Star Wars Roleplay: Chaos

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Junction Event Horizon | GA & SO Junction of Terijo and Orax







OBJECTIVE III

During his time in the server room, Drystan began treating it like his own little habitat. Ever mindful of the camera, he made a point to constantly swivel around in his wheel-tipped office chair, pretending to stay busy. The illusion was convincing enough on camera, the angles of the feed helping to obscure the more sensitive parts of his work.

But then—something stopped him cold. A presence. A signature picked up on approach, making its way toward the server room door.

With no monitors inside to show who was passing by or coming in, it was impossible to tell exactly who it might be. Security? Another technician? An engineer needing to check raw data? It wasn't something he expected—but in his line of work, the unexpected was routine. He was a Shadow, after all. And shadows adapted to the shape of the object that cast them. An unexpected element was, in a sense, expected.

He calmly pushed his chair back into place beneath the console, casually concealing the small data-gathering device before slouching slightly, ready once again to slip back into his assumed identity.

Quietly, he moved toward the server room door. The locks remained engaged—not as a true deterrent, but as part of the protocol for a room under active maintenance. It reinforced the illusion of a worker too focused on his duties to be disturbed.

He pressed the button, activating the two-way communicator between the room and the corridor.

His voice was shaky—by design—yet carried the firm tone of someone confident in his task.

"This is Junior Technician Meeks. The server room is currently undergoing routine maintenance. What can I help you with?"

Adean Castor Adean Castor
 
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OBJECTIVE II: TAKODANA EVACUATIONS
ALLIES: Sienna Sienna | Kaleleon Kaleleon | Kei Raxis Kei Raxis
ENEMIES: Ka'Ahs'Ruk Ka'Ahs'Ruk


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Tyron was silent as he listened to Kaleleon Kaleleon his mentor speaking with the Sergeant and observed the other troopers attempting to rally civilians together. The Besalisk spared what time he had available to help others the spirit Tyron emits seemed to be like a compassionate warmth where he displayed understanding to each face that glanced into his eyes. Something else was coming from Tyron through the Force as if it was like a Harmony upon others to help them calm down and focus on what they can control within themselves. The Padawan Learner turned his focus back to the Sergeant and his master hearing about a lizard like being accompanying Apprentice Sienna Sienna and Kaleleon Kaleleon wasn't having any of it. Something was wrong and his instincts began to kick in.

"I'm with you master. Let's go!"

Tyron had called out to Kaleleon Kaleleon as he watched him go from a walk to break into a jog and a quickened pace at that. The Besalisk made haste as he followed his master where he'd be running to make up for lost ground and time to find this threat of a Ssi-Ruu lifeform perhaps similar to Trandoshans and Tyron has heard about Transdoshans being fierce rivals against Wookiees now that's something you don't underestimate. A fellow Jedi student was in grave danger and this had a series of concerns that Tyron was riding into. Like a storm without the calm eye but there was the Lightside of the Force where the Besalisk was becoming the calm eye of this storm building. 'There is no Emotion, there is Peace' Tyron said and thought into himself where he took his own understanding of that line from the Refined Jedi Code to help guide him mentally as well as spiritually.

"Master have you encountered a Ssi-Ruu before? What are we going to encounter?"

Tyron asked Kaeleon while the two continued to jog quickly to find Sienna and hopefully stop the Jedi Apprentice being harmed or killed out in the field. Thumping and thudding sounds coming from his footsteps that slammed into the ground as Tyron progressed with his master. However, Tyron also has his spiritual Force Ghost mentor on his side able to guide him further Kei Raxis Kei Raxis . The Padawan Learner called out to his other mentor through the Force utilizing everything available to him being strategic and cautious.


"Master Raxis I ask for your guidance in aiding another to bring her safely home. We're heading right to where Sienna was last located from the Sergeant's reports."

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//: Obj II //:
//: Valery Noble Valery Noble //:
//: Azurine Varek Azurine Varek //: Luka Felcado Luka Felcado //:
//: Attire //:
Equipment, Brand & Echo in signature




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Allyson watched as the explosion rocked the clearing. As expected, Valery had reacted quickly, saving both the apprentice and herself. That was enough to confirm what Allyson already knew—Valery knew she was here.

Quietly, Allyson drew another arrow, this time tipped with a kyber crystal. She pushed a surge of Force energy into it and slammed it into the tree at her side, creating an anchor. If she needed to retreat, it would give her an immediate escape route. She had no intention of being caught flat-footed, especially not with the memory of Valery's boot trying to drive her face into the ground at Woostri still fresh in her mind. The thought made her shoulders tense.

There was no follow-up attack. Instead, her attention shifted to the Padawan. As quickly as the girl had appeared next to Valery, she disappeared.

It wasn't a simple cloaking trick—it was an actual bending of light and space, near flawless. The kind of invisibility reserved for trained shadows. It could be taught, but some were born to it. Allyson knew; she'd seen it before, first in herself and later in a student from long ago.

The Padawan had earned Allyson's respect without even knowing it.

Her satisfaction was short-lived. The banshee's movement pulled her focus. Allyson watched closely as the corpse cradled the decaying body it carried, shielding it with unnatural care. There was something potentially significant about it. That was enough for Allyson to turn the forgotten into a target.

But its attention remained locked on the Padawan.

Allyson felt the shift in the Force, the way the world seemed to twist. The creature instantly vanished and reappeared exactly where the Padawan had been standing.

Without hesitation, Allyson dropped from the treeline, sprinting with Force-enhanced speed. She moved low to the ground, fast and efficient. Her boots dug into the dirt as she stopped sharply, already drawing another arrow, this time armed with an explosive tip.

The bowstring pulled back smoothly, and the explosive arrow aimed directly at the corpse. She paused, holding her shot, considering whether she should announce herself—warn Valery, taunt the Sith—but decided against it.

The silent surprise was better.

Her form flickered back into visibility just as the explosive arrow cut through the air, flying toward the base of the forgotten remains.

Without waiting, Allyson turned sharply, shifting her focus. Her gloved hand moved to the bow's center, where a bright energy line formed, extending into a narrow sniper bolt. She didn't waste a second. Allyson centered her aim on the banshee's exposed neck—the weak point—and fired.

She hoped Valery would recognize the precision and understand that the shot wasn't meant for her or the Padawan.

Allyson had no interest in collateral damage.

The Sith was the obstacle. Clearing the way was necessary—for her, for the Padawan's unexpected potential, and because, in the end, Valery was still hers.
 
“Let evil fear me. Innocent know they're safe"
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You can’t have them!
Takodama
On the Ground



Michael, Gabriel, Azrael, Sariel, Raphael, Jeremiel,REEK

The once-tranquil forests and lakes of Takodana, now scarred by Sith occupation, were patches of Alliance personnel escorting frightened citizens. The streets lay either dark or burning. Much of this was not the Sith, it was of others, others not wanting them to have anything to lay claim to.

After clearing the Sith airfield, Omega Squad set up for evacuation coordination in the ruins of an ancient Jedi waystation. They sent out beacon pulses to the incoming Galactic Alliance 42nd Evac Battalion.

Suddenly—all systems went dark.

In a bit of a panic, Gabriel yelled out: Systems fried—spectrum’s jammed. We’ve got cloaked perimeter disruptions. They planned for this.

Snipers in the tree lines. We are surrounded.

From all directions, Sith troopers, Sith beasts, and dark-robed acolytes descend. Connel planted his foot on a broken stone column, scanning the horizon.

Fall back. Defensive formation. Don’t break.

They’re fast—but the enemy was faster. Raphael took a glancing saber swipe to the shoulder. Azrael’s detonite packs went off too early—EMP interference.

Connel threw his combat shield, it ricocheted off two troopers before returning. He ignites his shortsaber in reverse grip. Then the pressure shifted. A quiet hum precedeed it—like the world itself bracing. Darth Saliss appeared, walking through flame, cloak trailing in the embers, twin red sabers angled low like claws.

Darth Saliss (to Connel):
"Your chaos bought them hours. But I am time reclaimed. My Master sends regards."

Michael grit his teeth: That’s him. Apprentice to Illicitus. This is his show.

The air thickened. The squad was surrounded. Nowhere to run.

Connel knew what was next and yelled out to the squad: Form fallback perimeter. You move when I say. Don’t stop for me.

We don’t leave—

Connel normally did not try to command any of them, so when he did, it meant something big. You don’t stop. Go.

Jeremiel wanted to stay and fight as long as Connel did, but Sariel grabbed him. Azrael, Come on… don’t question him. He’s doing his job so we can do ours.






In the chaos of crossfire and retreating Omega Squad, Connel faced Saliss in the open, amidst a ruin choked with smoke, stone, and fire.

Saliss moved like liquid rage—dual sabers spinning with pinpoint violence. Connel is a wall of technique—shield absorbing blows when not thrown at and off of Sith attackers, sabers responding in minimalist counters, each movement precise, like poetry hardened into steel.

The battle was ferocious, Saliss channeling a storm of dark-side hate, projecting illusions of fallen comrades, mimicking Michael Angellus’ voice, his mother Chrysa Vanagor Chrysa Vanagor . He was a barrage of brutality and power, but he was fighting a losing battle against a Jedi of two disciplines. Connel pressed forward anyway, wounded, grimacing, not to kill—but to end the threat to his team.

At last—Saliss drove both sabers down, Connel caught them in an X block with his own sabers, locked them—and pulled him forward with a headbutt that cracked Saliss’ mask.

Connel just growled: Your master should’ve come himself.

In one brutal sequence, Connel sidestepped, spun his shortsaber into a reverse strike, and drove it into Saliss’ abdomen. Then he whispered:

Tell him… I’m coming.

And pulled the blade out sideways. Better yet, I’ll do it myself.

Saliss collapsed, gasping, staring at the forest canopy as it darkens. Connel was leaving, but not before pulling one of his Throwing Lightknives and jamming it into his chestplate. Not enough to pierce the skin, that deed was done, but so that someone will see it.






Omega Squad regrouped, dragging wounded, detonating charges behind them to halt Sith pursuit. The evac transports broke through the sky above, Alliance banners on their hulls.

Michael then spoke over comms: [Evac secured. Repeat—Takodana sector safe. Civilians inbound. Get us out.]

Connel staggered toward the ship last—limping, blood on his vambrace, but still standing.

Gabriel went quickly over to Connel to try to hold him up: That was a Sith apprentice?

Was.” Illicitus sent a whisper. Now he’s going to hear thunder.

He didn’t regret it. He didn’t waver. He remembered why he walks the shadows now—because someone must.







Aboard the Alliance medivac transport, high above Takodana. The cabin was dim. Civilians slept in bundled rows. Omega Squad was scattered—some getting patched up, others cleaning weapons in silence.

Connel sat alone in a utility hold just off the main corridor, legs planted, elbows on knees. His helmet rested beside him. His armor is scorched and smeared with ash. His knuckles raw. One lightknife still dangled from his belt, faintly glowing.

He looked down at the blood on his gauntlet—not his own. The door behind him slid open quietly.

Jeremiel just stood there and spoke softly: Heard he was Illicitus’ apprentice.

Connel didn’t look up. He was.

A beat.

And now he’s not.

Connel didn’t respond. The silence stretched. Eventually, Jer left him alone.






Connel then closed his eyes.

The sounds of war fade. In his mind’s eye, he saw Takodana before the flames—peaceful, green, teeming with life. And then… the Sith flags, the enslaved, the airfield full of death machines.

He replayed the duel in his head, over and over—not for doubt, but to study it. To know. Not every Jedi would have done what he did. He knows that. He then opened his eyes and spoke quietly to himself..

This isn’t the path I thought I’d walk. But it’s the one that needed walking.

He ran his fingers along the scorched edge of his shield—once a symbol of defense. Now, it bore gouges from red blades. Once his “safety” from having to use a lightsaber, it was now his “safety” protecting those closest.

I didn’t fall today… I didn’t stray… I stood… and I stopped him.

He thought of Michael, of Sariel’s cold focus, Azrael’s brutal fire, Jeremiel’s quiet strength, Gabriel’s tormented brilliance, Raphael’s grit.

They needed him to hold the line—and he did.

And he’ll do it again. Standing and speaking to himself more firmly.

I’m not the Guardian I was. But I guard just the same.

His gaze hardened. He reached for his helmet and pulled it back on—sealing in the resolve. As the ship hummed through hyperspace, a Shadow watched over it—scarred, silent, and unshakable.

Because the Jedi have peacekeepers.

But sometimes, the galaxy needs a sword drawn in silence.






Aboard a Sith Frigate Vox Tenebris, Orbiting Takodana amid a brimson ambient glow, rain streaked the observation windows. A silent chamber where light barely touched the dark.

The body of Darth Saliss lay at the center of the chamber—still armored, pale, blood now blackened against his robes. Sith guards knelt silently, heads bowed. The air smelled of incense, static, and the bitter tang of rage long since burned cold.

Darth Illicitus approached without a word. His cloak whispered against the floor like the edge of a guillotine. No one dared speak.

He knelt before Saliss’ body—his apprentice, his blade, his creature of shadow. He did not mourn.

But something was wrong.

Pinned to the center of Saliss’ chestplate—just over his heart—is a single object: a throwing Lightknife, elegantly crafted. Familiar.

He pulled it free slowly.

Etched into the hilt in an archaic Aurebesh script—a phrase that hadn’t been spoken since Kelada:

"Still standing."

And burned into the blade’s edge, so fine only a Sith could read it in the Force:

"You should have come yourself."

Illicitus studied the blade for several long seconds. Then he stood.

Darth Illicitus (quietly):
“Not a warning. Not a challenge.”

“A promise.”




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TAGS TAGS
Regular, [Comms], ~Through the Force~, Thinking
 

OBJ2: CITIZENS OF THE SITH ORDER
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WEARING:: Jacen’s Second Legion Armor
EQUIPMENT: DC-902d
HG-88 Hand Cannon
C-11 Combat Knife
LOCATION: :: TAKODANA - DEATHDROP ASSAULT ::
TAG:
Aiden Rennek Aiden Rennek Ashley Nevermore Ashley Nevermore
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To his left and right, as they breached the smoke, Jacen could see other Droppers advancing and firing upon the enemy. And when they fell, he saw that too. A hypocritical anger rose inside Jacen’s chest with each fallen comrade, despite the fact they were on the attacking side.

“Rush the wall!” He roared, pointing to the defensive structure, “Detpacks, blow it to hell!” He continued, bracing his rifle against his shoulder again as he prepared to return fire, but was interrupted as a frag grenade popped right in front of him. The concussive blast knocked Jacen on his ass, and the shrapnel peppered his armor, chipping chunks out of the protective layers.
“Oh chit,” he said quietly to himself as he regained his composure and rose back to his feet. He pulled a thermal detonator off of his chest and primed it, “Thermals, over the top!” he relayed. A couple of the droppers next to him nodded and pulled a thermal from their own chests each. And together, the three troopers chucked the thermals over the wall as they approached.

Jacen’s target was specific. He knew who he was aiming at: wherever that grenade came from. So, with a measured arm, he tried to toss the grenade approximately where he thought the shooter was. The other two, however, just blindly threw theirs. No consideration for a target they weren’t sure of it’s location, just causing mayhem and destruction.

After tossing the thermal, Jacen hustled towards the wall, closing the distance just as one of the demolitions troopers placed his detpack on the wall and withdrew. A few moments later, the detpack erupted, blowing material from the wall inside and out, billowing smoke. A triumphant cheer erupted from the scattered ranks of the DeathDrop troopers, all taking cover in small craters or behind rocks or fallen trees. All surrounding the base, similar teams would attempt to do the same thing. All hoping to create multiple breaches, overwhelm the Alliance position.

As the troopers surrounding this breach worked to take control of and push past the hole in the wall, Jacen lamented his regiments overall position in the military as First Strikers. This battle would be settled easily if an entire army could push through as quickly as his unit did. But, he thought, that’s what they were for.

People ‘expected’ them to survive but no one really counted on it. All across Takodana, DeathDrop deployed at similar locations such as this. Surely, some of them would be victorious, and some of them would be defeats. If even one was a success, no one cared if the entire regiment was wiped out as a result. The message had been sent, the mission was worth it.

If only one was to be the win? It was going to be this one.

Jacen sighted a pair of alliance troopers beginning to sight the advance. With a sneer, he raised his weapon and began firing at the position as he continued to advance towards the wall.

 
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Objective II: Takodana Lost
Operation: Crimson Echo
Agents in the Area: Davorin Orsava Davorin Orsava
Assets in the Area: Sons of the White Wolves, Order of the Golden Flame, The 14th Legion
Open to Engagement: Tags Open

  • Tasks:
    • Establish a foothold on Takodana. [√]
    • Eliminate the Galactic Alliance's presence.
    • Keep civilians safe and secure.
    • Reignite First Imperial identity among the population.
    • Aid the Sith if and when necessary to maintain optics.
  • Location:
    • Fort Tenebris: Serves as the primary Commonwealth foothold on Takodana, reactivated during Operation: Crimson Echo as both a strategic installation and a powerful symbol of First Imperial legacy.

      Overlooking the overgrown ruins of what is believed to be Maz Kanata's castle, the installation occupies a commanding position along the northern ridgeline, hidden amid dense forest and natural rock formations. The ruins of the castle remain visible from the command level, a silent monument to the region's wartime history.
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The scent of scorched moss clung to the air—faint yet cloying—a reminder that Takodana had never surrendered quietly. However many centuries had come and gone, battles had a way of carving themselves into the marrow of the land, and Ivalyn could feel its quiet resistance, a tremble beneath the boots of her vanguard. The soil itself seemed reluctant to forget.

She had arrived not moments earlier, her crimson-edged cloak flowing behind her like the standard of a returning sovereign, catching the wind with an almost ceremonial grace. Her armor—polished obsidian with burnished silver etchings—stood in stark contrast to the ancient stones and mossy ruins.

The 14th Legion formed a silent cordon, their visors gleaming with the light of dying embers. Among them moved the Golden Flame, already at work. Like liturgists tending the pyres of old, they moved softly over the ash-streaked stones, sanctifying what had been claimed with hushed rituals and solemn gestures.

She did not need to turn to know who approached.

"Orsava," she acknowledged, her voice modulated only slightly by the vocalizer embedded in her chestplate, its pitch refined to the low resonance of authority. "Your work was precise."

There was no ceremony in her tone, no flattery, only the surety of a commander who measured loyalty not in words but in deeds. Ivalyn did not bestow approval lightly, especially upon those honed in the shadow.

Her gaze remained fixed upon the distant treeline, where a thin mist, blue and spectral, curled around the shattered trunks like a final benediction of the dead.

"Tell me, Orsava," she continued, her tone clipped yet curious. "What does the Flame see here? Beneath the rot, beneath the myth of resistance and ruin?"

Only then did she turn, the full force of her gaze meeting his eye to eye, steel to shadow. A commander's stillness met the fervor that burned in him like a private conflagration.

"What lingers in this ground? What echoes in this forest?"

There was weight in her question, a gravity that reached beyond mere military gain. It was a question of memory—of legitimacy, of the inheritance of dominion itself.

She allowed the silence to stretch, then continued, her voice soft but edged with steel. "Around us, the Alliance seeks to rid the galaxy of Sith dominion, just as the Sith seek to lay waste to the Alliance." Her tone was almost elegiac, but there was a glint of calculation in her eyes. "The dogmas of the light and the dark have laid this world to waste, one creed of ruin replacing another."

She paused, waiting for Orsava to answer, as footsteps approached, a measured rhythm of armored boots. 217 arrived, helmet tucked beneath his arm, his bearing immaculate even in the ruined forest.

Beside him, a larger figure loomed, a man slightly older, broader of shoulder, the insignia of the Alpha of 217's unit emblazoned across his breastplate.

"We await your command, Pasha," the Alpha intoned, his voice a low baritone, respectful, but confident.

Ivalyn inclined her head in acknowledgment, then resumed her measured stride beside Orsava, her voice a low murmur as they moved. "These woods remember, Orsava. So must we."
 


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Takodana
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Tag: Aris Noble Aris Noble Nodak Nodak
Vera felt the snarl like thunder through glass. That pulse in the Force cracked at the edges as Nodak's voice slithered back into her mind, still simmering with the sting of her jab. It made her temples throb, made her thoughts buzz, but she held on. Jaw clenched, breath steady.

No. Not again. She shoved back. Not with a strike this time, but with focus — pulling tight around her mind like a closed fist, blocking the conduit as best she could. His voice dulled to a whisper at the edge of her hearing, still there, but caged.

She crouched then, brushing aside leaves and dirt with a sweep of her hand. Her fingers dragged quickly into the soil, drawing familiar lines — half circles, triangles, old inscriptions that still rang with power. Runes. Dad's runes.

"Dad taught me these," she said without looking up, her tone clipped as the first sigils began to glow faintly. Cold, blue-white, pulsing with frozen intent.

Then the Force screamed. Vera froze — not with fear, but certainty. Her head snapped up, eyes wide as danger flooded her senses. The whine of engines. The heavy roar of atmosphere splitting apart. "...Bomber," she whispered, already surging to her feet. Her hands shot out, and a blast of the Force erupted from her center — not violent, but controlled. Her runes, already etched, pulsed to life.

The air around them cracked, and a wave of frost exploded upward in arcs, turning dirt to permafrost, bark to ice — a glacial shield rising between them and the sky.

A moment later, the bombs fell.

Explosions rocked the woods around them — fire licking over the treetops, searing heat melting frost where it touched, but her shield held just long enough. Just enough to matter. She turned to Aris, panting now, the fire reflected in her eyes, "That's it," she said, her voice tight. "We can't wait. We can't outpace this. He's pushing us, cornering us."

Her hand shot out, grabbing his arm.

"We go to him."

No more visions. No more dancing around the edge. If Nodak wanted to see her, he would.

And he would regret it.



 



Wedge Draav came out of the sun. His X-wing howled, the markings unmistakeable to the Alliance forces. Not just Revenant Squadron- but the boss. Captain Draav and his black and orange X-wing-

The Commander of Revenant Squadron.

If anyone was going to help the Alliance, it was going to be him. He was the best for a reason. He didn't disobey orders and commands to remain where he was out of pride or vanity, or a desire to kill more Sith. It was a simple fact:

Wedge Draav was the best.

And the men and women on the ground deserved the best.

The Sith were pouring into the breach at the FOB, probing Alliance lines, assaulting, and doing quite well from his brief observations. Drop-pods and other transports came down in their attack posture. He came down at an axis of about forty degrees to their assault, diving first then leveling roughly fifty feet off the ground. He screamed against his oxygen mask, narrowing his eyes as his targeting vectors came up. His X-wing fired at the airborne targets, knocking a few enemy aircraft out, before he managed to fire off a few shots at the infantry on the ground.

His X-wing streaked across the sky, engines leaving a slight trail against the sky. He came up in a helix pattern, catching another enemy aircraft off-guard. The other pilots may have been good- but Wedge Draav was the best. He had not yet met his equal in combat. He screamed again, and then flipped on his comms, broadcasting to all local Alliance channels.

"This is Revenant Actual on station, ready for tasking. The skies are mine."






 
283rd Air-Assault Pathfinder Battalion


Objective Two

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The 283rd
Chapter Three: Death from Below and Above
Objective 2

Tags: Open.



"Entering engagement zone! Here they come!" barked the pilot over comms, voice distorted by static and barely contained panic. "Hel's balls! You cannot be serious, sir. We need to turn around."

"Stay on course," Major Lycus Merita growled into his headset. "This is the only feasible approach vector we have left. If these troops and ammo don't make it down there, it'll only be a matter of time before the perimeter is breached."

"But-" the pilot never got to finish the sentence. A flak shell erupted barely ten meters from their starboard, causing the entire gunship to shudder. Hypersonic fragments punched through the hull like it was tissue paper and erupted into the crew cabin. Lycus felt himself slammed so hard against the wall by the sudden jolt that the breath was driven from his lungs, and he blacked out for a split second.

He opened his eyes to a world of pain and screaming. Lycus tried to sit up. The first thing he saw was his staff sergeant, Kalin. Or what was left of him. The upper half of the sergeant was folded back at an unnatural angle, helmet split and visor blown out. A strip of flak or broken hull jutted from his neck like a broken wing.

One of his Chiss comms officers was slumped against the bulkhead with a smoking hole in his chest, the set's phone still clutched in his dismembered hand, lying several steps away.

Someone - was it Compton or Merik? - besides him moaned. Not a word, just a broken sound. The kind a dying person makes when they don't realize they're dying.

"Kriff," Major Merita swore, swiping the blood off his face. He stumbled forward to wrench open the Ziio's side doors. Wind howled into the compartment.

The sky around them burned with angry orange veins of anti-air fire. Hundreds of tracer lines strung the air like necklaces. Missiles whooped wildly, trailing hot brown smoke. Bright green lasers lanced out from hidden emplacements, splitting the air apart. Autocannons painted the skies with a leopard skin of black flak smoke.

One of his gunships was unlucky enough to be hit directly by a stray laser blast from the ground, causing it to spiral out of control, its engine block shredded, trailing smoke and bodies.

It was only getting thicker the lower they got.

And here they were, flying right into the mouth of hell. If Lycus swore that if he ever found out which egg-head back on Fort Basion authorized this mission, he would strangle them with his bare hands.

Suddenly, another Ziio began to splinter and fall apart, cascading flaming debris down into the forests below. Lycus's breath hitched. He hadn't seen anything from the ground, take it out. It looked like something had hit it dead side-on instead of the bottom or front.

A voice - Lycus wasn't sure whose - bawled over comms the conclusion he hoped against all hopes was wrong. "Interceptors! We've got faster movers amongst us!"

The dark shape of a Boreas Atmospheric Fighter blasted past Lycus, so fast he could have blinked and missed it, its cannons ripping apart another Alliance transport. Mere spots against the blazing sun at their backs, five more descended like carrion birds to decimate more of the formation.

"Don't just fly there!" Lycus screamed, "Shoot back!"

He pulled the dead body of the door gunner and gripped the handles of the chainlaser, wrenching the gun around to chase one of the interceptors. Snapped out of their stupefied state, the other Ziios quickly joined his fusillade.

The Boreas were viscous fighters. Feasting on the weak was their purpose. Individually, that was what the Alliance gunships were: prey. But a dozen of them in close protective formation? Different story. One of the fighters was caught in a killbox between two of them. Their composite beam lasers sectioned it into nice little slices.

Still, there were five more of them ripping them apart.

Lycus grabbed the phone from his dead comms officer, "This is Major Merita of the 283rd Pathfinders. We are under interceptor attack and ground anti-air fire. I need someone to be a broom and sweep my path to the LZ clean!"

 


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Outfit: Jedi Jumpsuit | Wedding Ring
Weapons: Blasters | Lightsabers

Valery felt the subtle tug of the Force an instant before it happened. Azzie vanished into the Force. Not in a blur of speed. Not in the practiced flicker of a Jedi trained to hide. No — she slipped into the folds of the world like water into cloth. Seamless and controlled. Gone.

Valery's eyes didn't widen. She didn't gasp. But her smirk curled at the edges, quiet and sharp.

"That's my girl."

She didn't follow with her own cloak. She could — the technique was etched into her bones from years in the shadows — but she didn't want to disappear. Not this time. No, Valery would stay exactly where she was. A visible target. A flare in the dark. She'd draw the eye, the anger, the blade of that cursed thing.

Let them focus on her.

The moment shattered like glass. Luka's presence shifted in the Force — a ripple that felt wrong, twisted and frantic. But the movement wasn't unfamiliar. Not to Valery. She had felt it countless times in her bond with Kahlil — a bending of space, the crack of sudden nearness. Luka jumped.

And Valery was already turning. Her feet slid across the wet soil, knees bent, body fluid and low — an elegant twist of speed and control. The corrupted saber came down like thunder. Valery's blade ignited in a burst of orange-white light, flaring up to catch the corrupted emerald as it screamed downward.

The impact rang through her arms like a gong. But she didn't counter — she didn't need to. Valery held. She locked Luka's blade against her own with brute strength wrapped in dancer's grace, one foot sliding forward into a low stance as she angled the lock — not just to bind the saber, but to keep Luka exactly where she wanted her.

Becayse Valery had felt it before she saw it — an arrow whistling down, aimed true. Allyson. Of course it was. Her smirk returned, just for a heartbeat, as she hoped it would reach her target.

If it didn't, she knew Azurine would strike true.






 


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Objective II - Takodana Lost

He had kept out of the fight for long enough. He had sat ruminating upon the command throne, even without sight, he could see clearly upon the battlefield as if it was a sprawling dejarik board. Already the skirmishers were well underway upon their tasks, the first vollies fired, as the first casualties fell.

Now it was time for the mainguard to come into the fray.

Out from the depths of quotidian darkness, inhabited only by speckles of light, the radiance of stars that even from great distance aegis displayed their forms here. Really, they proved the ultimate metaphor of this battle, of this very war, speckles of light, surrounded by the great vastness of the dark.

How long could they hope to hold?

Out from those depths, like the snapping hiss of a lightsabre drawn to battle, the first echelons of the Tsis'Kaar fleet emerged. In a stagnant boom, the Alliance would be forced to bear witness to an ancient collosus of a vessel, a class of ship that had not been seen since the days that the Sith had ruled the core, the Darr Itah-class Grand Battlecruiser was a foreboding sight, the victor of a hundred different battles, and despite its age, despite the scars that rang heavy along its hull, the sleek and slender juggernaut ever still sailed ever forward, lined over its armoured coils stood guns of every make and measure, straddling the line between hypervelocity cannons, to turbolasers, ion batteries, and missile launchers.

It may have been smaller in size than the Alliance Battlecruiser opposite.

But the old veteran had every expectation of victory.

For sailing at its flanks, dropping out of hyperspace to join the aging titan, a tritip of three Kaas-class Star Destroyers, folded into position, a barrelling steel tip, their engines burned in an antipathy to bring the enemy before them low. Joining them, much smaller vessels, but hardly to be underestimated, a task force of ten Arbite-class Cruisers, and ten Shikkar-class Corvettes had been brought together for this impending assault.

As Malum opened his masked eyes, gazing out across the battlefield.

A familiar presence, tugging herself onto the Force's currents. It had been some time since they had dueled... he hardly much appreciated when someone he thought he had killed returned. Such bite however had been restrained at the news of their elevation to the Jedi Council. At least then, it proved that their survival was not born of barest luck.

It meant, that this test of Sith assets, could have another goal as well.

Finishing old business.


"Deploy the fighters and bombers, target the transports behind the fleet, drag their attention towards the bees that sting their sides." Malum spoke, his words echoing along the line, from Venerandus, and spreading out to the rest of the fleet, as out from the mighty hangers of the Darr-Itah to the specialist made Arbites, squadrons of TIE-H Huntress-class Fighters, Locust-class Fighters, and Kzaevas-class Bombers deployed.

And began racing towards the Alliance battleline.

TLDR: Sith fleet emerges out of hyperspace and deploys starfighters to attack the Alliance fleet, focusing on the transports emerging between the fleet and planet.

Jonyna Si Jonyna Si Isoroku Spruance Isoroku Spruance

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A bomber now?

To send a bomber after a Jedi the saw in a vision, they had to be a higher ranking Sith then. Not just strong enough to see through her, but also in command? His expression tightened, but as the bombs fell there wasn't much room for debate on what to do next. They were targeted, they were known. Even as her barrier kept them safe, he was sure they were going to come back around if ordered to.

If they tried to run away.

He looked ahead, shutting his saber off as he instead reached over and lifted Vera up onto his back. He was the faster of the two. "We'll go full speed. Guide my steps." If he went as fast as he could, it'd work in a straight line and no interference. He was going to rely on her sight to make sure they didn't run into anything he'd trip on or fumble through.

Soon as she was ready, he was off in a full spring through what remained of the woods. If there was anything he could agree to, it was stopping this destruction at least.

Nodak Nodak | Vera Noble Vera Noble
 

The Bomber disappeared as quickly as it had arrived. Its bombs dropped, the forest below blanketed in fire. It had served its purpose.

Over comms it was relayed to Nodak that the payload had been delivered.

There was no response.

He felt Vera Noble Vera Noble 's mind close off to him. He didn't attempt to fight it. She was in control of the conduit, he was merely a passenger that had 'hitched a ride' after she had made contact through her visions.

Soon even the whisper of his voice would fade. He left the conduit. Their connection severing after the passenger chose to make his exit.

Atop the Spire Nodak could view the thick black smoke rising from the forest. Eyes narrowed. He'd watched as the Bomber appeared in the distance, dropped its load then passed over the spire and disappeared in the distance as the whine of engines dimmed signifying its departure.

Once that was done Nodak had retrieved the heavy shield he had set to one side before turning and disappearing from the pinnacle of the spire.

Descending, he would emerge at its base a short while later. He'd step into the open, his left arm shoulder the massive alchemized shield while his right remained empty; Nevermourne still clipped over his right hip. It would be just in time for Aris Noble Aris Noble to emerge from their journey through the forest with his sister on his back...

"Two of them."

...a guttural sound, he spoke to himself neither surprised nor indifferent to the revelation that he learned when he saw them.

Notable amongst his observation was how tall they were for humanoids. Aris would certainly be nearly the tallest in almost every room he entered yet the Monster still dwarfed him by almost a foot and a half.

He began moving towards them, every step he took causing the ground beneath his feet to shudder.
 
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Spitfire Soul, Heart of Gold
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Edge Of A Razor
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Outfit: Clothing/Armor | Glove | Right Arm | Talisman | Purple Bracelet
Weapons: Lightsaber 1 [x] | Lightsaber 2 [x] | Hook Swords

The damp air felt thick against Azzie's skin, the rain dripping down her horns and sticking her hair, clinging to her lashes. The scream of Luka's grief still echoed in her bones; the raw power in that wave had nearly knocked her off her feet. She'd slipped just beyond Luka's slash, the blade carving the air where she'd been a heartbeat before. For now, she was a ghost in the storm. Her heartbeat slowed, her senses sharpening, the Force threading her movements with silence.

Luka's aura churned around her like a maelstrom before she moved, almost desperate. Reaching out. There was a ragged edge to it, a plea that tangled itself into Azzie's senses and made her falter. The woman's hand had lifted, not in attack at first. She felt it like a pressure against her ribs, a strangled cry beneath the roar of the storm. The wave of darkness pressed close, but there was something jagged and aching inside it.

Azzie's fists clenched, her knuckles white on the hilts of her sabers. How dare she? Her thoughts snarled, her muscles trembling with the instinct to strike. After what she did to Aadihr. After she tore him down. After she treated him like nothing more than a broken tool, now she has the choobies act like none of that mattered? The bile of her anger rose fast and hot, but as the dull pain in her lower back reared its head again, she ground her teeth to shove it down. Her twin blades hummed at her sides, the song of them sharp in the stillness she had carved for herself.

No, people can change. It was a belief she held onto with a white-knuckled iron grip so often in her life, even if it grated against every wound torn open. They can regret and realize what they've done, even if it's too late to fix it. Yet, she couldn't trust herself to speak. Not when all she wanted to do was scream at Luka for everything she'd done.

She pulled at the Force, focusing on the subtle warmth of the orange crystal nestled in the heart of her lightsaber. It resonated with her, a steady hum against the chaos. It whispered of the strength to calm the storm. She let it surge outward, a pulse of influence that laced into the air, weaving through the tension. A gentle reminder to any listening heart that violence wasn't the only answer. She did her best to turn it toward Valery, bolstering her master's presence, sharpening her words.

"Her aura's conflicted... I think she might listen to you." She whispered on the wind as she brushed past Valery in her positioning herself.

That didn't mean she would stand idle, not when they were stronger together.

Her stance shifted as Luka lunged for the grandmaster. Azzie's knees bent, her body a coil of force and precision. She ducked low, pivoting on her back foot, then launched herself upward and around, both sabers whirling in a bright arc. At the same time as her body shimmered back into view, her left blade angled to knock Luka's saber high while her right swept in to slash at Luka's exposed side. Not to kill, but to force her back. Break her concentration and give Valery the opening she needed. The movements weren't as sharp or precise as she wanted, her body only just feeling near normal again after weeks of therapy, her balance just a shade off.

Time slowed as another couple of images from battle precognition flashed through her mind, sending waves of goosebumps across her skin. Another explosion was coming, but not in their direction exactly. Only pain would come of that—she felt the warning smack at the back of her mind. Her amethyst eyes flew wide, turning towards the ridge the body had been left at as she caught the flicker of Allyson's arrow streaking in from the treeline.

Oh kriffing hell, this won't be good...




 

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The moment her blade collided with Valery's, she felt the harmony of its restraint. The saber didn't dance or duel. It simply held. A trap. Then came a flash of warning, intent of a strike. Luka, still blade-locked with Valery, pulled out a wave of the force, shoving the Padawan—and a torn rift of dirt and stone of in the rough vicinity of her—away from the revenant.

That strike served as distraction, however. A searing scream of light whistled from the trees and the world tilted.

The bolt tore clean through the side of her neck. A perfect hole, cauterized at the edges. Her windpipe bisected, arteries fused shut by the heat.

The wounds hissed with the smell of burnt meat and ozone. Luka stood very still, then blinked away, back to a safe enough distance as she felt raw, harsh air entering her lungs - through the sides of her neck.

Her saber lowered. Her free hand rose to her throat. Fingertips brushed the edge of the hole, as if uncertain it existed. Her brow furrowed in confusion. As if she were adjusting a collar. Then she tore it open.

One fingernail nail slipped into the charred blackened edge and she peeled the flesh back, revealing the sealed ends of an artery.

She pinched both ends of the artery, slicing off the fused seal with precision. With a tremble of her fingers, thread-thin arcs of Force Lightning sparked between them—surgical, controlled. Ozone cut through the rain. Nerve endings hissed as she stitched flesh with power, reconnecting her jugular before the lack of oxygen rendered her unconscious - or the drop in blood pressure from opening the vein. The neck was as whole as she needed it to be. Not healed. Not natural. But functional.

Her breath rattled once through the sides of her neck. The smell of char still clung to her skin. Her fingers hovered near her throat, as if uncertain whether to press again or simply hold the pain in.

Then—a sound. A vibration. An arrow. Luka’s gaze jerked toward the forest's edge and Jo'Han was gone.

The explosion bloomed like a red flower. Thunder. Heat. Shattered stone and ragged flesh. Pieces—of cloth, of armor, of him—hurled into the air and vanished in the smoke.

There was nothing left to cradle. No voice in her mind. Not even a corpse. She stood, unmoving. A wisp of hair floated past her cheek. Ashes fell from the blast like petals.

Then her breath hitched. A single, ragged inhale—followed by a jagged, keening exhale that folded in on itself like a scream too wide for her throat, an outburst split into three vectors, with no larynx to give the pain voice.

She blinked to the crater, stumbled forward to her knees, hands out. Groping the air. Searching for anything that remained. A bone. A finger. Something.

Nothing.

They had taken him. They had tricked her. Valery had lured her here. Her apprentice, the Zabrak, used the boy's scent to give her false hope. Valery—Valery had held her. Kept her locked in place. Slowed her down, for the unseen hunter's shot. For the kill.

And the shot. The shot. That thing in the trees. It had been waiting. Not for Valery. Not for Azzie. For her.

This had always been a trap.

The vision was gone. Her brother’s voice—silenced. All that remained in her mind was static, pulsing in time with the storm outside. Her lips moved but no words came at first. Just a tremble. Then a whisper. Then a laugh
— a hollow exhale in bursts, a mirthless sound of nothing but air.

Luka snapped, sitting back on her heels, face turned upward, towards the falling rain. Detached. Crooked with grief and revelation. Her eyes burned—yellow and glassy, like a fever that couldn’t break.

Jo'Han’s broken saber ignited once again in her right hand. Her saberstaff ignited in her left. Three red beams that lit up a growing puddle in the crater, the epicenter of a blast that detached the last anchor Luka had.

She remained kneeling. Silent shudders of voiceless laughter picked up once more.


 
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Tag: Darth Malum of House Marr Darth Malum of House Marr Jonyna Si Jonyna Si
Objective 2

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He watched it advance across the holographic tactical display, engulfing everything in its path. It swallowed the viscous dagger-shaped Star Destroyers flanking it into its mass. Its enormity absorbed the myriad of cruisers and corvettes until there was nothing but a mass of blackness crashing across the cold, desolate void.

That beast was coming for them.

Spruance nervously swallowed, shoving his hand into his coat pocket so that the others wouldn't see it trembling.

The sheer displacement of that damnable Grand Battlecruiser nearly matched every single ship he had under his command. A singular broadside from its hypervelocity cannons would render half his Task Force nothing more than burning hulks in space, while his combined firepower would only strip its paint scheme off. And that wasn't to even mention its escorts. Maybe his fleet could have taken on one of them, two if they played things close to the chest—but three backed up by twenty murderous Kainite vessels?

This isn't the first time you've faced odds like this. We stared down the monster that was the Mon Mors and came out of it, didn't we? Spruance tried to lie to himself. He couldn't. The Dreadnought had barely noticed his Task Force when it ruthlessly murdered nearly every single member. Still empty entries on his fleet roster paid testament to the carnage it had wrought.

They should have stayed in the shipyard longer, but had been forced to sally out in this state the moment they received news that the Sith offensive had finally reached Takodana. Alliance reserves were starting to run dry. Third-rate forces such as his were being chewed, spit out, and yet still thrown back into the meatgrinder because there was nothing else left to throw. Naval cadets were shipped off years before their graduation. Brigs were being emptied, prisoners given the option to rot for the rest of their lives or redeem themselves in the cold void. And disgraced officers like himself were told to die with honor lest they come home to humiliation.

The bleeding had to stop.

That was why he couldn't bring himself to order the retreat. The few experienced troops they had left in this sector had to get out to carry on the fight where it mattered. In the face of these facts, his Task Force were considered expendable to high command and, to be honest, to Spruance himself.

Freedom was not free. Its tree was to be watered with the blood of martyrs and tyrants.

For that end, Spruance had brought everything his paltry Task Force could muster.

His flagship, the Courageous-Class Star Destroyer Vanguard, still bore the evident scars of that encounter. Spare armor plating had been hastily welded onto gaping holes where superheavy cannons had punched through meters of deck plating. One of his main guns remained missing, its housing shorn clean off by a mere glancing blow from the Penumbra's eldritch energies.

Flanking the Vanguard were the twin sister ships Radiance and Admonisher. Courtesy of Aether Systems, the Blissex-class Assault Frigate stood out against the rest of that venerable shipyard's elegant catalogue. For good reason. What they lacked in aesthetics, they more than made up for with a viscous bite and thick hide that allowed them to stand up to far larger ships they had no right to go toe-to-toe with.

Forming a picket line before him were Taffy 2.2 and 2.3. Their ranks having been decimated at Woostri, Spruance had been given no choice but to lie, beg, and — under certain readings of Alliance law — steal a quadruplet of Kota corvettes that had been destined for the scrap heap. Their outdated hulls had been crammed full of fresh cadets from the navy. He could only hope that the veteran survivors of the last battle could more than make up for the shortcomings of their green newcomers. The Belarus Medium Cruisers Mantua's Law and Somnambulist led the vanguard, the Trandoshian Captain of the latter having made good on his promise to a Kainate captain over Woostri to mount her skull on the ship's bow.

Already, their turbolasers were locking onto and the crew bracing against the incoming locust scourge.

Right behind them was the Tython-class Fleet Carrier Promethean Doctrine with her escort frigates Righteous Indignation and Truth and Reconciliation forming Taffy 3. While they had performed admirably enough against the onslaught of Sith starfighters, some individuals in high command thought otherwise. Their former Captain's defection to the Dark Empire during their opening offensive was never forgiven. The defeat over Woostri seemed to prove valid previous suspicions. Several officers and dozens of crew had been detained, pending interrogation by the SIA into their true loyalties. Somehow, Alliance bureaucracy could be even more devastating than a superlaser tearing through your ranks.

As he watched hundreds of tiny dots pour out of the carrier to cover the screening force, Spruance could only pray that the new starfighters he had scrounged up would compensate for the loss of so many veteran personnel.

And they weren't alone.

The Dawn of Hope stood steady at their rear. It felt good to be finally back-up that didn't come with the Admiralty's burning gaze of judgement. Even though they were light-seconds away, the mere knowledge that there was a Jedi Master in their presence seemed to uplift the waning morale of his crew. Most of them were improvised recruits from the Alliance's frontiers, where the only Jedi presence they knew was fuzzy images on the HoloTVs and tall tales of monastic warriors defending the weak. A sense of invincibility began to creep into them. Surely one of the Jedi's most powerful wouldn't let harm befall them? Surely their childhood heroes would protect them?

Spruance let them keep their hopes. They would need it for the hell they were about to enter.

"Open up a line of communication with the Dawn of Hope's commanding officer."

"Yessir."

"Master Si, I would offer better greetings, but circumstances prevent me from doing so. It should already have transferred into your databanks, but the sensor readings I'm getting aren't good. I can maybe stalemate that incoming starfighter wave, but I have no answer to that blasted Battlecruiser of theirs. If we can prevent it from engaging in close combat and keep it at arm's length, we might have a chance to last long enough to get those transports out. I am already deploying my fighters and cruisers to screen them out," he paused. "In the light of the fact that you both command the larger fleet and seniority, I am offering to place my Task Force under your nominal disposal. We only need to defend, but I caution against remaining passive and allowing them to dictate the terms."

The Task Force places itself as a blocking force against the incoming fighters. Taffy 2.1 and 2.2 move into screening positions while the Vanguard and Promethean Doctrine scramble their starfighter complement in support. Spurnace offers Jonyana supreme command. He suggests a defensive posture for now, but not to remain passive.

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TAG: Drystan Creed Drystan Creed

Adean's brow furrowed as she came across the locked door. She wasn't so bold as to expect every door to be open to her, nor did she think that thought process would be expected of her borrowed name. Still, there was something off about this block, something she couldn't quite place.

As the communication opened, relief should've washed over her with the Junior Tech's explanation. Stars, a month ago, the only thing that would've stopped her from apologizing profusely was the role she currently played. But as time passed, her awareness of how the order operated grew.

The voice on the other end was compelling on its own. Shaky, to be expected without knowing who was on the other side of the door, but confident. That on its own wasn't suspicious. What compelled the nagging feeling in Adean's gut was an understanding that routine maintenance had already commenced, its schedule altered by the same goings on that had instigated her own assignment.

Someone was lying.

What they were lying about, however, she didn't know. Perhaps they'd made an error and were scrambling to correct it before it was flagged. Or perhaps they needed a moment out from under the gaze of their superiors. Whatever the reason, Adean could sympathize.

Brassius, however...

She chose her words and tone carefully as a carefully manicured finger selected the button on her own side. "This is Agent Zambrano of the Tsis'kar. Open this door, technician, I have business with this data."

Firm, detached, and not unnecessarily cruel. Just establish her jurisdiction and hope the junior technician chose not to make this more difficult than it needed to be.

 
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FRIENDLY FORCES: Isoroku Spruance Isoroku Spruance
SITH FLEET: Darth Malum of House Marr Darth Malum of House Marr

She could feel it.

Malum.

It was an unmistakable presence. The man who gave her the stab through her chest, and the man who seemed to want nothing more than the glory of laying claim to her corpse.

He'd never get that.

Instinctively, she gripped the blaster at her hip. The crystal could feel it too. A purified kyber that winced at his arrival. She could only calm it's nerves as she tried to calm her own.

"Ma'am, we've got an incoming message from taskforce Spruance."

A deep breath, before she motioned to the comms officer. Behind her, she motioned for the Vice Admiral to handle the discussion. She didn't technically have the authority to issue orders to a fellow GADF commander.

"Master Si, I would offer better greetings, but circumstances prevent me from doing so. It should already have transferred into your databanks, but the sensor readings I'm getting aren't good. I can maybe stalemate that incoming starfighter wave, but I have no answer to that blasted Battlecruiser of theirs. If we can prevent it from engaging in close combat and keep it at arm's length, we might have a chance to last long enough to get those transports out. I am already deploying my fighters and cruisers to screen them out," he paused. "In the light of the fact that you both command the larger fleet and seniority, I am offering to place my Task Force under your nominal disposal. We only need to defend, but I caution against remaining passive and allowing them to dictate the terms."

"Captain, this is Vice Admiral Zoro Igala. Orders will follow."

The Vice Admiral, a staunch Cathar male, looked to Jonyna, nodding as to motion her to consider a plan.

Jonyna could only think back to Zash and the Mon Calamari Commander she had fought alongside. What would they do? She looked across the holo-screens at her dash. Play to your strengths.

"Tell the task force to hold position, deal with the fighters. Send our CAP to assist. The LionXs should be able to outmaneuver the enemy Ties. Tell the Lifelight to send out Claymore to hunt down those bombers."

"Aye, ma'am. Spurance, you heard them. We'll deal with the heavy ships, you focus on keeping the transports clear. Focus on your WolfXs, and acting as a bulwark. I don't want a single transport down."

Jonyna shifted her focus. Play to your strengths. What did she have?

She knew they didn't have a chance to take out those battlecruisers or Star Destroyers. She wouldn't risk it.

But she could force a retreat if...

"Zoro, I want the Astrocats to focus fire on the corvettes. The more of their fleet we knock out one by one, the more the sith will reconsider the engagement. Have the Venators work with them, Thunderer Batteries both Ion and Turbolaser, in sequence. Kill their shields, then hammer them with the capital guns. Have the Lifelight engage the Battlecruiser as a stalling maneuver."

"Aye! Vice Admiral Igala to Lifeline, engage full shields, and open fire on that battlecruiser. Keep their attention! Send out Claymore with the other fighters to hunt down those bombers! Red Six, have your compliment open fire on those corvettes. Work your way up in ship size, and coordinate with Blazing and Shining. Get to work people!"

Without skipping a beat, the Alliance's Relief Fleet pushed to battlestations.

First came the fighters. Just over 150 of the Alliance's new top of the line LionX fighters pushed in, raining down on the sith attackers with a speed unmatched. Next, out of the Lifeline, the B-Wings pushed in, almost immediately opening fire with their longer range Turbolasers, designed to fire across space at targets most would assume out of reach.

The Lifeline itself opened up at the forward of the formation, it's super heavy turbolasers rocking the superstructure every time they fired, aimed at the aged battlecruiser across from it.

Far in the back, three Astrocat frigates sat in waiting. Out of the dark, twelve Thunderer barrels rocked, firing hundreds of kilometers away, at the chosen target. A corvette that had broken formation for just a second, long enough for the two Venators to open up on it with those same super-heavy ion cannons the Lifeline had.

One by one. That was Jonyna's plan. Knock the darkness out of the sky, one ship at a time.


 
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//: Objective II //:
//: Valery Noble Valery Noble //:
//: Azurine Varek Azurine Varek //: Luka Felcado Luka Felcado //:
//: Attire //:
Equipment in Sig
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Both arrows hit their intended targets. Allyson had felt the area shake around them as the explosion did what it was meant to do. Whatever she had just attacked seemed to have meant enough to the corpse woman that she turned and disregarded Valery and the hidden Padawan. The tension in her stance shifted as she had witnessed only moments before the woman stitching and pinching the wound on her neck.

Allyson stood in the middle of the clearing, in full view of the Jedi and the risen corpse woman. Her bow lowered momentarily as she watched the banshee gasp in what could only be seen as a laugh. What was she? Why was she dragging the headless body with her? There are too many questions to ask now after Allyson has destroyed the dead weight.

"Why do you have weird chit always following you, Val," Allyson said with a slight chuckle.

She raised her bow again, fully visible to the three others in the clearing. The same glove hand anchored on the arrow rest for a moment as another bolt of energy began to form from its fingertips. Drawing back, the energy shaft began to pulse, crackling as the rain continued to fall.

Maybe it was a good thing the rain had started. The fires from the explosions were dying, leaving only debris and silence behind.

Allyson stood still, surrounded by the damage. She hated the rain. It reminded her of being left out in the cold by people she once trusted.

Her eyes focused on the woman on her knees. A brief hint of guilt plagued the Corellian, yet it was gone as quickly as it came. The woman was in her way, an obstacle that needed to be dealt with before she could handle what she came for.

Allyson had wasted enough time with this distraction. She said nothing as the plasma energy bolt fired aimed at the silent banshee's forehead.

She wondered if the Jedi would interfere if they would want to take pity on the creature on her knees. It would be in their doctorate to find lost souls and bring them back to the light.

Help them find peace.

But the galaxy and everyone in it knew that was a lie.

The bow lowered to her side as Allyson watched the bolt sing through the air like lightning in the storm.

Hopefully, this was the end of the hag's tiresome existence.
 

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