Star Wars Roleplay: Chaos

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Private Precipice

Oyokal, Assembled Alliance Fleet​


Cale had not felt this way in a long, long time, but he remembered the last like it was yesterday. A somewhat different evil, a different heart of darkness, but the same sort of heroes assembled to stop it. He did not feel in place as he had then though. Korriban had been a long time ago, before the One Sith, before Venatorum, before Aleksandr and Ronan and the rest of it. Cale wondered if he’d changed too much to stand among the forces of the light once more, the nagging voice in the back of his mind gnawing at him, rabid.

But he silenced it, and his mind became a sea of tranquility once more. This was where he was meant to be, this was where the road had taken him, this was where he belonged.

They’d docked with one of the Alliance capital ships to fuel up, restock their ammunition, and see a few old friends. The soldiers they’d shared trenches with on Illum had come to greet the one-armed Jedi, friendly barbs had gone to and fro before promises to meet one another ground side were made aloud and filled with firm handshakes. They were good men and women, all of them, and again Cale felt a twinge of guilt for still standing among them.

This is who you are.

He’d not heard his conscious speak in her voice in some time, but it was almost a comfort now where it had been a burden before. She was right, she’d always been right about him from the very start. Cale wondered again where she was, if she was alright, if she was happy. If she’d ever meant to return to the life, she’d have been her, and when Cale reached out and felt the strength of every Jedi assembled pulsating in the force, hers was not there. She’d moved on, and he likely should’ve to.

Clad in the dark jacket, one sleeve tapered off at his right shoulder, a red cloth hung over it, the grizzled Jedi sat alone in the white-walled briefing room, distant eyes staring blankly at the holotable in the center. He didn’t know what he was doing here, or who he was waiting for, maybe he’d just wanted a moment of quiet before he went back to his ship.

He remembered Korriban again, remembered standing side by side with his brother for the first time as Jedi, together. He’d saved Marek, and he knew his brother had never quiet forgiven himself for not saving Cale in turn. His twin was out among the assembled fleet, they’d spoken briefly, but Cale hadn’t had it in him to go to his brother. It was too much to remember.

Cale wondered what Exogol would be like when it was all over, Korriban had been glass, vicious sandstorms ripping apart those unable to get off the surface, fire and chaos, and death had been everywhere. But they’d won then, the light had triumphed over the dark, just as it would now. It had to, the Maw had to be stopped.

Fumbling in his pocket, Cale pulled a stimstick free, and pressed it to his lips, igniting it and taking a long drag. He sensed it then, something or someone unfamiliar nearby, but strong in the force, doubtless one of the other Jedi that had come to see an end made. He prayed they weren’t going to barge in and lecture him about smoking, but he didn’t count it out.


 

Kahlil_Div2.png

Kahlil paused only for a moment. He'd just been passing by, as he always did. Finding the next group to talk to. Prepare for the next fight, the next battle. Exegol was coming. They were preparing. It was.. He wasn't too sure how to feel about it all. It was a necessity, that much he did agree with. But, well. Those thoughts passed pretty quick as he smelled smoke. Curiosity got the better of him as he opened the door.

"Y'know, literally everyone will tell you you probably shouldn't smoke that. Think I heard there's some of the new generation that would just pluck it from your lips."

Cale Gunderson Cale Gunderson
 
The stranger was no doubt Jedi, though Cale was not ignorant to the almost alarming number of force-wielders that the Alliance had in its ranks who were not beholden to the Jedi Order. He supposed that was hypocritical of him, given his rather lax affiliation with the Order itself, maybe he really was getting old.

"They're welcome to try." Cale shrugged, taking another drag. "What about you, you the lecturing type instead?"

There was a bite to the question, but it sounded close enough to being made in jest, whereas once he'd have meant it as sharply as possible. Maybe he was in luck, maybe this one was like Noble and would just tolerate it, or perhaps he'd be like Kaze, where Cale wasn't sure if the man meant to bum a smoke off him.


 

Kahlil_Div2.png

"Can't say I am. It's not my place."

Kahlil offered a shrug of his shoulders before stepping over, turning his gaze to stare out the viewport to space. To the planet below. He kept a calm smile as he walways did, but for once it didn't actually reach his eyes.

"What do you think about Exegol?"

Cale Gunderson Cale Gunderson
 
“I think,” Cale thought a lot of things about Exegol, that the more he heard of it the more he’d wished it really had just been a ghost story, that the friends he’d made among the GADF would be far fewer in number by the time they left it’s surface, that whatever happened there might well be the most important or utterly pointless thing he’d ever done. He had faith and doubt in equal measure. “I think it might be a fight that matters in the end.”

The Republic, the Alliance, the Sith Empire, the One Sith, again and again, over and over he’d watched light and dark rise and fall. It was the way of things, but never before had the balance changed so drastically and so often. But the Maw were unique in their evil, their means nearly as horrific as their ends, and destroying them would have an impact that the changing tides of the galaxy would not just wash away.

“You?” He asked the stranger.

 

Kahlil_Div2.png

"It's a necessity. But I fear what we'll find there. .. No, I know what will be found there. I just hope it won't ruin the lives of those brave enough to help the strike." An impossible hope, really. The Sith, what they made there, what the regular soldiers were going to end up facing, it was a fate he didn't wish on anyone. He let out a sigh, followed pretty quickly by a chuckle.

"Sometimes makes me wish I was smoking too. But, well."

He shrugged before turning to offer a hand.

"Kahlil Noble. I'll be alongside my wife in the station."

Cale Gunderson Cale Gunderson
 
“Noble? What, you Val’s brother or…descendant? Or something?” He asked with an arched eyebrow. Brother seemed unlikely, they didn’t look related, but maybe he was some sort of child of her bloodline, she was one of the alarmingly common variety of individual who’d awoken in the current age from hundreds if not thousands of years before. He’d never known another Noble, but even storied bloodlines did not always yield fruit for some time. It was good to know it was apparently going strong though.

Maybe if he’d spent more time with the Order instead of out on the fringe, he’d have known Kahlil better, enough to know his history, but all Cale had there and then was guesswork.

Before he went any further, he met the man’s hand with his own, and gave it a firm shake.

“Cale Gunderson, I’ll be groundside with my boy and the rest of Tano.” He thought about offering the man a smoke, but the words never came. It wouldn’t be much of a first impression to pass a vice on to a man he just met.

 
Cale had to take the lit stimstick from his mouth as he laughed, the one-armed Jedi too amused to be embarrassed at the blunder. Smiles still felt strange, but they were becoming easier and easier for him again as time had rolled on. He didn’t think much on the why of the situation, didn’t pry into what Kahlil might’ve wanted to be rid of when he forsook the name he was born to. It didn’t matter, he seemed like he was happier for it.

“You know, I suppose it would.” He agreed, a final chuckle escaping his lips as he shook his head and put the stim back between his lips. It was a familiar situation, though one he’d forgotten the feeling of. Quick exchanges with his squadronmates as ‘Cassian Feryn’ before a sortie against the First Order, jokes between he and his men before they clashed with the Sith, and Korriban. His mind kept going back to Korriban.

They’d won the day there, and darkness had followed for decade after decade in its wake. Would this be any different? Or would it merely be the end of one chapter and the start of another?

“Don’t worry about us, you do your part and we’ll do ours. When it’s done I’ll pass you a smoke or something. Don’t tell your wife though, somethin’ about her scares me.” He chuckled, then sighed.

“Here’s hoping this sticks, and something worse doesn’t come up in their place.” It would be hard to be worse than the Maw, but they’d said that about each great darkness that had preceded it, only to be wrong each time.

For once, Cale hoped the galaxy would see a change that lasted.

 

Kahlil_Div2.png

"She is pretty scary when she wants to be, yeah."

And likely now knew about this conversation, given their dyad. No, he wasn't going to smoke. His body was a temple, after all. Yes, he was absolutely one of those kind of guys. Though he did end up frowning, just a little as he listened to Cale.

"Something will. Maybe not immediately, but there will always be something dark waiting to strike. That's why we're here, though, right? The next time it creeps it's head up, hopefully we'll be here to help defend against it."

Cale Gunderson Cale Gunderson
 
"Yeah, so I'm told." He'd struggled with it for a long time, the idea that the fight would never end. He'd given up, walked away, tried to be something he wasn't, and it'd taken a street urchin becoming something like a son to convince him otherwise. Cale was glad in the end, but he wondered how much he'd lost in the years between. Not that he'd have changed it, not anymore.

"Maw's the worst I've seen though, even the ones that had me had some sort of...purpose, beyond the destruction of it all. It was self-interest that drove them. Greed, lust, hate, I get that but...these guys." Cale shrugged and waved a hand dismissively. "The galaxy is gonna be better off with them gone. Maybe even in a way that lasts."

 

Kahlil_Div2.png

"War, death, rebirth."

Kahlil mused out the Maw chant, a frown on his face.

"Not all, especially the leadership, follow it. But the masses. Their hordes of raiders and pirates, murderers and thieves, they're not mindless. They're fanatical. Death is just a step to their freedom. And that makes them far more dangerous than anyone else. People who can't be reasoned with, they are indeed the most dangerous. Even after Exegol, even if we win and the Maw is defeated, they won't be gone. They'll fight to the last one. .. I fear for the Jedi going into this. Even after the war is won, they will still be forced to kill."

Cale Gunderson Cale Gunderson
 
War, death, rebirth. Rise, fall, redemption. The world ran in circles, telling the same stories over and over with different people with the only constant being the suffering it wrought. No, he reminded himself. The suffering was a certainty, but so was the inevitable return of good, the inescapable defeat of darkness by the light. He'd seen it play out more times than one should've in a single life, but there was no point in lamenting that. He'd found his way anyway.

"Up to folks like us then to try and keep their hands clean then." Cale met Kahlil's gaze, something cold in the blue of his eyes. He didn't know Kahlil Noble, didn't know where he was from, who he'd been, or what he might've done, and the other Jedi knew just as little of him. Or maybe he knew more, maybe Valery had told him. It didn't matter, Cale was all but certain about the man. The two of them wouldn't be the type to flinch from what was necessary.

Even Jedi could be killers.


"Their fanatics might carry on, but there won't be another Csilla. We'll be sure of that."

 
"I'm a grim kinda' guy, comes with the territory." He kept the stimstick loose between his lips, and his bitter thoughts about Panatha to himself. He wondered if Carnifex would show at Exegol, if someone would finally put the old demon down. Or maybe they had already, Cale hadn't kept himself in the loop.

"To never again." He declared somberly. "I'd say I'll see you out there Kahlil Noble, but if we're seeing one another in the field something has gone very, very wrong."

Cale rose to his feet, and gave the man a final nod before heading for the door.

 

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