Protect Prosperity
Deep Space
Prosperity
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Michael, Gabriel, Raguel, Sariel, Raphael, Jeremiel, Connel
[Any text in brackets signifies comm-link usage and not face to face conversation]
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Rides
Gear/Armor
SURGICAL - CRYBERNETIC IMPLANTS
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Shadow Sanctuary - Enterprise
The corridors were changing.
Pathways becoming obstacles.
It would not hold them forever. It did not need to. Forever was not the mission. Minutes were. Seconds were. Enough time to get friendly bodies off
The Prosperity and leave the attackers to whatever waited for them in the dark. Let them clear the hallways. Let them push deeper.
Let them funnel themselves into bottlenecks where they would have to kill hundreds to reach tens. Every step they took was one Cora’s white routes did not have to answer for. Lily Decoria’s voice came over the comm, calm where his had been edged. A warning… A good one… Maybe even the right one.
Connel, don't think you are the only one handling the red targets. And don't lose yourself to the fight. We will need you after this. Our priority is preventing this being the massacre the Sith wish it to be.
Connel set another charge beneath a conduit and thumbed the arming sequence. Battlemaster.
Still strange.
Not because Lily lacked courage. Not because she lacked skill. The trail she had cut through the enemy would have made that argument ridiculous. But titles were heavy things, and Connel had always believed they should leave marks on the hands before they were worn on the shoulders. Still, she was good…And she was right.
Mostly.
[I know.] He spoke flatly over the secure comm line as he sealed the charge and moved to the next support line.
[I’m not trying to be the only one handling red targets.]
Then he paused in thought. His visor tracked a fresh cluster of hostile signatures turning away from Cora’s white routes and toward the dead corridors he had been shaping.
[I’m making sure fewer of them reach you.]
There it was again.
The old Jedi disease. Warning another away from the fire while already stepping into it. He could not judge her for that. Connel Vanagor had built half a life out of choosing the worst hallway and calling it duty.on. The purpose was to delay, to buy time, to create a maze that would confuse and slow their pursuers. Each twist and turn was calculated, designed to test endurance and determination, ensuring escape was possible for those who could adapt quickly.
The next charge clicked into place.
Not yet.
Preferably not until he was already gone.
The blast would rupture the line, blow the wall casing outward, and turn the corridor behind him into an argument no one could win quickly. Another charge followed. Then another. Each one had a purpose. Block pursuit… collapse visibility… kill momentum… spare life support. Preserve evacuation control. Hurt the enemy only where hurting them bought time for the innocent.
That was the line.
That was the mirror.
Moving through the halls had become easier.
Foot soldiers. Acolytes. Pawns thrown into the rancor’s den by masters who would never learn the names of those they spent. Those still advancing would receive no quarter. No respite. No reprieve.
Then Connel saw Cora.
As well as the monster in front of her. He stopped. Not because he was afraid.
Really? He stopped because he recognized the shape of the moment. This was not just any Sith. The aura was the same discordant wound he had sensed on Alderaan. Chaotic. Familiar to her. Poisoned by choice and pain.
Her relation. Her brother. This was not a duel.
This was a family fight.
Connel could take it away from Lysander. Easily. Gladly, if the mission demanded it, one Vanagor may have liked him, thought he had promise, an outlook sorely lacking in the galaxy, but that Vanagor is gone now.
He could not take it away from Cora.
Caltin’s words moved through him, old and stubborn as stone.
Redemption is never out of reach. You just have to reach for it.
Connel did not know if there was still good in her brother. He did not need to know. Cora believed there might be. That was enough to stay his hand. For now at least. He slipped into the dark above the hangar lane, masked, cloaked from the Force, breath quiet behind the seal. “Night”t remained silent in his grip. The detonator rested against his palm. He would not interrupt her choice.
He would not abandon her to it either.
Then Decoria entered the hangar.
Connel heard her before he saw her, the movement of another Jedi pressing into the storm, silver confidence and crossguard light cutting through the smoke.
So, which one of you thinks they can handle fighting me?
Somewhere beneath the mask, Connel almost sighed. Battlemaster, then. Definitely Battlemaster. Brave… Loud. Very much not what he would have done. Which was probably why the Sith were looking at her now instead of the evacuation routes.
Useful, then.
Fewer, apparently, was going to have to work very hard.
A Blackblade fireteam shifted along the far side of the hangar, using the smoke and broken machinery to angle toward Cora’s exposed flank. Another unit moved high, armored shapes climbing through the gantry work with disciplined speed. Not panicked. Not careless. Elite mechanized infantry did not need to be brave. They had been built to make bravery irrelevant.
Connel watched them move.
The Sith always recognized an exposed heart. The first rifle rose toward Cora, not Lysander’s, that was someone else’s mistake.
Connel pressed the detonator.
The charge did not bloom into wild fire. He had no use for spectacle. It snapped with controlled violence, punching through the gantry support above the advancing team. Metal shrieked. Stone facing cracked loose. Sparks fell like burning rain as the upper walkway folded between Cora and the incoming line of fire.
The shot went wide.
His view was momentarily obstructed, but Connel knew Cora more than well enough to know that she had probably never looked away from her brother.
Which is Good.
Connel moved. The stolen Blackblade rifle came up against his shoulder. He fired twice from the dark. Once into the floor coupling ahead of the fireteam. Once into the overhead release above them.
The first blast spat steam and static across their optics. The second brought a curtain of debris down hard enough to split their formation and foul the clean angles they had been building. Red markers paused. White markers moved.
Good.
He slid his last “blinder” charge under a shattered service cart and let it rest there, quiet and ugly, a little sun waiting beneath scrap metal.
Not for Cora.
Not for Lysander.
For anyone who thought her moment belonged to them. Another Blackblade squad adjusted almost immediately. Fast. Too fast. They were already compensating, spreading their spacing, shifting from direct advance to layered pressure. One moved with a heavy repeater braced against his armor, the weapon panning toward the smoke where Lily had made herself impossible to ignore.
Connel’s thumb brushed the detonator again.
He could have taken the shot. He could have crossed the hangar. He could have made the entire moment his.
No.
Cora had her brother.
Lily had her challenge.
The evacuation had its routes.
Connel had the dark.
He pressed once.
The charge beneath the cart flashed white and hard. The blast rolled low and directional, taking the repeater team off their feet and folding their shield line sideways without tearing into the hangar wall. A full-yield detonation would have been louder. Messier. Easier.
This was better.vThis was work. A second later, another charge went off behind the Blackblade advance. Then another. Then another. Not random.
Never random. The hangar’s approach lanes began to close one by one, not sealing completely, but narrowing, forcing choices, making every route toward the Jedi slower and uglier than the last.
Connel did not smile. He did not rage. He did not look away from the map. Red dots clustered. White dots moved. He opened the comm to Cora’s channel, voice low beneath the mask.
[You have room.]
That was all. There was no permission, no advice, no comfort, none needed, just a fact.
Then he cut the channel and slipped deeper into the smoke, detonator in one hand, stolen rifle in the other, “Night” and “Day” waiting silently at his back. If the brother appeared, Cora would have her moment. If the Emissary appeared...
Connel’s thumb settled over the next trigger.
...someone was not going to like it.