't you dare twist my love like that."

A flicker of fury flared in her eyes — rare, righteous.

She stared at him.
Not with hate.
Not even with fury.
Just quiet, shaking disbelief.

"You really think that's what we were?"

Her voice was low, tight in her throat. Controlled — but barely.

"You think the Jedi just dance around in fields while the rest of the galaxy burns? You think we haven't bled? That we haven't crawled through ash and ruin for the same people you claim to be saving?"

A beat.
A breath.

Her gaze burned now — not with rage, but a pain that sat too deep to scream.

"I carried the bodies of younglings out of shattered stone, Roman. I stood waist-deep in rubble beside you, do you remember that? I've watched people die choking on fire. I've watched Jedi die begging for peace."

She stepped forward, slow.

Not to threaten — but to make him feel every inch of distance he'd put between them.

"And through it all, we never stopped trying. Never stopped choosing compassion. Even when it would've been easier to let it all rot."

Her voice cracked.

"But you—" she caught herself, looked away for the first time. A breath in. Another out.

 

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Lieutenant Roman Vossari
Training Field | Tython
TAG: Anneliese Kaohal Anneliese Kaohal
GEAR: X | X | X | X | X

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Roman's face hardened with every word.

Not because he didn't hear her.

Because he did.

Each sentence slammed into him like a stun bolt to the chest - not fatal, but enough to stagger the soul. Her voice, quiet and cold, dug under his skin more deeply than any scream could have. Every syllable dragged old scars back to the surface - not the ones he wore on his body, but the ones no armor ever covered.

"You think I stopped showing up?" he growled, voice cracking as it rose, low and tight with disbelief.

His pacing restarted, jagged now. Erratic.

He barked a dry, bitter laugh. "Yeah. Yeah, I signed with rank. You know why? Because that rank kept people alive. Because that rank mattered. I had squads, I had missions - whole planets depending on the right damn orders. I didn't have time to write poetry from trenches while breathing sulfur, Anneliese."

He turned sharply to face her, his chest rising, breath clipped.

"You read them? Good. Then you know how hard I was trying to still speak your language while drowning in a galaxy that didn't care if I ever learned it."

Her words spun again in his head - a ghost wearing his face.

It hit him like a punch.

"I didn't ask to become this," he snarled, voice sharpening, "but I had to. I made myself into something useful. And don't give me that pious Jedi lecture about compassion. I am compassion, Anneliese - just not your version of it. I put my body between civilians and blaster fire. I sleep in my armor. I spend my nights pulling shrapnel from kids."

His jaw clenched so tight it looked like it might snap.

"You don't know the things I've done. The things I've stopped. You just stood back and decided I crossed some line."

He stepped toward her again, not quite closing the distance - but close enough that the heat of him was tangible.

"You keep talking like I abandoned you, like I chose all this over us - but you haven't told me why."

His voice lowered into something more dangerous - not from threat, but from desperation wearing rage like a mask.

"You say I stopped showing up? I'm here now."

A pause. A breath. His hand trembled once, clenched it into a fist.

"But I what, Anneliese?"

The words were sharp, cracked glass in his throat.

He looked at her like a man begging for the truth, even if it killed him.

"Finish it. If you're going to carve me open, finish it. What was it? What finally broke us?"

He didn't blink. Didn't breathe.

Just waited.

As if the whole galaxy had narrowed down to the space between her next words.
 


She stood still. Let him spit every word like venom he needed to empty. Let him glare. Let him pace. Let him posture.


She didn't stop him.
She didn't interrupt.


But when it was over, when the fire had burned through and all that was left was the smoke of his pride—


She finally spoke.
And it was ice.


"No, Roman," she said, quiet. Unmoved. "You're not compassion. You're conviction without conscience. You think if you say it loud enough, it makes it true. That if you act righteous enough, it erases the damage."

Her voice never rose. It didn't need to.

"You think I walked away? No. You pushed. Every time I disagreed, every time I wouldn't nod along, you shoved. You reshaped the truth to make room for your ego, until there wasn't space for anything but your version of reality."

She took a step forward. Calm. Measured.

"And now you stand here with your fists clenched like I owe you something. Like you deserve closure. But Roman… I am not your exit wound. I am not here to bleed for your sense of failure."

Her eyes didn't shine. They didn't soften. They burned — clear and unsparing.

"I see you now. The way you talk. The way you move. You've already decided I'm the enemy. That I'm weak. That I'm in your way. Val told me this would happen — and I didn't want to believe her. I thought maybe… somewhere, the man I knew might still be in there."

A breath. Short. Steady.
"But you've already gone. Haven't you?"
A beat passed in the silence.


"You want something final? Fine."

She tilted her head, gaze locked on his with sharp finality.

"I am not yours."

And then, lower — firmer.

"Your worst fear was becoming him — might look in the mirror sometime; seems you two are more alike than you realized."

She let the silence stretch, one last moment — then stepped back.

“I think it best you leave — now. You’ve overstayed your welcome.”

She turned without drama. Without pause. Not in retreat — in release.

She didn't look back.
She didn't have to.

Because whatever he was now, it wasn't hers to carry. Not anymore.


 

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Lieutenant Roman Vossari
Training Field | Tython
TAG: Anneliese Kaohal Anneliese Kaohal
GEAR: X | X | X | X | X

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Roman didn't move for a long second.

Not even to breathe.

Her words slid into him like a vibroblade slipped between ribs - no warning, no mercy, no point in pulling it out.

Conviction without conscience.
I am not yours.
You've become him.


The last one. That one. It snapped something in him so violently it was a miracle the Force didn't tremble from the aftershock.

His head dropped slightly. Just for a breath.

And then - he snapped.

"You dare," he spat, voice low, trembling, livid. "You dare stand there and say that to me? After everything I told you? After everything I-" he cut himself off, pacing back, then forward again, faster this time, like a storm pacing its own prison.

"I let you in, Anneliese. You knew what that meant. I told you everything. About Serenno. About him. About what it did to me - to watch that man twist my blood, break my family, grind my mother into dust so he could mold me into something cold. I told you what I feared."

He pointed at her now, hand shaking.

"And you used it. You used it against me like a weapon. Like he would have."

His voice was breaking now. Something beneath it. Something feral.

"You know what the difference is between him and me?" he snarled. "He lied to everyone. He smiled while cutting throats. Me? I never lied to you. Not once. I was brutal. I was honest. I showed you who I was."

He turned sharply, then froze as something else hit him.

"…Val."

He let the name hang there. Dripping with venom.

"Of course she warned you. I'm sure Kahlil did too. I was never good enough for their precious Anneliese."

He stepped forward again, closer than he should've, eyes burning.

"Well congrats. She was right, wasn't she?"

His face twisted into something bitter, broken, cruel.

"You think I didn't know? That all your precious friends thought I was beneath you? Like some filth. Raised wrong. Loved wrong. I saw it. I saw it in every glance, every whisper behind your back. They never believed I was good enough for their golden Jedi."

He took another step, towering now, venom seeping into every word.

"But you wanna know the truth, Anneliese?"

His voice dropped. Dark. Quiet. Sharp.

"You'll never be one of them. No matter how much you sacrifice. No matter how much you bleed, or burn, or break for them - you'll never be family. Not to Val. Not to the Council. Not to anyone here. You're too wild. Too you. You don't fit. You never did."

He exhaled, then straightened - the air between them like a battlefield.

"And now you've burned me too. The one man who would've stood between you and this whole galaxy."

His voice turned to steel.

"You're alone now."

Then came the final blow.

Roman reached behind him, unhooking the lightsaber from the back of his belt. The one he still kept, even after he turned from the Jedi. Even after the Confederacy gave him new tools, new weapons.

He stared at it for a breath, the ghost of something lost in his face.

Then his grip tightened. And he hurled it.

The weapon landed at her feet.

"You won't have to see me again."
 



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Items: Lightsaber I Engagement Ring I Outfit X X II Equipment X X X I Theme Song I Bloodline Tattoo | Sigil Bead Necklace ( Gift )

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Tags: Roman Vossari Roman Vossari



Anneliese didn't speak at first.

She just looked at him—long, level, unmoved—as if she were assessing not a man, but the last dying echo of someone she once loved.

Then, softly, she exhaled… and laughed.

Not out of joy. Not malice. Just something hollow and astonished.

"You really believe that," she said quietly. "That everyone was out to get you. That the Temple judged you. That I did."

She tilted her head—not unkind, not indulgent, just… curious. Like she was watching a child throw a tantrum and wondering how long it would last.

"Did you come up with that lie yourself, or did your father hand it down with the rest of his sickness?"

Her eyes narrowed, her voice still calm.

"He bent truths until they screamed, Roman. Made guilt feel like duty. Made fear look like love. And when the world didn't give him what he wanted, he tore it apart until it did."

She paused. Her next words were exact.

"You've become very good at doing the same."

Her gaze turned sharper now. Flatter. She raised a finger—not accusatory, not angry. Just final.

"You don't get to say their names."

Her voice was firm. Final. No anger—just the steel edge of a boundary that had taken years to forge.

"Val. Kahlil. The people who stood by me. The ones who tried—tried—to stand by you. They loved you, Roman. All of them. They would've done anything for you. And still, you rewrote the story so that you could feel betrayed instead of seen."


A slow breath. Not shaky.
Measured.


"Do you really think they looked down on you?" she asked. "Or is that just the story that feels safer than the truth?"


She waited. Let the silence answer.

Then:

"I'm not alone."

Her voice didn't rise. It didn't need to.

"I never was. Not in the dark. Not in the silence. Not now."

She didn't say the names of those who loved her. She didn't need to. The weight of them lived in her voice.

"I'm not trying to be anything for anyone anymore. Not to prove I belong. Not to be accepted. I am who I am."

She nodded once, simple. Unflinching.

"And I'm not ashamed of her."

Then the saber hit the floor.

She looked down at it. The symbol. The performance. She didn't flinch. Didn't look at him.

Only bent, slowly, and picked it up with both hands, as though it might fall apart if she weren't careful.

She cradled it in her palms. Held it like a memory already grieved.

"I'll see it buried," she said. "Along with what's left of this."

Her words landed like stone.
She looked at him once more.
And for the first time, there was no trace of the girl who loved him.


Only the woman who survived him.

She turned, silent, and walked away.


Not fast.
Not broken.
Just done.
 

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Lieutenant Roman Vossari
Training Field | Tython
TAG: @
GEAR: X | X | X | X | X

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Roman didn't call after her.

Didn't beg. Didn't chase.

He stood there, in the ashes of what they were, in the silence she'd left behind - and for the first time in years, he didn't know how to move.

He'd survived sieges. Watched comrades bleed out in the dirt beside him. Watched planets burn, watched entire cities fold under fire. He'd held men in his arms while they died and told them lies to make their last seconds bearable.

But nothing had ever hollowed him like this.

She walked away - not with fury, not with pain - but with certainty.

And that was the blade.

Not that she left.

That she didn't have to look back.

Roman stood there, staring at the spot where she'd cradled his saber like a corpse. Something sacred once. Now just wreckage.

She said she'd bury it.

Good.

Let it rot.

Let the last piece of that man go with it.

His breath came sharp. Controlled. A soldier's breath. A survivor's breath.

He turned, slowly, the glade behind him already dimming in his mind, swallowed by the fog of Tython's indifference. The path ahead was narrow, dark. Familiar.

He walked it without ceremony. Without hope.

Roman Vossari left as he came.

Alone.

And this time, he didn't plan to return.
 

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