Star Wars Roleplay: Chaos

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Private Phase I: The Web of Shadows





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Comfortable Liar - by Chevelle

Location: Devaron

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The crimson veil of hyperspace surrendered at last, and before me unfurled the infernal beauty of Devaron; a world of jungles, deep valleys, and low mountains, of ancestral memories, where the breath of my long-dead Master had first quickened beneath the sun. The capital, Montellian Serat, sprawled beneath the dusk like some slumbering beast of old commerce and hidden vice, its towers burning gold beneath the dying light while shadowed alleys whispered of debts unpaid and loyalties bought in silence.

I had not come for sentiment, though memory proved itself an obstinate companion; I had come to meet the elusive architects of a clandestine power known as the Web of Shadows, a syndicate so carefully obscured that even uttering their name in the wrong company invited scrutiny.

It had taken diligence, more diligence than I found respectable, to secure an audience with their triumvirate of leaders, navigating intermediaries, veiled correspondences, and the tedious theater of proving myself worthy of their time. Such effort irritated me, though I begrudgingly admired their caution; paranoia, after all, was merely survival refined into ritual.

Yet as I descended into the city’s labyrinthine arteries, memory dragged its claws across my thoughts, for this world had once known me differently. The last time I had walked the scorched avenues of Devaron, I had done so at the side of Darth Maladi, still an Apprentice, still learning that power did not simply demand cruelty but patience sharpened into precision.

I remembered her voice; clinical, cold, impossibly measured, as she taught me how fear was best cultivated rather than seized, how information could bleed kingdoms dry more efficiently than warships ever could. Then, I had followed a Master through these streets with restrained hunger coiling in my spirit; now, I returned alone, cloaked in the weight of years and sharpened by betrayal, seeking criminals who trafficked in whispers as though they were treasures.

The galaxy had changed, and so had I, but Devaron remained stubbornly familiar, as if the planet itself remembered the footsteps of Sith long after they had turned to dust.


 
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Comfortable Liar - by Chevelle

Location: Devaron

I was escorted through corridors draped in shadow and perfumed with spice smoke, each step deeper into the lair of the Web of Shadows stirring memories of old Devaronian intrigues and blood-bought alliances. The guards spoke little, their hands never straying far from concealed blasters, until at last the great black iron doors parted and I was ushered into the presence of the syndicate's triumvirate leaders.

Ryi Voltek, whose scar-lined face carried the cold precision of a financier; Mer Hops'in, draped in silks and jewels like some decadent king of vice; and Jakok Jakob, broad and silent, his deadened eyes studying me with the patience of a predator waiting to see if prey would bare its throat.

I inclined my head only slightly, more courtesy than respect, while the Force curled between us like unseen smoke, and I found myself wondering which of these men fancied himself powerful enough to bargain with a Sith.


I offered the three men a measured smile, my voice calm and edged with the refinement expected of one trained in the old ways. "I am Darth Sycophantia," I announced, allowing my gaze to drift carefully from Ryi Voltek's calculating stare, to Jakok Jakob's silent menace, and finally to the jeweled excess wrapped around Mer Hops'in.

"Once Apprentice to a forgotten Master of the Sith..." before I could finish, Mer erupted into sharp laughter that echoed through the chamber like broken glass.

"A Sith?" he sneered through a crooked grin, leaning back in his seat with mocking amusement. "You expect us to believe that? Tell me, girl, are you truly Sith, or merely another pretender wrapped in legends to spook us?" His laughter lingered in the air, but I did not flinch; instead, I studied him with growing curiosity, wondering whether his arrogance was born from courage, or ignorance.

I let the silence dance softly for only a heartbeat before I reached into the Dark Side, feeling its cold fury coil through my veins like liquid fire, and with a single outstretched hand I seized Mer Hops'in by the throat through the Force. His laughter died instantly, replaced by a strangled gasp as his jeweled body lifted violently from his chair, clawing at an invisible grip tightening around his neck.

Around the chamber the guards reacted in panic, blasters snapping upward toward me, yet with a sharp twist of my will I tore the weapons from their hands and sent them crashing across the polished floor in a storm of metal and sparks. Mer dangled helplessly before me, boots kicking above the ground while the currents of the Force trembled through the room, and to my amusement it was not fear that came from Ryi Voltek and Jakok Jakob, but laughter; low, genuine laughter, as though Mer's humiliation was a spectacle they had long waited to witness.


I released my grip upon the Force, and Mer Hops'in collapsed back into his chair coughing violently, clutching at his aching throat while I calmly folded my hands behind my back as though nothing of consequence had occurred. "Now then," I said in a dry, caustic tone, my eyes narrowing upon him with open irritation, "may I continue my introduction, or must I further educate this room on the difference between a pretender and a Sith?"

 
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Comfortable Liar - by Chevelle

Location: Devaron

I stood in silence beneath the dim amber glow of the chamber-like room, the stale air thick with spice smoke and perfume, as Jakob and Voltek exchanged rough laughter like two old war veterans trading scars. Their amusement rolled through the room in ugly, familiar waves while poor Hops'in sat there absorbing the punishment with the same weary endurance of a man long accustomed to humiliation among companions.

"I swear," Jakob barked between chuckles, slapping the armrest of his chair hard enough to rattle teeth, "you never really had luck with the ladies, Hops'in. Even back on Nar Shaddaa they looked at you like you were carrying some kind of plague."

Voltek grinned cruelly through polished teeth, adding, "Luck? The man could walk into a pleasure den with a cargo hold full of credits and still leave alone." Their mocking remained friendly, almost brotherly in its brutality, yet I could feel Hops'in's embarrassment through the Force like heat rising from scorched durasteel. At last, Voltek said, "Please, Lady Sycophantia, continue."

I waited briefly for the last remnants of their laughter to die down before I spoke, my voice cutting through the chamber with the cold precision of a vibroblade drawn across exposed flesh. "I have studied your organization for only a few weeks," I said, folding my hands behind my back as I paced around the room, watching as the guards retrieved their floored weapons, "and already I can see the plot holes in your entrepreneurship."

My eyes drifted from Jakob to Voltek, then finally to Hops'in, lingering upon each man long enough to make them feel measured. "Your routes are predictable. Your hired guns are loyal only to credits. Your information network leaks more than a cracked coolant pipe, and half your associates indulge in excess so openly that Republic investigators could track them blindfolded through Coruscant's underlevels."

The room grew still beneath the weight of my observations, the shadows seeming to deepen around me as I continued in sharp, factual tones devoid of emotion. "You survive because your competitors are incompetent, not because you are secure." Voltek shifted forward abruptly, jaw tightening as anger flashed across his face, clearly preparing to answer me, but Hops'in lifted a hand toward him without taking his eyes off me, silently waving him to stillness so I could continue.

I allowed a thin, humorless smile to creep across my lips as I looked upon the three men with naked disdain, my voice dripping with sharp condescension that echoed through the chamber like poison poured into clean water. "Your organization is a shame," I said flatly.

"A disgrace wrapped in expensive suits and hidden behind false lifestyles." I slowly began circling their chairs as I spoke, my boots striking the durasteel floor with deliberate rhythm, each step carrying the weight of judgment. "You posture like kings of the underworld, yet you think like street thugs squabbling over scraps in an alley on Nar Shaddaa. Your empire survives not through brilliance, but through luck, fear, and the incompetence of lesser criminals too weak to challenge you properly."

I could feel Voltek's irritation boiling beneath the surface and Jakob's pride beginning to sour into resentment, yet I continued mercilessly, savoring the discomfort spreading through the room. "But," I said at last, pausing behind Hops'in's chair as my cloak settled around me like living shadow, "there is hope at the end of the tunnel, gentlmen. Even rotting structures may still be rebuilt before collapse, provided those leading them possess the intelligence to accept guidance from someone far superior to themselves."

It was Hops'in, with a touch of anger and curiosity mixed in his voice, who spoke first, "And we are to assume you have a solution to fix what only you perceive as broken?" I placed my hands on Hops'in's shoulders, gently rubbing them, feeling them tense rather than relax under my cold caress before I answered proudly, "We have much to discuss."

 
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Comfortable Liar - by Chevelle

Location: Devaron

The hidden arteries of the Web of Shadows breathe around me as I walk its dimly lit corridors, my cloak trailing across durasteel floors polished black enough to reflect the crimson glow of the lanterns above. Employees of various backgrounds move through the walls like busy workers ants, while distant electronic machinery hums with the pulse of it's forbidden industry.

I move slowly, deliberately, allowing my presence to poison the air with unease as the three men walk beside and behind me like devoted carrion circling a dark queen. Hops'in speaks first, his gravelly voice carrying the scent of spice dens and blood-stained credits as he details the smuggling veins of our criminal enterprise. Entire freighters vanish beneath his careful touch, rerouted through ghost hyperspace lanes unknown even to the organization's most paranoid navigators.

Weapons, relics, narcotics, slaves, and more he moves them all through the galaxy like a phantom threading poison into the bloodstream of civilization. I give only a faint nod as I listen, my red eyes tracing the hooded dock workers below through the overlooking balconies, for I admire efficiency almost as much as cruelty.

Voltek takes his turn with the cold pride of a man who knows secrets can kill faster than lightsabers. His pale fingers dance subtly as he describes the vast information network nested within the Web of Shadows; spies hidden in senatorial courts, agents buried within syndicates, slicers feeding upon encrypted holonets like parasites gnawing at flesh. Every whisper, every betrayal, every illicit desire eventually crawls back to him.

I can almost taste the fear such knowledge creates, and it pleases me deeply. Beside him walks Jakob, broad-shouldered and silent until spoken to, carrying himself with the rigid posture of a veteran executioner. His voice is calm and merciless as he explains the security apparatus he commands; mercenaries, former bounty hunters, old combat veterans, fanatics recruited from forgotten worlds to defend our hidden dominion. He speaks of kill-zones, patrol rotations, loyalty conditioning, and contingency protocols with almost religious devotion.

As I continue deeper into the cathedral-like heart of the headquarters, hearing the machinery of my future empire unfold around me piece by piece, I cannot help but smile beneath the shadows of my hood. The galaxy worships order and light, yet beneath its feet the Web of Shadows tightens patiently around its throat.


"I find myself pleased more than not," I said with a slow, satisfied grin curling beneath the shadows of my hood, my voice echoing through the black halls like velvet wrapped around a dagger, "yet satisfaction is the death of growth, and the Web of Shadows still has veins left to spread across this rotting galaxy."

My blood-color eyes drift toward Jakob as I fold my hands behind my back and continue in almost eager tones, "So first we address the security; Mr..Jakob and I will review the personnel manifest and begin there before moving forward; one week from now we reconvene within this chamber, and Mr. Jakob, you will accompany me now."
 
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Comfortable Liar - by Chevelle​

The manifests sprawled across the dark ashen wood table before me like the entrails of some gutted beast, each datapad glowing in pale purplish hues beneath the vaulted shadows of the Web of Shadows' Security Command chamber. I sat with one leg draped over the arm of my throne-like chair, crimson eyes drifting line by line through the histories of guards, mercenaries, and sentries who would eventually serve beneath my dominion. Mr. Jakob stood beside me in his usual statuesque silence, the sharp edges of his outfit catching the dim light as he recited details with mechanical precision.

Some files amused me. Former pirates turned disciplined enforcers. Ex-military personnel whose loyalty had survived only because fear chained it there. Others earned a faint curl of satisfaction from my lips; veterans who had resisted bribery attempts, guards who had chosen violence over cowardice when tested.

"This one," I murmured, tapping a finger against a particular record, "understands vigilance. Reward him quietly. Competence should never go unnoticed." Jakob gave a slow nod and marked the file while I continued my predatory examination through the endless sea of names.

Yet beneath the surface of commendations and polished records, I could smell the rot lingering between the lines. Patterns revealed themselves to me as naturally as blood spreading through water. Too many clustered loyalties. Too many friendships among the lower security tiers. Comfort bred weakness, and weakness invited betrayal. I leaned back slowly, steepling my fingers beneath my chin while the chamber hummed with distant machinery.

"The solution is obvious now," I said at last, my voice lowering into a cold, velvet certainty that made even Jakob still himself further. "We fracture familiarity before familiarity fractures us."

My eyes narrowed upon the manifest as though I could already see the future screams hidden within it. Rotations would be randomized. Squads separated and reassigned across sectors. Internal watchers embedded among them without announcement. Loyalty would belong to the Web of Shadows alone; not to drinking companions, not to old allegiances, not to whispered little cliques festering in dark corridors.

Jakob inclined his head once more, and I allowed myself the faintest smile. "Order born through pressure. Trust forged through scrutiny. Fear sharpened into devotion. Such things are far more reliable than affection could ever be."

I slid several offending files across the table with the slow scrape of claw against wood, watching the purple-lit names drift toward Mr. Jakob like condemned souls being offered to the void. "And now," I said softly, a cruel satisfaction coiling beneath my voice, "we cut this rot from the flesh and replace it with capable, competent minds before their weakness infects the rest."
 
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Comfortable Liar - by Chevelle

For the next several days, I walked the corridors of the Web of Shadows beside Mr. Jakob like a carrion queen surveying the health of her future kingdom. Beneath the cold glow of datapads and flickering holoscreens, we hired those with sharp minds, steady hands, and the proper hunger for ambition, while casting the incompetent into the abyss without hesitation or ceremony.

Some pleaded when their names were struck from the rosters, their voices trembling like condemned souls before execution, yet I felt nothing save irritation at their weakness.

Mr. Jakob handled the administrative machinery with ruthless efficiency while I observed the subtler truths; the nervous twitch of a liar, the greed hidden behind false humility, the predator concealed beneath polished civility. By the end of each cycle our organization bled less corruption and breathed with renewed purpose, its veins no longer clogged by parasites fattened on stolen credits and hollow promises.

When our work within the personnel ranks concluded, we turned our attention toward finding a suitable world upon which to erect the training complex. Together we traveled through rain-soaked industrial sectors, abandoned mining territories, and forgotten stretches of wilderness where even the stars seemed reluctant to cast their light.

I desired a place removed from the soft decadence of civilized systems; a domain where discipline could be forged through isolation, hardship, and fear. Mr. Jakob spoke often of supply lines, defensible terrain, and construction costs, yet my thoughts lingered upon atmosphere, silence, and symbolism.

At last we discovered a desolate region wrapped in perpetual storm clouds, where jagged black mountains rose like the teeth of some ancient slumbering beast. The thunder there rolled endlessly across the horizon, and as crimson lightning illuminated the barren landscape, I felt the Force coil around the land like a dark omen welcoming me home.
 


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Comfortable Liar - by Chevelle

Mer Hops'in walked beside me through the iron-veined corridors of Devaron's lower district, his voice low beneath the mournful groan of machinery and the distant thunder of departing freighters. The docking quarter breathed like some colossal beast in slumber; steam hissed from fractured pipes, red warning lamps bled across the floor, and the air carried the bitter incense of fuel, ozone, and sweat.

As he spoke of the Web's smuggling lattice, I listened in silence, my hood shadowing my features while my mind wove his information into intricate designs of power. He detailed the employed captains who ferried contraband through the stars; hardened souls born in the gutters of Nar Shaddaa, deserters from governmental and military remnants, and cold-eyed opportunists who worshipped profit above morality.

Two of them awaited my inspection within the docking bay ahead. Their files rested within his datapad; histories soaked in violence, betrayals, unpaid debts, and survival. To lesser minds such records would inspire caution; to me, they were simply the anatomy of useful creatures.

Cargo manifests scrolled endlessly before my thoughts; spice hidden beneath medical supplies, stolen relics concealed inside machine components, weapons buried beneath false compartments sanctified by forged government seals.

Every illicit shipment was another strand in the great web tightening around the galaxy's throat.

As we descended toward the cavernous bay chambers, Mer Hops'in continued unveiling the arteries through which the Web fed itself. He spoke of hyperspace routes and 'ghost-lanes' threading through scantly patrolled sectors and unstable nebulae where customs patrols rarely wandered. I committed each path to memory with predatory fascination, envisioning how easily those routes could become avenues not merely for profit, but influence, espionage, and eventually dominion.

He described the scattered docking sites stretching from the jeweled Core Worlds into the decaying reaches of the Mid Rim; hidden ports shadowed by mountains and forests, abandoned refineries repurposed into warehouses, sanctuaries buried beneath cities where desperate officials had already sold their loyalty for credits.

All roads eventually converged here upon Devaron, within the shadowed docking bays owned by the Web of Shadows itself. I found pleasure in the symmetry of it. The organization resembled a living organism concealed beneath civilized space, unseen yet everywhere, feeding upon greed and corruption.

While Hops'in spoke, I was already reshaping his operation within my thoughts, refining weaknesses, envisioning expansion, deciding who among these captains would serve faithfully; and who might someday need to vanish into the endless dark between the stars.

 

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