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Dominion Operation: Creedfall || Mandalorian Empire Dominion of Ketaris

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UNIVERSITY OF KETARIS – OUTER VAULT APPROACH

Jonah let the silence stretch a beat longer, just to savor the moment.

His gaze lingered on the twisted corridor of Vong-borne ruin, then slid sideways toward his sister—her crimson visor catching the flicker of distant flames like a slow wink from a war god.

“Let me guess,” she said. “You told Aether you would handle it. Didn’t specify how, so he sent me here as insurance.”

He barked a laugh—low, sharp, amused.

“That obvious, huh?”

He tilted his head toward her, a faint smirk tugging at the corner of his mouth. “Figures he'd send the deadliest insurance policy in the Empire. Still—” his eyes narrowed fondly behind the dark lenses of his own visor, “—glad you’re here, ‘Seli. Can’t think of better firepower to have on my six.”

His words carried genuine warmth, beneath the usual slick exterior. Family was rare. His siblings rarer still. And Aselia? She was one of the few constants in the storm he called life.

Then it hit.

Like a breath of wind from a sealed tomb.

The air shifted. The shadows deepened. A ripple passed over his senses—not cold, not warm, just… hungry. He felt it rise before the mists even thickened. The Bogan curling, teasing, beckoning.

Jonah turned his head slightly, smile blooming across his face before she even spoke.

“There she is.”

Velda emerged from the gloom like she’d been born of it—all shadows and silence and that wicked sort of elegance that made even ruin feel like art. His hand rose, smooth and easy, motioning toward her as if unveiling a painting in a gallery.

“What are we waiting on?” he echoed Aselia’s words back, glancing between the two women. “Her.”

With a sweep of his coat, he stepped forward to meet Velda’s approach. No hesitation. No pretense. He took her hand gently—scarred fingers brushing the back of her gloved one—and brought it to his lips in a gesture both old-fashioned and disarmingly intimate.

“Velda,” he said softly, reverently, before turning toward Aselia. “Allow me. This is Velda—my mentor, my teacher, and the sharpest mind I’ve ever known.”

Then, to Velda: “This is Aselia. My sister. Try not to let the armor fool you—she’s the blunt instrument and the scalpel.”

He stepped between them then, pivoting smoothly toward the vault ahead. The corridor pulsed with organic malice—veins throbbed in the walls, and the air stank of bile and scorched protein. It was beautiful, in the way natural disasters were beautiful. Terrible and full of purpose.

Jonah drew his curved vibroblade in one fluid motion. It thrummed with quiet anticipation as he advanced, carving through the slough of fleshy Vong webbing with precise, surgical strikes.

As the first chunk of biomass sloughed off the entryway with a wet shlurrrk, he called back over his shoulder:

“Aselia—keep your scanners live. Vong tech doesn’t play nice with the Force, and they love slipping through blind spots.”

He paused just long enough to glance back at her with a grin.

“I’d rather not find out what’s lurking behind door number two the hard way.”

And with that, Jonah stepped into the gullet of the Vault, blade in hand, shadow at his back, and two of the deadliest women in the galaxy at his side.

Ketaris didn’t stand a chance.


 

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KETARIS
"We don’t retreat from fire—we shape it."

The Firebreather roared.

Wounded. Bleeding. Enraged.

Obsidian plates shifted and cracked as magma surged through its vents. Steam hissed from ruptured flesh, and with a howl that shattered nearby glass, it rose to full height—lumbering forward on malformed legs. Its chest still smoked from the missile strike, but it wasn’t dead. Not yet. And now it was angry.

Aether saw it all from the flank of Ori’tracin, high above the charred skyline. His HUD danced with tags—Alora’s disruptors biting into exposed muscle, Ze’bast’s shatter rounds punching through weakened bone. Siren was repositioning overhead. Below, Alora flared like a streak of vengeance, laughing in the face of flame. Kirae’s retreat held steady, her voice still calm as she carved a path for survivors. Itzhal—on his own front—drew the beast’s attention away from civilians with the suicidal calm of a soldier who had nothing left to lose but refused to fall.

He saw them all. And in that instant, he didn’t just lead them—he felt them. The beat of the Empire’s heart was made of beskar and blood.

“Copy, Alora,” Aether said over comms. “You’ve got their attention. Keep them mad. Ze’bast—good strike. Confirmed impacts. You’ve got her six.”

Another shriek echoed through the district.

The Firebreather reared back—and belched hell.

Aether’s eyes widened. “Incoming!”

A torrent of flame erupted from the beast’s maw—arching high into the air before crashing down across the University plaza like a tidal wave of molten ruin. It struck buildings, melted durasteel balconies, and came crashing toward the Mandalorian line.

“Ori’tracin—rotate! Burn thrusters, now!”

The Basilisk War Droid screamed into motion—wings folding, claws gripping scorched masonry. The flames chased them like wrath incarnate, but they broke left mid-air, the droid flaring its repulsors hard. Heat washed over Aether’s armor like a tidal forge—but he stayed locked in.

“Primary cannons—full barrage.”

“Confirmed,” Ori’tracin growled.

Rotary blasters roared.

Bolts lanced through the smoke—aimed dead-center at the beast’s throat. One clipped its lower jaw, sending a plume of molten ichor splattering against a nearby tower. The other chewed through flesh above its shoulder, exposing the bioluminescent muscle writhing beneath.

“Secondary ordnance—mark and release.”

Aether’s HUD blinked as the missile lock confirmed.

He raised one arm—targeting laser active—and painted the center of the beast’s spine.

“Missile away.”

The second warhead launched with a shriek.

It spiraled, punched through the fog—and slammed into the beast’s back. The explosion tore a piece of its dorsal armor clean off, showering the plaza with glowing, half-liquefied shrapnel.

The Firebreather screamed. It stumbled, stumbled again—then dropped to a forelimb, bleeding flame from at least three new ruptures.

Aether keyed into the general channel again.

“Hanna—send new telemetry to Siren and Gambit. Mark that weak point. Everyone else—focus fire center mass and right shoulder. That carapace is softening.”

He leveled his pistols again and sent another volley of plasma into the exposed gaps.

“We end this now.”

The Basilisk twisted mid-air, stabilizing for another strike.

And below, the Mandalorians surged—fire in their hearts, purpose in their hands, and vengeance burning in their eyes.

The Firebreather would not fall easy.

But fall it would.


 

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TAG: Varuun Rekaal Varuun Rekaal | Cordelia Malkavian Cordelia Malkavian | Malachi Vokat Malachi Vokat

Silence overtook the wreckage. Alone in the rubble, seconds turned to minutes. She knew that logically, not much time had passed, just as she knew any sort of rescue was going to be made complicated by whatever structure remained. Yet as the seconds drifted by, panic threatened to overtake her. She was going to die here, pinned by duracrete, the mask of a stranger her own sarcophagus.

When things started to move again, she thought for sure she was done for. She might as well be, senses overwhelmed by the shrieking of metal and stone, delayed in realizing wreckage was moving up and away rather than further burying her with the corpse. She'd read somewhere once - or maybe she'd heard it? - that drunkards rose from speeder wreckage unscathed as they were too out of it to brace themselves for impact. That was a method Adean tried to employ now, slumping to the ground despite instincts screaming at her to scramble to get unpinned.

She didn't move again when stillness returned to the debris around her, convinced it would be mere moments before another set of aftershocks kicked in. Eyes, which had been closed to better encourage her pretending to be boneless, at last opened as she sensed a different kind of movement nearby. Intentional, searching.

An armored knee, kneeling, was visible in the helmet's viewfinder. And then came a voice, the same one she recognized from the comms. Relief washed over the wayward acolyte, followed by an even larger wave of dread, further propagated when she stirred to get a better look at her altered surroundings.

< "Somehow, yes." > she started, fighting to keep her voice within an acceptable level of shaky. She suspected her savior wasn't the only armored individual nearby, even if she didn't catch another ( Cordelia Malkavian Cordelia Malkavian ) from her vantage point. Nevertheless, she was keenly aware of the similarities between his helmet and the one she currently wore. And how somewhere within the moved debris, there was a corpse with matching armor and no helmet. Hardly a good look if that was discovered, assuming it hadn't already.

< "Legs are in a state, but I should be able to take care of them myself. Go on and continue with the mission." > So I can get out of here before you realize I'm not one of you.

 


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Objective 3: Chart the Unknown

The Writ of Iron:
Contract on Dr. Halven Krex
The Imperial Scientific Corps

Wanted on multiple counts of unethical human experimentation.
WANTED:
DEAD


The inner sanctum of the facility lay buried beneath layers of ruined labs and flooded corridors, a cathedral of broken science and rotting ambition. Varuun passed through it all, unflinching. Lights flickered dimly, casting erratic shadows across rusted surgical chairs and shattered stasis pods. Cracked data-slates littered the floor like fallen leaves. The deeper he went, the colder it became, not from the chill of the air but from the weight of what had been done here—what still lingered in the walls like smoke in old cloth.

He reached a thick blast door sealed by a reinforced locking mechanism, still intact. A console beside it hissed with static. Security protocols had been rerouted, but not concealed. Varuun inserted a spike from his belt, rerouted power through his vambrace, and the door shuddered, groaned, then split open with a guttural sigh.

Beyond it, the chamber was vast, round, and silent. Cables hung from the ceiling like vines. In the center stood a single figure beside a glowing terminal. He wore a long coat of worn synth-hide, high collar stiff around his neck, and his posture was crooked with the confidence of a man who believed himself above danger.

Dr. Halven Krex turned slowly as the door clanged shut behind the Mandalorian.

"So it is true," Krex said, voice smooth and unhurried, like warm oil over broken glass. "They sent you."

Varuun said nothing. He stepped into the chamber, boots leaving faint echoes behind him.

Krex regarded him as one might a difficult puzzle. His eyes, pale and restless, scanned the armor. "I had assumed it would be someone more... talkative. One of those bounty hunters who thinks threats are foreplay." He smiled faintly. "But you... you're something else. You're silence with a pulse."

Still nothing.

"You know what we did here?" Krex gestured to the room. "Of course you do. The cries. The data. It offends you. But it worked. Every scream was a step toward a stronger galaxy. Toward obedience. Toward peace."

Varuun stopped three paces away.

"You can kill me," Krex continued, raising his arms, palms out as if welcoming judgment. "But you cannot kill the work. I made copies. I sent them out. My mind... my mind is already in others. Whispering. Teaching."

He took a step forward.

"Do you want to know how many I broke to get it right? How many lives did it take to crack the code of the will? Of the soul?"

Varuun moved. No warning. No words.

The vibroblade came free in a clean arc, but Krex darted back, faster than expected. His hand reached for the console, pressing something out of sight. Sparks burst from the floor. Autoturrets snapped from the ceiling, targeting arrays whirring to life.

Blaster fire erupted.

Varuun rolled left, blade shearing through a vented panel. A bolt screamed past his helmet. He rose behind a pillar, carbine in hand now. One clean shot took out the left turret. He pivoted, fired again. The second exploded in a bloom of red light.

Krex was running.

He fled to a stairwell hidden behind a wall partition, descending deeper into the underlabs. Varuun gave chase, boots hammering against steel steps, every motion a quiet promise. No matter how deep Krex ran, there would be no escape.

This was not a negotiation.
This was the end of a name.


 
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"Just keep your transmitter on, or let me know where trouble is," Alora called back to Kirae Orade Kirae Orade as she rolled over a stream of magma. Her flight path sought to stay mostly on the opposite side of the behemoth from the city center so stray shots fell away from the people. Most of her shots registered on that far side as well to try and keep the attention that way, and stall forward momentum. Even Gam joined in pelting their thick carapace with turbolasers.

Ze'bast Verd Ze'bast Verd sounded out they'd joined the field as well. Their marker showed up on her HUD as she zipped around in the air. "Copy. Don't let up." Never hurt to have people with effective weaponry on the scene.

Aether Verd Aether Verd and his Basilisk got a little heat as a result of all the hard hitting action. Then he returned the favor with his mechanical monstrosity letting loose. Always exciting to see one of their own in rapid fire action.

Alora ejected cartridges and loaded new ones as word came in about a weak spot. Was getting about time to get back to Gam for a reload, but if there was a target then she'd hold off for the moment. "Get some," she cried as she dipped down low before rocketing skyward once more. With those meaty limbs keeping it from guessing where she'd be was as important as not getting slagged.

The second Hanna transmitted the coordinates for the concentrated fire, Gam, Lyra Scarlet Lyra Scarlet , Ithiel Vi'Dreya Ithiel Vi'Dreya , and herself could lay into the Firebreather. It was time to give the people of Ketaris some much needed relief.

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Open​

 


OBJECTIVE I: Crush the Firebreathers
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Location: Airborne
Tags: Alora Vizsla Alora Vizsla OPEN
Gear: piloting Crimson Shadow
Mask: off (unless someone is riding along)
Callsign: Siren

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Lyra looked at Hanna Hanna over her shoulder as she stood by the access port "Confirming comms, ready to jump in 20 second." The ship coiled around on it approach back to the target skimming low off the ground and launching more missiles along its flightpath. Lyra reduced the ground speed to agreed departure speed and levelled out. They were above an abandoned freeway with nothing but a few cars for Hanna to dodge as she departed at high speed.

Once the other girl had left Scarlet pulled up sharply and banked into a sharp turn releasing a bomb that carried on and impactes the beast again.

"Recieving your coordinates Aether Verd Aether Verd coming for another run." She spun the ship round and pulled it into a hover, with no aeriel targets there was benefit to slowing down and she began pumping heavy laser cannon shots into the weak point watching the beast roar. The creature was a spectacle of nature but it was beginning to seem unfair.

 
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Location: University District, Asluria - Ketaris
Objective: Crush the Fire Breathers
Tag: Alora Vizsla Alora Vizsla Lyra Scarlet Lyra Scarlet Kirae Orade Kirae Orade Aether Verd Aether Verd Itzhal Volkihar Itzhal Volkihar Ze'bast Verd Ze'bast Verd │ Open

“Jumping now!”

Hanna’s repulsorlift skates flared to life as she tore out from the Crimson Shadow’s bay and into open sky, the sudden rush of wind howling against her suit. For a split-second, she hung suspended in the air, before landing on the freeway at blinding speed.

Abandoned speeders blurred past as she wove between the burned-out wreckage, her body arcing in fluid leaps and dives. Her targeting systems honed in on the primary objective: the alpha Fire Breather, its elimination personally mandated by the Mand'alor himself.

And there it stood. a walking cataclysm.

Buildings crumbled like sandcastles beneath its tread, structural bones snapping with each thunderous step. Above, the Mand'alor's Basilisk war droid circled like a vengeful phoenix, cannons vomiting fire directly into the creature's gullet.

The Fire Breather dwarfed much of the city block, its form so titanic that it towered over the freeway and the nearby multi-story buildings. They crumbled like sandcastles beneath its tread, structural bones snapping with each thunderous step. Above, the Mand'alor's Basilisk war droid circled like a vengeful spirit, rotary blasters vomiting fire directly into the creature's gullet. The monster reeled, its agonized bellow shaking the freeway as it collapsed onto a massive forelimb—

—just as Hanna screamed towards it.


“Hanna—send new telemetry to Siren and Gambit. Mark that weak point. Everyone else—focus fire center mass and right shoulder. That carapace is softening.”

“I’m on point! Standby for tagging!” Hanna replied, a snarl in her tone. The Qilin leaned into her momentum, shifting her weight backward in a controlled drift to shed velocity. Repulsors whined as she carved into a razor-sharp turn, then flared to life again—this time with a precise burst of upward thrust that launched her in a high arc onto the adjacent rooftop.

Her skates nearly scraped against permacrete as she slid to a halt at the building's edge. The wounded Fire Breather loomed across the street, its carapace weeping rivers of flame and molten rock through three gaping wounds.

Hanna's targeting systems came online. With a thought, she isolated the infrared signatures bleeding from each fissure, marking their thermal profiles in her network. A heartbeat later, the data packet streaked through the airwaves.

Right on cue, three pulsing waypoints lit up in the targeting systems of Siren, Gambit, and Ori'tracin.

“Transmission complete! Targets marked!” Hanna wheeled around, before pulsing her skates to accelerate away from the beast and escape the radius of the incoming hail of fire!


 
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| Location | Ketaris, Outer Rim Territories
| Objective | I - Eliminate the Firebreathers


Duracrete crumbled under a breath of fire. Cruel flames dashed against the surface, leaving a trail of sloughing grey walls and floors hot enough to burn a man alive. The crackling embers danced like fireflies in the darkness, the ceiling above sloping inwards, trailing a thin tongue of acrid smoke that curled and twisted, a branded noose around Itzhal's neck. An incinerator left to finish the bleak job, his only protection the once-cooling embrace of his bodysuit, now clung uncomfortably to his skin as beads of sweat trickled down his spine.

Yet he didn't stop, he couldn't, not when an inferno prowled at his back, a maw of fire and smoke hunting in the darkness.

Undeterred by the stream of water that began to flow from sprinklers in the ceiling, it followed Itzhal through the corridor, tarnished and scorched black as the stream of fire traversed along the walls, sinking into the metal pipes, screeching a final death as liquid turned to steam. Their hunt continued into the stairwell, where their prey paused for only a second, long enough for the flames to lick at his back, before a spool of whipcord shot from his raised gauntlet, and a second later, he was gone, whisked away with a zip, soaring into the upper levels. Below, the inferno roared, its flames lashing out wildly, crackling with anger that tore at the building even as it slowed to an inevitable march upwards.

Outside, the monstrous beast continued on its way, another nuisance reduced to cinder without further thought, worth little more than the effort it took to breathe. Unaware that the Mandalorian had survived, although it wouldn't have cared regardless, all things burned in time.

The city was bathed in a molten orange glow, the air thick with a dark haze of smoke and ash cast by the grotesque forms of giants that prowled across the skyline, their forms illuminated in faint lights from below. Countless lives were lost and delivered to a pyre, fuel to the flame that burned in every defender's heart. In their wake, the titans died, not quickly enough for many of those beneath their feet, reduced to cinders in their moment of hope, but quick enough for some.

Exhausted and battered, Itzhal trudged onto the rooftop of what was once a bustling office building, the people long gone, hopefully escaped before the Fire Breathers had turned it into a kiln. Each heavy boot had its sole echoing like a distant drum against the cracked concrete floor. He pushed himself onward, relying on the sturdy frame of a sleek ventilation unit for support as he passed. The cold metal was a cool balm against the heat beneath his feet, relaxing like an icepack pressed deep against a soft wound, though warming by the moment. He was running out of time, the building groaning beneath his feet. Itzhal took another step forward, his lungs filled with oxygen from the filtered system in his helmet.

Errantly, his gaze drifted across the smoky skyline, where flames licked hungrily at the skeletal remains of buildings, their charred outlines standing as grim sentinels to the day's horrors. In the distance, a fleet of ships emerged from the hazy sky, their forms bathed in the glow of atmospheric entry like meteors descending upon the battlefield, heralds of hope ready to deliver a resolute message to the terrors of Ketaris—a promise of vengeance.

It felt only fitting that he would dispatch his own message of retribution.

With a steadying breath, Itzhal stepped forward, drawn towards the looming water tower that stretched over the rooftop like a vulture ready to swoop down upon the remnants of this hellish battle. The structure, bowed under the weight of its own frame, tilted slightly forward, the duracrete surface beneath it fractured and crumbled as smoke leaked from the cracks. Its sleek frame, almost untouched by the desolation below, cast an elongated shadow that stretched over the street, as if starkly entranced by the horror.

Itzhal had no explosives, their arsenal drained with lesser foes, none as great as the leviathan that convulsed with every blow that was delivered by the new arrivals on machines of war he could not outmatch. This was no sin; lives had been saved, and he was just one man. No matter how much it burned, he could only do so much. His target, mighty and unfazed by the devastation it brought, would not bow to petty blasters, nor did the Mandalorian possess controls to bring what weapons lingered on his ship to bear. He did not need it.

All things fall in time.

Beneath his feet, the roof creaked ominously, while jagged shards of rubble tumbled down as the outer wall gave way, scattering debris like tarnished memories across the cremated street. Each heartbeat echoed the looming disaster, the total collapse of the building now an inevitable spectre on the horizon. Yet the fire breather pressed on, exuding an air of arrogance, unwavering in its delusion of invulnerability as it stared down upon its lessers, untouched by the devastation it brought, too far to reach or crumbling long after it was gone, the memories of fire all that lingered.

The Mandalorian's jetpack detached from the sleek contours of his backplate with a sharp, resonant hum that faded into a heavy clunk. His voice command deactivating the magnetic locks, allowing the cumbersome device to tumble clumsily into his waiting hands. Itzhal steadied himself, grappling with the awkward weight before finally swinging it around to rest against his front, the metal cool and unyielding against his grip. The support struts of the water tower loomed over him, each as thick as his torso and far taller, even buckled by bowing duracrete beneath their feet; if not for the ravaging of the building, this would never work, even now it seemed unlikely.

Itzhal had made a career of the unlikely.

With a heavy clunk that faded into a sharp but resonant hum, he sealed the jetpack to the support strut, thrusters angled towards the centre point of the building, and the gap of an anti-armour missile pointed above the street and the passing by Fire Breather. The moment of opportunity rapidly approached with each lumbering step, closer to his position, as well as the civilians that had attempted to retreat, but were still not entirely out of danger, not if it reached this far.

Crack.

The roof groaned under the mounting weight, a warning that trembled through the structure as pieces began to fracture and fall away, like shards of an ancient giant shedding its weary skin beneath the relentless sun. Beneath him, Itzhal felt the moment crystallising; with determination surging through him, he activated his whipcord and leapt off the edge, carried to another rooftop. Time seemed to slow as he watched the facade crumble behind him, the roar of his jetpack igniting into a ferocious symphony of power and determination, for all that it was a force akin to a stone defying the relentless push of the tide. Sometimes that was enough. Momentum surged the tower forward, a rhythm of inevitability—the kind that could turn the smallest act into a fulcrum for change, guiding its passage like a stone tumbling down a hill, unstoppable in its descent.

Bone shattered upon impact, fractured into a dozen fragments that cracked with thunderous force. Lacerated by thousands of knives, their splintered forms drawing furrows deep into the skin that wept tears of magma and blood, boiled in an instant, joined by the ash and debris that slumbered on the floor beneath, brought low in a mere moment: the shattered water tower, a cage for the dying creature.

"Itzhal Volkihar here. I've got civilians with me, we require an extract at these coordinates," he declared with a click of the controls attached to his gauntlet. From his vantage point, Itzhal's gaze travelled over the survivors he'd dragged through the nightmare and past them, towards the largest of the monsters that remained.

It was a shame, he would have liked to pay it back for all of this mess, but even at a glance, it looked like others had it in hand. He would have needed a bigger gun anyway.


 
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Creedfall
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"I find the fastest way to travel is by candlelight."
- Tristan Thorn -

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Location: Kertis
Gear:
Staff / Necklace / Ring I / Ring II / Bracelet I / Bracelet II
Mount / Pets: Echo
Theme: Smoke and Mirrors - Puscifer

I slithered my way down a spiraling staircase from the backside of the university, toward this Forbidden Vault, where abominations and monstrosities had been concocted by the twisted minds of those working in these catacombs. The mission was to seal the vaults, to prevent any housed inhabitants from escaping, and destroying all evidence born from twisted experiments. I agreed the vault needed to be sealed, but not everything deserved to be eradicated. We Witches of Dathomir have no grand army, no great political tongues to lull our adversaries into flimsy treaties; we use tactics and strategies most consider immoral.

And we have not forgotten those historical atrocities brought down upon us from Jedi to Sith and all in between.

It was then, when I reached the bottom after navigating those sickly stairs, that I could almost smell the bizarre antics that once took place, and quite possibly still processing. I was fascinated that there was still illumination down here, though it was in circular patches that acted like a 'follow me' kind of pattern. My staff leading the way, I began stalking down this partially lit corridor, anticipating what awaited me. And what awaited those mysterious, was the product born from another sinister mind; one that not only weaved life back into my dead body but gave me a purpose; the perseveration of the Nightsisters by any means horrifically.





Tags: Open
 


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Objective II: Seal the Vault
Vytal Noctura stood at the entrance to the University, her emerald eyes turned up at the assault on the towering behemoth nearby. She didn't deign intervene as the Mandalorians appeared to have it well in hand -- hunting monsters was something they were quite skilled at -- and the Witch had her own matters to tend.

A young thing ran up and breathless informed Vytal the instruments had been deployed as she'd instructed. They were a refined version of a creation made to defend Ryloth once; a means of extending the range of a ritual or spell without needing to expand an exponentially larger sum of energy for the effect.

"Good. Be certain the Firebreathers do not break the Circle." The constructs had a fatal flaw, of course; anything that was physical could be broken or disturbed. Well, a Witch did what she could. It was too early to have an entire coven assembled or to claim she was Warden of all of Dathomir. This would simply have to suffice.

She tapped the transmit button on her armor, "Command, Vytal, ritual containment activating. Twould support the objective if those beasts were held back." If the briefing hadn't been enough they'd well understand in short order.

Transmission sent, the Nightsister strode out into the courtyard to where the first of the beacons had been placed. As she stood before it, her hands rose into the air, and Vytal began to call upon the spirits, "Tȟašúŋke hena tȟečhíŋ ečhúŋkȟi chiyóh'a ečhíŋ ičá. Thiyóhe, ektáčA, tȟašúŋke. Ktaʼi owaǧí uŋ ështëȟke tȟózi, ičhákin, na tóḳu kiŋ tési." Spirits shield us from ancient enemies whose ravenous monstrosities have returned. Protect your brothers, your sisters, your kin from their corruption. Grant us a place to set upon them, crush them, and restore this world.

Nether energy began to gather and the crystal atop the beacon at first was dim, but steadily grew brighter as the seconds wore on. Her chant continued to call upon more of those in the Beyond to come to this world's aid. Perhaps they were dead, but they had not yet forgotten their once-ties to the realm. Or, perhaps, they simply came because Vytal asked -- and knew of their agreements with the Nightmother that would come due if they failed to heed the call. Whatever their reason, their power feed the Circle and soon a translucent, green barrier began to encircle the University grounds. It reached far beyond where the hidden Vong Vault lurked. Root, stone, or flesh would not deter its formation as Vytal sought to buy the surround time as intrepid souls dove within to excise the threat.

Once the defensive perimeter was set to keep the Vong horrors from escaping their fate, Vytal thought to join them.

Provided any remaining Firebreathers weren't immediately drawn to the towering mystical walls that'd been created. They would do those beacons no favor, and could collapse the defensive line if left unmanaged.​

 


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TAG: Aether Verd Aether Verd / Alora Vizsla Alora Vizsla / Hanna Hanna / Kirae Orade Kirae Orade / Lyra Scarlet Lyra Scarlet

Their assault had landed true, but to Ze'bast it felt more like they had merely provoked the creature's ire. Despite the withering storm of blaster fire, turret barrages, and heavy cannon volleys, the beast pressed on. It was wounded, but far from wavering. If anything, the pain only fed its fury. Still, damage was being done. Continuing the onslaught seemed like the only viable course. Ze'bast anchored himself where he stood, bracing against the recoil of his rifle as volley after volley of projectiles screamed toward their mark. He would hold the line, no matter the cost.

There was no emotion behind the cold, reflective gaze of his T-shaped visor. Only a hardened focus—the kind that came from years of blood-soaked campaigns and the burden of command. As others fell back or flinched under the beast's roar, Ze'bast remained a bastion of composure. Yet even in his composure, calculations ran rapid through his mind. Ammunition was finite, time even more so. He needed something decisive.

His hand dipped into the drop pouch at his belt, guided more by instinct than conscious thought. With the Force as his unseen hand, three thermal detonators lifted into the air—silent, deadly spheres of concentrated destruction. They zipped forward like birds of prey, funneling into the gaping wound torn open by their earlier strikes. A moment later, a flash of violent light erupted from within the beast, followed by a plume of smoke and a concussive burst that trembled the battlefield.

Still it stood.

This creature, this firebreather, was unlike anything he had faced before. Not in the jungles of Skako, nor in the void-bound slaughter aboard derelict cruisers. It dwarfed them all in scale and ferocity. And yet, the old tales spoke of warriors who brought down such monsters. Mandalorians of legend who did not flinch before dragons or demons. If they could do it, so could he.

Everything bled. That was a truth he clung to. And everything that bled could be killed.

 

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KETARIS
"It took all of us to bring it down.
Let that be the lesson—they may be monsters, but we are Mandalorians.
And we hunt as one."

The Firebreather still stood.

Scarred. Sputtering. Bleeding light and flame from half a dozen wounds—but alive.

Aether watched from his perch, eyes narrowed beneath the T-shaped visor as his HUD lit up with the relentless cascade of attacks. Alora’s disruptors flared again and again—punching into raw, exposed flesh. Siren’s ship banked hard for another run, heavy laser cannons opening up and slamming straight into the tagged weakpoint with merciless precision. The creature reeled, howling—but it didn’t fall.

Hanna’s transmission came in clean, her voice tight with effort and speed.

“Transmission complete! Targets marked!”

He caught the blur of her form disappearing from danger as flame licked at the street where she’d just been.

“Copy,” Aether growled. “Dropship inbound to your coordinates, Itzhal—stand by for evac.” His voice tightened at the edges, layered with the bite of command. “You did good.”

His gaze flicked across the battlefield. Through the fog of ash and smoke, he felt the Force stir—not from within, but beside him. Ze’bast. His brother’s will coiled with purpose. Three thermal detonators zipped forward and vanished into the open cavity Hanna had marked. The resulting burst cracked like a thunderclap, flame gouting from the Firebreather’s flank in a tidal scream of molten pain.

It still didn’t fall.

Aether’s fists clenched. This creature… this thing… had taken everything the Empire had thrown at it and refused to bow.

And that infuriated him.

He turned, eyes settling on the mangled carcass of a rooftop water tower—collapsed in the distance, steam still rising from where Itzhal had torn it from its perch. Amid the wreckage, a long durasteel strut jutted skyward like a broken rib.

Aether reached out.

The Force coiled around the support like a serpent. With a growl that broke into a full-throated roar, he ripped it free. Debris scattered in all directions as the beam lifted into the air—and then, with a single furious motion, he hurled it like a spear.

It tore through the sky.

And impaled the Firebreather.

The strut punched through flesh and bone and fire, burying itself in the weakpoint Hanna had marked. The beast shrieked—a sound so sharp it cracked the air. It reared back, belching flame into the sky in a final, sputtering spasm. Siren’s cannons didn’t let up. Alora kept hammering. Ze’bast never stopped shooting. And the ground teams surged.

The Firebreather crashed through the side of a building—and didn’t get back up.

Its days of breathing fire were done.

A pause fell over the battlefield. One breath. Two.

Then chaos erupted again—but not from them. The remaining Firebreathers spasmed.

Some froze mid-step.

Some turned… and unleashed hellfire on each other.

Others collapsed entirely, crashing into walls or streets as if their equilibrium had been shattered. Whatever coordination they once had—it was gone. The death of the alpha had shattered the web.

Predators became prey.

Aether exhaled—long, slow, the weight of the moment settling across his shoulders.

“Oya, Mandalorians,” he said, voice steady over open comms. “You did it. We all did. The beast is dead.”

He let the words linger for just a moment.

Then his tone hardened. Steel beneath the flame.

“Now clean-up begins. Leave no monsters standing.”

With a snap of his reins, Ori’tracin banked hard, engines roaring. The Basilisk dove from its perch like a thunderbolt, straight toward one of the confused titans.

Mandalore was watching. And they would finish what they started.


 



Tags: Aether Verd Aether Verd Alora Vizsla Alora Vizsla Ze'bast Verd Ze'bast Verd Hanna Hanna Lyra Scarlet Lyra Scarlet
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Breathe. Get Oxygen into your lungs. Kirae felt shame in being unable to help with the Alpha, but using the Force exhausted her. It had been something she had pushed away, and as a result, it was as if her connection to the Force had atrophied like a muscle ignored and left to waste away. It screamed at her, a pain and exhaustion she hadn't experienced before. It wasn't like how her muscles ached, or how her head throbbed from the adrenaline. No, it was like her very being was exhausted. And so she had no choice but to listen to the battle around her.

The heavy cannon opening fire echoing through the air, the faint sounds of disruptors being muffled beneath all of the chaos. The thunderous boom of the thermal detonators going off. Even the crash of a water tower collapsing. She couldn't see any of it as she rested in the alley, hunched over her shield as she was forced to come face to face with the names scrawled across the metal. Those who had fought and didn't give in. Those that didn't let a simple bout of exhaustion. That's what this was. Just simple exhaustion. And you can always push yourself forward when it came to exhaustion. And so Kirae took in one final deep breath before she moved.

Forcing foot in front of foot as she slowly but surely dragged herself out of the alley. As long as she kept moving, she'd be fine. She'd stay up right. Taking in a deep breath, Kirae lifted her head up high and stepped out from the alley. Her body still screamed at her but she couldn't risk showing any sign of weaknesses. Not to the people. If she wanted to be seen as a guardian, as something for the Domarians to hide behind, she had to stay strong. She had to be unyielding. Kirae knew she'd be feeling the effects once this was all over...but that was it. Once this was over. It wasn't over. Not yet.

"I'll keep evacuating the Domarians. You've all fought well."

It was a shame to Kirae that she could not see their exploits. See the glory of their work. No, she had pushed herself too much. Instead she had been relegated to only being able to hear their exploits. It was a shame she'd keep to herself for now. Kirae would just focus on her duty. Make sure that the people stayed away from the chaos and safe. She still hadn't fully recovered. If she threw herself against another Fire-Breather, she knew she wouldn't be a match. It was lucky that she had been able to take down the one earlier. Luck was important in battle but so was knowing your limits. And she had reached hers.


 


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Objective 3: Chart the Unknown

The Writ of Iron:
Contract on Dr. Halven Krex
The Imperial Scientific Corps

Wanted on multiple counts of unethical human experimentation.
WANTED:
DEAD


The stairwell spiraled downward into blackness, slick with moisture and the remnants of old coolant leaks. Emergency lights pulsed dimly along the walls, casting brief glimpses of fleeing footsteps ahead—Krex, panting now, coat flaring with each frantic turn as he descended into the bowels of the compound.

Varuun moved with relentless precision. He did not rush. He did not stumble. Each step was calculated, the measured advance of death itself. The facility groaned around him, its ancient structure no longer able to hold the secrets that had festered within. Water dripped. Pipes hissed. Old systems died quiet, sputtering their final breaths.

Krex burst into the sub-lab at the base of the stairwell, a cavernous chamber half-submerged in stagnant water. Failed cryo-pods lined the walls, their glass long since shattered. Strange shapes floated beneath the surface—misshapen things that might once have been people. He slipped, caught himself, then staggered to the far side, reaching for a panel embedded in the wall.

"You don't understand," he gasped, frantically keying in an override. "I was close. I was so close to creating a mind that could never break. One that could survive anything. You think I'm the monster. But I was building the cure."

The panel sparked. Denied access.

Krex turned.

Varuun stood at the edge of the stairwell, water rippling at his feet, steam hissing from the vent behind him. The light caught his visor, casting his silhouette into something mythic. His blade was drawn. His silence complete.

Krex backed away slowly, hands raised, fingers trembling. "We could work together," he said, voice cracking under the weight of panic. "You're not like them. You don't speak because you know words are weak. But I can give you something better than words. I can give you—"

Varuun crossed the chamber in three steps.

The first strike came low. Krex dodged back, slipping in the water. He grabbed a metal rod from the floor, swung wide. It glanced off Varuun's pauldron with a hollow clang. The Mandalorian did not slow. He caught Krex's wrist, twisted it until the bone snapped, and the rod dropped with a splash.

Krex screamed.

Varuun drove the hilt of his blade into the man's gut, then lifted him by the collar of his coat and slammed him against a rusted terminal. Glass shattered. Krex gasped for air, eyes wide, face bloodied.

"Please," he whispered. "You don't have to—"

The blade slid through flesh and spine in a single, clean motion.

No flare. No fury. Just precision.

Varuun held him there a moment longer, the body twitching as blood spilled into the water. Then he pulled the blade free and let Krex crumple into the filth he had once ruled.

Silence returned.

The Mandalorian turned away. The chamber steamed. Machines clicked in their death throes. Above him, the faint sound of sirens began to rise—perhaps more guards. Perhaps nothing at all.

It did not matter.

The bounty was claimed.
The work was ended.
The name Halven Krex no longer held weight in the galaxy.

Only in memory.
And memory was not spared from the blade.


 

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OBJECTIVE III

Gray eyes rolled behind their helmeted protection so hard that it nearly caused an ache. It was noted in that moment that ice breakers were not amusing, that perhaps Cordelia's sense of humor was too dark for present company. It was not a moment she would repeat, nor the attempt to try and ease any of the stress from any given moment via humor. Naturally she was aware that the situation was dire, hence her gesture for the lead to be taken after her comment.
It didn't matter. Just another situation where she did not have to worry about expanding her small social circle.
Still, she followed suit when the male paired with her moved, and her senses tuned to the area around them just to make sure nothing fun was trying to sneak up on them. With the state of things, it didn't seem likely. Everything was shattered to bits, and unless trapped beneath the debris it wouldn't be easy to hide.
<"I did not say that I needed a shovel."> she retort. The display that followed caused a crease to form between Delia's brow where it pinched together, and while there was a sudden scream within every fiber of her being to reach out and help, to prove that she was quite capable of digging their current objective out as well, she remained stood by until all of the large debris was moved and rubble was left to be swatted and dusted away. From there she stood back to give this person room, though her gaze swept over what she could immediately see. Helmet...where was the rest?

<"What happened?"> Delia found herself asking before she could make herself keep quiet. <"For you to have stayed put and still been here to get yourself nearly crushed?"> She made sure to clarify her question, lest she get an obvious answer that would only sour her mood more.
 




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Aselia tilted her head toward the pulsing corridor, the scent of rot and charred flesh thick in the air. She gave Jonah a sidelong glance, visor reflecting the flicker of the growing bio-luminescence deep within the Vong structure. His smirk hadn’t changed since they were kids sharp, dry, and just smug enough to irritate. But it was good to see it. Good to hear him speak her name like that again.

"‘Seli.’”

He hadn’t used that in a long time. The corners of her lips turned up in a smile under the helmet.

"The deadliest huh?,” she said with a quiet edge of amusement, the distorted tone of her voice filter adding an almost mechanical hum to the words. “Well you certainly know how to make a girl feel special..” she let out a laugh as she turned herself toward business.

Her hand came to rest briefly on the hilt of her lightsaber, she unclasped it simply and held it in her right hand,. The walls ahead pulsed like a living wound, and she could already feel the wrongness of the place tugging at her gut, curling up around her spine like smoke. The Force may have hated these things, but Aselia didn't need it to know this place was hell.

She stepped in beside Jonah, her shoulder brushing his as Velda emerged from the mist. She didn’t need to ask if this was the infamous mentor he always spoke of with reverence and just a hint of danger. The woman moved like a shadow with purpose too calm for a battlefield, too precise to be called anything else.

Aselia gave a faint incline of her head in greeting.

"Pleasure," she said simply. There was no warmth in the voice filter, but the sincerity was there beneath the steel. "Any friend of Jonah’s who walks willingly into this pit earns respect by default."

Then she turned back toward the tunnel mouth, where biomass flexed like muscle and the air practically vibrated with ambient threat. She activated her HUD overlays, scanners pinging off growths and dead zones in every direction.

“I’ve got point on sensors,” she said over comms. “Three blind spots just inside the wall ridges—too smooth for coincidence. Either camouflaged ports or hatchlings. Either way, we don’t linger.”

She fell into step behind Jonah as he carved forward, watching their flank, pulse steady. And when he cracked his joke about door number two, she scoffed over comms. The familiar snap-hiss sounded as her lightsaber ignited, crimson plasma casting light all around them. A soft click from her left and a disruptor released its magnetic lock on her beskar, falling gently into her waiting left hand.

TAG: Jonah Jonah Velda Nar-Donna Velda Nar-Donna Odessa Djazit Odessa Djazit Vytal Noctura Vytal Noctura

 


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TAG: Aether Verd Aether Verd / Alora Vizsla Alora Vizsla / Lyra Scarlet Lyra Scarlet / Kirae Orade Kirae Orade / Hanna Hanna

The beast finally collapsed.

Ze’bast would have immediately celebrated its fall had it been during his childhood days. Though, that was no longer the person he was. There were still plenty of things left to do. The spawn erupted into what he could assume to be rage. Just in time for the clean up. They would be easier to deal with now and the civilians mostly out of the way. Focusing on their defeat was top priority.

“Well done,” he stated in a solemn tone.

He would check his reserves and found them to be sort of lacking. There was a preference to utilizing weaponry, but he didn’t mind getting in close and personal. Mandalorians were to use all weapons and advantages to their disposal. They had killed the firebreather honorably. That was a solemn objective that would definitely call for drinks later if time was available. Each moment that passed got them closer to completing their objective.

Ze’bast sheathed his rifle on his back next to his jetpack. A downward outstretched hand reached out into the force calling his lightsaber to his hand. Its blade ignited in a deep dark orange. The force was a tool. There were no Sith teachings in his perception of the force, but the dark side he pulled on.

“See you all on the other side.”

Becoming one with his weapon, he dashed away to the nearest beast. A flick of his wrist cut through it with ease in a diagonal slash. Another bellowed flames into the air as he lifted the mini-firebreather into air and quickly crushed its insides with the force. The beast would be quickly thrown aside as his death march began. A purge of the unclean filth that plagued his people and the citizens of this planet.

 


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Alora watched as their target collapsed in a heap. She ejected the last mag from her pistols and found no further reloads on her person. Cursed thing had taken a lot of effort by the entire squad. Next time, she'd bring some ordinance or something bigger. At least the rest of the creatures seemed thrown into chaos as a result of this 'Alpha' being brought down. How long would that last? They were still causing damage to the city, so their work wasn't over yet.

"Alora, an Itzhal Volkihar has requested extraction for civilians," Gambit sent over their private channel.

"Alright. Pick me up on the way, Gam." He wasn't a massive ship, but they could at least move a few while some roomier transports spun up or something. "Hey, Gam, you hear anything from Kirae recently?"

"She just--"

"Gam."
Alora planted her hands on her hips as she hovered in midair with him on approach.

"I have her location marked."


With the bay open, she soared back inside her mechanic's bay. "Good. Make sure friendlies check on her, alright? I got to head back out to help on cleanup. You go get those civvies Itzhal needs help movnig." With her warchest unlocked, Alora filled up on ammunition for her disruptors. They were hungry weapons, but they were effective for their size -- given these horrible monstrosities needed a turbolaser normally to get through their thick hide. To think they didn't vaporize on contact though!

With a wave, Alora hopped back out into the air to let Gam get under way. Just another day in the life of a Mandalorian.​


 


The Planet Ketaris has taken the Creed:
They are now our to defend.


* Jaikell Orders: Survive.
*Objective I

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"Being down on the city streets has its advantages...."
"But not when the things you are defending the city from are giant monstrosities that breath fire"


"This might be a tough battle" Jaikell thinks to himself..
Armed with a Rifle in his hands, he's already slayed a few firebreathers.
Now he waits high on the buildings waiting for more

His communicator beeps: Incoming Firebreather, He's right on top of you! Move!
Jaikell rushes to get up as fast as he can and runs down the stairs, making it just before the firebreather spewed his last position with flames.

"That was a close one. he says into his communicator": as he fires his wrist rocket at the monster above him, disorientating it.

"Closest location to friendly forces? we need to make some kind of unified front instead of wandering the city by ourselves if we are to take them all down"
Jaikell says
NORTH the voice replies,




Understood, On my way now.
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Location: University District, Asluria - Ketaris
Objective: Crush the Fire Breathers
Tag: Alora Vizsla Alora Vizsla Lyra Scarlet Lyra Scarlet Kirae Orade Kirae Orade Aether Verd Aether Verd Itzhal Volkihar Itzhal Volkihar Ze'bast Verd Ze'bast Verd

Fire rained down in Hanna’s wake, a concentrated hellstorm hammering the Alpha into submission. The beast staggered under the onslaught, its carapace splitting open to vomit rivers of magma before its colossal form smashed through the adjacent building’s flank. A thunderous shockwave rippled outward as duracrete and steel disintegrated, the resulting dust cloud swallowing the entire block in a choking, particulate shroud.

Hanna’s repulsorlift skates whined as she pivoted, her HUD piercing through the cloud to lock onto the Alpha’s fallen bulk—a smoldering ruin of cracked chitin and dying embers.

“It’s done,” Hanna breathed, the words leaving her lips as a whisper. Above, the Mand’alor’s Basilisk banked hard, its engines howling as it dove toward another Fire Breather looming in the haze.

Hanna smiled then—a blade unsheathed.

“Clean-up started, Mand’alor.”

Then she was gone—a streak of motion across the freeway, pistols rising before spitting fury into the hide of a rampaging Fire Breather.


 
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