Star Wars Roleplay: Chaos

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First Reply No Place for Monsters

The garden was carved into the heart of the city like a wound that refused to close. Neon towers loomed above, their cold light bleeding through the canopy of engineered trees. The air smelled faintly of wet soil and ozone, the kind of sterile peace only wealth could buy. A stark contrast to the streets outside, where noise and smoke never slept.

Korda Veydran sat on a stone bench near the edge of a fountain. His helmet rested beside him, its scarred beskar catching the lamplight like a dull star. Heavy plating clung to his frame, blackened and battered, but for once he wasn't moving like a battering ram through some breach. His gauntleted hands rested loose on his knees, claws of scar tissue visible beneath the armor's edges.

His red eyes caught the reflection of lanterns rippling in the water. For most, it would've been a moment of quiet. For Korda, it was an interrogation.


Monster, the word echoed again, as it always did when silence pressed too long. They had branded him with it — his clan, his kin, his enemies. Perhaps it was true. He had torn down walls, reduced squads to ash, detonated charges close enough that even brothers-in-arms had recoiled. A warhead in human flesh.

And yet, looking at the flowerbeds — carefully arranged, blooming where nothing natural should thrive — the question coiled tighter. Could a man like him even exist in places like this? Or was he only a shadow cast by fire and ruin, out of place in a world that built instead of broke?

He muttered to the night, voice low and rough as gravel ground beneath a boot.
"Don't belong here."

A soft clack echoed along the path behind him — the scrape of boots on stone. Someone else was here. The garden wasn't as private as he'd hoped.

Korda didn't move for his blade, though his shoulders tightened like a storm waiting to break. His red gaze lifted, catching the flicker of another presence through the lantern-lit leaves.

"...Strange place to find company," he growled, words carrying more weariness than threat.
 

Garden
Tags: Korda Veydran Korda Veydran

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"...Strange place to find company," he growled, words carrying more weariness than threat.

"...Sorry."

Phobos slowly stepped out of the brush, her hands folded awkwardly in front of her. She had come here to escape the harshness of the city, hoping to reconnect with the natural world. What she found was an armored man not looking to be disturbed. His tone was tired, sporting a bit of edge.

A large cloak covered her, the hood up to shroud her head. Cover the unnatural flames that made up her hair. A faint glow was slightly visible under the hood, but it veiled her strangeness well enough.

"I-I was just passing through," she assured. "I may depart if you wish for such."


 
Korda's eyes flicked to the figure, the faint glow under her hood catching the light of the lanterns. He studied her for a long moment, hands still resting on his knees, fingers loose but twitching slightly with old tension.

Then, almost imperceptibly, the corners of his mouth twitched. Not a grin, not a show of friendliness — just a shadow of acknowledgment. His voice came low, gravelly, but softer than usual.

"You're welcome… if you don't mind a monster sitting beside you," he said, letting the words hang in the quiet air. For a heartbeat, he didn't move, didn't reach for his weapons. A flicker passed through his red eyes — a trace of something he rarely allowed himself to feel. "But… I won't bite."



He shifted slightly on the bench, gesturing to the space beside him. "Sit, if you must. The garden's… more forgiving than the streets."

Phobos Phobos
 

Garden
Tags: Korda Veydran Korda Veydran

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"You're welcome… if you don't mind a monster sitting beside you,"

"Monsters do not speak in gentle tones," Phobos mused, tilting her head under her hood. "If you... mean to express that you are flawed, I have found that most people are."

The young woman moved over to the bench, walking in a manner that made her appear as light as a feather on her feet. From certain angles it may even appear, if momentarily, that she was walking on air as opposed to the ground. Phobos sat herself down on the far edge of the bench and politely folded her hands in her lap. Her hands sported four digits, three fingers and a thumb. Her species was unclear at a glance.

The sound of a sigh escaped her lips, but it was almost artificial. As if no air had even escaped her.

"I do find cities to be... overwhelming," the young woman stated. "It's a bit to disconnected from life for my liking..."


 
Korda gave a short, humorless laugh at her words — more a rasp of breath than anything else. His gaze fell to his gauntlets, the scarred beskar plates blackened from a hundred blasts and etched with the worn Death Watch symbol across his knuckles. The crimson sigil seemed to glare back at him under the lanterns.

"Gentle tones don't wash the blood off," he rumbled. "These hands have done worse than most care to imagine. I've torn walls apart with charges still burning. Crushed men who never even raised a weapon."

His fingers flexed slowly, metal creaking against scar tissue beneath. "My own clan called me too brutal. Said I endangered honor itself. So they named me monster, and cast me out."

For a moment, his red eyes lifted from his fists to the flowerbed ahead — colors alive, untouched by ash or fire. The contrast lingered like a knife. His voice dropped lower, rough, almost reluctant.


"Maybe they were right. Maybe a monster is just someone who doesn't flinch when the flames spread to the innocent."

Korda's gaze shifted toward her at last, the glow beneath her hood reflected faintly in his feral irises. "Still want to share a bench with me, knowing that?"


Phobos Phobos
 

Garden
Tags: Korda Veydran Korda Veydran

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"You seem capable of reflecting on this fact," Phobos stated. "A monster can only consume mindlessly. It does not look back on its actions with regret."

Phobos turned and offered a gentle smile. Her timidness had slipped away, revealing an obvious tender nature. In her travels, the young woman had seen the depths of darkness. The Bendu had told her such thing was the path of weakness. Perhaps it was. That did not change the fact that she wished to see others not abandon hope.


"I am not in danger," the Ashspawn said with certainty. "The past belongs to those who have moved on. I'm in the present. I am only beholden to what is chosen right now in this moment."

 
Korda studied her for a long time, the faint glow beneath her hood playing across his scarred features. Her words didn't wash over him — they hit, heavy, like charges set too close to the chest.

His jaw tightened, and he gave a slow exhale through his nose. "You speak as if choice is clean. As if the present isn't built on the bones of what came before." His red eyes dropped back to the sigil scarred into his gauntlets. The Death Watch mark looked older than he felt, carved deep enough to outlast any regret.

"Regret doesn't undo the things I've done," he muttered. "It doesn't bring back the children who burned because I lit the fuse too close. It doesn't wash the screams out of the beskar."


But then, almost against his will, the hard line of his mouth twitched. Not quite a smile — more the ghost of one. "Still… you're either brave, or foolish, to sit here and tell me I'm no monster. Either way…" he lifted his gaze back to her, eyes burning like coals in the lantern-light, "…I don't mind the company."

Phobos Phobos
 

Garden
Tags: Korda Veydran Korda Veydran

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"It doesn't bring back the children who burned because I lit the fuse too close. It doesn't wash the screams out of the beskar."

"You're right," Phobos nodded. "And yet, you reflect anyways. What is your path forwards? Do you seek to continue to harm? Do you believe you have no choice in the matter?"

An airy chuckle escaped her chest as she leaned back on the bench, her feet kicking in a rhythmic way.


"I am not naive, just observant," she insisted. "The galaxy is quite vast, and you meet many people when you see it jumping from transport to transport. There are some who revel in the violence and let the blood wet their appetites. They do not allow themselves to come to the crossroads you sit at here."

Something strange had begun to happen. The grass at her feet had slowly, though at first not noticeably, begun to grow taller. Flowers seemed to spring up out of nowhere, at first not visible but now alive and present. Her own eyes were glassy and vibrant, a reflection of a world unseen by the naked eye. It was as though she could peer at the essence of his very spirit as it stood in the turmoil of his past actions.

"I have sat with many who have come to these same crossroads," the young woman noted. "I am happy to keep you company as well."


 

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