Star Wars Roleplay: Chaos

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Faction Remnants [THR]



"The simple answer is you are going to keep messing up," Lorn said, meeting the young wolf's uncertain gaze dead-on. "You will. I will. Everyone will."

A heavy sigh escaped the veteran Jedi as he shifted his stance. Failure was an inevitability of life, a truth forged into his own armor through years of hardship. Sensing the guilt and pain swirling around the kid, a familiar ache tightened in Lorn's chest. He should have been better, more prepared, and more willing to see things from the kid's perspective before the fracturing happened.

"It will call to you," Lorn admitted, his voice rough. "Another inevitability."

Slowly, his hand reached down to his hip, calloused fingers wrapping around the hilt of his lightsaber. He unclipped the weapon and held it forward, the heavy cylinder resting in his palm.

"I can help you," Lorn said, the offer hanging between them in the dim light. "We can finish what you started. If you trust me."

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Location: Republic Space - [REDACTED]


Equipment:
Inmate Jumpsuit | Cybernetic Arm

Hearing that the family hadn't done anything drastic was reassuring. Even his father's visit hadn't ended in a disaster, which honestly felt like a small miracle.

Ace also knew Isley wasn't bluffing. If something happened to him, other people would pay for it. More people than he wanted to think about. He just hoped they'd be able to respect his decision and accept whatever happened without trying to seek "justice" afterward.

When Isley promised to keep the more enthusiastic members of the family under control, Ace found himself genuinely appreciating it.

"Thank you." The sincerity in his voice was obvious. "Tell them this was my choice. And that I'm asking them to respect it."

Whether they actually would was another matter entirely. Then came the introduction, and Ace smirked faintly.

"Isley." He repeated the name once, then a small nod followed. "Yeah. You stay safe out there too."

Isley the Younger Isley the Younger




"Figures."

The answer about the Crusade didn't surprise him in the slightest. If there was one thing he'd learned over the years, it was that organizations rarely agreed on anything important.

What interested him more was her answer about the Jedi. Purpose, not certainty or faith. Purpose. She stayed because she believed she could help steer things in a better direction. Ace understood that feeling intimiately.

As Colette continued, his gaze gradually lowered. The conversations with Arris on Coruscant and Mercy on Throneworld drifted through his thoughts. Different people and philosophies, yet somehow they had all arrived at a similar conclusion.

The cycle never ended. Light surged, then dark surged, rinse and repeat, but neither truly disappeared. One simply gained ground until the other pushed back. An endless struggle stretching across generations.

Eventually her sigh pulled him from his thoughts.

"How am I doing?"
A humorless laugh escaped him. "Fine, I guess. All things considered... when I'm not spiraling over everything I did."

Then came her question about visitors.

"Insufferable?" A snicker followed, and he leaned back slightly. "Maybe a little. Debating redemption is getting old. Fast."

His eyes drifted toward the ceiling.

"Mostly I'm just waiting for everybody to get their fill so I can finally be left alone."

Colette Colette




Michael was being coy. Ace was fairly certain the Hidden Path was little more than a memory at this point, but Michael's attempt at being vague told him enough. Either way, Michael wasn't confirming anything, but he had his suspicions.

If they were still kicking, secretly, that was good. Probably meant they were doing something right.

"Found your meaning, huh?" A faint smirk tugged at the corner of his mouth. "Cryptic."

Not that Michael had ever been particularly straightforward. Ace deliberately ignored the part about finding his own. He wasn't ready to unpack that one yet, or more like, he didn't want to.

Instead, he studied the pilot for a moment.

"You're different now." His head tilted slightly. "You used to be this anxious, awkward kid back when we ran together."

The observation wasn't cruel. If anything, it was oddly fond. As fond as Ace ever sounded. His gaze lingered on Michael for another second.

"Whatever it is, it looks good on you. Guess doing what you were 'meant to do' had something to do with that?"

Michael Angellus Michael Angellus




Ace shook his head. "Think you're confusing being irredeemable with being self-aware. The things I did are what make me irredeemable. Me taking accountability for them doesn't magically change that. That's not how this works."

His gaze settled on her and a faint frown crossed his face..

"You think Mercy Star-Arm's redeemable if she wakes up tomorrow feeling guilty?" He tilted his head slightly. "What about Carnifex? If he suddenly has a change of heart one day, does that erase everything he's done?"

The questions weren't rhetorical. At least not entirely.

Still, despite his disagreement, Ace listened to the rest. Because Lily wasn't wrong about the weight of failure. The guilt, the pain, and the way it stayed with you. Whether you were responsible for it or not.

And she wasn't wrong about something else either. People were defined by how they responded to those failures. He already knew that one. Somewhere deep down he'd always known it.

Eventually Lily thanked him for his honesty.

Ace nodded once. "It's fine. Thanks for... respecting my autonomy, I guess."

The words felt awkward leaving his mouth, but he meant them. Then, after a moment, he looked at her again.

"I've got one thing to say to you too." His expression grew more serious. "This hopefulness you've got. It's all well and good. Just be careful."

The warning came quietly.

"The galaxy has a sick way of humbling us... and our values."

Lily Decoria Lily Decoria




Ace let out a slow sigh. Of course Lorn was right, he usually was, and that was part of the problem. The idea of failing again wasn't exactly comforting after spending months fucking his life up in spectacular fashion.

Then Lorn made things worse. The Dark Side would call to him again. Apparently it was inevitable. Outstanding. That alone almost made Ace want to spend the rest of his life in the cell.

When the grizzled Jedi Knight reached for his lightsaber, Ace's eyes followed the movement. He blinked at the offer. He could help? Finish what he'd started? Trust him?

For a moment Ace simply stared at the weapon resting in Lorn's palm. Trust him? Lorn had warned him. Again and again. Throughout his time in the Covenant. On Yavin. On Coruscant. On the Trinity. Every single time.

And Ace ignored him. Every single time. Yet, somehow Lorn was here, after everything fell apart. His expression remained unreadable as memories surfaced.

Finding himself again after Death Star III. The Mother of Teeth. Their arguments. Their fight. The fact that Lorn never truly gave up on him.

Others surfaced in his mind quickly after too. Cora. Lily. Colette. Dominique. Michael. The other visitors. The messages. The conversations. People who gave a damn enough to show up.

Ace squeezed his eyes shut and exhaled slowly. There were still people out there who needed help. People worth helping. Like those in the Covenant. Maybe he deserved to rot for what he'd done, but the least he could do was try to make something right.

Maybe with Lorn's guidance... maybe.

Finally, his eyes opened. "I trust you."

Lorn Reingard Lorn Reingard
 
Acier Moonbound Acier Moonbound

Spiraling wasn't ideal, but it was an understandable way to be for anyone with a conscience. Colette herself would most likely have spiraled too if she had gone through what Acier had. The only reason she felt like she wasn't spiraling at this moment was because she still had her hands mostly clean to begin with. At this point it felt like that was all that still anchored her to her old homeworld, and that thought alone scared her almost senseless.

"I can book some of the more busy time slots and 'forget' to attend if you want." Colette offered with a dead serious look on her face. "Although if you're spiraling, odds are that having at least someone present is better than having no-one present."

"If you're ever in a bad way, I'll make sure to have the warden forward a message my way as well as anyone else you might need. Make this whole thing a bit more bearable to go through." That wasn't an offer, that was a statement. "Do you have anyone in particular in mind for that or would you prefer if it was just me?"

"Neither is not an option. I won't let you through this on your own."
 
I think I did something stupid 5 minutes ago.

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EPISODE – Entry # 10
Location
: – Naboo, Can’t really say where.
Assigned Craft: My X-wing or My Other One Astromech Partner: BRED (BB-30)
Current Mood: Bothered.
Background Noise: Machinery.
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I was no good trying to be a Jedi. I’m a pilot, simple as that. He really didn’t see what was so cryptic about what he had said. He was a pilot and better meant to be. Simple.

When Acier observed his new outlook, Michael shrugged. Thanks, I guess. I wish I could say I like this new you. You seem colder, calculating, almost like you’re looking for ways to use this to your advantage… even if you don’t see it.. He wasn’t judging, clearly, but explaining what he saw.

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TAG: Acier Moonbound Acier Moonbound
CUTTO SCENE - This is where he is speaking in a different setting, as if recapping what he had just seen on a holovid
Wooo-beep
 
Location: Republic Prison
Outfit: Jedi Attire
Equipment: Arwr Da, Hydrangea Moonblade (concealed)
Tag: Acier Moonbound Acier Moonbound

Shaking her head, "I think you are misunderstanding my point here, but I do agree there is a difference between being self-aware and being irredeemable." When Acier asked about whether Lily would think Mercy or Carnifex would be two people that she would consider potentially redeemable if they showed an interest in doing so, Lily sighed. "There will be some Jedi that will say no, a few that would say yes with no questions and potentially some naivety on how it would go." Lily mentioned as she considered how to explain her thoughts and feelings. "I believe a person's actions speaks more than their words, if Mercy, Carnifex, Srina, yourself or any Sith that has attempted to kill me came to me and said that they truly regretted their actions, they wanted to do better. They wanted to make up for all the bad they did."

"Then I would accept that but I would warn them, it won't be easy, people will be suspicious of you always and some will never forgive you. But as long as you accept that is their right, their decision but that does not have to stop you. Then you can truly do some positives in the world and redeem yourself." Lily shrugged, "no one in my mind is ever too far gone, it just ends up being a long, difficult walk towards the light. Most importantly, who am I to say whether a person is possible of redemption or not? I don't know why they did the things that they did, nor do I truly know why they choose to desire a redemption."

"Think about it Acier, the Sith believe anyone can and will fall to the Dark Side with enough pressure. Why shouldn't we believe the inverse is true? That with enough compassion and care, anyone, literally anyone, can do enough to start walking the path to the Light Side."

Standing up, Lily looked to Acier, "redemption is never about absolving you of your past sins, it is not about creating a blank slate. You have hurt people and they may never forgive you, but true redemption is understanding that pain and striving to ensure no one ever feels like that again. That you work hard to do better, to be better. That is what I believe redemption to be about, understanding the sins of the past and wanting to better things for the future."

"I will never lose this hopefulness, not until the Sith are defeated and I create a better future for every future generation. That's my duty and that is the work I promised to do as part of my redemption for failing so many before." There was a slight sadness in Lily's silver eyes as she thought about the people before her that died. Lily breathed in deeply as she steeled herself once again. "I shall let you think about what we discussed and leave you be. If you wish to talk about anything in the future, have a guard or the warden message me. I still don't believe you are truly irredeemable, nothing you said indicated that to me."
 

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Perhaps, Dominique thought in response to Acier's comment of the Code. Jedi and Sith were not her area of expertise, but cults... well, the Corporations knew a thing or two about indoctrination, so-called brainwashing, conditioning, and simple persuasion. Her knowledge of the Force was enough to extrapolate from matters she did understand. Somehow, Acier had fallen in with the wrong crowd for a reason seemingly all his own at the time. It was a very small step from that to ardent believer. So, the Chancellor took a stab -- and was a bit off the mark -- but it might still prove worthwhile in the future. In case those 'temptations' returned and Acier found himself in dark company once more. Sometimes all it took was the smallest comment, the smallest pebble to keep one from going over a cliff.

Then he seemed suddenly on guard again. Unavoidable. Eventually Dominique had to bring matters back around to the present. They couldn't stand there all day talking of the past or some ill-defined future.

"Community service?" The Chancellor's own brows rose in response. "Would you maintain you caused no deaths by your own hand of innocents or Republic personnel? If that were so then a soup kitchen might be just the thing." There was a pause and a smirk shared between them. As if the man were being held in a secret facility because he'd be handing out blankets somewhere by tomorrow.

"No, Acier, I need people that believe in something more than their self. In the institutions of the Republic, if you will; in ceaseless championship of the needs of the People, otherwise. Though I wouldn't turn down someone with an ax to grind, something greater and more idealistic is less easily corrupted. You see," one wrist rolled as her hand lifted off to the side, "as much concern as I had hearing of your off-the-book pursuit -- and as little public acclaim as there might be for the need of such -- there are many tasks required to ensure the health and longevity of the People, Acier. Some serve as politicians or soldiers. Others merchants or bankers. And others still avoid the limelight whether in community support or... well, how else to put it, exposing those that seek to bring about the ruin of us all." Analysts, scouts, spies, assassins, inquisitors, the list went on.


 

Location: Republic Space - [REDACTED]


Equipment:
Inmate Jumpsuit | Cybernetic Arm

Ace glanced at Colette with a puzzled expression. The idea of her intentionally booking visitation slots and then "forgetting" to show up so he wouldn't have to endure another round of philosophical interrogations was, admittedly, appealing.

Then she kept talking, and somehow the conversation went from scheduling to her essentially appointing herself as a support system. Against his will.

Ace let out a slow sigh and shook his head. He couldn't even really argue with her. It wasn't like he could stop her from showing up if she wanted to. Short of escaping the prison, which would obviously defeat the purpose of being here in the first place.

"I don't get it." His brow furrowed slightly as he looked at her. "Why are you doing all this? You don't even know me."

The question was genuine. He ran a hand through his white locs before falling back to his side.

"Why make all this effort?"

There wasn't any hostility behind the words, he was genuinely confused. People helping each other made sense. Friends. Family. People who owed each other something.

Colette wasn't any of those things. As far as Ace understood it, she was just a Jedi who'd decided to walk into a prison cell and start caring about a former Sith.

The entire thing felt bizarre. Truthfully, he was fine. Or at least as fine as he could be. He'd spent most of his life dealing with things alone. It was what he knew. What he was comfortable with. The idea that someone would simply refuse to let him do that sat strangely with him.

Colette Colette



Michael's assessment wasn't entirely wrong. The Covenant had changed him. It had made him colder, harder, and more willing to view people as pieces on a board if it meant reaching whatever objective he'd convinced himself mattered most.

A dry snicker escaped him as he flexed the fingers of his prosthetic hand.

"Yeah, no." The correction came immediately. "Ask me that a few months ago and I'd have said yes. Or lied."

His gaze drifted briefly toward the floor, the admission felt strangely easy now. Back then he'd still had reasons. Justifications. Plans. Now all of that felt very far away.

Ace shrugged.

"But now?" Another small flex of the metallic fingers. "I don't know."

His voice lacked the certainty it once carried.

"I'm just waiting for whatever punishment I've got coming my way."

And for once, he wasn't trying to outsmart it, control it, or find the angle. He was just waiting.

Michael Angellus Michael Angellus



Ace listened quietly as Lily spoke. She was stubborn....incredibly stubborn. And so relentlessly optimistic that at times it bordered on naïve. At least one part felt familiar, he understood stubbornness. Respected it, even. Because for all the things he disagreed with, Lily remained unapologetically herself.

On the other hand, the Sith defeated? Maybe. Maybe she'd help bring down the Covenant, or help destroy this generation of the Sith Order. But another one would come eventually. They always did. Just like the Jedi always came back too.

Still, Ace didn't bother arguing. They'd already gone back and forth enough and neither of them was going to convince the other today. Whether Lily was right or he was right was a question the future would answer.

Eventually she prepared to leave, and Ace offered a small nod.

"You're stubborn."

The observation was delivered plainly, not as an insult or compliment.

A faint smirk tugged briefly at the corner of his mouth. "But... thanks."

His gaze followed her toward the exit.

"Stay safe out there. Don't let any Sith off you or anything."

The delivery was dry enough to sound almost sarcastic. But it wasn't. For all their disagreements, he meant it. Genuinely.

Lily Decoria Lily Decoria



If Dominique's comment about community service was a joke, it landed completely flat. But Ace continued to listen as she went on, studying her closely. Every word and implication.

The frustrating part was that he understood exactly what she was saying. Systems. Institutions. Thousands of people filling thousands of roles. Politicians. Soldiers. Merchants. Community leaders. Everyone contributing something toward keeping the whole thing moving forward.

He'd known that as a kid, even if he hadn't had the words for it. And he'd learned it intimately as an adult.

"I grew up on a planet that made it hard to trust institutions. The system I knew wasn't people working toward something bigger. It was every man for himself. The people at the top didn't care about us bottom feeders. We were just background noise at worst, tools at best."

His eyes narrowed slightly. Then he remembered something she'd said. People operating in the shadows. Community support. The things done outside the spotlight.

It reminded him of a conversation he'd had with Arris.

"You know Veruna offered Arris Windrun amnesty, right?" He asked. "The same Arris Windrun that was responsible for the genocide of dozens of Imperial worlds."

The statement hung in the air.

"So I get what you're saying. I do. Systems need people. Institutions need people. Sometimes people have to get their hands dirty."

He raised both hands slightly.

"Trust me, I understand that better than most. Your whole sending-a-fleet-into-Imperial-space stunt kinda proved the Republic's willing to do questionable things when it thinks the outcome justifies it."

The gesture fell away.

"But that's kinda my point." Ace's gaze settled firmly on hers. "I kept telling myself it'd be worth it in the end. That if I could stop something worse from happening, then maybe all the ugly parts didn't matter. I ended up losing myself. Becoming something I hated."

His gaze settled firmly on hers.

"So when I hear you talk about necessary sacrifices, doing things in the shadows, serving something bigger than yourself... I'm not hearing duty. I'm hearing the same arguments I used to justify becoming Sith."

Dominique Vexx Dominique Vexx
 
Acier Moonbound Acier Moonbound

"Do I need a reason?" Colette asked back with an equally confused look on her face. "You're in a tiny little cell, seeking to make things right because of things you've done wrong. I don't want you to go through that alone even if you yourself seem to think you do."

She could sense his emotions after all, same as he would sense hers if he wasn't force suppressed somehow. She respected him and if anything found some manner of pride in his willingness to be here.

"You don't. When people talk about lone wolves they have this picture of a perfect predator, the one getting chit done. Except do you know what usually happens?" Of course he did, she figured, and yet she continued. "They die. The entire point of wolves is that they hunt in packs to bring bigger prey or predators down to eat. When wolves separate they do so to find new packs to be with."

"You are in the middle of that transition, and I don't want you to end up both dead and alone."
 

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Cora often wondered what had gone through Lysander's head before and after throwing himself into those heinous acts of violence that he wore as both a weighed shackle and a prize medal. She had rarely wondered what he was thinking in the moments in between, and that realization brought on a sudden wave of guilt.

Cora was quiet as she set up the next test – a probe attached to her datapad that would scan his body for injury and log biometric data. She wasn't ignoring him, and had a feeling that Ace could tell she was searching for the right words to use.

"We fought," she said finally. Somehow, it felt like half an answer. Cora paused, her fingers resting at one of the probe's joints after tightening it. "Or rather, I tried to fight him. He wouldn't attack me."

Underneath generational layers of guilt, there was a sense of frustration. Lysander didn't get to make the choice to kill Jedi and exempt her from his blade. Hard choices had hard consequences, after all, and he didn't get to pick and choose. Except he had. Sith did as they liked.

And the Jedi still died.

Cora let out a sigh so deep and long that it sounded as though she'd exhaled all of the air from her body. After a pause, she shook her head.

"Do you – did you – two talk about things like this?"

Acier Moonbound Acier Moonbound
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Last edited:
I think I did something stupid 5 minutes ago.

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EPISODE – Entry # 10
Location
: – Naboo, Can’t really say where.
Assigned Craft: My X-wing or My Other One Astromech Partner: BRED (BB-30)
Current Mood: Bothered.
Background Noise: Machinery.
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I’m glad to be wrong then. He didn’t believe Ace when he said that, “... six months ago…” but that was his cross to bear at the moment. He also wasn’t here to judge.

When Acier was talking about waiting for his punishment, there was a finality to everything and that bothered Michael. It was not him. You were there for me when I needed a friend. If you face a trial, I’ll be there for you. He did not see what Acier had done, so his opinion of him was unchanged.

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TAG: Acier Moonbound Acier Moonbound
CUTTO SCENE - This is where he is speaking in a different setting, as if recapping what he had just seen on a holovid
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Aurelian hadn't exactly spent a great deal of time discussing Arris Windrun, but Dominique didn't blanche at Acier's remark. For his sake, however, Dominique lowered her chin slightly with a slight raise of the brow. Something to show more than a statue, but hopefully not so much to be read into. That was a subject that would require a lengthy conversation of its own. One that'd sidetrack them as to the necessity of... unpleasant exchanges.

"The ends justify the means." The Chancellor paused after she echoed Acier's sentiment in different words.

"The difference, Acier, is not in the... nature of action that is necessary to defend a people, but its motivation. The boundaries imposed by the intended ends." A delicate topic that Dominique sought to be mindful not to be too frank about. Personally, she had less moral qualms than people might look to a Chancellor to possess on the topic. Fortunately, for them, as Chancellor she was mindful of being more than an individual. Most of the time.

"The Sith, for instance, largely speaking or as a whole do not do what they do for others. Many follow orders. Many have a belief in something -- some proclaimed to be a god. But when you examine their actions -- as a whole -- what do you see, Acier?" There was a brief pause for him to contemplate the question. "What did you see on Humbarine? Admittedly the details are sparse. The Covenant is not without their own counter-intelligence even if they aren't as well organized as they might believe. But my sources inform me there was a gargantuan lizard, a massive Force Storm, and some sort of curse that threatened to consume the living." The Chancellor slowly shook her head. "Those are not actions of people concerned with the well being of Humbarine's occupants."

"If people were the priority then a Force Storm and a Curse, at least,"
both hands rose and pumped the brakes in the air, "are the last weapons to bring to bear. Not the first. The Republic's operatives must support the ideals of the Republic. There may be times when they are forced to commit criminal acts," her hands rolled to face upward, the stark realities of maintaining a cover were unavoidable, "but they will avoid them wherever possible; and they will certainly not detonate a weapon of mass destruction over a civilian population." That last one wasn't as iron clad as it sounded. If the civilians were already dead due to a curse and just didn't know it... well, Blackwing was not a plague you let run rampant because you couldn't bring yourself to push a button.

"As you rightly point out, there is a danger to this line of work. An uncelebrated, thankless task by people that believe in giving the Republic's people a chance to live in a better world where they don't need to make such choices. Alone," as Acier might have been, "they might find it a hopeless, futile effort. Easier to kill them all and let whatever deity sort them out, as it were. That is why such operatives do not work alone. Why the Intelligence community has Handlers, Facilitators, Oversight, and Directors. They help each other. They watch one another. And when necessary, they speak of the questions raised and horrors seen with one another so they do not become buried in the burden they bear." Because if they had no outlet, it would consume them. Dominiique had seen good men and women on Denon alone become messed up and unusable or mere puppets in the hands of other Directors.


 


A solemn nod acknowledged the kid's admission of trust. The heavy swirling of emotions slowly began to settle, leaving behind a grim clarity. This wouldn't be an easy road for either of them, but ease was a luxury the galaxy rarely afforded. Beyond guiding him, a quiet truth resonated within the veteran Jedi; he needed Acier just as much. They were two fractured soldiers who needed each other to stand against the coming dark.

Plungeing the plasma blade of his lightsaber into the wall panel, Lorn sent a shower of bright sparks cascading across the floor. The glowing energy shield flickered violently, hissed, and finally powered down into nothingness. He deactivated the weapon, the hum dying out to leave only the smell of ozone in the air.

Stepping across the threshold, Lorn closed the distance and wrapped a heavy arm around the young wolf, pulling him into a brief, fierce embrace. Relief washed through the older warrior, anchoring him. If this kid had truly been lost to the dark, it might have broken what was left of Lorn's spirit.

"I need your help," Lorn murmured, pulling back.

Turning toward the corridor, the Jedi stepped out into the open hallway without looking back. He left the choice entirely up to the kid, waiting to see if Acier would follow or if he would choose to cling to his self-imposed punishment.

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Location: Republic Space - [REDACTED]


Equipment:
Inmate Jumpsuit | Cybernetic Arm

Ace avoided her gaze entirely at first. Her admission that she didn't want him going through this alone lingered in the silence between them, unanswered. He wasn't sure what to do with it. For most of his life, support had always come with conditions, expectations, debts. It was easier not to touch the subject at all.

But as Colette continued, his eyes flicked toward her. Only his eyes. The lone wolf analogy landed harder than he'd expected. Truth be told, he'd always imagined he'd die alone. Young, too. Not because he wanted to, just because it seemed inevitable. The sort of ending reserved for people like him. Orphans from places like Bonadan didn't usually grow old. They survived until they didn't.

He'd made peace with that a long time ago.

Yet the idea that he wasn't dying alone, that he was simply between packs... That was something else entirely. Something worth thinking about.

A thoughtful hum escaped him. Then, despite himself, a small smirk tugged at the corner of his mouth.

"Guess you're offering me a place in your pack?"

Colette Colette



Ace waited patiently while Cora searched for the words. When they finally came, he wasn't surprised in the slightest. The Prosperity incident had put Jedi and Sith on opposite sides of the same battlefield. A confrontation between Cora and Lysander had always seemed inevitable.

"Right."

The word left him quietly as he turned away, eyes settling somewhere ahead of him. And yet... He was somehow even less surprised by the fact that Lysander had refused to fight her. Family had always been the line he wouldn't cross.

For a moment, Ace found himself remembering a conversation they'd shared back on Thrantin. What would Lysander do when the day finally came that family and duty stood on opposite sides of the battlefield?

Now he had his answer. And somehow it only reinforced the belief that his friend wasn't entirely gone.

His attention shifted back toward Cora when she asked her next question. Did they talk about things like this? Ace's lips parted, then closed again.

A slow breath escaped through his nose. "No. Not really."

The admission felt heavier than he expected.

"I think..."
He paused. "I think he wanted to."

His eyes drifted away again.

"But I just shut it down. I kept my distance from everyone there. Even Lysander, to an extent. Never let myself be vulnerable. Never talked about anything that wasn't practical... unless it was about Fatine."

A humorless smile tugged briefly at his mouth.

"It was my own way of avoiding dealing with myself. My guilt. My shame. The self-hatred."

Silence followed for a moment.

"But... I'm not scared to admit Lysander was my friend anymore. Much as I tried to deny it."

His gaze dropped briefly.

"I should've-- Maybe if I'd been more open with him, he'd--" Ace shook his head. "I don't know."

His hand moved to the back of his neck, rubbing absently before he looked back toward Cora.

"I know this probably isn't what you want to hear. But remember when I said he'd put family above anything? Even the Covenant" Ace held her gaze. "I think that's how you bring him back. If you still want to try."

Corazona von Ascania Corazona von Ascania




Ace's expression softened. For a moment he found himself thinking back to Caltin's funeral. He'd almost forgotten about it, forgotten being there. Everything that followed had happened so quickly. Dathomir. Atrisia. The Covenant. Humbarine. Months that felt more like years. It was easy to lose things in the noise.

A faint smile tugged at his mouth. Weak, but genuine. Whether Michael was offering because he wanted to or because he felt he owed him something, Ace couldn't honestly say.

But the distinction didn't really matter. He came anyway. After everything. After hearing what Ace had become. That said more than words ever could.

"Thanks, Michael."

He meant it. Michael didn't need to come here or offer support. But he did. And it said a lot about the kind of person he was.

Michael Angellus Michael Angellus



Ace listened quietly as Dominique laid out her argument. Humbarine again: the storm, Srina's curse, the giant lizard.

"Yeah." He nodded once. "All that's true."

He never pretended that the Sith cared about the cost of innocent lives. Or champions of the people. He knew then, and he knew now that Sith were rotten and self-serving. With... a few exceptions.

When she finished, silence settled over the room. Ace didn't answer immediately, because the uncomfortable part was that she wasn't wrong.

Eventually, he let out a slow breath. "You're right."

The admission came easier than he expected and his gaze drifted toward the floor for a moment.

"Oversight. Accountability. People watching each other. Pulling each other back before they disappear into their own justifications."

A humorless huff escaped him.

"I had that. I'm sure you know who."

Sibylla. Lorn. People who warned him exactly where this road ended. His thumb rubbed absently against the side of his prosthetic hand.

"I was arrogant and stubborn. Thought I knew better. And when they tried to stop me by force, I fought them."

Silence lingered for a moment.

"So it's not what you're describing that bothers me." His eyes lifted back to hers. "It's that none of it sounds different from what I told myself. Every person that crosses the line, that moves the line, thinks they've got a good reason. Every person thinks they're the exception."

His jaw tightened.

"I looked at people like Carnifex, Windrun, Star-Arm, and thought I was different because my intentions were better." The statement hung there. "Learned the hard way that intentions don't stop you from becoming the thing you swore you'd never be."

His gaze stayed on hers, and for the first time since the conversation began, uncertainty crept into his voice.

"How do you tell the difference between duty and arrogance? Between doing something necessary and just convincing yourself it is because you're the one doing it? You get why I find what you're saying hard to put faith in, yeah?"

Dominique Vexx Dominique Vexx




Ace studied Lorn for a moment, uncertain of what came next. Then the older Jedi drove his lightsaber into the wall panel. Sparks exploded outward and the energy barrier crackled violently before flickering out entirely. He hadn't expected that.

Before he could fully process what had happened, Lorn stepped forward and pulled him into a fierce embrace. Ace stiffened instinctively. Not because he wanted to pull away, he just didn't expect it.

Through the Force, faint and distant as it was, he felt the relief rolling off the older man. His own connection was already beginning to return now that the dampening field was gone. The sensation was strange after so long. Both familiar and uncomfortable.

When Lorn pulled back, Ace didn't answer immediately. He simply stood there as the Jedi turned and stepped into the hallway. His eyes lowered toward the floor and the Force flowed back into him little by little, filling a space he'd almost grown accustomed to being empty. Along with it came something else.

The dark side. Not strong or overwhelming. But it was there. Waiting. Calling. Like a quiet whisper. And it genuinely frightened him. For a moment, he hesitated.

The cell suddenly felt safer. Simpler. Stay here and rot. Never hurt anyone again.

Then the memories came. The conversations. People who had come all this way just to tell him he wasn't finished yet.

You owe me a better explanation one of these days.

Whatever it is you're planning, make sure you're still breathing when it's over.

"Penance isn't just imprisonment. It's action, it's actively working to fix a problem that you caused. Or helped cause. Sitting in prison doesn’t count.”

"It is important in how we handle that, how we move forward and what we take away from those lessons."

"There is no singular problem to be solved, but many smaller problems requiring many different solutions.

Beside the letter, one might note the drawing of a flower with bell-shaped blossoms. Beneath it, a small line of text read: "Lily of the valley; the return of happiness."

I’m doing what I was meant to do. I found my meaning. You’ll find yours.

"The entire point of wolves is that they hunt in packs to bring bigger prey or predators down to eat."

"You're still running my son...At least run in the right direction. Live. Live for those you've conquered. Live for the bodies you've piled. Avenge them by being who you were meant to be."

"Your story doesn't end here."

Ace closed his eyes and took a slow breath. Then he stepped across the threshold.

The sensation was strangely anticlimactic. There was no revelation or grand moment, just a single step. He glanced back once at the empty cell and the room that had become both prison and sanctuary.

Then he turned away and caught up to Lorn. Only then did he finally answer.

"Whatever you need." The words came quietly, and a few steps later, his brow furrowed. "...But I'm guessing this isn't sanctioned."

The realization settled almost immediately. Of course it wasn't.

A dry sigh escaped him. Somehow, against all odds, he was about to become a fugitive again.

Lorn Reingard Lorn Reingard
 
Acier Moonbound Acier Moonbound

"Of course!" Colette smiled. "And that might not be where you want to stay in the long run, but even so I'd be happy to help you find the way."

She fidgeted with the hem of her jacket for a moment before she glanced back at Acier. Her words had struck a chord. He might not have been willing to say it, but she could see it.

"Then again, you'd need to see this through too." She drew a box around the forcefield with her index finger. "Need at least a few moments more of being a caged wolf before I can do much to help in any 'direct' manner. Meet new people and all that."

The councilor's pad began to beep and vibrate. She opened her satchel to give it a quick look and sighed. Figures. Time was starting to run out.

"Sorry, that was my time." She rolled her eyes. "But think on what I said, okay?"

"And if you get out before we can meet again, I'll find you. Don't worry about it."
 

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The scanner's probe was a long, thin piece of durasteel alloy. Held parallel to him, it slowly crept down Ace's body, washing him in bars of blue light.

Cora idly watched that light as it crawled over Acier's cheek. She found a strange sense of quasi-relief - one that quickly tightened her gut - in the prospect that she was not the only one who hadn't given Lysander what he'd needed.

"I'm glad that he had you has a friend." Relationships were never easy all the time, but Lysander was charismatic and seemed to be doing just fine on that front. To the eye of the beholder, that was.

Cora frowned. A great fatigue, wider than the skies over Ukatis and deeper than the inky black abyss of space, settled into every shadow of her face.

"Of course I still want to try," she said quietly. The line of blue light had swept down his neck, and Cora lifted her gaze to meet Ace's own as the scan moved toward his chest. "I pled with him on Ukatis. Then, he joined the Kainate raid on the Prosperity, chasing the tatters of a dying Order."

She blinked, slowly, the feeling dry and gritty. "How many lives did my pleading cost? How many more will he take?"

Deep down, Cora knew that she would never stop reaching for him. Even if it reduced her hands to burnt, withered husks.

Acier Moonbound Acier Moonbound
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Dominique stared at the man for a moment in silence. As she blinked, the Chancellor turned her head to look down the empty corridor. A second later she turned her attention back to Acier.

"Life is full of choices, Acier. What you say. What you do. Who you trust. What you believe. Have you made the right choices? That is life's greatest mystery. Not the meaning of life -- that one's easy. But could you have done things differently and been better for it?" Dominique reached up to slowly retrieve the lilac shades from her nose to reveal the right, nearly radiant glow of her eyes. "But you already know why that's a mystery." There were more answers than there were questions to beg for them.

"There is one technique to weigh your own heart. And it isn't one most Jedi or Sith would ever teach you." She paused to simply smile. A soft smile beneath a bright gaze. "Be your own inquisitor, Acier. Doubt. Question. Reflect on what you believe and ask if they're built on a sea of lies you've told yourself. Some of what we've come to hold dear is built on lies. Sometimes those are necessary lies. The sort that keep us from fixating on questioning whether anything we do truly matters in the grand scheme of things. But other times, we find we've come to believe something -- to cling to it so tightly -- because it was convenient. Because it excused who we'd become, and it was simply easier to stay the course." On the other hand, examining everything too closely, sometimes a person could question too much or too often and become factually their own worst enemy unable to see the world around them for what it was rather than the unsolvable mystery that consumed every waking thought. There was a reason Masters didn't have young pupil question everything. It was not merely skepticism she spoke of -- though that was a crucial skill to possess.

"It's no surer a method than relying on friends to steer you from a self-destructive course. But, in the end, Acier, we're responsible for our own fates. Our own choices. And, at times, people lose themselves." There was no guaranteed method of denying corruption or madness. Life wasn't that fair or kind. "I never promised the way forward was easy or certain. Merely that if striving to help as many people live as peacefully and happily as possible is your aim that you work with those that yearn for the same. Look around from time to time to see where you're standing."

"And, perhaps, if we're all lucky, we will do alright by them."



 

Location: Republic Space - [REDACTED]


Equipment:
Inmate Jumpsuit | Cybernetic Arm
For a few moments, Ace simply sat with what Colette had said. He didn't answer immediately. Instead, he let the silence settle between them, turning her words over in his mind until the insistent beeping of her datapad finally broke it apart.

His gaze followed as she checked the screen and sighed. So that was that. Ace leaned back in the chair, stretching his shoulders as though trying to work the stiffness from them.

"Yeah." He nodded once. "Sure."

Then came her final promise, and his brow lifted slightly. It almost sounded as though she expected him to walk out of here one day. The thought lingered for only a second before he quietly dismissed it.

"That sounds almost like a threat." His voice remained dry, though the faintest hint of amusement crept through. "See you around, Colette."

Colette Colette



The scanner's blue light continued its slow journey across his body, but Ace barely noticed it. His attention never left Cora. Dark eyes watched her quietly, sympathetic rather than analytical for once.

When she mentioned Lysander having him as a friend, Ace pressed his lips together before speaking.

"I wasn't much of a friend to him." There was regret there, quiet and unforced.

His gaze lingered on the fatigue etched across her face as she spoke of Ukatis. Of pleading with her brother. Of seeing him again, not as her younger brother, but as the Sith Knight.

She still wanted to reach him. To believe there was something left to save.

"How many lives did my pleading cost? How many more will he take?"

Ace went still. His eyes finally drifted away from hers, lowering toward the floor between them.

"I don't know." The answer came without hesitation because it was the truth. "Few months ago... I'd have told you as many lives as it took. But now..." His jaw tightened almost imperceptibly. "I really don't know."

Another few moments passed before he looked back up at her.

"He's your brother and..." His voice softened. "You did what you thought was right in the moment. That's all any of us can really do, yeah?" His gaze held hers. "Guess it's up to you to figure out if you can live with the lives lost."

The words were meant for her. But they came from somewhere much closer to home, because he still wasn't sure he could.

Corazona von Ascania Corazona von Ascania



Dominique shifted toward the empty corridor before returning to him. For a brief moment he wondered if she expected someone else to arrive, or if years of politics simply taught a person never to ignore what was happening behind them.

She spoke of choices, belief, the quiet burden of deciding whether any path had truly been the right one. When she removed her lilac shades, the soft radiance in her eyes caught his attention, but it was her next words that truly held it.

Doubt.

Question.

Reflect.

None of that was new to him. He'd questioned authority for as long as he could remember. But asking whether those beliefs had been built upon lies he'd told himself... That landed differently. Because that was exactly where he'd failed.

But other times, we find we've come to believe something -- to cling to it so tightly -- because it was convenient. Because it excused who we'd become, and it was simply easier to stay the course."

That struck deeper than anything else she'd said. He had done exactly that. Not all at once. But it started with one compromise, then another, until eventually the person making those choices no longer resembled the one who'd first entered the Covenant. He didn't want to become that man again.

Ace let out a slow sigh as Dominique finished. He reflected on the point she'd driven home about, essentially, how it was always better to have people beside you working toward a common goal instead of standing alone.

"That's the dream, right?"

He wandered toward the nearest wall, leaning back against it before tilting his head to stare at the ceiling overhead.

"In a perfect galaxy..." A faint smile tugged briefly at one corner of his mouth. "I'd have got my shit together and left the first chance I got. Joined you. We'd be fighting the Covenant together. Protecting lives."

The smile disappeared as quickly as it'd come and he followed it with a shrug.

"But..." He exhaled quietly. "Reality's messy."

His gaze remained on the ceiling for another moment. He couldn't picture himself in this ideal scenario he'd had just described. Not because he didn't want it, but because he no longer believed he'd earned the right to it.

Dominique Vexx Dominique Vexx
 

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"You might be surprised to learn how stark necessity has a way of bringing people together, Acier. The only thing you need to do is make sure the abyss hasn't pulled you back under and you caused the very nightmare to unite people you sought to stop."

Dominique paused to smile. "I cannot release you now, of course. But this conversation has been quite illuminating. I am, in fact, pleased to find you in better mental and spiritual health than I had feared." The Chancellor inclined her head slightly. "I may not be a Jedi, but I am exceptionally well-read. And in this matter, I will simply say echo a sentiment I expressed earlier: it's never too late, Acier, until you are dead." If he had regrets there was plenty of time left to make up for them.

Now all she had to contemplate was the means of keeping Acier from ended up abandoned in some mine, or locked away in some Jedi Temple cell ruminating on the quantity of belly lint. After all, sometimes prisoners had a way of not reaching their destination. And that didn't always mean they were dead.

"I'll be keeping track of your stay until matters are settled." Perhaps that would be reassuring? Dominique wasn't going to let someone engage in vigilante justice for their own appeasement. Certainly not when Acier showed hallmarks of being a useful person in the war ahead.


 

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There might’ve been some irony in complaining to a man who was literally imprisoned, but Cora couldn’t help but follow the thread that they shared. Like it or not, they were bound together by her siblings' antics.

A slow breath worked its way from her nose when Ace mentioned that he hadn’t been a much of a friend. “I might’ve not been that good of sister, either. I think it's harder to do than it seems."

From the outside, Sith appeared successful. Power, wealth, and more power. Greed and drive could lead you to great things, but it could rot an organization from the inside out. Especially given the amount of trauma they carried.

The scan continued on in silence as Cora let Ace’s words land. You did what you thought was right in the moment.

Force, how she wanted him to be right. Jedi though she was, sometimes anger couldn’t be helped. Sometimes it leaked into those critical moments.

The scanner gave a soft chime, and Cora broke from her reverie. Her eyes found the datapad’s screen again. “Some superficial trauma, but that’s about it. I can give you bacta spray for it."

She was quiet as she packed the scanner away, lost again in her own thoughts. “I suppose that we both have a lot to think about,” she admitted quietly.

“I’ll have a technician scheduled for your arm." Fishing though her bag, she left a can of bacta spray on the counter, relatively confident that it would go unused by the stubborn teenager. "If you need anything, use my name.”

Cora tucked the last probe into her bag, then rose to face her little sister’s ex-boyfriend. How would Fatine react to any of this, she wondered?

“Be well, Acier.”

Acier Moonbound Acier Moonbound
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