Star Wars Roleplay: Chaos

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Private Gospel of Gold




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ᚺᛖᛁᛚ ᛊᛖ ᚺᛁᚾ ᛖᛁᚾᛁ ᛊᚨᚾᛁ ᚷᚢᚦ
Ark of Ha'rangir

Veyra Saelis Veyra Saelis

The depths of The Ark trembled with the pulse of divine labor.

Smoke rolled in great curling plumes, glowing with the red of molten faith, as the Warpriest Prime knelt amid the infernal heat of the forges. Her armor, her sacred carapace, lay discarded in pieces around her, steaming in the haze. She wanted her scales to breathe, to taste the ash and metal, to feel the sweat of her god upon her flesh. This was holy ground, where creation bled and burned.

In her hands rested the Glyphscript Anvil, the hammer that sang with the hymns of Ha'rangir's will. It was said that the weapon contained the voices of a hundred dead forgemasters, spirits whispering instructions from the other side. Each stroke of it sent a harmonic vibration through the forge, and the world seemed to change beneath its light.

All around her, the Iron Clergy toiled in reverent silence. They fed the molten channels with broken weapons, rusted armor, and useless scraps, the discarded trophies of past wars. Dima swung the Anvil down in rhythmic succession, the clangor of each strike echoing like a temple bell. With each impact, the impossible happened: rust became gold, stone became silver, durasteel sang itself into songsteel, a shimmering metal that reflected the light of the forge as if it were alive. The room glowed with divine transmutation, like alchemy performed through prayer.

Dima chittered in delight, her tail rattling as her claws gripped the gleaming relic before her. A useless bronze trinket, a forgotten idol, had been tossed onto her table by one of the clergy. She plucked it up between her fingers, holding it to the light and tilting her head curiously.

"Hah....what is this little thing? A child's bauble? A beggar's coin?" she purred with mock judgment, her tone girlish and teasing. "Oh, but you could be so much more, couldn't you?"

Her grin widened beneath her mask. She raised the Glyphscript Anvil high and brought it down with a single, echoing strike. The bronze screamed under the weight of godhood, its surface rippling, melting, shifting until, at last, it cooled into a mirror-like gleam of pure beskar. The forge fell silent for a moment, the glow reflecting off her eyes like twin suns.

Dima giggled, a strange, guttural, yet charming sound, half divine and half child. "See?" she cooed, admiring the newly forged relic as though it were a newborn. "All it takes is a little faith...and a good hammer swing!"

Her tail flicked, scattering ash. "Oh, I do adore the glitter of it all. How dull the galaxy would be without the shimmer of our god's touch! The difference between rust and ruby, stone and sapphire, it's all just a matter of who holds the hammer, isn't it?"

She leaned back, sweat glistening on her scaled abdomen, the orange light rippling across her muscles. Around her, the Iron Clergy bowed low, reverent and fearful of the divinity at work before them.

With a soft hum of satisfaction, Dima ran her claw along the beskar's edge and whispered, "Yes...let the galaxy rot if it must. We'll just melt it down and make it beautiful again."

And with that, she raised the hammer once more, the forge roaring to life like a god awakened, its light reflecting in her eyes, bright as worship, bright as war.

 

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Objective: Strike it Rich
Weapons: Vibroknife | Vibrosword | Blaster Pistol
Equipment: Modified Uniform | Hidden Choker | Wristwear | Personal Shield
Tags: Warpriest Prime Warpriest Prime

The Hound's Mercy drifted in the shadow of the gas giant like a predator waiting to strike. Its hull panels hummed with the quiet power of readiness with guns charged, engines idling low. Beyond the viewport loomed the Iron Citadel, also known as the Ark of Ha’rangir stood as a Mandalorian city-state adrift in the void, lit by the eerie shimmer of its solar arrays and the faint heartbeat glow of its Iron Heart reactor core.

Even at this distance, the structure dwarfed anything the crew had ever seen. Before them was a titanic cathedral of beskar and faith, bristling with tractor arrays and shield pylons. To most, it was a fortress. To some, a relic.

To Veyra Saelis, it was an opportunity.

Veyra leaned over the holo-table, light from the Citadel’s telemetry wash glinting against the matte plating of her cybernetic left arm. Her tone was level but edged. “If we play this wrong, we’re vapor before we get within a klick. Jirra, power reroute ready?”

“Triple-baffled and cooled.” Jirra Taan, the Twi’lek engineer, didn’t look up from her console. “The Mercy’ll read like a trade freighter till we open up. After that—”

She snapped a cable into place. “We’re ghosts with teeth.”

Lyra Fen glanced up from her comms array, her voice crisp. “Local signal traffic’s dense. The Iron Citadel’s got a full gravity hook field around it. They’ll see us coming unless I spike a fake approach vector. I can do it, but I’ll need ten seconds of silence when we drift in.”

“You’ll have it. Tessa, once Lyra ghosts us, bring us up through the ventral shadow. Keep our nose toward their energy pylons. If they flare, I want room to run.”

At the helm, Tessa Morn gave a single nod keeping her movements precise, almost ritualistic. “Already plotting for it, Captain. If they light those solar arrays, we’ll be flash-fried before the shields even register.”

A low chuckle came from behind the gunnery console. Ralo Brenn, the Besalisk, cracked his thick knuckles and eyed the Iron Citadel through the tactical display.

“Big target like that? Feels like robbing a god’s grave.” Quartermaster Drix Kael snorted. “Though I'm sure the god’s got something worth stealing.”

Amid the steady hum of systems and the tension of preparation, Shae Drav stood apart with her helmet clipped to her belt, her expression unreadable. The Mandalorian’s eyes were fixed on the holo-display of the Iron Citadel. Every pulse of that vast war-priest ship was something she could feel in her bones. The rhythm of her people’s faith and fury.

“You’re sure about this, Captain?” she said finally, voice steady but with a quiet bite. “That ark isn’t just a station — it’s a pilgrimage for them. You don’t raid something like that. You defile it.”

Veyra didn’t flinch. “It’s full of relics, Shae. Relics that could keep us in the black for years. I don’t care what gods they pray to. They made themselves a target.” Her gaze stayed on the map, where the Citadel’s inner conduits shimmered like veins of gold.

Shae’s jaw tightened. “You think they’ll see it that way? Mandalorians don’t forget. You strip their holy vaults and they’ll come for you. Every last one that still breathes.” Her gaze turning to stare at Veyra as much in warning as disbelief.

Veyra’s voice dropped, quiet and cold. “Then they’ll have to find us first.”

From the side of the table, First Officer Keln Varo cleared his throat — a veteran’s weary patience in his tone. “Shae’s not wrong, Captain. You’re talking about picking a fight with a mobile fortress the size of a continent. I’ve seen Mandalorians fight over less than a relic blade. They’ll burn the stars to chase down whoever crossed them.”

Veyra looked up finally, her pale eyes catching the blue of the holo-light. “That’s why we plan. That’s why we move with precision, not panic.”

She turned to her crew, every voice falling silent. “We’re not here to start a war. We’re here to take what the galaxy forgot, or doesn't know exists. The Iron Citadel has vaults full of wonders and spoils. We take what we can carry and vanish. No heroics, no sermons.”

There was a moment of silence before Shae Drav stepped closer, folding her arms across her chest. “You don’t understand what that place means. It’s not just metal and relics. It’s faith.”

Veyra met her gaze. There was no challenge, only steady conviction. “Then you understand better than anyone why I have to tread carefully.”

A pause.

Then Shae inclined her head slightly, though her eyes didn’t soften. “Careful’s not the word I’d use, Captain. But… I’ll make sure we’re ready.”

As the Hound’s Mercy slipped closer to the faint gravity well surrounding the Iron Citadel, the deck hummed with anticipation.

Lyra’s voice came through the comm-line, quiet and sharp. “Ghost field active. We’re in the dark.”

Tessa eased the ship forward. The Mercy’s engines dimmed to a whisper.

Veyra watched the Iron Citadel grow larger in the viewport. An imposing symbol of faith, drifting in silence. Her left hand flexed, the servos in her cybernetic limb clicking faintly.

“Steady,” she murmured. “Let’s see what gods bleed like.”

And beside her, Shae Drav looked at her captain with something between loyalty and dread.

Shae Drav “If Ha’rangir’s watching,” she said under her breath, “he’s already smiling.”

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ᚺᛖᛁᛚ ᛊᛖ ᚺᛁᚾ ᛖᛁᚾᛁ ᛊᚨᚾᛁ ᚷᚢᚦ
Ark of Ha'rangir

Veyra Saelis Veyra Saelis

The Ark's vaults sang with a light of their own, an aurora of gold and plasma reflection. Rivers of molten metal coursed through etched runic channels as machines older than empires hummed in quiet obedience to their mistress. The air was thick with the perfume of faith forged into matter.

At the heart of it all stood Dima Prime, haloed in radiance, her four arms outstretched over a slab of black beskar veined in molten gold. Every movement she made was both ritual and art, the divine rhythm of alchemy guided by instinct more than science.

Her voice purred through the chamber, half-prayer, half-song.

"Gold to glory...steel to spirit...broken things made holy again."

Before her, shattered helmets, scarred cuirasses, and ruined relics of war began to mend themselves under her will. The veins of Ha'rangirite pulsed from her fingertips, crawling into the fractures like liquid light. She giggled faintly, a girlish sound wholly at odds with the sanctity of the chamber as one of the relics over-melted and flared too brightly, forcing her to shield her eyes.

"Oops~ too much love," she cooed, fanning the heat with a playful flick of her claws. "You'll melt if I keep touching you like that, won't you?"

Around her, thousands of treasures glittered, chalices from fallen kings, the bones of saints plated in mythic metals, even an entire throne turned upside down to be reforged into something more beautiful. The Prophet was lost in her trance, dancing lazily through her sacred work like a priestess drunk on her own divinity.

The Ark itself, however, had begun to whisper. Warning systems chirped faintly, distant klaxons muffled under kilometers of cathedral plating. Outside, the Hound's Mercy crept closer, unseen, a speck of hunger against the infinite dark.

Dima, of course, noticed nothing.

"Oh, precious little baubles," she murmured to the treasures as she held a pendant up to the light, watching it refract into a cascade of amber and crimson. "You've slept long enough, haven't you? Let's wake you properly..."

The vaults hummed, the light dimming briefly as her power pulsed through the conduits, an unintentional beacon.

Then the moment was interrupted.

A low hiss of the chamber doors, followed by the soft, measured steps of a Warpriest. His armor bore the sigils of the Iron Clergy, his tone deferential but edged with nervous purpose.

"Grand Warpriest Prime," he began, bowing his head. "Apologies for the intrusion, but there are pilgrims at the outer hangars awaiting blessing and inspection. The Scribes also request your signature on the trade manifests from Geonosis. The paperwork has... accumulated."

Dima froze mid-motion, claws still poised above the half-mended relic. For a heartbeat she looked ready to smite the messenger on principle. Then she groaned, an almost theatrical sound of divine irritation, tossing her head back with an exaggerated sigh.

"Paperwork? Ugh, by the forge, must the gods test me so?" She set the relic down with a pouting frown, the golden light dimming in her hands. "Do they not see I am conducting miracles here? The Ark itself hums beneath my touch and yet I must...sign scrolls and greet pilgrims?"

"Your presence inspires them, my lady," the Warpriest replied cautiously.

"Ha! So would my absence, if they had any imagination," she quipped, but the laughter in her tone softened the bite. She snapped her fingers, summoning attendants to gather the relics. "Fine, fine. Let them have their Primarch for a while. But only until the ink dries, then I am coming back."

She sauntered toward the exit, her silks glinting like spilled sunlight, the air still tinged with molten gold where she had worked. As the heavy vault doors sealed behind her, the guardians within resumed their silent watch, great bronze Sentinels motionless as statues.

Yet without Prime, the vault's aura dulled. The divine hum softened, and for the first time in centuries, the great chamber felt merely mortal.

Far beyond, in the endless dark, a predatory ship drifted closer, its crew unaware of how perfect their timing was.

The goddess of The Forge was gone from her altar.

And the Ark, for the briefest, most perilous moment, was left to dream unattended.

 

exteriorbar1.png
Objective: Strike it Rich
Weapons: Vibroknife | Vibrosword | Blaster
Equipment: Modified Uniform | Hidden Choker | Wristwear | Personal Shield
Tags: Warpriest Prime Warpriest Prime

The Hound’s Mercy settled into the Citadel’s shadow like a cat folding around a warm stone. Dock clamps bit clean and silent.

There were no alarms to greet them for now. The Ark’s lights washed the hull in a ceremonial wash of pale gold that made the beskar inside look almost kindly. For all its hymn-sung menace, the Iron Citadel slept, indulgent, proud, and blind.

Veyra Saelis was already at the airlock when the boarding lock forced open their entrance. A maintenance hatch sliced open with a line directly into the Hound’s cargo bay. A cargo elevator extending with freshly greased quiet into the unaware Ark. Veyra’s cybernetic left arm flexed once, servos whispering.

The rest of the team flowed behind her in practiced silence. Shae Drav at her flank, Keln Varo shadowing with a tactical slate, Jirra Taan hauling tool-rigs, Ralo Brenn lugging a small crate of improvised breaching charges, Tessa Morn in comms-ready stance, Drix Kael with data-sleeves and false registries, Dr. Neth Vairen with med-pack and diagnostics, and Lyra Fen already murmuring to a portable slicer console.

“Keep your faces plain,” Veyra said, low. “We’re technicians and port handlers if seen. No grudges, no salvation, no icons.”

Shae’s helmet hung at her hip; she moved without show, every step precise. Her voice was the same: quiet, edged with something that felt like steel and doctrine. “We take what keeps us alive and what buys the next week. We leave their altars, their priests, and the Iron Heart alone. You desecrate a shrine and you do not only make enemies. You make a crusade.”

Keln nodded, eyes scanning projected approaches on his slate. “Strategy; fast in, clean pockets, soft out. No long stays. Lyra, get me the floor manifests, which bays are hosting harvest cargo and which are reliquary holdings.”

Lyra’s fingers flew. “I’m ghosted on the local net. Drix’s proxy cleared our hit signature. They’ve got Harvesters unloading ore in bay C-113. Two sealed crates marked as ‘Ceremonial Conduits’ in hold 7B flagged for surface transfer tomorrow. I can reroute the manifest to us, but if we lift anything tagged as ‘core relic’ it’ll ping their warders.”

“Exactly,” Shae said. “Conduits, maybe. Cinders, if they’re in transport locks and stable, maybe one or two. Heart? Not a fething chance. Leave the Heart. Leave the altars. Take practical things; fuel cores, forge modules, drone servos, tractor matrix spools. Those feed us. Those don’t demand a war.”

Jirra cracked a grin as she slung her toolbox. “And if the Mandalorians are offended, we’ll leave them something nice to remember us by. Like a vacancy in their supply chains.”

Ralo hefted his crate. “And a few of their weapons. Not the ceremonial blades for feths sake. Those will make a whole culture’s head tilt. But turbolaser capacitors, plasma regulators, a few working proton canisters. Nice, quiet money.”

They moved as a unit. Veyra led them down the cavernous corridor, her masked calm a metronome. Shae walked directly ahead when they reached the storage cluster making her familiarity with Mandalorian order apparent in how she read the labels, the way her hand skimmed the lip of a crate and then moved on. She did not touch the reliquaries. She paused only when they passed a trove of rune-etched panels that hummed faintly with embedded wards.

“Leave those,” she said, almost to herself. “Wards and priests will turn half the hangar into a furnace if we crack those wrong.” Then, louder, to the crew.

“Take the logistical spools, the energy cells in the green crates, the field-repair kits, the Azurite ledger boxes if they’re sealed in containment foam. Don’t touch loose cinders. If a cinder is free in the open it’s either stabilized or someone’s set a trap.”

Drix moved like a man counting coins already earned. He fingered a sleeve of forged manifests and slipped them into the local terminal with Lyra’s overwatch. “I’ll mark the haul as internal reallocation during the pre-dawn redistribution. No flags if Lyra holds the sensor trace to us.”

Dr. Neth crouched by an open crate and peered inside, scanner in hand.

“Fuel sacs, low volatility; there’s a couple of biotech crates labeled ‘encephalic stabilizers’. Could be worth a lot to the right buyer. Check containment seals before we move them. A misread could hurt a man." she warned, glancing at Veyra as if to underscore the practical limits of their operation.

Shae’s blade hung across her back, untouched. She scanned the bay, then nodded toward a maintenance chute half-hidden behind stacked pallets. “We slip cinders into lined casings and feed them through the chute. No open handling. Jirra, you and Ralo secure containment. Keln, you walk point. Drix, you shepherd the manifests. Lyra, keep comm scrambles on loop. Tessa, twenty minutes from launch to clear. Don’t let us be late.”

Tessa’s reply was a single, calm confirmation. “I’ll fly the shadow home.”

Veyra crouched for a moment by the nearest crate, fingers brushing a banded fuel core. “We aren’t trophy hunters,” she said. “We’re precise. No blasphemy, no souvenir ornaments. We take what keeps the crew fed and the Mercy working. Everything else is a sermon we don’t need.”

Shae’s answer was a brief, unexpected thing. Not soft, but not dismissive either. “Honor isn’t just a thing you recite. It’s what keeps your kin from becoming ghosts. You keep that in mind and you’ll stay alive longer.”

They moved into the work with mechanical efficiency. Jirra and Ralo unbolted crates with quiet tools, padded and strapped the stable Azurite containment boxes into shock-cases, and sealed energy cores into dampening skins. Lyra hummed beneath her breath, slicing sensor-pings and leaving nothing but a faint ghost-signature. Drix interpolated the manifest bytes into the Ark’s ledger while Keln watched the corridor and watched the crew. Strategist’s instincts pacing like a heartbeat.

No idols were toppled. No altars touched. Shae personally dragged one crate back from the edge of a reliquary alcove and placed it where Veyra could see as an unspoken check.

“We keep blood off the doorsteps,” she said. “We take the means to survive. Anything else turns this into a vendetta.”

When the load was done, the team retraced its steps with the same silence they’d used to enter. At the airlock, Veyra counted the cases by feel, then nodded. “Good. Fast. Clean.”

Shae secured the last latch on the containment case, then met Veyra’s eyes. There was no warmth in the Mandalorian’s look. Just a steady, cautious respect.

“You did wrong, Captain,” she said flatly. “But you did it without being a fool.”

Veyra’s smile was a small thing. “I prefer being useful.”

The ship still clung to the Citadel’s hull like a remora as the two lingered outside of the ship. The engines whispering against the void as bodies inside moved with practiced speed stowing their haul. Inside the Iron Citadel, the boarding party had moved with precision. A rhythm of soft steps, clipped murmurs, and restrained greed.

They had come for supplies, for survival. And by the time the last sealed crate was loaded with energy cores and stabilized cinders, Veyra Saelis was ready to give the order to pull out.

Their ships docking clamps holding steady as the hum of the final trips of the cargo lifts echoed through the bay. The smell of metal, ozone, and forge oil filled the stale air as Ralo Brenn and Jirra Taan worked through the last of the crates.

“That’s the last of the stabilized cores,” Jirra called over her shoulder, her lekku twitching with concentration. “Another few minutes and we’re gone.”

“Make it five,” Veyra replied, her tone distant, eyes drawn toward a narrow corridor at the far end of the hangar.

Shae Drav followed her gaze, helm tucked beneath her arm. That faint orange light pulsed from deeper within the Citadel. A slow, rhythmic glow like breath.

“That’s the Vault,” Shae murmured. “Domina Prime’s forge chamber. No guards, no wards. She’s not here.”

“And you want to see it.” Veyra said, not as a question.

“If she’s gone, this might be the only chance. Her work’s more than weapons. It’s faith given form. I’ve heard the stories.”

Veyra’s cybernetic hand flexed once, a whisper of servos.

“Five minutes,” she said at last. “Lyra, lock the hangar and loop the surveillance. We’re going for a walk.”

“Copy that,” Lyra Fen’s voice crackled back from the comm. “You’ve got a clean corridor. Just don’t wake any gods while you’re down there.”

The passage leading to the Vault sloped downward, lined with murals carved into dark beskar. The carvings told no clear story. Only fragments of battles, symbols of Ha’rangir, and streaks of molten metal frozen mid-flow. The air grew warmer with each step.

At the end of the corridor, a door of layered alloy stood half-open, light spilling through its seam like sunlight through storm clouds. Veyra pushed it aside with her cybernetic arm, and they stepped into the Vault.

It was less a workshop and more a sanctum. Each step made it clear even the walls were alive. Veins of molten ore running through crystalline conduits around them. The Forge Hammer of Domina Prime rested on an altar-like dais, its surface still radiating faint heat. Surrounding it were forged artifacts, weapons, armor, and vessels that shimmered with a strange alchemical luminescence.

Shae froze just inside the threshold. Even without Domina’s presence, the space felt alive.

“Ha’rangir’s breath,” she whispered. “She’s still working it… even when she’s gone.”

Veyra circled the dais, eyes sharp and calculating. “This isn’t engineering,” she said softly. “It’s something older. The metal’s shifting on its own.”

She crouched, studying a curved breastplate. The alloy rippled. Not molten, but not solid. As though it could move, like it was breathing.

Shae stepped closer, reverence in every motion. “She fuses through resonance. The hammer channels it. Binds energy to memory. Every strike leaves an imprint. Every creation remembers its maker.”

Veyra straightened slowly, eyes catching the flickering reflection of her cybernetic arm in the molten pool. “And that makes her more than a smith. It makes her dangerous.”

“To the unfaithful,” Shae said, voice steady. “To her people, she’s divine. You can’t kill a god that knows how to rebuild herself.” The hum of the forge deepened, low and resonant, like the ship itself was listening. The molten veins pulsed once, a heartbeat in metal.

Veyra’s hand hovered briefly over the hammer, feeling its warmth from a distance. Her expression was unreadable, half fascination, half warning. “This is what happens when belief finds a tool sharp enough to hold it.”

Shae nodded slowly. “Or when power decides it deserves worship.”

Their comms crackled to life with Keln Varo’s voice, crisp and urgent. “Captain, loading’s complete. Patrols are rotating. We should be gone.”

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Dima-Banner-Gif.gif


ᚺᛖᛁᛚ ᛊᛖ ᚺᛁᚾ ᛖᛁᚾᛁ ᛊᚨᚾᛁ ᚷᚢᚦ
Ark of Ha'rangir

Veyra Saelis Veyra Saelis

It was hard being favored by the gods as she was. The massive war priestess sat stiffly in her temple chambers, shaking hands with delegates from fellow clans and stamping the insignia of House Prime onto supply orders, declarations, and all manner of civic madness. She signed requisitions for ore transfers, petitions for shrine restorations, monastery expansions, repair forms, food shipments. Her scribes swept away a finished stack only to replace it with another fresh mound a heartbeat later. Dima rolled her eyes so dramatically she nearly saw her own spine. She slumped back in her chair like a dying noble, wheezing in theatrical agony, limbs sprawling in tragic, operatic defeat. A comedic sight to some, given the sheer menace of her design, her talons, her fangs, her holy aura...and yet there she was, reduced to a pouty overgrown cat stuck doing taxes.

"By the smoking bones of Ha'rangir," she muttered, dragging her claws down her face. "If I see one more form marked urgent, I swear I will drown myself in molten magma just to feel something more pleasant than THIS." She slapped another document onto the desk with such force the parchment gave an audible whimper. "I am a woman forged for war, for glory, for divine purpose, and you want me to ratify shipping routes. I would rather wrestle an erupting volcano. Naked!"

Her scribes pretended not to hear her spiraling into dramatic despair, though a few had perfected the art of side-eyeing her in pious silence.

She was a woman of god now, a missionary of Ha'rangir and the Pantheon. She was refined, tempered, matured from the feral destroyer child she once was. Her life was miracles and purpose. And yet...yet...here she sat drowning under a tidal wave of documents like some underpaid office clerk.

She wished the gods themselves would descend just so she could yell at them face-to-face.

The only mercy came in the form of the temple bells. They tolled throughout the Citadel, deep and resonant, calling all nearby Mandalorians to service, prayer, or duty in their nearest sanctum. Her scribes froze, shared a silent nod of obligation, then hurried out of the chamber with their quills and tablets, leaving the demon-priestess blessedly alone.

Dima immediately closed her eyes, bowed her head, and murmured a reverent, heartfelt prayer:

"Thank you for taking them away. Don't bring them back. Amen."

The instant they were gone, she shot upright with the energy of a prisoner freed from captivity. Her spine cracked like artillery as she stretched and cursed the existence of chairs. She marched to her personal radio system, massive, ancient, wired into the stereos across the Ark, and twisted the dial to her favorite playlist. The soft hum of connection was followed by.

GUITAR.
GLORIOUS, SACRED, GOD-BLESSED GUITAR.

A grin split her face. She peeled out of the chamber with a bounce, a sway, a full-body wiggle, doing a little jig that no holy figure had any business performing. But she was free. She was thriving. She was in her lane, vibing, untouched by mortal concerns.

"When the rhythm starts to play, dance with me, make my sway..."

Her voice, like gravel being grated across a metal drum, failed spectacularly to match the notes, but her enthusiasm more than compensated. She shimmied down the hall, clicked her heels, shaking her proverbial bacon. She did not notice the subtle shifts in the Ark's hum. Did not notice the unusual silence in the lower bays. Did not hear the faint shuffle of intruders in the shadowed docks. She was entirely, cosmically unbothered.

She kicked open the doors to her forge like she was entering a concert stage.

"Flashing lights of devotion! Circling in slow motion-"

She twirled on her talons, arms wide, voice cracking magnificently as she sauntered toward her gleaming hammer. The massive forge doors slammed shut behind her with a boom, sealing the chamber. She strutted with every ounce of holy swagger she possessed.

"My motivations, ah, are my temptations, ah! My heart is racing with sensation, it's sensational!"

She caressed the haft of her forge hammer, lifted it, and placed a dainty kiss upon the surface with the theatrical reverence of a woman greeting her lover after war. She took her stance, raised the hammer high...

...and stopped.

Her five eyes focused, pupils dilating like a hunting beast.

Something in the chamber was...off.

A few pieces of armor, ones she knew she'd left perfectly arranged, were shifted. Barely. An inch. Maybe two. But she noticed.

She always noticed.

"Ohhh...well that's not how I left you," she purred, tilting her head at a chestplate. She reached over and adjusted it precisely back into place. Her smile was bright and charming and absolutely predatory.

Now she suspected something was amiss.

Slowly, the divine war-priestess rotated in place, tail sweeping behind her, ears pricking, pupils narrowing. Her music still blared through the speaker system, her hammer still glowed faintly in her grasp, but now her body language screamed hunter.

She peered into the piles of metal. The stacks of raw beskar. The crates of relics. The hanging chains. The mountains of scrap and half-born constructs.

All of them perfect places for prey to hide.

Her voice dipped into something low, sweet, and deadly.

"Is someone in my forge? Lost foundlings? Curious newcomers?" she murmured.

Her grin widened.

"Oh. I do hope so."
 

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