Star Wars Roleplay: Chaos

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Fire Gild : [Levantine Sanctum Dominion of Etti IV]

No sooner had he sent his message did [member="Thessa Kai"] respond in voice. Despite the worried tone in her pitch, hearing her words was like switching the galaxy from black and white back to color. She was alive and well enough to speak. It was more than he could have asked for, especially since he and Makai had made it out relatively unharmed.


"A little worse for wear but he's okay. We're both alright. Whats that pounding, where are you?"


------------------


One could forgive the frazzled Corporal Stross for her identification. Either way, [member="Caerys Argente"] got the general idea.


"We will be awaiting their arrival. Use caution, we may still have enemies below us."
 
[member="Judah Dashiell"]


Connection was cut and Askari turned to Caerys, who had been a bystander for the past couple posts despite this being her character account! "Take a fireteam and a Gunship and check out the situation at Salacia. You meet any hostiles, kill 'em. Make sure the Salacia guys stay in one piece. And don't kill any civilians," the Eldorai did not like the droid much.



"I am not a mindless battering ram randomly destroying everything her path. Or a crude Archangel design," Caerys responded, sounding just a bit offended at her one hundred percent surgical efficiency being called into question! As for Archangel, well there was a bit of rivalry going on. Suffice to say if she and Moira Skaldi ever met, there would probably be a fight.


"Then get going," Askari said impatiently, turning away and heading back to the command building. Order had to be restored, all those dead bodies and wrecked vehicles had to be moved away. Ashira knew how long it would take before they had communications again with Kaeshana. Or whether anyone was still alive there. Hopefully Ashira was watching over them.


For her part Caerys quickly gathered a small fireteam of Firemane troopers and then quickly boarded a Silaqui-class Gunship, which then soon took off into the sky and set off. It would probably take about ten minutes before they reached the Salacia building. Any hostiles encountered then would be terminated.
 
He watched through the bottom viewport, the one by his feet, as the hungry began to organize themselves. A reminder, if he'd needed it, that most places had existing structures, viewpoints, leaders and principles, and that they were often capable of solving their own problems. A reminder, if he'd needed it, that there was a large difference between showing up to fix everything and showing up to ask the locals exactly what they required. Planners versus seekers -- the dichotomy of all relief aid. The recognition that you didn't know all the answers in advance.

Once lines formed, radiating out from the food dispensers, he accelerated away.
 

Jaxton Ravos

Mindwalker of the Outer Rim
The Levantine patrol continued moving along, as did Glurp and [member="Katya Shorn"]. The Levant-mandalorian was a good shot, far better than Glurp, who had hit two out of five targets by this time. The opposition, hired mercs and security men, didn't seem to have been cut from the best cloth. The biggest and meanest mercs had disappeared it seemed. Soon enough they were replaced by what seemed like an army of droids.

"Blasters to full!" Koin said, and Glurp didn't follow. He didn't really understand the concept of "Droids" yet, and continued firing his stun bolts. The droids were unperturbed. One of the Patrolsman rolled out of cover and next to Glurp, taking his gun and putting it onto it's particle setting.

"They're droids man. We don't need to hold back." The patrolsman said, before leaning over cover and firing a few bolts here and there. He hit a droid and part of it was vaporized, revealing a mass of circuity and electronic parts. Glurp had a feeling this was why the patrolsman thought they didn't need to hold back. But Glurp still could not shake the feeling that just because the Droids weren't made of carbon didn't mean they weren't alive. Weren't people. Just made differently.

It made for awful confusion.
 
+ Stack D/Formal Division M98 +​

Not long after the encounter at Formal F2, leaving behind an upset old creature struggling with second-hand pillage and numbed confusion, his speeder went down.

Formal M98 comprised of sixteen kilometers of low-income modular housing stacked and tiered to accommodate indentured work-forces living down below the shadow of Stack D's immense, towered city interior. Bright roofing obscured canyon roadways running like epidermal capillaries, turning M98 into a bejeweled, segmented drumlin, flint blue and iridescent, a hunched beetle-esque profile from the air. Barrel fires lit the hab-blocks from within, glowing shadows of teetering architecture up against acid-scarred terracotta roof-shelves. Firefights were exchanging up and down streetworks and back and forth twixt vertical housing levels, as black-market munitions and ordnance blew out and toppled fragile hab-stacks.

Only a few brave sec-force transporters hovered round the M98 on circuit. They wouldn't risk daring their squads to chance the hellacious, internecine gang battles throttling the neighborhoods. A generation of educated and commercially embittered fighters were acting out in localized riot. Seydon piloted low over the lumped roof and open-air terrace gazebos; his eyes panned for stranded non-combatants forced higher and higher by encroaching violence. The speeder could accommodate a maximum eight bodies, or twelve-hundred pounds of excess weight. Several rescue drives to and from a designate shelter was possi -

"Hmn?"

Seydon saw someone stand up in the starboard side-view mirror. They were thickset, arms and clavicle tanned to copper, roped with vat-muscle and scar-tats. A speeder-bike helm topped over their face and had been conspicuously decorated with decal scriptures. In their arms was a gleaming rocket-propelled grenade launcher. The figure was already hunching into a kneeling pose, hefting the shoulder-groove and sight-module up to their opened helmet. Alarms triggered in the speeder cabin: target lock. Seydon gunned his aft-repulsor nozzles wide until the fanned metal began to flare red from unseen anti-grave friction. The speeder wobbled and took off into a sharp, curling ascent.

He spotted a miniature star follow hard on his tail, eclipsed centrally by a small warhead and guidance fins. The speeder was damn swift, but the rocket dealt with far less air drag and burned on an efficient fuel-cell over maxed to deliver brutal speed. Seydon smashed forward across the control yoke when the back of the cabin erupted open in shrapnel and fire. Fighting spinning g-force, fighting pain in his shoulder blades and hip, fighting the water-loose response in the yoke-stick, he leaned back against his chair and hauled for dear life. The speeder cracked through a disused roof-floor patio like an out-of-control top. Its nose dived, clipped off a shelf off rowed vitrian glass tiles, tossing its cabin-body end over end.

A second grenade rocket found the speeder and tucked up in beneath its carriage, blowing out the forward passenger seating and console. Seydon was still conscious, to watch through the crazed windshield when his speeder finally stalled and went into a plummet between a pair of shanty apartment towers.
 
[member="Judah Dashiell"]

The Galan almost sunk down to the floor in relief as she heard her husbands voice and confirmation about Makai. "I'm with most of the CEOs that were left in the corporate building just in front of yours. Getting them to complete business as usual and not liquidate their accounts to themselves. Theres an angry mob, though."

She paused, the door started to pry off its hinges.

"I love you guys."

She didn't know if she would make it. The mob sounded big and she only had one blaster. She put the comm down as the door burst open, forgetting to switch off the
Transmission. Judah would hear everything if the communication systems held.

Shots of stun bolts lit up the conference room as the Galan stood on a table. "Hey! Listen up. We've got fair trade going in here and if you come in one at a time we'll hear your complaints. Probably even donate to some city public projects and funds. Right gentlemen?"

Some of the CEOs grumbled but didn't disagree. "If you don't want to act civilized you'll end up on the floor."

Gaze drifted to the ones already stunned.
 

Eun

Guest
Droids spilled onto the causeway, replacing their incapacitated organic counterparts. They were loud and clanking, often obstreperous in pursuit of achieving their programming. The true face of the corporate sector, every bit as ruthless, cold and logically driven as the CEOs who bought them off the factory line; but where droid motivators consisted of bits of metal, plastic and wire, the execs were pushed only by their ambition and limitless greed.

The young girl in the mandalorian armor didn't care much for either. She flicked her setting from stun to kill robotically, mind numb. A droid had raised her for ten years in the Bubble of the Lost. Maybe it was some sort of homicidal Oedipus complex, or just the emergence that murderous Shorn streak. The end result was the same.

The hissing streams of blue steadily turned to a cascade of a crimson. Droids fell, holes scorched through their gleaming carapaces. Katya raised a hand toward a golem and wrapped her will around it, flinging the droid off the edge of the causeway.

The unit advanced, implacable.

[member="Glurp"]
 
It was all about vantage point. From the stance of a normal spacer, he could only aspire to assisting in a substantive way. From the standpoint of a man who'd done what he'd done, this felt like insufficiency. It felt like failure. What were a few hundred people fed, compared to billions in need of help? Trillions? Jorus pondered this as the Gypsymoth flew away, but it wasn't a pleasant ponderance. Frankly, he couldn't much escape the thought that there should be a way to do more.

If there was, though, he couldn't find it today.
 

Hira Mitsae

Ain't No Rest For The Wicked
[member="Shule Windspeaker"]

'That is the plan, baby.' Didn't say that to him, not really. It was more to inspire something of confidence in myself, because whatever I had said to his face, whatever I kept tell I myself. The things he had pointed out bothered me, a little bit, not enough to suddenly turn my life around and become some kind of saint slash miracle worker. But just enough that later tonight when I was celebrating another win with some whiskey, that I probably wouldn't be celebrating a lot.

Grimaced a little at that sour thought. Damn these Jedi and their supposed code, it was only a pain to deal with these days.

Anyway, I was here with a distinct purpose in mind and so I went for it. Had a data screen on my sleeve, information feed and all that. A few moments ago I had hacked into Aratech's security mainframe, full access and all that beauty. Meant I could get out a map of the place, with some wizard techno blablabla I combined the feeds of the cameras stationed in the building and presto. Just like that the map showed little red blups, enough info to allow me to dodge 'em.

Started walking through the hallways, all sneakily and crap. Wouldn't be long now.
 
+ Stack D/Formal Division M98 +​

Hands were fishing him out of the pilot cabin.

Outside were walls blistered with air-intake fans and just as many reversed ventilation exhausts, bundled and corded by sheathed fiber-cables running up in several thousand multitudes, dodging aside immobile broadcast vanes and corrugated siding. Metals were washed with rust streaks, with a few hard-bolted ebon gargoyles colored black by dripping waste leaking septic discharges out their eroding maws. It washed down foetid, stinking troughs into a recess dug into the alleway's rockcrete and down an open manhole. The atmosphere was dismal, morose, clinging with sub-standard conditions forcing life to endure. Or break.

Someone took a box-cutter and slashed through Seydon's seat harnessing. He felt limp and deadweight. There were a half dozen voices grousing in animated language, coloured with thick phrases, local argot, brewed by obvious hostility and disdain. They thought the driver was gone. The speeder trickled into the alleyway canyon and soared down for a hundred meters, before pile-driving nose-grill first into solid concrete-mesh. His dress was odd, but those blades strapped close on his back, the axe and longknife, those pivot-knives buckled on his gauntlets would be fetching as war-gear.

They pulled him away from the crumpled hatch-frame and threw him onto a pile of bagged garbage. One of them sauntered up, hunched low, and stabbed his snub-blaster into Seydon's face. His eyes drew open, noticing the lightless barrel punching in at his eye. The gunman paused a moment. Startle paused his killer instinct. Seydon reached and snatched the pistol out of his hand, then punched the gunman's nose back into his skull. Dark, capillary blood jetted from broken cartilage gristle, the gunman tossing back off his feet, struck unconscious.

One, a boyish figure cutting a slash of bright gang-colours, hosting a fake plastisteel eyepatch over his face, was holding his swords. They looked positively gigantic pasted against his slight frame. Seydon stood up from the trash heap and began treading forward, while the other four looters threw themselves at them. Each was a vat-monster, gene-grown with muscle hardwired by chemical and bio sluices that increased their bone ossification and muscle density. Moody stack clansters, jawbreakers, heavy meat-heads, with skulls pierced by steristeel nuts and raised, intentional scar tissue. They had fought and beaten their way through the M98 since the instance they could walk. There wasn't a soul they couldn't crunch in with enough blade-affixed piping and some throaty-barreled slug-magnums.

The Dunaan took them apart. The boy paused stock still, watching stunned at the four-versus-one knuckled melee. He saw the clansters were brooding kickboxers with exaggerated snap-punches and haymakers. By contrast, Seydon was clenched in tight, motions curt, economic, burling in or smacking aside strikes like a coil of liquid steel. The first clanster fell, broken across his left arm from wrist to elbow to shoulder socket and the scapula bone attached. The second knelt over onto his hands and knees while vomit hosed out mouth and nostrils, wretchedly acidic, produced by a forearm blow to his midriff that collapsed several solid organs in against each other. Seydon turned the third one away and disarmed the serrated fillet-knife out of his grasp, kicking his right knee out, following with a one-two-three combination of forearm, elbow, and knee strike that flailed his mandible and skull. He turned towards the fourth: this one considered himself a more accomplished street fighter. He had backed off and then settled into a bouncing stance that kept him leveled and rock-secure. He raised a mailed hand, tied with gym-strip, and beckoned Seydon on with a taunt.

The boy still keeping a shocked hold on his pilfered scabbards winced. Clanster number four flew back off his feet by a snap-kick he didn't even see. Something had been traumatized to mulch inside his mid-torso. He hit the opposite wall and pulverized a dozen slimy bricks with his ramrod spine and meat-hank backside. And then he toppled forward onto his face against the muddied road and began bleeding out his mouth.

Seydon took his blades and scabbard back from the boy, though gently. The lad's hands were shivering pale and the heavy gulp bobbing in his throat like a goiter spoke for his mortal fear. His companions, at least he thought so, were all slowly writhing on the dirty earth in gross pain. He blinked up at the Dunaan.

"...That was cool."

"Do you have family or anywhere to stay, 'till all this blows over?" Seydon asked.

"Sorta. I don't know," He replied. "Haven't seen 'em in a while."

"Have they retained their address?"

"'Retaina - wha'?"

"Have they moved?"

"Nah," The boy sniffled, looking at that last clanster, curled over with either arm clutched at his sternum. "But they ain't got much like food or water, and the beds I remember were lumpy a lot. Been... Been trying..."

Seydon nodded, keeping his face locked stoic. "Was it safe where they lived?"

"I guess."

"Then go and hole up. You keep with these freaks," Seydon nodded at the gang-muscle splayed around them. "And either you'll get shot at the front. Or clubbed in the back."

"Not 'less I do 'em dirty first," And the boy grinned maliciously. The Dunaan tried to not let that expression disturb him.

"Just get up somewhere safe."

"You're letting me go?"

"You take anything else of mine?"

Reluctantly, the boy plucked a thong of narrow, black leather string out of his pocket, wove through a small, black volcanic-glass ring etched with gold. He handed it back over to Seydon. The next moment, he was sprinting up the alleyway, cutting left onto a main streetway. Out of sight. The Dunaan found himself left alone to his own safety amidst hab-stacks hacking each other apart in the wake of planetary destabilization. He considered how much affect he could actually wrought against the chaos, if the best he could accomplish was sacking moody-gangers in the back of a stinking alleyway...
 
[member="Caerys Argente"]


"We look forward to seeing you" Corporal Stross ended the communications. The comm was placed back for all of Firemane to use and listen out for. There were some straggling Salacia employees too. Ones who didn't have family and decided to stick it out with Firemane. At least most of them seemed to have their heads on fairly straight.


"Listen up, we've got reinforcements inbound. ETA ten minutes or so. We're going to flush the final section of corporate cowboys out. Start your preparations."


---------------


"Just across? Why aren't you hauling tail this way?" Yes, there was an angry mob. He also knew [member="Thessa Kai"] . The woman could command a crowd like no one's business. Yet he did hear the hollering and pounding as the comm was put down somewhere in the room. Judah turned off the connection so Makai wouldn't hear. Instead, he turned on a downloaded game - something with pod racing or the like and set it down near the boy.


"Hey, finish eating. I gotta run across the street. Very important. Okay?"


"Nooooo. You're just gonna disappear again."


"Nope, be back in a flash. I promise. Firemane Security is going to keep an eye on you til I get back."


"Okay." Makai practically whining at this point, lower lip out in a pout. Judah ruffled his hair and left immediately, grabbing a blaster on the way out of the cafeteria.


Since they had barricaded the entrances and exits, Judah opened a second story window and hopped out. He landed on the duracrete with a thud, far too old to be flinging himself out of windows like that. The streets had been cleared of some of the riff-raff, leaving those looking to scavenge behind. Folks were picking up anything of relative value. It would be important to grab anything. It was going to take at least a week to coordinate a relief effort of any kind.

He hurried across to the building, running. Windows and doors were busted out on the lobby level and Judah immediately ran in. Thessa should be somewhere close by, judging from when they were watching her from above earlier.


"THESS? THESSA?!"
 
[member="Judah Dashiell"], [member="Thessa Kai"]


Ten minutes passed and soon the Silaqui-class Gunship had reached the Salacia Corporate Building and was swooping down in a fast descent. As the Firemane Corporal had warned, it seemed some enemies were still out and about, so it did not take long for the Gunship to come under fire.



Those who shot upon it came to regret as the Silaqui's laser cannons spewed out a volley of fire, mowing down hostile mercenaries. An attacker wielding a missile launcher, preparing to fire, suddenly keeled over when Caerys, having spied him with her scanners, shot him between the way with her shattergun, before leaping down, not waiting for the Gunship to land. Falling down like a cat she shit the ground. Eyes flared up a bright crimson as she got to her feet.


A grenade was tossed her way and she was caught in the blast, sending her flying. Armour battered, smoke coiling off her body and showered with shrapnel, she emerged. Bolter in one hand and shattergun in the other. The grenade-tossing corporate cowboy ate an APE round, a sniper hidden on a rooftop found that his face made polite conversation with a shattergun. With the Firemane fireteam in tow, Caerys moved into the corporate complex to take out the hostiles the Corporal had told them of. Between the two forces, they would find themselves cornered and flushed out.
 

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