Star Wars Roleplay: Chaos

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Campaign Feast of the Fallen || The Iron Covenant


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Amidst the fire and steel of war, the storm must eventually break. During such periods of rest, mirth and revelry aplenty are commonplace. Yet in the wake of the Battle of Humbarine, the collective mood within the battered Mythos Fleet is far more somber. What would have otherwise been an occasion for merriment and diversion, stands as a time for remembrance and honor for the fallen.

As the fleet repairs and recouperates in the dead of space, a call goes out to all who stand able and willing to gather. The holographic form of Kjartan Hammer-hand stands before one and all; a symbol of the battered resolve of the fleet by virtue of his own wounds plain for all to see - including a mechanical fore-arm replacing his left appendage of flesh and bone.

“To all brothers and sisters in arms, we stand united - even after the assault on Humbarine. It remains to be seen what fruit our sacrifices shall bear, for the losses we’ve all suffered are great.” Kjartan paused, allowing his words to sink in to his fleet-wide audience. “Regardless of the impact our actions have on our greater campaign - we are iron-forged. Man or woman, we are Mandalorians - we do not falter when we are struck down, nor do we cower in fear when we meet a worthy foe. We rise again, harder and stronger until either we or our foe meet their end.” Despite the craggy demeanor in which he started, along with the obvious wounds that altered his gestures; a fire was present within the Warlord’s eyes, which carried through his voice. His words carried an intensity that shone through the holographic display, yet it pulled back for a beat as though a tentative wave preceding the rising tide.

“Even still, there is no weakness in remembering or mourning the fallen, for although they died with honor on the field of battle, they are our brothers and sisters.” Just as quickly as his tone abated, it began rising again as he grasped a tankard with his right hand. “We shall mourn, and we shall heal. But let us remember the fallen as they would have wished for us to.” He raised his mug in salute. “...that the living shall carry on in life to honor their memory. You’re invited to a feast aboard the Buurenaar’gam, where we shall celebrate the lives of those we have lost. We shall drink, eat, and if our hearts allow - be merry in the songs to be sung in their honor.

Vode An.


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OBJECTIVE I - THE HAMMER-HAND’S HALL

Although a massive ship of war, the Buurenaar’gam houses an impressive ale hall in tribute to its commander - Kjartan Hammer-hand. Today, the Mando’ade gather to eat, drink, and remember their fallen brethren in song and what mirth can be had in the aftermath of battle.

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OBJECTIVE II - THE REKAV’DRAL MOOT

In the wake of the Battle of Humbarine, the Rekav’dral counsel convenes in private conference aboard the Buurenaar’gam amidst the ongoing festivities - a meeting of great import that shall affect the greater campaign that lies before them. Lessons learned, mistakes to be corrected, and new directions that lie beyond the horizon.

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In all honesty, Gel Karn Gel Karn wasn't sure how much he felt like celebrating.

Yes, he was still alive at the end of the day. Yes, he had managed to escape that accursed planet Humbarine thanks to the efforts of Jericho Dragr Jericho Dragr and his squad. Yes, he had avoided the worst that the Sith had had to offer during the battle. Still, between what Gel had seen during the fighting and those who had been killed during it, the events of the battle had stayed with him, and he just couldn't seem to shake the feelings of shame and horror that he had experienced, especially that flashback that had come to him when he had tried to escape the roof of the apartment building with Isk.

Actually, that reminded him. He had yet to properly thank Isk for saving his life, and he intended to forge them some kind of thank you gift. Maybe a new set of armor? Perhaps a weapon of some sort? Honestly, it would probably take a while to finish the gift for Isk, so perhaps Gel should skip the party entirely and get to work aboard the ship's forge, right?

Gel sighed to himself as he debated what to do. No, he shouldn't skip out on the party that his brothers and sisters were holding. After all, he was a member of the Iron Covenant, and his compatriots had gone through all this trouble to honor the fallen and celebrate the living. Not attending would be more disrespectful than anything else, especially considering the efforts that everyone had gone through to have this party. Plus, it might be a good chance for Gel to make some new friends and meet some new people, as Gel still had yet to really get to know everyone within the Covenant.

Despite his misgivings, he decided to make his mind up. He would attend the party, and dammit, he would have a good time no matter what! Gel somewhat awkwardly entered the party chamber as he started to scan around for any familiar face that he might already know...

 
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The hologram flickered to life on one of the seats around the table.

"Gentlemen." came his tinny greeting. "Nag synched with the rest of the Fleet and we're on our way to link up with you, so hopefully Nag and I will see y'all soon in person." Static rippled through the holo for a moment.

"Anyway, on to more pressing things." Vren then went on, voice sounding like the other end of the tunnel for a moment. "I received the initial reports Siv Dragr submitted along with yours Romul. Hammer-hand, I understand from some of them that you secured some intel at great cost to you and your men. Partner, that sacrifice will not go unanswered in any capacity, I assure you." He let the words hang. "And I understand you brought us great honour in stalling a great adversary, Carduul?"

It pained him that he couldn't be there with the rest of them. It had all happened so quickly - he couldn't wrap things up on Kestri fast enough before things went south. Not to mention, the search for Zavar Kelborn Zavar Kelborn continued and had to be given attention to. Someone had to make sure that their vode was found and Vren was the only one with enough freedom in his daily to manage.

He was torn in two once again. Sometimes he wished there were two of him.

Alas.

After another ripple through the projection, he spoke up again as he looked at them all.
"What else have we learned that you didn't have time to share about the unplanned amount of Sith on Humbarine?"

His old instinct told him there was more to what happened than the initial surface reports.

 

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MYTHOS FLEET | BUUREENAAR’GAM COUNCIL CHAMBER
OBJECTIVE II: THE REKAV’DRAL MOOT
TAG: Vren Rook Vren Rook | Carduul Akahl Carduul Akahl | Romul Saxon Romul Saxon
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KJARTAN HAMMER-HAND

It had only been a few days, and yet Kjartan hated it. He had already slapped himself in the face half a dozen times as he tried to use his newfound limb to drink from a tankard. His beard smelled of ale, which was not altogether an uncommon scent upon the man. Yet he usually smelled of ale because he was drinking it - not spilling it on himself like a half-soused Gammorrean. But Kjartan was a stubborn man, and knew despite his hatred of the contraption that it was the best alternative available to him, save for just abiding a stump and living life without his left arm.

Gel Karn Gel Karn offered his considerable talents in the forge to make the device for the Warlord, and despite Kjartan’s ill-temper, it was well made and quite serviceable. He knew well that the situation couldn’t be helped, and he’d just have to ‘suck it up’ and use it until the limb felt as much a part of his body as his natural arm did. But that meant embracing the embarrassing moments and mistakes until that time came. For now, most of his crew and kin had the grace to allow for his clumsiness... but he knew it’d be short lived. Hell, put a few drinks into Vara Rasha Vara Rasha or Yuri Maji Yuri Maji and the pair of dogs would probably try to make him hit himself with it.

But for now, the old pirate would have more magnanimous company around him. He was summoned to join a meeting of the Rekav’dral - the ruling body of the Iron Covenant. As the Alor of the Buureenaar’gam, his presence within the meeting would not be unheard of - yet even still, he was unsure what to expect. Perhaps the body wished for his counsel on how to proceed in the aftermath of Humbarine, or they wished for a direct accounting of why their invasion met such surprising resistance.

Whatever the case, he was en route to answer their summons adorned in his freshly polished armor which bore fresh scars despite its clean appearance. He had come a long way since forsaking his wayward life as a pirate and renewing his dedication to the kin he had left behind. During that time, submitting himself to the authority of others would have been laughable. Yet the situation now was different.

He was no mere mercenary, or penitent pirate looking to erase his past in exchange for his talents. He had already made his peace and paid his debt to society (which ironically was a similar transaction of absolution for aid). He was a part of something that gave both he and his daughter renewed purpose. Kjartan was no longer a raider seeking to pillage whatever wasn’t nailed down, but a protector that his people needed now; probably more so than they ever needed him before.

So it was that he entered the council room - a vast chamber made and used for war councils and meetings of import amongst his officers. But today, it would serve as the council chamber of the leaders of his people. He nodded respectfully to both Romul and Carduul. Alore.” He said little else, for that singular word was enough. While Kjartan was a leader among his men and people, the other two men were equally if not more so worthy of the word as well. While the Iron Covenant did not believe in the concept of a singular Mand’alor, if there was a man who could be regarded as such, it would likely be Romul Saxon. The man was among the original founders of the Enclave that was, and had fought many battles to preserve their people in the aftermath of Mandalore’s destruction.

Then there was Carduul - a man who had actually claimed the title of Mand’alor among a resurgence of the Neo Crusaders. At first, Carduul was but another pretender to the title in Kjartan’s eyes, even before the pirate had grown more observant in the Enclave’s ideology. During his years as a raider, Kjartan held no obligation to answer any such Mand'alor's call - which probably said more about him than any of those who claimed the title.

But in the time that followed, Kjartan had come to view the Neo Crusader differently. The two men were nothing alike to be sure; where Carduul was a warrior of singular vision with a purpose behind it, Kjartan always was an agent of chaos; a rebel without a cause. Although he was largely tamed, Kjartan remained an unpredictable and peculiar Mandalorian by all accounts; known to be a man who followed his own hyperlanes when everything was said and done. Yet the two men were alike in many ways, something that Kjartan had come to appreciate as of late. They both were charismatic, veritable leaders who inspired those around them. They both were masters in their own right; fearsome warriors who could anchor an offensive where all else would fail.

While Kjartan could not speak for Carduul; for his part, he held a sincere respect for the “Neo Mand’alor”, and honored him thusly. After the Warlord took his place alongside the other two men, the holo display would come to life.

"Gentlemen." came his tinny greeting. "Nag synched with the rest of the Fleet and we're on our way to link up with you, so hopefully Nag and I will see y'all soon in person." Static rippled through the holo for a moment.

"Anyway, on to more pressing things." Vren then went on, voice sounding like the other end of the tunnel for a moment. "I received the initial reports Siv Dragr submitted along with yours Romul. Hammer-hand, I understand from some of them that you secured some intel at great cost to you and your men. Partner, that sacrifice will not go unanswered in any capacity, I assure you." He let the words hang. "And I understand you brought us great honour in stalling a great adversary, Carduul?"

It pained him that he couldn't be there with the rest of them. It had all happened so quickly - he couldn't wrap things up on Kestri fast enough before things went south. Not to mention, the search for Zavar Kelborn Zavar Kelborn Zavar Kelborn Zavar Kelborn continued and had to be given attention to. Someone had to make sure that their vode was found and Vren was the only one with enough freedom in his daily to manage.

He was torn in two once again. Sometimes he wished there were two of him.

Alas.

After another ripple through the projection, he spoke up again as he looked at them all.
"What else have we learned that you didn't have time to share about the unplanned amount of Sith on Humbarine?"

For a prolonged moment, Kjartan remained silent. He did not expect for his contributions to be mentioned with what appeared to be... respectful recognition. As evidenced by his arm, his frustrations were still very fresh over the whole ordeal, and he largely viewed it as a failure in many ways despite the valid successes Vren mentioned. He inclined his head at the accolades, and after pausing a moment for the others, spoke up.

“You honor me and my men Alor. We did only what needed to be done.” A somberness peppered his words, with the faintest hint of guilt in his heart. Yet Kjartan was made of stern enough stuff to carry on with the second half of Vren’s request. “I’m unsure what Romul or Carduul included in their reports, but for my part - the battle was altogether odd.” He almost reached for his beard with his left arm, by force of habit; yet checked the motion given his desire to not punch himself in the face, and instead used his right arm. “There were mercenary vessels that appeared at the seeming right time while we assaulted the Imperial blockade, and the Sith I personally fought... seemed far different than what I would have expected from those of the Dark Empire.”

His hand stroked his beard and his lips pursed pensively. “I’m just an old pirate, but my gut is telling me there’s more that lies beneath. The data we secured from the Spirit Breaker was odd for a garrison commander... It felt more like information someone who planned to flee would possess. Patrol routes, and an Imperial cache of supplies and material. My intuition is telling me we need to look into it further, perhaps even raid the cache. See what can be learned. Worst case, we get more supplies for our campaign.”

He shrugged and placed his mechanical limb on the table - albeit a bit too forcefully. He closed his eyes and fractionally shook his head in half-embarressment, then opened with an apologetic look to them all.

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W A R M A S T E R
Mythos Fleet, Deep Space

[] Mythos Fleet Respite []​

Tag: Kjartan Hammer-Hand Kjartan Hammer-Hand | Vren Rook Vren Rook | Carduul Akahl Carduul Akahl

Romul's wounds and body trauma from Humbarine had, for the most part, healed. But one image did not leave his mind, waking or asleep. The Dha'naast. He did not know if Darth Carnifex Darth Carnifex had survived Humbarine, though everything should have indicated that he -- or at least, his lizard -- had perished in the orbital strike. But a certain instinct kept Romul weary.

The Rekav'dral sat in fewer numbers than before. Zavar Kelborn Zavar Kelborn was unaccounted for, a problem that had quickly become apparent, but with events moving so quickly -- Seswenna, then the emergency operation on Humbarine -- the council had not been able to address it. Meanwhile, the Mythos Fleet hurt without the leadership of the Tra'verde. This had to be rectified.

Romul shifted uncomfortably in a chair too small to contain his bulk, sitting at the Rekav'drals improvised round table. Many Ha'rangir-class Star Destroyers bore small adjustments and modifications, one from each other, as the Clan or group that inhabited it turned it into their own home. Romul was especially impressed by the Buureenaar'gam's massive planning room, including the transparisteel window that gave a marvellous view of the core of the spiralling Galactic Core behind them. It was appropriately thematic for what the council had to discuss; and Romul filed away a mental note to have something similar installed in the Gra'tua Dral. How prescient that it was going through repairs.

"There is something more," Romul rumbled. He was no politician, and neither were any of the Rekav'dral. All intelligence he had he shared freely. " Darth Carnifex was present. Per Dragr's report, Srina Talon was present. The Dark Lord and Empress of the Blackwall present on some fringe Imperial world -- that's an anomaly of enormous propoportions." He shifted again. The chair creaked under the strain of his weight. He pressed a button on the holotable and the image of a massive battlecruiser, scans recorded in the engagement over Humbarine, was projected in a still, slowly rotating image. "These ships are of explicit Sith allegiance, unaffiliated with whatever Imperial force controlled Humbarine. But they were able to respond quickly enough and with such a projection of force. This is not some small Sith group." The image transitioned to the insignia that was emblazoned on the battlecruiser's hull. It was of distinct Sith design, yet unlike the insignias of the Sith Order that hid behind the black wall. "We thought that the Sith Order was alone in the galaxy. We were wrong; there is a Sith power unaccounted for."
 




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HAMMER-HAND'S HALL
TAG: Gel Karn Gel Karn

"The Clan is wounded, but we survive, Alor," Devon said, speaking to him via hololink from their secluded sanctuary, "Four have died, another dozen wounded, 7 seriously so. Unknown whether two more will survive the week. Humbarine was costly for us, but we'll recover. We await your return to us for the rites."

"Keep me updated with any changes. I'll let you know what our plan is soon," Brent replied, closing down the connection. While Brent had traveled back to the Mythos Fleet, the rest of the Clan had gone back to their home world, preparing funeral rites that Clan Warnel, especially Brent, would need to follow so their spirits traveled to the Manda.

Brent stared at the empty air where Devon had just been, fingers laced together, thinking of Humbarine. Too many of their fledgling Clan had paid with their lives and bodies due to the war. A simple recon mission had been devastating, but that was the unfortunate consequence of war. It didn't always go your way. Brent knew that better than most, and he had stark reminders of it this time. Not only with the death of his Clan members, but with his own wounds. The lacerations, concussions, and overall bodily damage was nowhere close to healing. But he didn't care about that, his wounds would mend with time, the only thing he cared about were his dead vode.

It was his call to join the Covenant, and now one of the first missions had cost Clan Warnel more lives than anything else since their inception. No one had blamed him for the deaths, or for his choice in joining the Covenant. They were Mandalorian, fighting and dying was their way of life, but it felt different now that he was the head of his Clan. Following orders and killing was easy; having others die because of your orders, especially your own Clan, was hard. But it was the cost of leadership, and he would have to bear it.

A gathering was taking place in the Hammer-Hand's Hall, and Brent would go, joining the other vode to drink and remember.

"K!" Brent yelled out to HK-93, but there was no reply.

"K!"

What was that droid doing? Brent stood up from the chair he was sitting in, in the Hawk's cockpit, turning around to walk further into the ship. As Brent turned, he let out an involuntary, "Ah!" as HK-93 stood nearly face to face with him, somehow silently entering the cockpit.

"Statement: You called."

"By the Manda, K, can you at least announce yourself next time?"

"Observation: Announcing oneself makes assassination harder."

Brent stared at the droid, his head canting to the side as he gazed into the glowing red eyes.

"Right. Well, uh, I'm heading into the Hammer-Hand's hall. I'll be back soon. Keep working on the scanners, please."

"Observation: If you fail to return promptly, I will assume you have either been detained, betrayed, or killed."

Brent's mouth opened and his eyebrows raised as he thought about his reply, before just shaking his head and walking around the droid.

"Addendum: While you are occupied with Hammer-Hand and whatever complications inevitably follow your presence, I shall also inspect the ship's defensive systems."

"Sure, K. Go wild," Brent said dismissively as he left the cockpit and ventured into the ship


****

Brent ducked his head through the bulkhead door as he stepped into the hall. Many Mando'ade were already in the hall, some drinking and laughing, talking and cheering. Others had their heads bowed, seemingly in quiet contemplation. Brent wished he had the mirth some of those around him were showing, but he was still drained from the fight and the aftermath. He was also still feeling the weight of what he believed was his failure as a leader. Of those vode who were inside, Brent did not immediately see any he recognized.

Brent looked for Iris Beroya Iris Beroya , the one he owed more than a handful of ale, but did not see her armor. He hoped she would come, as he did not believe he had rightfully thanked her for her actions on Humbarine.

His armor, however, pinged the ident of Gel Karn Gel Karn amongst the crowd. While Brent did not know the other man well, they were both part of the Recon element stranded on Humbarine. Brent didn't know what Gel had gone through to get out of there, but he could imagine an ale or two would go a long way for him to start to settle down.

Brent stalked over to the other man, holding two flagons of ale he had collected, and set one down on a table next to him.

"Ni su'cuyi, gar kyr'adyc, ni partayli, gar darasuum: Balor, Yal'ret, Hale, Nirvan.
For those we lost," Brent said as he drank from his tankard before addressing Gel properly, "It's good to see you alive, brother. I didn't think any of us would leave that place."


 
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G U N S L I N G E R

Tag: Gel Karn Gel Karn | Sahan Dragr Sahan Dragr | Jericho Dragr Jericho Dragr | OPEN

Siv limped his way through the unfamiliar corridors of the massive Star Destroyer, wincing slightly with every step. He'd been in a medically-induced coma since being evac'ed from Humbarine, and only a day ago had finally woken up. Medic still mandated that he spend several hours a day in the bacta tank as his body continued to heal, but at least he could move. That was good.

Just about every part of him was sore. Worse was his armor. The beskar plating was intact -- anything able to damage that would've meant his death, surely -- but everything else was fried. Electronics and mechanical systems were completely gone. The armor that Siv wore, battered as it was, was barely more than a beskar shell. Better than nothing, but he needed it back and better than before.

Siv did his best to push through the crowded hall, or better, the crowded hall pushed through him. Several vode bumped into him, Siv too slow to move out of their way, but they merely nodded and moved on. Enough courtesy to prevent a brawl, though Siv was in no condition mentally or physically to start one. He was thirsty, though. He doffed his helmet and grabbed a pint of ne'tra gal sitting on a table, eyes cast down. He merely picked up the tankard and threw his head back, eyes closed. Pungent ship-brew alcohol flushed his throat with fire. The Mandalorian liquor was always strong and varied heavily depending on the brewer. Unfortunately, this was no sweet Kestrian ale. But it washed the taste of bacta out of his mouth, so that was a plus.

He set down the tankard and, for the first time, looked upwards. He recognized the vod who stood in front of him. A smith. "I know you," he said gruffly. "Seswenna?" He didn't realize he'd interjected into what Brent Warnel Brent Warnel 's own conversation.
 
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Pain. It was a familiar sensation. But after Humbarine, of all things…he felt grateful for it. Because unlike that figure he encountered on the ground, he at least was capable of feeling it. To be in control of his own body, and benefit from all the sensation that brought- from the ecstatic to the abhorrent. He, among many of his number, earned injuries to mark their will in their latest escapade. Carduul had quickly visited his quarters aboard a relatively older model of warship amidst the fleet to tend to his own injuries. Some of his number felt as if they prioritized him over the treatment of others; and said others were likely far more in need than himself. Flesh scalded against an environmentally protective bodysuit and armor. Skin having to be irritatingly peeled off so that burn patches and skin grafts could be properly applied. T’was not the worst in the world, but the burden of feeling such sensations is that they could not be ignored forever. In time, the sensations grew duller, but had yet to leave. Days after the invasion amidst replacing the bandages and supplementary supplies, a loud pinging made itself clear enough to interrupt his reflections, in the form of an alert to communicate.

Despite his heritage…Carduul usually wasn’t one for celebration. He knew the Mando’ade of yore oft’ adored such occasions, even after their most grueling and harrowing battles. Yet it felt almost selfish, in a way. To join the celebrations himself, when it was often by his order individuals lived and died. Such was the burden of any leader, be it of a people or upon the front of a battle. Yet… he participated in them anyway. Perhaps, he thought, it was because the nearby presence of his kin truly did bring the comfort needed to alleviate such thoughts. Alas, t’would seem he would have more pressing matters to attend to instead. With a passing glance given almost wistfully to the celebrations through an open door, he had stepped past towards his end destination.

And thus, he had tread forth to settle upon the unfamiliar seat he was bestowed—Werla'tayla. A fitting moniker, he must admit, for one of his origins. His entrance was unmistakable, as ever, with the tell-tale metallic taps of his weapon. There had been a passing dip of his head to the acknowledgement given from the others- some of whom, he was truly speaking with for the first time beyond mere formalities. Saxon, a figure from the Enclave who was closer to his own Crusaders than one may think. Kjartan—a rowdy, unknowable individual he had only seen in passing until now. Humbarine, however, more than proved his competence, and left its stake on the once-pirate’s arm much as the healing burn scars did upon his own flesh.

So this, was their ‘council.’ It was time to see whether it would ease that burden as he had subtly hoped.

He had quietly listened along towards the opening remarks of Vren Rook Vren Rook . Honor. Glory. Valued concepts that he was certain were well-won, that day. A small dip of his head accompanied the acknowledgement. “‘Tis the truth; the warriors with me that day fought valiantly, and doubtlessly saved the lives of their kin by buying each precious second with blood.” Tone was laced with a hint of pride; he must admit, even the newly initiated into the Crusader’s ranks did well. Though, there was still a fair share of losses. He could not linger on that; each was one willingly paid in pursuit of one’s own will and burning wishes. So, the once Rally-master had silenced to listen yet further. Hammerhand's mention of spontaneous mercenary vessels only made his thoughts stir further.

“...I felt as if there was a rot upon Humbarine that was separate from the remnants of those mad armageddonists, yet t'was eerily similar.” Came the musing aloud, “The troop movements were far too dissonant amongst those who arrived to fight against my warriors, and the defenses with which we made our strike upon. I heard reports they were even attacking each-other, though for what reasons I cannot say. It felt far too sloppy a defense, even for a remnant.” His right hand, in an idle fidget, tapped lightly against the haft of his weapon. An ever-so-soft resonant song of Beskar sounded in response. Mercenaries didn't make much sense in the scheme of all of this. Where did they fit..?

Yet, a brow raised upon Saxon’s turn. Of course, where there was wicked business, the wicked would follow to reap all they could. Gaze had roved across the designs brought to attention of the table.

“...Whether they are a new group or not, ‘tis clear the Sith Order must have some ties with them. I am under the impression they splinter frequently enough to warrant such a thing, no? It may be a dissonant movement, or a separated front that yet serves all the same.” He surmised. “I know not the fathoms of their differences—but a foe I fought seemed little different from the Sith I know of. A conniving individual, willing to make whatever sacrifice needed of themselves to gain the upper hand in a conjectured form of power. I know not the difference between the Maw-sworn ilk, yet…”

Lips purse for a moment in thought, brows furrowing behind the mask in the image of a once revered figure. He was again, reminded of his spoken promise to that most curious droid, amidst blaring alarms and fleeing prisoners. “...Imperials have a habit, I know, to be unceremoniously entangled with such wretched beings in the most unlikely of causes. Their wish for order is often satiated in some cruel way all the same.”

 
Hound from the Underground
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SPACE | HAMMER-HAND’S HALL
TAGS: Vara Rasha Vara Rasha | Siv Dragr Siv Dragr | Brent Warnel Brent Warnel | Gel Karn Gel Karn | Open
GEAR: In bio

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It was a heavy day for the Covenant, Yuri had no illusions of the contrary. Nor was he unfamiliar with loss or funerals. But one glance at the fleet composition as he and Vara neared the Hammer Hand’s ship told him that many more survived the brutal warzone.

And that warranted celebration.

Instead of the Hound’s familiar freighter or Baby’s IFF, rest his machine spirit, a new marker showed up on the scanners. A new vessel dropped out of hyperspace close to the fleet. It sputtered, shook and shuddered in its approach, but it flew true and touched down in the hangar with a thundering slam.

The cockpit’s roof and sensor cluster split open for the two occupants to dismount as the raw Basilisk rested its head upon the floor. Yuri emerged first, armour neatly polished in spite of the near permanent marks seared on it. His mechanical hand was outstretched to help Vara out before falling in step beside her. ”Before you say anything, I know. We stink of oil and coolant. We’ll fix it later.” He muttered for her ears only. An embarrassing moment to be sure, but the beast flew.

Another cause for celebration.

Upon entering the mead hall, Yuri spared a curious glance at those in attendance. Many helmets and sigils were absent, but far more were there to see. He might not have fought beside his brothers and sisters on Humbarine, but his weapons slew the Enemy. His munitions kept them alive. He felt responsible, in a way, for those who did not make it home.

He looked at Vara as he clipped his helmet to his belt. ”Anything on the agenda first? I think Kjartan and the other stiffs are havin’ tea without us.” He teased with a nudge to her ribs.

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Vren's brow started to furrow the longer he listened to all of them, static occasionally rippling through the projection as each spoke.

It was even worse than he thought. What stakes did the Sith Order have on a fringe Imperial Core-world? Wheels were turning hard in the old man's head, trying to look at the information offered from another angle.

"Romul, what was the designation of the model that the fleet had faced in orbit? The one of Sith allegiance?" he asked the old boar. That might nudge them into some direction.

"Either way, from what y'all have gathered and seen so far, we can consider this a splinter group of Sith that are in cahoots with the Order. Though I think this unknown group needs to be handled differently from their known counterparts. It's clear they operate more from the shadows and more like the Mawites we have faced years ago, than their Imperial-minded kin." He pulled his hand through his hair as another ripple went through the projection.

"Let's see what the Nynir'kad can gather on where all they may be present in old Galactic Imperial space. If we encountered them on Humbarine of all places, we might find them on other worlds that we may have perceived as Imperial before. We need to find out how far their web goes - if they have one. In the meantime, however, there are more pressing things. Search parties I have sent out from Kestri to find Kelborn haven't delivered anything as of yet and are still looking. I also have old underworld contacts from Tatooine that have eyes out looking." He shook his head. "The fleet needs more concrete leadership - especially now that we are facing a new foe." He turned his attention on Kjartan.

"Hammer-hand's ease on naval-vessels has been evident and his men follow him without much question. Romul, Carduul, I think that we can offer him the seat of Tra'verde to lead the Fleet into these unknown waters, don't you?" he asked his fellow Council members.

"If you are willing to lead it, that is, Hammer-hand?"

 

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B E R S E R K E R
SPACE | THE HAMMER-HAND’S HALL
TAG: Signy Bralor Signy Bralor | Open
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Kaldar wished he had been there.

Not only had he missed the glory of battle, but he had failed to step in to save his kin. Though he understood their deaths were not on his hands, the irrational guilt remained. Had he had a chance to leap into the fray atop his mighty Basilisk, at least some of the fallen might still be here to celebrate. Even now his blade hungered for the blood of the Sith.

Yet Kaldar was able to hold back his rage, for he respected the grief of his kin. As someone who had not directly suffered in the assault on Humbraine, it was his responsibility to drown in spirits the suffering of those who had fought.

So it was that the young Beroya found himself near the center of one of the great halls of the warship in the company of hundreds of his kin. He had first searched for his clan-brothers, but seeing or hearing no trace of the Beroya, he contented himself to feast amongst the other members of the Covenant, hoping his banter could help lift the spirits of the others.


 


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THE FOUNDLING
The Mythos Fleet | Aboard the Buurenaar'gam | Feast Hall
TAG: Yuri Maji Yuri Maji | Siv Dragr Siv Dragr | Brent Warnel Brent Warnel | Gel Karn Gel Karn | Kaldar Beroya Kaldar Beroya | Signy Bralor Signy Bralor | Open

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Aoana

To say the approach did not fill her with confidence would be the understatement of the millenia.

The pair of crimson eyes under the T-visor widened as Buurenaar’gam’s silhouette rushed to meet them. Her black mane bristled high with every shudder that rolled through the craft’s frame. What made things particularly worse for the Foundling, was the noticeable input delay in the FCS.

It turned with the grace of a dump truck.

<”Y’know y’can always go-aroun’, right?”> The Harpy pleaded to Yuri, but it was of no use. He didn’t listen.

Of course the fleabag wouldn’t listen!

<”Carefulcarefulcareful!”> She cautioned as they punched through the hangar containment field. Their velocity ceased, too quick and unceremonious. A thunderous clang ripped through the frame. <”Gh-ahhh!”> her gasp came sharp, the air in her lungs punched out from the borderline crash-landing. Only her seatbelt kept her from being tossed around in the cockpit like a pong ball.

The roof and sensor cluster above them split by the seam in the middle. Wordless grunts and grumbles rolled from her throat as she freed herself of the seatbelt. The soles of her boots met the hangar’s durasteel floor with a dull clang. Plates of crimson durasteel rasped softly against one another as she straightened. The armor was no stranger to hardship. Old scars and scratches marked its plates, while fresh carbon scoring blackened the chipped crimson finish. A double-sided loincloth clung from her warbelt. It fluttered wildly between her thighs as she turned to him with a sharp pivot, too riled up to properly appreciate his help coming down the basilisk.

She accusingly raised a finger, pointed at his chest. Her maw parted, but the Hound disarmed her before she could open up with a barrage of obscenely creative slurs unheard by any spacer alive.

”Before you say anything, I know. We stink of oil and coolant. We’ll fix it later.” He muttered for her ears only.

She was way past the discomfort from stinking like oil and coolant. By all hells she loved it, in fact.

Her gloved hands shot up to her helm. Palms caught its rim. The seal broke with a faint rush of air. Brows knit, her maw peeled back to a snarl as she finally spoke her mind, mercifully sparing her man the obscene details she originally hand picked for him. “Well, maybe – if y’knew how t’land! – we could’ve sold it, to a museum! Because that’s where it belonged now! No way this bird was spaceworthy anymore.

Not after a landing like that!

Properly soured to start the day, she fell in with The Hound. Her chuckle carried them to the great hall a few steps in. A jab landed against his shoulder; she could never stay angry at him for long.

The feast hall grew larger beyond the threshold ahead with every step. Tables lined the mead hall under the shadow of banners. Familiar clan sigils stood out to them both. And so did the missing presence of fellow kin. There were fewer than there should have been. Their most recent action on the world of Humbarine saw them fall. But not forgotten.

Never forgotten.

The raw memory of it all still clung to her – it had barely been a week. Her digits curled into a fist. Her own gripes with the whole ordeal threatened to boil over from her core. The nudge into her ribs threaded into her attention before she lost herself any deeper in her anger. Eyes shifted from the tapestry of banners to Yuri. Her features softened. She flashed him a smile as her crimsons gleamed quizzically at him.

”I’unno ‘bout that, but I need me sum' tihaar that’s fer damn sure.”

 

SIGNY BRALOR
FATHER'S HALL | OBJECTIVE 1
TAG: Kaldar Beroya Kaldar Beroya Yuri Maji Yuri Maji Siv Dragr Siv Dragr Gel Karn Gel Karn Brent Warnel Brent Warnel Vara Rasha Vara Rasha
GEAR: Huginn and Muninn, Beskar'gam, jetpack, spear, energy buckler


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Signy had escaped Humbarine with her life, but had taken quite the beating. The wound in her stomach still ached despite the bacta treatment and apparently she had fractured her left orbit. But at least she had fared better than Kjartan Hammer-Hand Kjartan Hammer-Hand . Losing an arm was harsh. She had done her part as dutiful daughter, he was a hard man but she could see that he felt the loss. She had tended to him while he was in the medical bay. She had even managed to get into a scrap with a junior Bralor that had made the stupid mistake of uttering the words "Kjartan One-Hand" within her earshot. Maybe she shouldn't have done that, but she was allowed to get pissed off.

Debriefing had been a strange meeting. She learned just how much carnage the Sith had wrought on their own planet, she dearly hoped her people never devolved to the level that they needed to carry out unecessary barbarism purely to feed their own fragile egos.

Next was a party, it was a wake, a memorial and a celebration all rolled into one, as was the Mandalorian way. The lost would be celebrated and celebrated hard. She intended to be blind drunk by the time she landed in a bunk tonight.

She had been making sure that her clan were their rowdy selves. There was many clans here and people needed to know who the home team were. But now she needed a break and to grab a drink. She made her way to get one. She practically walked in to Kaldar Beroya Kaldar Beroya looking a little lost on his own near the center. "You OK, vod?" quickly looking him up and down for identifying emblems. "Signy... which clan are you?" she asked. She was wearing a necklace which had both the Bralor sigil and her own personal wolf sigil. But other than that her own markings were subtle.


 

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PINKIE
HAMMER-HAND'S HALL | SPACE
TAG: Brent Warnel Brent Warnel | Signy Bralor Signy Bralor | Kaldar Beroya Kaldar Beroya | Gel Karn Gel Karn | Siv Dragr Siv Dragr | Vara Rasha Vara Rasha | Yuri Maji Yuri Maji | Open

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REBEL YELL

"I'mlateI'mlateI'mlate!"

Kalli literally ran through the hallways towards the Hall. How on earth was she late if she was one of the ones that had never left the ship while her father and the rest had deployed to Humbarine.

That was one helluva ordeal.

She's just glad Brent returned, albeit not unscathed. If he hadn't been hurt, she would have been harder on him for leaving her behind this time. Luckily K was hard enough on him for all their sakes.

The Foundling literally burst into the Hall and nearly barreled over Kaldar Beroya Kaldar Beroya and Signy Bralor Signy Bralor that were standing not far from it.
"Snap, sorry y'all, hot damn!" she all but hollered as she skidded to a stop to next to them. She then took a moment to stare up at the big guy that dwarfed both her and Signy. "Uh.....hi Mountain, I'm Kalli - haven't seen you around yet." She then turned to her bruised friend. "Coudn't find my other sock. You look like shit by the by."


 

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Before entering the ale hall, Jericho sent one encrypted packet to Vren Rook and the Rekav'dral. It contained the damaged probe-droid telemetry recovered during the withdrawal from Humbarine: corrupted routing paths, broken authentication markers, partial timestamps, and hostile command metadata too damaged to translate into complete speech. The message attached to it was brief. <Most of the probe traffic remains encrypted or structurally incomplete. One identifier recurs throughout the surviving metadata. Translation is approximate, but consistent: COVENANT. It appears within hostile routing architecture and command-authentication traffic. It does not refer to us. Further analysis is ongoing.>

The transmission ended, and Jericho remained still in the passage outside the ale hall. The task was complete. The data had been transferred. The next logical action was to return to analysis, remain available for further Nynir'kad instruction, and avoid entering a crowded chamber full of grieving Mandalorians engaged in loud communal ritual. That was the most efficient course. It was not the one he was choosing.

The doors opened before him, and sound rolled out first. Voices. Boots. Cups against tables. Laughter that carried too much weight beneath it to be mistaken for simple joy. Grief had not been removed from the hall. It had only been given food, fire, and company. Jericho entered without ceremony, his armor still marked by Humbarine. The plates had been cleaned but not polished. Black scoring remained along one shoulder where the gunship's fire had come too close, and fine ash still clung within seams that had not yet been fully purged. He could dematerialize the armor at any time, but he had chosen to keep it on. The helmet, however, was absent for the moment.

Jericho crossed the hall with the quiet precision of something built for places without celebration. Several warriors glanced his way. Some recognized the Dragr markings. Others saw only another armored survivor of Humbarine and returned to their drinks. That was acceptable. His eyes found Siv Dragr near the gathering around Forgemaster Karn and Brent Warnel, and the assessment arrived first, unbidden and automatic. Gait compromised. Weight distribution uneven. Armor electronics nonfunctional. Mechanical assistance absent or degraded. Recovery incomplete. Bacta treatment insufficient for full operational restoration. High probability of concealed pain.

Jericho dismissed the analysis. Siv was alive. That was the only relevant data.

He approached the group and stopped at a respectful distance, close enough to be part of the circle without forcing himself into it. For a moment, he said nothing. He looked from Gel Karn to Brent, then back to Siv. His right hand rose and struck once against the ironheart set into his chestplate, a quiet tap of metal on metal. "Alor." That probably came out too formal. Jericho knew that, but no immediate correction presented itself.

His eyes shifted toward Gel Karn. "Forgemaster Karn. It is good to see you alive."

He looked to Siv again. "The final Covenant dropship cleared the avenue before the civilian landing zone came under attack. The extraction corridor held. Your withdrawal route remained open." It was a report, because reports were easier than grief. It was also the closest Jericho could come to telling Siv that the mission he and Sahan had been injured for had not failed.

The voices in the hall seemed louder around the silence he had created for himself. Jericho had spoken to commanders, enemies, droids, civilians with perfect clarity throughout Humbarine. This was more difficult. His hand remained over the ironheart a moment longer than necessary as he regarded Siv. "You are awake. That is good."

There were many other things he could have said. Sahan will be relieved. I was uncertain you would survive. I did not know whether I had the right to stand here. I am glad. None of those sentences assembled correctly, so Jericho chose the one that did. Then he stepped beside the table rather than away from it, not quite claiming a place and not quite asking for one.
 
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THE OFFICIAL ACCOUNT
LORCAN NANU
OBJECTIVE I: THE HAMMER-HAND'S HALL
LOCATION: BUURENAAR'GAM — ALE HALL
ALLIES: IRON COVENANT | CAPTIVE AUDIENCE | WITNESSES TO GREATNESS
ENEMIES: INACCURATE HISTORIANS | COWARDLY FLAME-GIANTS | STRUCTURAL NEGLIGENCE


The serving platter represented the Spirit Breaker. Lorcan Nanu had explained this several times already, but he understood that the giants required patience. Their eyes were large, their ears were large, and yet their ability to follow a simple tactical reenactment remained tragically inconsistent. This was why he had arranged the battlefield himself. A polished metal platter served as the doomed Imperial warship. Several tankards marked defensive emplacements. A roast leg had been drafted into the role of an Imperial flametrooper. A bowl of stew had, at various points, represented the reactor chamber, a coolant reservoir, and the entire enemy fleet before Lorcan decided that even metaphor had limits.

He stood atop the platter in his battered light-blue armor, all forty centimeters of him planted with magnificent authority upon the upper hull of the defeated vessel. One boot rested against the rim. His beskad pointed toward the roast leg. Around the table, several Mandalorian warriors watched with the solemn attention owed to history, or at least with the unfocused patience of people who had been drinking long enough to accept that the tiny armored commander was not going away. "The enemy vessel was larger than this," Lorcan declared. "Considerably larger. Its halls were vast, its guards were many, and its architects had clearly been paid by the corridor. A lesser warrior might have been delayed. A taller warrior might have been confused by the unnecessary abundance of doors. Fortunately, the Mini'alor is not constrained by such obvious design flaws."

Lorcan marched across the platter, drew his threadline, and fired it toward the handle of a carving knife. The hook caught, the powered reel whined, and he swung in a tight arc over a trench of spilled ale that had not existed in the original battle but greatly improved the current one. He landed atop an overturned cup, skidded half a boot-length, corrected with the smallest flare from his jetpouch, and raised his blade high enough for the nearest warriors to see. "Here, Mallet-Man and his warriors were beset by flame-giants." The roast leg received a dramatic kick. "Each stood approximately forty meters tall, weighed as much as a dropship, and possessed the moral courage of damp bread. They attacked from the front because they lacked the imagination to do anything else. I, naturally, attacked from behind."

He leapt from the cup onto the roast and drove his beskad into it with both hands. The blade sank less deeply than the drama required. Lorcan compensated by planting one boot against the meat and wrenching it free with a sound he hoped registered as battle-fury rather than effort. One of the warriors at the table gave a thoughtful nod. Another reached for more ale. Both responses were acceptable. "The first flame-giant fell before he knew he was dead. The second attempted to turn. This was his mistake. The third considered surrender, but too slowly. By then the Mini'alor had already pacified the enemy rear line with superior tactics, dazzling footwork, and a wholly reasonable amount of violence."

A few more gestures completed the sequence. A bread roll became a breaching pod. Three toothpicks became Mandalorian shock troops. A spoon represented the command substation until Lorcan decided it was too shiny and promoted it to captured intelligence instead. He seized the spoon, dragged it across the platter with both hands as though extracting a prize far too large for ordinary heroes, and lashed it across his back with an exaggerated tug of imaginary cord. "The data was secured beneath my personal protection. The terminal surrendered. The enemy command structure collapsed. The ship, recognizing that it had been defeated, attempted to destroy itself rather than endure the shame of captivity."

Lorcan kicked one of the tankards marking the enemy defensive emplacements. It toppled into another, which struck a third, sending the Imperial line collapsing across the table with a magnificent clatter. Lorcan remained standing at the center of the platter, clingboots fixed to the metal surface while the enemy positions fell around him in disgrace. A few drops of ale shivered across the improvised battlefield. "Pathetic." The hall beyond his table continued to shift and swell with noise. A forlorn forge-giant stood near a wounded gunslinger and another warrior with ale in hand. Elsewhere, oil-scented arrivals brought the stink of machinery and battle into the feast. A towering snow-giant occupied another pocket of attention, and a small pink comet of movement seemed determined to crash through the evening by enthusiasm alone. Lorcan noted all of this without concern. Naturally, they were all listening. Some had simply chosen to do so from a greater distance out of respect for the scale of the performance.

Lorcan paced along the platter's edge, adopting the grave tone of a commander explaining very simple truths to soldiers who should already know them. "Gravity failed. Lights failed. Corridors twisted. The vessel reconfigured its own innards in a cowardly attempt to trap me. I proceeded upward with complete confidence because I knew exactly where I was going." He paused just long enough for the statement to become suspicious. "The ship was lost. I was not." This distinction satisfied him. Lorcan pointed toward a flattened plate near the table's edge, its surface smeared with sauce and crumbs. "There, upon the outer hull, I discovered an Imperial attack craft of elegant minimalist construction."

The plate had previously held bread. Now it was a starship. "I commandeered it." He stepped onto the plate and rocked it beneath his boots, knees bent as though riding a vessel through turbulent debris. "Its steering was unconventional. Its engines were absent. Its weapons were theoretical. Even so, under my command it outperformed the entire Imperial fleet by continuing to exist. A loyal war-beast arrived shortly thereafter and requested the honor of escorting me back to the Buurenaar'gam. I permitted this, because even lesser heroes deserve the opportunity to contribute to a great victory."

For a moment, Lorcan stood proudly atop the captured attack craft, chin lifted, beskad raised, the tiny scratches and carbon marks across his armor catching the hall light. One warrior at the table began to clap before realizing Lorcan had not finished. He stopped immediately. Wise. Lorcan's gaze drifted back toward the platter. The Spirit Breaker lay silent beneath him. He stepped down from the plate and returned to the improvised wreck. His boots clicked softly against the table. The swagger did not leave him completely; that would have been irresponsible. But it settled into something smaller and sharper, a blade sheathed without being surrendered.

"There was also Captain Blue-Eyes." The name was not correct. Lorcan knew that. He had heard the larger warriors call her something else while the command substation died around them. Caris, perhaps. Or something near enough. Giant names had too many edges and not enough sensible syllables. But he remembered her eyes when she removed her helmet. He remembered her pointing at the terminal. He remembered the order that had not sounded like a request. "She commanded the warriors who held the passage after the data was taken. She understood, as all competent officers eventually do, that the most important person aboard the vessel had already secured the objective and needed a clear route to carry it home."

That earned the faintest upward tilt of Lorcan's chin, but he did not linger there. "Captain Blue-Eyes and her warriors stayed. They bought time with blood and fire while the Mini'alor carried the prize out of the dying ship. Their courage requires no embellishment." Lorcan reached for a cup. It was properly sized for him, which meant it looked like a thimble beside the tankards surrounding it. He raised it anyway, arm straight, posture rigid with all the dignity his small frame could contain. "To Captain Blue-Eyes. To the warriors who stood with her. They died as Mandalorians."

He drank. The solemnity endured for several heartbeats. Lorcan allowed it, because a commander of his stature understood the importance of morale. The dead required remembrance. The living required food, ale, and a correct account of events before inferior versions could spread unchecked through the fleet. Then he lowered the cup and looked over his audience. "You may now ask questions." Several Mandalorians stared at him. Lorcan nodded once, accepting their awe as sufficient. "Good. Then there are none."

He turned back toward the platter and began rearranging the tankards again. "In that case, I shall explain the battle a second time. Some of you arrived late, and others were clearly overcome by the magnitude of the first telling."
 

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B E R S E R K E R
SPACE | THE HAMMER-HAND’S HALL
TAG: Signy Bralor Signy Bralor | Kalli Lorna-Warnel Kalli Lorna-Warnel | Open
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"You OK, vod?"

Kaldar stared down at the little runt who had somehow materialized right in front of him. She wore no beskar’gam, but she bore the sigil of Clan Bralor alongside a wolf pendant on her necklace. A foundling, perhaps?

The girl spoke up again, asking about his clan, and the question drove him out of his thoughts.

“Clan Beroya.” replied Kaldar grumpily, pointing to his right shoulder pauldron where a green Narglatch head was painted.

Before he could send off the foundling however, another one arrived. That was the thing about foundlings - wherever there was one, a gaggle always followed. In any other situation, Kaldar would be searching for the nearest exit. However, today was special. Just because they were foundlings who looked scrawny enough to fit inside his Basilisk’s autocannons did not mean they knew nothing of the suffering that had taken place at Humbraine. Some of them might have even been at the battlefield and endured the horrors crafted by the Sith.

That didn’t stop the foundlings from being annoying as all hell.


“Listen here, you little runts. began Kaldar, his voice exasperated. “Go find your clans. You should go support them."

“And before you tell me to do the same, that’s exactly what I was about to do before you two showed up."


 


Apparently, Gel Karn Gel Karn was far more popular than he could have possibly ever realized.

Brent Warnel Brent Warnel was the first person to break Gel's silent contemplation, as he walked up to him and struck up a conversation with him.

"Ni su'cuyi, gar kyr'adyc, ni partayli, gar darasuum: Balor, Yal'ret, Hale, Nirvan. For those we lost. It's good to see you alive, brother. I didn't think any of us would leave that place."

"Burc'ya vaal burk'yc, burc'ya", Gel replied to Brent as he turned to embrace the man, glad to see another one of his brother's having made it off that blasted planet in one piece. "I am glad to see you as well, Master Warnel. We lost far to many good men and women. It heartens me to see you not among them." Admittedly, Gel didn't know Brent particularly well, but he did know that he, much like Gel, had also been stranded on the planet during the Mandalorian's failed reconnaissance and infiltration attempt, and from what he had heard, the man was someone who conducted himself with sincerity and honor, a fry cry from the Sith-aligned Mandalorians that Gel had once been a part of. More importantly, his concern for Gel seemed genuine, which was more kindness than he had ever experienced in his life, and that meant a lot to someone like Gel. In fact, all of the Mandalorians he had encountered had been nothing but kind and accommodating to him, and Gel truly hoped he could one day return the favor, or at least get to know his brothers and sisters better. Before he could inquire about Brent's condition however, a second voice cut into their conversation.

"I know you. Seswenna?"

Gel instantly recognized the voice of Siv Dragr Siv Dragr , the man who had led the rescue mission to free Gel from his forced servitude to the Sith.

"Lord Dragr", Gel replied as he turned to face the man. "The one who gave me the chance for my cin vhetin. Words cannot express my thanks to you, for giving me a second chance and saving me from a most terrible fate. My skills and my hammer remain yours to command until the end of my days."

Gel was, of course, being completely earnest with what he had said, and he seriously meant every word that he had spoken to Siv. The man had saved his life and freed him from decades of future suffering, and Gel knew that there was no real way he could ever repay the debt that he owed Siv Dragr Siv Dragr . But he would spend the rest of his life making sure that he did, no matter how insurmountable such an endeavor was. Gel's conscience wouldn't allow him not to, and compared to where he had been before, he was more than happy to do so.

Still, before Siv could respond, yet ANOTHER voice interrupted the men's conversation. As much as Gel loved his brothers and sisters, perhaps a course in manners might be in order?

"Forgemaster Karn. It is good to see you alive."

Any annoyance that Gel might have been experiencing immediately vanished upon hearing the words of Jericho Dragr Jericho Dragr . If Siv Dragr Siv Dragr had absolved Gel of the past, Jericho Dragr Jericho Dragr was the one who had secured his immediate future, having saved his life back on Humbarine. Gel had been meaning to properly thank him for saving his life, but he had already turned his attention toward Siv, and was apparently quite concerned for his condition. Gel decided he would thank them later, not wanting to intrude on their moment, before turning back to Brent Warnel Brent Warnel .

"My apologies, Master Warnel. It appears I am a bit more popular than I had thought", Gel said as the faintest of smiles appeared on his lips. He took the tankard of ale that was standing on the bar next to him. "How about another toast? Since you have honored the past, I'll do so with the present: K'oyacyi! K'oyacyi! K'oyacyi!", he shouted at full volume as some of the Mandalorians around him responded in kind, echoing his words across the dining hall.

Gel took a rather long sip as he turned his full attention to Brent Warnel Brent Warnel , waiting for his next set of comments or questions.

 

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Sahan was not wearing gold. The Golden Dragon's armor remained aboard the Ironclad, docked against the Buurenaar'gam like a hard-edged tool case bolted to a fortress. The assault carrier was only a fraction of the Hammer-Hand's warship, but it carried enough of Sahan's life to feel more familiar than half the halls he walked through: armor cradle, repair racks, compact fabrication gear, droid-brain stations, weapon lockers, and too many diagnostic feeds arguing with one another in the background. The Mk III sat open beneath a web of scan arms, its systems still complaining about the four-hundred-percent surge he had forced through the shockwave output on Humbarine. Sahan had already decided that did not count as a malfunction. It was a successful field improvisation with consequences.

He had spent most of the aftermath somewhere between the Ironclad, Siv's recovery room, and whatever corner of the fleet would let him work without someone telling him to sleep. The armor diagnostics needed his attention. The AI project needed refinement. Siv's medical schedule sat in the back of his mind like a second heartbeat, refreshed through the same HUD feed that kept trying to notify him about stress warnings he had no intention of respecting. By the time Sahan finally entered the Hammer-Hand's Hall, he looked less like the Golden Dragon of Humbarine and more like the troublemaker who had built him: dark Kestrisaur hide duster, matching utility belt riding low at his waist, and Rulariyi sunglasses hiding the blood-red of his eyes while they quietly filled his vision with comms, scans, medical updates, and a dozen things he was pretending not to check every few seconds.

The ale hall hit him with noise first. Boots on deck plating, cups against tables, grief dressed up in laughter because Mandalorians were stubborn enough to make even mourning sound like a challenge. Somewhere in the room, Lorcan Nanu appeared to have conquered a table, several tankards, and at least one roast in the name of historical accuracy. Sahan caught the Patitite's tiny, armored silhouette through the shifting crowd, apparently delivering the official account of the Spirit Breaker with all the authority of a fleet admiral addressing a captured world, and a short laugh pushed through his nose despite himself. "Good. Our resident 'Minilorian' saved the record from facts. We were getting dangerously close to a normal memorial."

His gaze moved on before the humor could settle too deeply. The sunglasses tagged Siv near another gathering, upright and breathing, though the scans were less charitable than Sahan wanted them to be. Still injured. Still stubborn. Still wrapped in armor that had clearly suffered almost as badly as he had. Jericho stood close by, helmet absent, marked by Humbarine in his own quiet way, looking like he had stepped into the shape of a family moment without knowing whether he was allowed to occupy it. Sahan watched them for one breath longer than he meant to, then let that part of the HUD minimize. Siv was awake. Jericho had made it back. That moment belonged to them.

Then Sahan caught the smell before he reached the table: coolant, oil, hot metal, and whatever specific category of mechanical sin Yuri had apparently committed in Kjartan's hangar. The Rulariyi lenses tried to classify the residue clinging to Yuri and Vara's clothes, but Sahan dismissed the feed with a blink and crossed the hall too quickly for someone pretending not to be injured. "You smell like..."

The words landed about half a second before Sahan did. He hit Yuri in a rough one-armed tackle that was mostly greeting, partly hug, and partly the kind of friendly assault only a Mandalorian could mistake for affection. It would have been perfect if pain had not speared white-hot through his shoulder the instant the impact jarred the half-healed wound Mercy's ice spike had left behind. His jaw tightened. The sunglasses slipped a fraction down his nose. For one sharp breath, the grin almost broke.

Then Sahan shoved it back into place through pure spite. "Bad decisions." He gave Yuri one more squeeze before letting him go, the grin sharpening into something easier than admitting relief. "So just another day."

Only then did Sahan's attention shift properly to Vara. The grin eased into something a little more genuine, and he gave her a nod that carried far less violence than Yuri's greeting but no less sincerity. "Good to see you made it back." Vara had been in the mess too. Different part of it, different hell, same fleet full of survivors trying to pretend that standing around with drinks counted as recovery. Sahan was not going to wrap that in too many words. Not here. Not with Yuri still smelling like a hangar accident beside her.

His attention snapped back to Yuri, because the oil and coolant demanded answers almost as much as friendship did. "And what have you been doing while the rest of us were stuck in the weirdest damn battle with Imperials and Sith? Because whatever it was, it smells expensive." He let the jab sit for a moment, then added it more casually, like the offer was just an afterthought. "I can lend a hand, if you want."
 




"Aye," Brent said solemnly, "We did. Too many."

Before Brent could reply, another Mando'ade interjected in their conversation.

"I know you," he said gruffly. "Seswenna?"
Brent watched as Gel addressed this newcomer, Siv Dragr, and exchange pleasantries. The two were obviously familiar, and Gel treated him with great respect Brent could tell by the way Gel addressed him. As they spoke, Gel uttered the words, Cin Vhetin, and Brent's mind reeled, catapulting him back to Taanab.
"Vod," the Falleen said, his voice a smooth, melodic cadence that carried a weight of solemnity and grace, "You summon the wind to find its kin. Through flame and ash, the call of Cin Vhetin rises as a song that echoes across the stars. I, Ninurta, have answered."

" Vreegan Fett - Supplymaster of Shogun. "

" Careena Fett, Alor of Clan Fett. "

“Hail to thee, vode. I am Carduul Akahl. Rally Master of the renewed Crusade.”

"Crusader Armel... of Er'kit."
Brent remembered sitting on the grass of Tanaab, lost, before the crunching of twigs and the compressing of grass announced what would be his own rebirth. Where he had been lost, they had found him and welcomed him back into the fold. The Crusaders had offered him a place in this galaxy. Seeing Mandalorians answer his call and find him had lifted a weight off his mind that was threatening to drown him. Once the Crusaders broke apart, however, that darkness had returned.

Now, the Iron Covenant offered him a home, new brothers to fight alongside, and a purpose. Yet, those old memories and the vode that had helped him would never leave, an attachment greater than anything else in recent memory. Brent snapped back to reality as the conversation between Siv Dragr Siv Dragr and Gel was interrupted by another newcomer.

"Forgemaster Karn. It is good to see you alive."
Brent nodded respectfully to the two newest members of their conversation, not at all displeased with their arrival, and thought his distracted state of mind rude as they began to talk.
"My apologies, Master Warnel. It appears I am a bit more popular than I had thought", Gel said as the faintest of smiles appeared on his lips. He took the tankard of ale that was standing on the bar next to him. "How about another toast? Since you have honored the past, I'll do so with the present: K'oyacyi! K'oyacyi! K'oyacyi!"
Brent caught the words "Forgemaster" as this new Mandalorian addressed Gel and began to give some type of report of the battle of Humbarine to Siv.

"No apologies necessary, my friend." Brent replied, "Aye! Another toast!" A little mirth interjected itself into Brent's voice as he did this, raising his tankard and draining it. Brent wiped his mouth, slamming the tankard on a table nearby.

"If I haven't formally introduced myself to either of you warriors before," Brent stated to Siv Dragr and Jericho Dragr, "I am Brent Warnel, of Clan Warnel. I know you fought on Humbarine, and my Clan and I owe you for saving us."

Brent turned his head back to Gel, looking over the other man, the words Forgemaster playing again in his mind. Brent would make a point to bring that up again, as a Forgemaster could help him with something he was keen to work on, but not now. Now was a time for remembrance.

"What is your story, brother, for I have not heard it. I am new to this gathering of
Mando'ade, and wish to learn more of the history of all of you," Brent pointed two fingers at the other two standing beside Gel and himself as he said this, "Who stood and bled on Humbarine."

As Brent said this, his eye caught a slight commotion at the entrance to the hall, as Kalli Lorna-Warnel Kalli Lorna-Warnel barreled into it, nearly running into two other vode by the door. Brent almost made a move to go to her before remembering his place. She was nearly ready for the Verd'goten; she didn't need him hovering around her anymore.

 

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