Star Wars Roleplay: Chaos

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Private Fire Beneath the World

The Silver Warlord

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U N D E R H O L D
Silver Peak, Veshkaar Mountains, Mandalore

Deep beneath Silver Peak, the world breathed fire and shadow.

The great gates of the Underhold still yawned open to the pale light above, but within the mountain the air was thick with motion, the pulse of a titan stirring after an age of dreamless sleep. The forges had awakened, and with them, the mountain itself. Steam hissed from veins of stone as if the world were sweating beneath the weight of its rebirth. Chains groaned, gears screamed, and rivers of molten ore surged through transparent conduits, filling the air with the slow rhythm of creation. The veins of ancient technology surged with life once more, casting its radiance ever outwards, it was impossible to tell where the machines ended and the mountain began, and perhaps there had never been a difference at all.

The Underhold was alive. No fortress could contain its scale. It was a subterranean kingdom, a city hewn from the bones of the world, vast enough to drown a fleet within its depths. The grand arteries of the Underhold stretched for miles, lit by the glow of flowing metal and magma. Columns the width of warships rose like petrified gods, each carved with the names of generations who had vanished into the stone. Balconies overlooked molten chasms; bridges of beskar crossed gorges of liquid fire. From the lowest vaults, where magma coursed through rune-etched sluices, to the highest galleries beneath the mountain's crown, light shimmered through a lattice of veins, molten beskar, glowing blue-silver like the blood of a god running through the heart of the Veshkaar Mountains.

Beneath that living light moved the children of Clan Bruul. They filled the halls like a tide of iron and shadow, Taung and human descendants both, armor polished to mirror brightness, banners unfurling in slow waves of silver and blue. Voices rose in low, guttural hymns, chants so old they blurred the line between word and vibration. Sparks rained from colossal anvils, welding torches hissed in rhythm with the forge drums, and from somewhere deep below, the mountain's heart gave a steady thrum. Zurak Bruul moved through them like the mountain's shadow given shape. His helm hung at his side, a concession to the heat that pressed in from every wall. Ash and forge-light clung to his scarred skin, painting him in living flame. The air was thick with the smell of smelted ore, the pulse of machinery, the heartbeat of home.

It should have felt perfect. It did, and yet, not entirely.

He paused at a great balcony overlooking the inner abyss, a vertical expanse so vast it seemed impossible to have been built by hands. The central shaft descended for miles, its edges lined with living quarters, armories, archives, and suspended bridges like veins spiraling downward into the molten dark. Elevators of beskar moved on silent chains. Lights glimmered like stars along the walls, each one a forge rekindled, a memory reclaimed. From somewhere far below came the roar of a reawakened foundry, the Hall of Sparks where the first ore of Silver Peak had ever been born to flame. It was right, he told himself. The mountain lived again. His people's exile had ended; the silence had been broken. And yet…

He looked upward, toward the distant fissures in the stone where daylight spilled down like liquid silver. The light seemed fragile, thin, pale, uncertain, compared to the fire below. The surface world waited beyond it, a galaxy of noise and hunger and hollow oaths. He had not forgotten the reason his ancestors sealed the gates. The Taung had buried themselves to preserve something purer, harder, uncorrupted by the softening of the ages. Now that purity stood in the open air once more. Would the galaxy temper it, or taint it? The forge answered with its deep hum, and Zurak found no comfort in it. He did not need comfort. He needed purpose. He descended the spiral walkway to the Hall of the First Sparks, where the great anvil awaited, cracked, massive, glowing from within. It had never cooled, even through centuries of darkness. His forgemasters knelt around it, their visors down, their voices murmuring in prayer. Zurak approached, each step a tremor that rippled through the stone floor. He reached out and laid his calloused hand on the anvil's surface. It burned, not with heat, but with memory, the pulse of every generation that had struck this metal before him.


"Tor choruk dura." He murmured. The anvil's glow brightened in answer, as though the mountain itself acknowledged him. For a long while, he stood there, the Lord of the Underhold, the Alor of Clan Bruul, the last scions of the first Mandalorians. Around him the forges sang, the walls pulsed with molten veins, and the mountain's breath filled his lungs. The Underhold was alive once more. His people were reborn. But far above, in the pale sky of Mandalore, other powers stirred. Ships had been sighted on the horizon. Visitors, Allies, Emissaries, or Opportunists, would soon arrive, drawn by the light of a mountain they thought long dead. Zurak Bruul looked up through the shafts of silver daylight, the reflection of flame flickering in his eyes.

"Let them come." He said quietly, his voice echoing through the hall like a promise. "Let the galaxy remember what was lost. What we return to them." Just then, deep within the Veshkaar Mountains, the forge answered, it was a sound like thunder in the bones of the world.


 



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ᚺᛖᛁᛚ ᛊᛖ ᚺᛁᚾ ᛖᛁᚾᛁ ᛊᚨᚾᛁ ᚷᚢᚦ
Ark of Ha'rangir

Zurak Bruul Zurak Bruul

The gods had blessed the golden arteries of the Ark. The vast cityship hummed with life, its air thick with oil and incense, flame and devotion. Towers of beskar gleamed with molten veins; statues of the gods towered over streets lined with markets, forges, and temples. Choirs sang over the roar of engines, and from distant coliseums came the cheers of warriors testing their mettle beneath banners of crimson and gold.

Within the sanctity of one of its many shrines, Domina, grand warpriest and overseer of the Ark, humbled herself before the altar of her blade. Every temple had its altar: for Jedi, the silence of a garden in meditation and quiet contemplation; for Sith, the darkness of their castles. But for Prime and her kith and kin, the altar was the sword itself.

And Prime's sword was as massive as she.

Pinned into the earth, its reflective crystal surface shimmered with visions of the future. A pulse of light illuminated the visor of her mask as the towering four-armed xeno purred lowly, reverently tracing her claws across the crystal blade's surface. It showed her glimpses of glorious battles ahead, prophecies written in light and steel.

Then the Iron Clergy entered the temple.

They whispered into her ear of events that had transpired on Mandalore, an ancient mountain that had slumbered for countless eras had, according to reports, split asunder and unearthed a lost city.

Dima's eyes widened. Her prayer to the blade cut short as she rose to her full height.

"Prepare the Ark for travel when it finishes feasting from the light of the star," she purred. "I must investigate this rumor myself."

She left the confines of the temple and strode to the gardens where her warmount rested, a massive dragon-like creature that stirred at her approach. Dima whistled and gave the beast a pat before climbing atop the saddle and pulling the reins. The dragon shrieked and leapt upward in a single bound. Wings beating, it carried them away from the moon-sized city as it lingered close to a dying sun, drinking upon its light. And in a moment, the dragon hyperspace-jumped through the void directly toward Mandalore.

She could hardly believe her eyes when she arrived.

The spectacle before her was straight out of the chronicles of their mythology. The largest mountain on the planet had split down the middle as if ancient gates had opened, carving a path through the landscape. Domina flew down to the entrance, her warmount's wings casting shadows across the monumental threshold.

Dismounting, the towering xeno radiated like an oracle of the gods themselves. Adorned in purple fabrics and black steel inlaid with ornate gold patterns, she approached the grand gate of the lost city and steadied her poise.

A tear nearly escaped from behind her Mandalorian mask. This was straight out of the fairy tales she had read as a hatchling, when she was but a foundling in the culture. And now, she was seeing it with her own eyes.

The mountain breathed. Steam rose in silver columns. Light spilled from within, not the cold glow of modern technology, but something ancient, primal. The pulse of forges that remembered the first Mandalorians.

She stood at the threshold and waited, her four arms hanging at her sides in a posture of reverent patience. Whoever dwelled within these reawakened halls would come in their own time. She would not presume to enter uninvited.

Oh, how the gods smiled upon them.

 
The Silver Warlord

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U N D E R H O L D
Silver Peak, Veshkaar Mountains, Mandalore

The wind howled down the pass as the dragon's wings folded. The air was hot and bitter, tasting of ozone and melted snow, yet the shadow at the mountain's mouth was colder than the void. Out from within the vast gates, that stood like the maw of an impossibly large beast, strode a legend. A figure cut out of the mythology of the Manda, considered by many to be a Paragon, an Honored Ancestor, Zurak Bruul emerged, standing unmoving beneath the threshold of the Underhold, the living fire of its forges rising behind him like the breath of a god. Light ran along the runes of his armor, molten veins crawling across plates of black beskar, pulsing in time with the hammer's silent heart as it sat strapped over his shoulder. Steam veiled him in waves, and for a moment, the warlord and the mountain seemed one being, carved from the same primeval stone. For once more the Taung came to see the sky once more. His eyes, pale as quenched steel, found the figure before the gates, twn golden orbs, finding the four-armed prophet whose presence throbbed with war and revelation.

A dragon-borne priestess, her form was equal parts grace and omen. The scent of her aura was metal and incense, the song of her blood like tempered flame. He could feel her, not through the Force, but through the instinct of the forge, that deep and ancient sense that knows when another hammer has struck the same anvil. Deep in his bones he could feel a resonance with the emergent Prophet. For the first time in ages, Zurak smiled, a slow, solemn thing that showed no warmth. "So." he said, his voice the sound of a mountain grinding open, "The sky remembers us after all." Zurak stepped forward. Each movement was a low quake; his armor rasped like stone against stone. Sparks drifted from his pauldrons as molten channels brightened under the frost air. When he reached the outer ring of the gate's light, he stopped.

"I know you, child of the forge. Not by name, but by the noise your heart makes when it beats. You are fire that forgot it was meant to build as well as burn." The mountain seemed to exhale behind him, the forges roaring low, as if the world leaned closer to hear. He turned his gaze toward the dragon in the snow, then back to her. "In your veins runs the echo of gods. You wear their hunger, as my kin do." The hammer across his back thrummed once, a deep pulse that rippled through the air. "Long ago, when the light of Mandalore grew thin, my people sealed the gates. We buried the creed to keep it from rotting. We swore that if the gods ever sent a sign, we would open the mountain once more." He inclined his head, the gesture slow and deliberate. "Now you stand here, and the forge stirs at your presence. Tell me, do you come as flame to temper us…or to burn what endures?" The silence that followed was vast, filled only by the whisper of steam and the low growl of the mountain's veins. His words were not challenge, nor welcome, but something older: an invitation to judgment.

The Silver Warlord spoke then in the ancient tongue of the Mand'oa only...it was different. The mother tongue came out so naturally, like second nature, a beauty out of the mouth of a native speaker. Only it was different entirely. For he spoke a language thought lost only to the Scholars, that of Proto Mando'a. "Sol'nar kad'traar, vod Ha'rangir."


 



Domina-Prime-final-2.jpg


ᚺᛖᛁᛚ ᛊᛖ ᚺᛁᚾ ᛖᛁᚾᛁ ᛊᚨᚾᛁ ᚷᚢᚦ
Ark of Ha'rangir

Zurak Bruul Zurak Bruul

The air still trembled from his emergence. Steam coiled around her like living incense, its breath sweet with iron and age. The mountain spoke in Zurak's stride, and though Dima stood in divine raiment, her silks trailing, her mask of gold and glass shimmering with the reflected light of the forge. She felt the echo of something older stir in her marrow.

For a long moment, the Prophet of the Ark said nothing. The world around them was a cathedral of stone and fire, and the beast before her was its high priest, a relic of myth returned to life. Her breath came slow, visible against the molten haze, five azure eyes drinking him in with reverence and hunger both.

"Oh, how cruel the gods can be..." she murmured at last, her voice like honey poured over a blade. "They whisper promises to the faithful and send ghosts to test their faith." The words came soft, almost prayerful, her head tilting with a feline grace as she regarded the Taung. Then, an impish smile curved her lips beneath the mask, the monster slipping through the saint.

She began to move, slow, predatory steps in a circle about him, her tail curling in lazy arcs through the sand. Her voice wove through the forge's low thunder.

"The mountain that remembers. I heard such legends in the hymns of the forges, in the dying breath of dying warriors who still believed the ancients watched from beneath the stone." She laughed lightly, a chime that was almost mocking, almost devotional. "And yet here you stand, not some phantom of war, but living flesh. The gods do have a flair for the dramatic."

Her claws brushed one of the carved runes that glowed upon his armor, tracing the molten light. "You speak of fire that builds as well as burns..." she teased, her voice dropping to a low hum. "But tell me, sweet kin of mine. What use is a hammer that forgets the joy of breaking?"

Then, her tone softened, reverence blooming through the mirth. She came to stand before him once more, drawing her cloak open so the light of the forge gleamed against her black steel and golden inlay. Her four arms unfolded like the wings of a seraph, her posture both invitation and command.

"Oh, the light of god shines upon us all~" she crooned, echoing scripture with her usual lilting inflection. "And now my eyes get to feast upon something beautiful indeed."

She extended one elegant hand toward him, claws glinting. "Come then, Show Prime the divine work that's been done."

Behind her mask, her smile lingered, caught somewhere between awe and seduction, faith and mockery. For in that moment, the monster and the missionary warred quietly within her heart...and neither side wished to win.

 

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