Star Wars Roleplay: Chaos

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Invasion Return the Blade | COV Invasion of TSC-held Humbarine


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OBJECTIVE: 1 [Belly of the Beast]
LOCATION: Humbarine City [Belltower]
SITH ALLIES: Mercy Mercy
SITH ENEMIES: Imperial Scum/Faithless - Iron Covenant?

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The Faithless hid like vermin.

Remnants of the Galactic Empire had buried themselves beneath new banners and were deeply embedded in the day-to-day activities of Humbarine. Former Imperials, intelligence officers, and key military personnel had survived the ill-fated collapse of their nation only to scatter to the bones of the Core. It was in this capacity that they thought paying “tax” to the Sith Covenant would spare them and allow their political games to continue in quieter rooms. They bartered with their enemies. Paid for protection and anonymity, offered loyalty, only when watched.

And somehow, after all that, they still believed that no one was looking for them.

Right.

Humbarine was beautiful, she supposed, when squinting at it from a distance.

A fortress world could only be so attractive, but it was industrial, with towering districts that rose endlessly upward. Shipyards wrapped around entire sectors like giant mechanical ribs while military checkpoints and garrisons ensured that the newly declared Martial Law was upheld. From her lofty perch in an old belltower, it was difficult to see the rot caused by an Imperial presence. Harder still, to track the tension winding itself through the city. Humbarine had closed down too quickly, though; she didn’t think it was because her Order had descended.

Transit routes were redirected within hours, and the “secret” gathering for the Imperial Bloc they had come to crash—Cancelled. Emergency broadcasts replaced civilian frequencies with an efficiency that bordered on suggesting it had been rehearsed. Something had happened that was severe enough that Sith Covenant had closed its fist around the planet before the populace even understood there was danger.

Srina frowned.

It was interesting, but it went against her plans. She had intended to attack known Imperial cells…But now they seemed scattered. It was never going to be a bloodless endeavor, but rather than a river, there would be oceans. The wind moved through the exposed arches of the bell tower in long breaths that carried distant noises upward in fragments. Chatter that turned into muddy white noise.

Sirens.

Marching Stormtrooper boots.

“Didn’t you tell Arris the plan?”

Her question was barely a whisper for the woman at her side, but she knew from experience that Mercy would have no trouble hearing her. The ivory-haired Echani remained still as stone, perched precariously on the narrow railing, while the great bell loomed silent overhead. Black shimmer-silk draped over one crossed leg that stirred faintly in a frigid wind. The rest of her disappeared into matte armor weave dark enough to consume any light that remained. “It will make our work…Difficult. This martial law. Our people are mixed with the Faithess…”

Flaxen strands of moonlit hair escaped the sheer hood that had gathered around her shoulders, silver-white against a darkening sky. One hand was on the railing to keep her balance while the other sat in her lap, still healing, with blood-covered fingertips and a wicked gash across her palm. The occasional humming sound escaped her, an old tune, but it was also something Mercy might find painfully familiar. Not because she had heard it before, but because it was filled to the brim with all the power the Blackwall Empress had to bear. It would seem like a simple cradle-hymn that was stripped down to singular notes…But nothing was ever simple, with Srina. It drifted through the tower with a haunting cadence that threaded itself through stone before pressing out into the ether.

A song for her children, protection, and strength.

A mother’s love sharpened into something monstrous that promised care and death in equal amounts.

She shifted slightly, and it gave the appearance of a statue coming to life. Her temple found its place against Mercy’s arm, and she could already imagine that her battle-sister would wrap an arm around her waist. To keep her from falling, or perhaps, to lend her the strength that she had so much of. The flame-haired woman was made even more enormous against the narrow architecture of the tower, the Titan, who had crushed the best the Galactic Empire had to dust. Srina could feel the might she offered without looking.

She was steady, violent, and all too familiar.

This position should have made her think twice, considering how many ways Mercy could hurt her. Push her off the edge. Reach up and snap her neck…It wouldn’t have been all that hard.

But…It didn’t.

Her battle-sister had become the shore to the madness left behind by Sith Ritual and war. Mercy was an anchor. A constant that let her breathe when the galaxy became too full of ghosts. It let her relax against the side of the larger woman without fear. They did not take from one another nor covet what the other had…It was not the Sith way—But it was their way.

Her eyes drifted upward, suddenly, as if something in the sky called her.

An eclipse was coming.
A rogue moon crawled slowly across Humbarine’s sun, swallowing the light piece by piece, while the city below began to almost vibrate with growing apprehensions. Fear always traveled faster in the Core.

Especially among Imperials.

Her eyes closed for a moment before luminous golden eyes, half-lidded, traced the line of the moon cutting across the sun while she listened to people she shouldn’t have been able to hear descend into controlled panic. Controlled, for now. “Do you hear them, sestra…?”

The words were achingly gentle, but coldly observant. As if she were a scientist staring down a microscope at some newfound species of bacterium. Taking notes.

“They already know something is wrong.”

And they did.

The Force bent strangely during moments like this. Not stronger, but thinner. Boundaries loosened from their moorings in reality, while thought and emotion stopped moving cleanly. Even a non-sensitive flatscan could feel it pressing against their skin, though they might not realize why. Might not understand.

The Imperials would call it unrest.

Civil instability during a celestial event…Anything, but what it truly was.

War. Dread…And War.

Because before the throne, before the Order, before the endless machinations of a Sith Empress…She had first been the Dread Queen. That was what she would bring to this battle, and very few could do it better than she could without losing their minds.

She resumed her small song, an insignificant and quiet battle cry. For the Order. For the Sith Covenant…For all the creatures that would descend on this world bearing proverbial banners of black and crimson. The stairwell behind them was quiet, save for the echoing lilt of her voice.

Things had been different earlier. Noisy. Full of screaming… Now?

Gray bodies, still and unmoving, littered the narrow spiral steps in twisted stages of collapse. Uniforms were wrinkled and loose, trying to cover skin stretched a little too thin across matchstick bones. It would seem as if something vital, more than their lives, had been taken from them. Imperial officers, security personnel, and one communications administrator who was still clutching a sidearm he had never managed to fire. Their eyes remained open, hollow, caught in one last moment of horror and oblivion. These men would never see, never exalt their filth. Never harm her children.

Never again.

 
OBJECTIVE: 1 [Belly of the Beast]
LOCATION: Humbarine City [Belltower]
TAG: Srina Talon Srina Talon

Mercy did not share the hatred that was radiating from her battle-sister. It was cold, sharp, and oh so dangerous. But Mercy did not need to share, because she had her own brand of hatred specially reserved for the Imperial stain on the Galaxy. It was personal for both of them. One’s hatred grew from an attack on those she loved. The other because it reminded her of a different time, when she was smaller, younger and more vulnerable.

The Imperial Court had not been a kind place to a young girl with ideas.

The moment Srina’s head settled against her shoulder, Mercy’s arm already went around her waist, pulling her close.

It seemed to be their favorite position. Where as much of their bodies could line up together, skin to skin, touch to touch. Full access. Enough for Mercy to push everything she had inside of Srina and for Srina to pull everything she needed out of Mercy.

I did.” The Core Empress responded to the Blackwall Empress. “I told her that you have felt disturbing things around Humbarine… and that we will be here to clean the house of rats and vermin.”

Mercy wondered if it had been Arris’ hand to instill the Martial Law or if the craven Governor had done that all on his own.

“It will make our work…Difficult. This martial law. Our people are mixed with the Faithess…”

A sharp smile that was only slightly softened by Mercy kissing Srina on the top of her head.

They will either withstand the tide with your blessing, sweet sestra mine or they were not worthy to be counted among ours to begin with.”

There were many differences between the two Empresses, but few were as pronounced as how they viewed their respective flocks. While Srina cared for their lives, for their well-being, Mercy did not.

Or if she did, it was from a perspective so alien, so orange-and-blue, that it would be hard to make the determination she did.

It was that perspective that allowed her to unify two separate views:

Grieving for Vestra while counting Arris as one of her closest friends. Even though one murdered the other in cold (hot) blood.

Do not hold back.” Srina would know that wasn’t an admonishment. It was Mercy encouraging her, eager to see her fellow Empress go hard and do some real damage.

Only when Srina drew attention to it, did Mercy notice the wound still festering her flesh. Mercy reached out, gently drawing Srina’s arm to her. Golden eyes met golden eyes as her gaze flicked up.

That won’t do. Mongrels like this shouldn’t be allowed to make you bleed.” And then without another word, she opened her own flesh and trickled her blood straight into that open crevice, adding more of her to Srina.

One drip at a time.

It burns… but fire cleanses. And having me inside of you will keep you safe. I don’t need Carnifex staring daggers at me again, I would have to rip his eyes out at the end for that sort of privilege.”

Her head tilted at the atmosphere.

She was no conventional Force Master. Things of ethereal concern did not register to her, but her senses were magnified far beyond a normal person’s reach. Mercy could smell the heartbeats of those down the street. Hear the sweat trickle down their flesh as dread infected the air. Taste the whimpering sounds they made.

It was… intoxicating.

Take what you need from me…” Her gaze flicked briefly to the carnage they had already wrought to get here. “...and let’s continue the party.”
 

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OBJECTIVE 2: CRACK THE SHELL
TAG:
OPPS: Seris Velmora Seris Velmora | Emissary of Strife Emissary of Strife
ALLIES: Seva Beroya Seva Beroya | Romul Saxon Romul Saxon
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KJARTAN HAMMER-HAND

Scores of Mando’ade gathered within the hangar deck of the Buurenaar’gam - an imposing Ha’rangir Star Destroyer with a famed legacy amongst the Iron Covenant. It had almost single-handedly fought a diversion action against the Imperial Confederation Navy, of which it received many scars to serve as memories of its saga. It led the daring raid of Seswenna against The Sith Empire, bearing even more scars of its narrow escape. But today, she was but one of many other Mandalorian vessels assembled to answer the call.

The call to aid their brothers on Humbarine, who fought desperately for their lives. And so it was that today, the Buurenaar’gam’s commander would do something he rarely did today. Rather than taking command of the assault from the bridge, he strode through the hangar deck adorned in his full battle raiment. His hammers rested along his hips, with his shotgun slung across his torso, and pistol holstered at the small of his back. He held his horned helmet to the side as he regarded the warriors assembled, half of his face vertically blackened with warpaint.

Vode - you all know your worth. Many of you are veterans of countless battles, many of which I have held the honor of commanding.” His voice was hard and steady. “But today is not just any battle. We fight for the lives of our brothers, who stand at the gates of oblivion at the hands of our enemies. Rather than simply sending you into the maw, I shall fight at your side.” A clamour arose within the ranks, swords and armor being beaten in unison as they all signaled their assent. “We do not delve onto the planet below. No... we strike at the warships. We shall board them, and we shall wreak a terrible slaughter among them all.”

Everyone drew still, with only the sounds of battle in the void beyond remaining audible. “We shall show them the true meaning of Mandalorian steel - not the counterfeit refuse they’ve known as of late. We shall make them remember the fury of iron and fire. We shall make them know our names, without ever a word being spoken.”

Every warrior, to a man and woman, stared at their chieftain with bated breath. It was only then, that a faint smile cracked upon the Hammer-hand’s lips. “And we shall take whatever isn’t bolted down.” Laughter shattered the tension, but soon subsided as Kjartan continued. “Take everything, and give nothing back. Fight with honor, but give no quarter. VODE AN!

“VODE AN!” Came the choral response, along with a chant that bellowed from deep within all of those as they donned their helmets and readied their weapons.

“HAMMER-HAND! HAMMER-HAND! HAMMER-HAND!”




The fleet battle unfolded around Humbarine with a brutal intensity. The Buurenaar’gam, together with its complement of ships, fought alongside the fleet of Clans Saxon and Beroya in a desperate bid to break through the blockade around the planet. The Flagship of the Hammer-hand was led by his second in command - the Forgemaster, Rhein Bralor. He looked younger than the Hammer-hand, though in truth they were closer in age than one might expect. Yet it was the eyes that gave their proximity away. Rhein possessed the weathered eye of a man who knew his craft, and who could grant an ease from worry amongst the crew when their warchief was not present.

“Forgemaster, we are receiving a hail from the Saxon warfleet.”

Gallius nodded. "Hammer-hand, Beroya," he commed over to the other leaders of the assembled Mythos fleet. "We must draw the Imperial fleet out of position to expose their orbital facilities. The Saxon warfleet will provide all firepower capable while protecting the Akior." The suppressive cruiser was a key component of the Mandalorian fleet, facilitating Mandalorian communications while blocking outside communication. "Alor'ad Caecila, me'vaar ti gar? What is the status of orbital relay satellites?" he asked, switching over to the communication channel with the Akior.

“Acknowledged.” came the craggy reply. The forgemaster turned to the tactical station. “Concentrate all firepower on the Imperial-center, away from the Spirit Breaker. Focus fire on the lead ship. Synchronize our firing solutions with Saxon and Beroya.”

“Aye.” came the dutiful reply as the tactical station set about acquiring firing solutions as ordered. Several minutes later, a devastating volley of fire unleashed upon the Imperial fleet from the flotilla of the Hammer-hand, as if trying to punch a hole through the very fabric of space itself. Sol-ar-ionization batteries, mass driver cannons, MegaCaliber turbolasers and all manner of armaments in between cascaded through the space between the two forces.

Meanwhile, a storm of activity erupted within the Hammer-hand’s host. Squadrons of Basilisk war droids swarmed violently from the bowels of the Yai’me’suum’ - a Dalab-class Carrier near the back of the formation. They violently surged to the flank of the Imperial formation, as if to cut-off the corridor between the derelict Star Destroyer and the rest of the fleet. Yet, this maneuver served another purpose - a screen action for another host of ships, consisting of gunships, boarding pods and manned fighter craft.

This second host, carrying the boarding party of the Hammer-hand, swung wide to avoid the developing chaos, making a bee-line for the Spirit Breaker. The boarding pods would impact hard against the hull of the vessel, their tips designed to punch through the armor and force an opening. Kjartan waited in stoic silence within his pod, the flashing red light within the cabin strobing as they neared impact, then turning solid after the screeching and rumbling their forced landing. As the boarding tip opened, the Warchief leapt out and down into the hallway of the star destroyer, together with half a dozen warriors flanking him on either side.

With their unique position, the corridor was largely desolate save for the panicked fire of troopers in the distance who attempted to contain the boarders. The Mandalorian warriors around Kjartan returned fire quickly, and Kjartan grinned from beneath his runic helmet.

Battle had been joined, and blood would soon be spilled.



  • Kjartan Hammer-hand leads the boarding assault against the Spirit Breaker/
  • His second-in-command leads the fleet action, concentrating fire upon the lead imperial vessel.
  • Basilisk war droids are deployed in a screening action against the corridor between the derelict vessel and the rest of the Imperial Fleet.
  • Kjartan begins his boarding action against the Spirit Breaker via a boarding pod, and begins aura farming.
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Gel was NOT having a good time of things.

He had just managed to escape the clutches of Tamsin Starfall Tamsin Starfall , having been evacuated from the rooftop he had been stranded on by an Iron Covenant dropship, under a seemingly endless hail of blaster and rocket fire. Unfortunately for him, one of those rockets had managed to land a direct him on the dropship, causing it to spiral out of control and crash, killing both its pilot and everyone else aboard it. The fact that Gel had survived the crash and hadn't at all been thrown from the ship was something of a small miracle, but he was now back to square one, with no effective way of getting himself off this galaxy forsaken planet!

Coughing and sputtering, Gel emerged from the wreckage just in time to get a glimpse of some massive Sith Beast lumbering off into the distance, and he suddenly wished to get away from the creature as quickly as he could. Just looking at the monster made him uneasy, and Gel was certain that the creature probably possessed some sort of unholy abilities that would make fighting it nearly impossible for him, to say nothing of the creature's size and bulk.

If Gel was going to survive this, he would need a new evacuation point.

Scanning his surroundings, Gel hurriedly ran down the street, looking for a building that was suitably high for him to call for another dropship. The streets around him were eerily quiet, as the whole planet had apparently been placed into some sort of lockdown. That would make getting inside any building that much more difficult, and when Gel found a suitably large structure, he tried to get its doors open to no avail, as they were locked shut.

Gel didn't really have the time or patience to try and slice the doors open, which is why he went with Plan B. Unclipping Akalenedat from his belt clip, he began smashing the doors in as quickly as he could, each impact ringing loudly throughout the now abandoned streets. The power that his weapon provided him with allowed him to smash open the doors in just a few hits, and Gel was able to pry them apart enough for him to squeeze through.

He was, unfortunately, also quite sure that anyone remotely close to him would have heard the noise he was making, and would probably be converging on his location right this second. As Gel stepped through the now ruined doors, he scattered a couple of Beskar Caltrops behind him, which would hopefully be enough to stop or at least slow down any would be pursers.

Taking a deep breath, Gel stepped completely inside the building, and began running up the stairs as quickly as he could, unsure of what he would find or encounter as he did...
 

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It was almost impossible to read Riffraff's lips from walking beside her, looking down, so Efret reached into the Force even more than she normally would to understand what someone was saying.

"Not me," she replied with an instinctive smile. While she spoke with her hands, a vocoder hidden in her choker's pendant interpreted her signs into Basic. "I'm new." She picked up on Riffraff's euphemism and followed suit. Humbarine would only remain a secret satellite state if no one named the Sith Covenant influence. Of course, the truth would come out eventually, but, until then, loose lips ruined carefully-crafted schemes. "Was hired about a month ago."

When Efret had first decided to join this faction, she hadn't imagined that she would have been embroiled into its affairs quite so quickly. She assumed she would have been ostracized until she could somehow prove herself, given her past as a sitting member of the now-defunct New Jedi Council.

But maybe choosing to turn her back on the Light was enough proof.

And if it wasn't, having Mercy Mercy and Lysander to vouch for her potential and commitment was invaluable to her transition. In such, her gratitude for them had grown quickly to know no bounds, but she was unsure if it was appropriate for Sith to express appreciation for another.

"Don't worry," she added, flashing another smile. "I know universities like the back of my hand."

The Ranat and Lorrdian weren't walking alone, but instead were following behind two Human students: one Drice Tane and one Leena Antik. They were both studying in the Broadcasting program and both involved in hosting the Academy's radio station, HAAS. A third student, Rana Keeg, was already in the studio preparing for production.

"But I haven't been part of a radio show before," the former Jedi admitted.

They had been sent to Humbarine City some days ago like all the other Triumvirate operatives: with a mysterious mission. The Imperial Governorate was under the impression that whatever that was would be in their best interest, that it would solidify their control over the populace rather than seek to upend it.

Martial law looked different on campus than it did throughout the rest of the ecumenopolis. Though many businesses have been forced to close and many citizens not affiliated with the Academy had been crowded into temporary detention centers, the campus remained open with Moff Warren's personal blessing. Its operations were strictly restricted, however.

Student and faculty organizations of all kinds were suspended. Gatherings of more than two individuals outside of scheduled class times and settings were prohibited.

Efret had secured exceptions, though; which vested herself, Riffraff, and their associates with the power to resume any organization's operations, and to assemble as many people as they deemed necessary in the course of their work. That was how they were in the process of reviving HAAS, which had been off the air for the whole last month.

A wide automatic door ahead of the group pulled itself open as the students passed over its proximity sensor, revealing the the central courtyard. Efret lingered for a moment in the frame after the others moved past it, her eyes slightly widened.

Even Riffraff might have recognized that this space represented the Academy's heart, its current state a sign that it was bleeding out. The foot traffic here was very low for a setting that would have usually been packed with people laughing and studying together, sharing ideas and life. But now it was quiet; one didn't have to be able to hear to know that. Some students, faculty members, and classified staff mulled around the large circular sidewalk on various errands, most on their own but a few as groups of two. Four stormtroopers stood at attention at each cardinal direction around the planted median. The shade cast over them by the trees above darkened their white armor to a series of greys.

It was clear as day: the Humbarine Academy of Advance Studies was hemorrhaging academic freedom.

She was here to fix that.

Her attention pulled back to Riffraff, in time for her to speak again. Efret gave a nod, then strode to catch up Drice and Leena. "Not a problem. We can pivot. What's happening?" She watched the Ranat's reply as they followed the students counterclockwise around the courtyard until stepping off onto an offshooting sidewalk leading to the University Center.

That was it—their pivot.

She glanced down at her partner, simultaneously reaching up to her choker to turn down the volume of her vocoder to its whisper setting. "Did you hear about Corr Lergo?" He had been the first person to be arrested on campus for protesting against Imperial rule and for restoring intellectual liberty, but not before being badly beaten in front of the University Center two weeks ago. The blood was still painted over the duracrete, left as a warning, surely. Even still, from what Efret could gather, he had a lot of unspoken support on campus, as well as off. It just needed to be tapped into and mobilized.

Tags: Riffraff Ranat Riffraff Ranat Casimir Thorne Casimir Thorne
Post number: 1​
 
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Tag: Kjartan Hammer-Hand Kjartan Hammer-Hand
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The alarms never stopped on the Spirit Breaker. They bled through the corridors in shrill mechanical waves, buried beneath the deeper groan of a dying warship. Bulkheads screamed. Somewhere far below, something massive ruptured hard enough to make the deck jolt beneath Seris Velmora’s boots. The lights flickered crimson, then darkness, then crimson again. Smoke curled along the ceiling in black ribbons.

And Seris smiled. Not because the situation was good. It wasn’t. The Spirit Breaker was dying. The moment they had translated into the battle over Humbarine, the void had erupted around them. Turbolaser fire carved through the darkness in blazing green and scarlet lines while Covenant ships lunged through the formation like hunting beasts. The captain of the Spirit Breaker had tried to turn into the assault instead of breaking with the rest of the line. Aggressive. Proud. Fatal.

A Mandalorian cruiser had gutted them for it. Now the Star Destroyer drifted crippled above Humbarine, venting atmosphere and flame into the black while escape craft poured from its hangars in desperate streams. Officers screamed evacuation orders over the comms. Crewmen shoved past one another toward the lifeboats. Stormtroopers abandoned firing positions to save their own skins.

Cowards.

Seris walked against the current. Her boots rang sharply against the durasteel deck as frightened personnel rushed around her. A tech nearly collided with her shoulder before seeing the Sith warrior and recoiling immediately, muttering an apology that she ignored entirely. Let them run.

The Mandalorians would come. Of course they would. The crippled destroyer was bait hanging in orbit over a battlefield. Data cores. Command archives. Encryption chains. Survivors. Weapons. There would always be something worth taking from a dying Imperial vessel.

Which meant eventually someone would board her. Good. Very good. Seris rolled her shoulders slowly as she entered one of the ruined troop staging chambers near the inner hangar accessways. The room was half-lit by emergency strips, painted blood-red by the failing power systems. Blast doors had sealed two of the exits already. A dead trooper lay crumpled near the wall where decompression had slammed him hard enough to crack armor.

She barely looked at him. Instead, her pacing began immediately. Back and forth. Like a nexu trapped in too small a cage. Her fingers flexed constantly near the hilt at her hip. Every tremor of the dying ship made the anticipation worse. She could feel battle all around her through the Force: terror, rage, panic, desperation. Thousands of emotions bleeding together into something intoxicating.

Humbarine burned again.

The Mandalorians had come back in greater numbers, convinced they could crack the world open through sheer brutality. Seris had returned for the exact same reason she always did. Violence. Not politics. Not strategy. Not defense grids or fleet doctrine or territorial significance. She did not care about any of it.

The enemy had come to a world under her protection carrying weapons and hatred in their hands. That alone was enough. A fresh impact thundered through the hull. The deck lurched violently enough that sparks burst from the ceiling conduits. Somewhere nearby, metal tore open with a deafening shriek.

Seris stopped pacing. Slowly, she lifted her head toward the corridor leading to the docking sections. There. Faint. The unmistakable vibration of breaching clamps locking onto the hull. Her grin widened immediately into something feral. Finally. The Sith warrior ignited her saber. Crimson light exploded through the chamber, painting the smoke in violent red as the blade hissed to life in her hand. The sound alone felt like a living thing in the darkness.

Seris began pacing again. Faster now. Restless energy radiated from her in waves. No plan. No ambush. No tactical positioning. Just hunger. She waited for the first Mandalorian to come through the breach door so she could drown the corridor in blood.

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Location: Humbraine - The Governorate Armory

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EARLIER
Ace leaned silently against one of the cargo crates near the rear of the container, arms folded across his chest. His attention lingered on Lily first, or more specifically, the fact she was here at all.​
Months ago he'd risked his life getting her off Coruscant and away from Covenant space entirely. He'd given her an out when most people trapped near the Covenant never got one. And yet somehow she'd wandered right back into the middle of another Sith operation like she had a death wish or an addiction to stupidity.​
Whatever happened to her after this, he couldn't bring himself to care. He'd already tried.​
His eyes shifted briefly toward the woman beside her instead. Vess. He already knew how Arris was going to react to this, Ace said nothing regardless. He lacked both the motivation and the energy to involve himself in whatever this was.​
Still, it hadn't taken him more than a couple minutes to notice the tension between them. The subtle glances, the positioning, the instinctive closeness neither seemed fully aware they were doing yet.​
Then the cargo doors hissed open and industrial daylight spilled into the container as Arris appeared flanked by Varin and Tamsin. Ace's eyes flicked over Arris without comment before settling briefly on Varin. He gave the man a small respectful nod.​
Then his gaze shifted toward Tamsin. Immediately, something in him tightened. Balmorra lingered unpleasantly in his thoughts memory. Knowing she had ties to Dathomir left Ace with very little desire to be anywhere near her. He didn't trust Nightsister magick. Didn't trust what it reminded him of.​
So when her small voice suddenly spoke Mando'a fluently, his dark eyes snapped toward her almost immediately.​
"Pehea vaabir gar kar'taylir mando'a?" He asked flatly.​
NOW…
Red emergency lights flashed violently through the armory corridors as alarms screamed overhead. Ace's lightsaber carved through the darkness in sharp arcs while blasterfire ricocheted across the corridor around him. The first Death Trooper lunged around the corner only for Ace's free hand to clench violently, compressing the Trooper's armor inward with a metallic shriek.​
The black-armored soldier collapsed instantly as another opened fire behind him. Ace stepped sideways, blade rotating once through his fingers before redirecting three incoming bolts directly back into the squad.​
More were already pushing forward. Nothing was ever simple, was it?​
Another burst of suppressive fire hammered against the wall beside him. The Force rippled outward instinctively from his body, slamming into the lead pair of troopers hard enough to throw them backward into the others behind them.​
Then he felt Tamsin. Or more specifically, the spreading sensation of Dathomiri magick crawling invisibly beneath the structure around them like roots threading through stone.​
His focus fractured for half a second, and that was all it took. A stray blaster bolt clipped across his side beneath his ribs, the heat of it tearing through fabric and flesh alike. Acier hissed sharply through clenched teeth and immediately threw himself behind a crate.​
His hand pressed briefly against the burning graze at his side before lowering again.​
So much for this being a stealth mission.​
 

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GALAAR
GETTING TF OUT | HUMBARINE
ALLIES: Vara Rasha Vara Rasha | Romul Saxon Romul Saxon | Iris Beroya Iris Beroya (and Arkanian) | Gel Karn Gel Karn | Koda Fett Koda Fett | Darion of Myrkr Darion of Myrkr | Signy Bralor Signy Bralor | Carduul Akahl Carduul Akahl | Feydrik Munin Feydrik Munin | COV
ENEMIES: TSC
ENGAGING: OPEN
GEAR: In bio

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BLOOD, TEARS, DUST

"Shit - that road's blockaded too."

Reggie's red helmet looked back at Vara behind her from where they were hunkered in a downward stairwell and from which she was watching for routes they could take to get out of the industrial area. They were fully armoured now - no use continuing to go incognito - the city knew what they all were by now.

She was worried for the Harpy to say the least. The Foundling was her responsibility on this particular opp, after all. She had not been expecting to run into a Sith in a military vehicle factory of all places. He had gotten a hit in on Vara before Reggie had been able to react. In that moment, instinct had completely taken over. She was immediately back on Thyrsus when her family had been ambushed and had left her the sole survivor of her Concord Dawn clan.

She'd be damned if she let that happen again with the new family she had accumulated.

She had gotten Vara out of there after winning them some time with a strategic launch from her vambrace to topple a bunch of stacked durasteel sheets. Since then, they had ran, avoiding deployed Imperials.

But the planet had been closing its fist.

She had fired off the transmission to the Fleet just outside the system and had hoped for the best. They just had to stay alive and out of Imperial hands. If he got the transmission, Reggie knew Romul Saxon Romul Saxon wouldn't just leave them here. The old Boar always looked out for his people.

And sure as Manda, they arrived.

The comms had come through that the Iron Covenant had arrived for them - with fire.

But now, how on Haran were they to get somewhere in this duracrete jungle full of Imperial nightmare? Luckily, Vara wasn't hurt too bad. They just had to keep it like that. She'd never say it out loud - the Shistavanen would rip out her jugular if she did - but Reggie was just a little bit scared. It wasn't just herself she needed to worry about now. She knew Vara wasn't incompetent, but she was no supercommando yet either - and two are easier to notice than just a single warrior if you're not extra careful.

Reggie had to readjust her brain - she had agreed to train Vara martially. She was not her Founder, thus not her Alor. But she was her mentor, thus responsible for her the same way an Alor would be. This Foundling's life was more important than her own now.

She was the future of the Mando'ade.

Her visor scanned the area again.
"Let's try that alley. We need to be quick. Come on, while we have a gap." she said, motioning toward a little alley somewhat down the street from them.

With luck a probe droid or something won't catch wind of them.​

 

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WEARING: xxx | WEAPON: x | x | ALLIES: Efret Farr Efret Farr | Riffraff Ranat Riffraff Ranat | ENEMIES: Fenn Stag Fenn Stag
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Casimir found himself in Humberaine City once again. Towering durasteel structures disappeared into low hanging clouds while endless streams of traffic carved glowing lanes between the skyscrapers overhead. The planet never truly slept. Noise rolled endlessly through the city in layered waves made up of distant speeders, industrial machinery, and the constant murmur of billions of lives pressed together beneath artificial light. Rain had passed through not long before his arrival, leaving the streets slick beneath neon signs and reflected holoads that shimmered across the pavement in distorted colors.

The search for his sister had led him here.

Every trail eventually led somewhere. Most ended in disappointment, dead ends, or lies told by desperate people hoping to profit from a grieving man who looked dangerous enough to discourage questions. Casimir followed them all regardless because all it would take was one person being right. One witness. One rumor. One overlooked detail hidden beneath decades of failure. The galaxy was too large and too strange for him to believe Kaelis had simply vanished without explanation.

Even after all these years, he could still feel the absence she left behind like an open wound buried somewhere beneath his ribs.

A small cantina a few clicks from the university district had been chosen as the meeting place. The location itself told him enough about the person he was supposed to meet. Somewhere crowded enough to disappear into. Somewhere forgettable enough that nobody paid attention to who came or went. Casimir arrived early and settled into the agreed upon booth near the back wall where he could observe both the entrance and the street beyond the fogged transparisteel windows.

This mattered too much to be late for.

The cantina itself blended into the thousands of others scattered throughout the lower levels of Humberaine. Smoke drifted heavily through the air near the bar where old stains and polished wood fought a losing battle against years of neglect. Dim overhead lights cast the room in muted amber tones while old speakers crackled with music loud enough to drown most nearby conversations into meaningless noise. University students occupied several tables near the front while a pair of dockworkers argued quietly beside a sabacc machine blinking erratically in the corner.

Nobody paid attention to him.

That suited Casimir perfectly.

Dark robes concealed most of his frame despite the broadness of his shoulders. Loose white hair rested against black armor worn beneath layered fabric while pale, corrupted eyes drifted slowly across the room without appearing to linger on anything for too long. Some would have found him intimidating. Others would have mistaken him for another mercenary or drifter passing through the district.

None of them would have guessed how dangerous he truly was.

Casimir closed his eyes briefly and allowed the Force to stretch outward beyond the walls of the cantina. The movement around him sharpened instantly. He could feel conversations vibrating through the air, heartbeats pulsing beneath layers of noise, and the subtle emotional impressions left behind by everyone packed into the crowded district outside.

Then he caught the scent.

Saffron and clove.

His eyes opened immediately.

She was nearby.

The realization settled into him with uncomfortable speed. Somehow the dark-haired woman had already rooted herself deeply enough inside his thoughts that he recognized her presence before consciously searching for it. The memory of her crying against him atop the mountain returned uninvited alongside the sensation of her grief bleeding into him through the Force.

“Frak.”

The word escaped beneath his breath just as an explosion thundered through the district near the university grounds. The blast rattled the transparisteel windows hard enough to shake glasses across nearby tables while muffled screams echoed faintly from somewhere outside. Several patrons jerked upright in alarm. Others rushed toward the entrance to see what had happened.

Casimir remained seated for only a moment longer.

His fingers tapped once against the tabletop in sharp rhythm while tension tightened through his chest. Every instinct inside him screamed to stay. The contact he was meeting could still arrive. Information about Kaelis might finally be within reach after years of failure and disappointment.

Then her face surfaced in his mind again.

It was the look she had given him before they parted ways that remained burned into his memory. There had been pain in it, but something else too. Recognition. Understanding. Casimir had known in that moment their paths would cross again. What troubled him now was the way she had begun lodging herself somewhere dangerously close to the place inside him that belonged only to his sister.

Nobody belonged there.

The fact she was forcing her way into it regardless unsettled him more than he cared to admit.

Casimir pushed himself up from the booth as the conflict inside him finally reached its conclusion. Kaelis was gone. Whether she still lived somewhere beyond his reach or had vanished into the Force entirely changed nothing about the woman who was here now. Efret was alive, vulnerable, and somewhere near the source of that explosion.

He had failed his sister once already.

He would not fail this woman too.

 


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G U N S L I N G E R

[] No Time To Die []​

Allies: Sahan Dragr Sahan Dragr | Mandalorians
Enemies: Srina Talon Srina Talon | Mercy Mercy | Sith

Siv reverted to consciousness in a world of pain. He groaned, life support systems beeping frantically. His HUD was reading several broken bits across his body, displaying the warning signs in red Mando'a script. He squeezed his eyes tightly, then, groaning, shifted. He was lying in a pile of rubble. Where was he? Slowly it all began to come back to him. . .

He was on Humbarine. Siv had been sent as part of the recon team to scope out the world, a prime staging point for the Iron Covenant to push into the Core against the Galactic Empire. He'd been surveying a military installation, getting the readout of the local government's forces, when -- he'd encountered the Sith. Their brief firefight flashed back to Siv's mind. The duel, the chase, and then the explosion.

Boom. Not that explosion. Wait? Siv sat up. He was in the half-collapsed alcove of a building. Boom. Another explosion rumbled outside, dust cascading from the ceiling. He looked out at the hole in the wall where light was pouring in. What was going on? As he came to, he could begin to decipher the cacophony from outside. Shakily, the Mandalorian stood up as his suit began to auto-inject stim and bacta. There were no fatal wounds, and his band-aid patch would hold up for now. He limped towards the opening, with every step blood and bacta beginning to flow through him, the stim dulling the pain and sharpening his senses. Siv fumbled for his comms, turning them on, and as he stepped into the gouge, the chaos of the battle unfolded before him. Channels were loaded with Mandalorian transmissions, battle commands, and reports, and explosions echoed all around. The streets were littered with corpses.

What the haran was the Mythos Fleet doing here?

Siv unholstered his blaster, its grip familiar in his hand. He stepped out cautiously from the rubble, his sensors waking up, HUD beginning to mark what it could. There were no friendly Mandalorians in the nearby facility. It was too quiet. Then, from above, imperceptibly, his long-range audio detectors began to pick up something strange, like a song? Siv's ears picked up as the detectors began to hone in on the unusual noise. He didn't know what it was, but unless Imperials had begun to take up singing lessons, the siren-like song was not Imperial in nature. The song was coming from back inside the building, from inside, and perhaps up. Siv cast his gaze upwards; he was at the base of a bell-like tower.

The Mandalorian took a step into the building and paused. His recent ordeal on Seswenna flashed through his mind, the excruciating pain he'd gone through at the mercy of Darth Carnifex. The briefest flash of fear flashed through his mind -- was this another Sith machination? -- but he quashed his doubt down. He gripped his blaster more tightly, squeezing it as his resolve built within him. He didn't notice the moon darkening overhead.

"Vode, this is Siv Dragr," he reported in his comms over Mandalorian frequencies, open to any with an Iron Covenant transponder. A minute ago he had been unconscious, and he was already back in the thick of it, no questions. "Transmitting coordinates now. Possible hostile or anomalous contact. Need backup. Over." His communication was clipped, his brain still slightly foggy. But Siv didn't wait for a response, only pushed onwards and upwards.

It wasn't long before he came across the bodies. Imperials. Dead, their carcasses littered the floor leading to a set of spiral stairs. Siv crouched to inspect the body of the nearest, in an officer's uniform. The human's face was gaunt, skin stretched tight, eyes bulging from its socket, a convulsed expression of horror frozen on its face. Siv turned his head and saw that the rest were contorted similarly. A knot began to grow in his stomach; he silenced it. He was Mando'ade. He closed his eyes and, for the briefest second, remembered home.

Images of Mandalore, of his childhood, flitted past his eyes. They were distant memories now; he'd scarcely passed his verd'gotten when the Sith had invaded and razed his home. That home, burnt, is a crater. Only existing in an ever-fading memory in his mind. Siv opened his eyes, his resolve once more steel. The unease in his gut was completely gone. He pressed forward.

Creeping up the steps, the singing grew louder, louder. If there were Sith, his trakar weave should amply conceal him from detection. He took care to step over the bodies that piled along the spiraling staircase, but the cramped passageway afforded him little room to maneuver. After several minutes of climbing, he reached the top, blaster raised. The sight confused him more than anything.

Take what you need from me…” Her gaze flicked briefly to the carnage they had already wrought to get here. “...and let’s continue the party.”

Were they Sith? Had they consumed these Imperials? Questions for another day. They weren't Mandalorian, for sure. Without hesitation, he fired from his left vambrace his sonic blaster, sending a pulsewave at near point-blank range. His blaster in his right hand, he switched the blaster's mode to gunslinger and fanned the trigger, firing as fast as his blaster would allow, hopeful to drop these two before they could react.
 
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ATTN: Iris Beroya Iris Beroya | Mandalorian Fighters in Atmosphere
This is an NPC response.

FORCE HYDRA

Force Hydra, the elite TIE squadrons of the Humbarine Defense Fleet, was activated. Pilots, clad in all-black flight suits, climbed into their cockpits and began preflight checks, while ground crew scrambled to their stations.

Nearby, but deep underground, was the control bunker where operators took their seats. Viewscreens flickered on, filling with telemetry and live feeds of the battlespace.

All of them - the crew, the pilots, the operators - were essential to the operation. However, just three individuals were truly worthy of attention: the flying aces, their squadron leaders.

Introducing…

Captain Enad Zim of Null Squadron
“Saucy Sushva” TIE Hunter

Inhale. Cough. Inhale. Cough. That was about all you needed to hear to know Captain Zim was in the room, and it was hardly a secret as to why. The Keshiri was a textbook glitterstim addict. He claimed the stuff gave him an edge, and whether true or not, he was a devil behind the console of his fine-tuned Hunter.

Of the three, Zim’s fighter, ‘Saucy Sushva,’ was defaced with crude pinup art of an all-women Bith band wearing… Well, it was honestly better not to say.

The captain climbed into his TIE, the hatch sealing shut as it hummed alive. He giggled quietly to himself and took another hit from the glitterstim tank rigged to his rebreather.

Behind him were the other fighters of Null Squadron, each handpicked by the man himself. Suffice it to say, they had a reputation for aggressive, ‘play-it-by-ear’ tactics.

Baron Urrom Donnic of Rancor Squadron
“Sycophant” TIE Avenger

Wearing a black and gold flight suit was the undisputed kill leader of the three, Baron Donnic, a man whose cold lethality was matched only by his vanity. The march into his Avenger was ceremonious, with an actual red carpet fastened to the ramp. A classic number played as the pilot’s chair ascended in time to catch the Baron’s heavy fall.

Beside him was an out-of-place pedestal carved from expensive stone. On it, posed in a rather regal loaf, was a taxidermied lothcat, his childhood pet. The baron reached out to gently caress the preserved critter while he analyzed the pre-flight statistics.

“Let us score another victory, shall we, Wiggles?” His eyes drifted to his dearly departed pet. “What?!” He double-taked.

Poorly glued to the cat’s face was a mass of grey hairs, uncannily groomed in the likeness of Darth Solipsis’s mustache and goatee.

“This is… That’s treason!”

In outrage, he called into the leaders’ shared channel. “I’ll kill you! I mean it this time. I will melt your vile corpse with laserfire, you… You disgusting man!” There was only a wheezy huff on the other end.

Colonel Ivy Draltia of Glaive Squadron
“Wicked Strike” TIE Defender

“Fools,” she muttered off-channel.

Secured in her blood-red TIE Defender was Ivy Draltia, a woman of legacy whose ancestor served in the legendary squadron that inspired her own. She didn’t have time for those two idiots, who would’ve been executed long ago had they not been undeservedly blessed with talent.

Ivy took her command quite seriously, with an earned reputation for undertaking ‘impossible’ missions. Each of the pilots who fell in behind her had survived a gauntlet of live-fire exercises of her own design, noted for its 17% survival rate. For now, she summoned a cold-blooded calm ahead of the battle, while Donnic continued to threaten Zim’s life.

Together...

One by one, the squadrons took off. Rancor and Null moved to join the airspace, where other interceptor wings were well underway to assail the enemy smallcraft. Glaive Squadron, on the other hand, covered by anti-air fire, made a break for orbit.

  • Rancor and Null Squadron will begin engaging enemy craft in atmo during the next round of posts.
  • Glaive Squadron will enter the scene on objective 2 at a later time when I work on that post.


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THE ARKANIAN
LANDING ZONE | HUMBARINE
TAG: Isobel Serraris | Carduul Akahl Carduul Akahl
GEAR: See Bio

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“This is Carduul Akahl—my forces have landed and are beginning an assault upon the Command Center to buy time for extraction. Make haste, and good hunting.”

The Arkanian wandered back in his drop pod for a moment to fish out a bandolier of grenades. As he came out he heard new communications across the platoon channel.

"Rally on Akahl!"

Like the Arkanian, each of the supercommandos in the platoon wore repulsorlift skates in addition to their jetpacks. Moving with ease across the rubble strewn battlefield, they congregated on the position of the Neo-Crusader as they would around a war banner.

The Arkanian glided forward on his skates until he reached Carduul. Impossible to miss really, with his armor and presence.

The oggmiri lizard, Terror, landed beside the Arkanian causing the ground to shudder slightly.

"Sir," the Arkanian nodded to Carduul, "Ark," he jerked a thumb at himself, "Terror," he pointed at the lizard.

Then he hefted his concussion rifle, taking a hasty fighting position as the rest of the platoon coalesced and returned fire toward the stormtroopers of Humbarine.

Suddenly, the light of the system's sun went out bit by bit until they were cast into darkness.

Hmm.

The Force Dead Arkanian craned his neck back to look up at the eclipse overhead. He did not recall anything about an eclipse from the intel weather reports.

Probably nothing.

Even with his absence from the Force, he might have felt the vague crawling sensation of dread applied across the entire area, but the oggmiri lizard beside him and its Force nullifying bubble prevented that.

For now.

"What is that?" muttered one of the supercommandos. "An eclipse?"

The Arkanian shrugged.

"Then we fight in the shade."

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Gang Gang: Meliant Meliant
CC: Carduul Akahl Carduul Akahl

Eurydice had tried very hard not to get sent to Humbarine. Unfortunately, it was an all-hands-on-deck situation.

Even the ones that were trembling.

A heavily armored speeder trawled across the killing field, kicking up dirt and grime and everything else that war brought with it. You'd think she would've grown used to it by now, but no - the overwhelming scent of charred flesh had bile rising in her throat once more.

Eurydice swallowed it down, and tried to ignore everything while simultaneously keeping herself alert. Which was to say, that she was suffering.

"Here is good," she rasped to the trooper at the helm. The speeder ground to a halt and Eurydice clambered to let herself out.

The diminutive Seer approached Meliant and his grisly retinue with her head bowed. Not strictly out of deference, but because she didn't want to stew in the horrific reality of an active battlefield for any longer than necessary.

"Emperor," she said. Lowered eyes glanced to the man with a collection of flesh parts strung around his neck, before quickly snapping back into the dirt. "We've come to escort you to command complex."

A corvid circled above the girl before descending to perch atop the speeder's hood. Unconcerned, he began to preen oily black feathers while his maker cowered like the simpering wimp that she was.

"Please, let us depart with haste."

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VARIN MORTIFER



Equipment: Durum Mantle | Black Blade of Chandrila | Eye of The Dragon | Heavy Sith Mace | Cross Guard Broadsaber

Earlier

It was probably best that Varin was not contained within the small cargo container. The implications of a catastrophic failure would have been an understatement. A ticking time bomb. That thought escaped him as soon as the scent of sterile air from the cargo revealing three figures. Two he noticed, one he knew. The third was something more of an oddity. But he did not question it. Varin was always quick to adapt.

Varin stood in silence as they all conversed, his gaze scanning the area around them as his piercing red visor moved with his head. The armor that encased his body like a tomb was just as much a weapon as it was a shield. Tamsin spoke to them in a language he could not understand, but he moved past it. It was not important to him at the moment. Something in the air did not feel right. Ever since they landed he felt like something was coming to turn the plan upside down.

And boy, it did.

Now

Tamsin began to weave her sorcery into the ground, a familiar feeling that he had sensed before. Many time she and Varin had done jobs together, many times they had proven themselves effective. But the shortstack always had a knack for getting into trouble. Her web spread far and he felt its connection. Blaster fire rained all around them as Death Troopers moved forward. Ace acted first, scrapping one and dispatching another, but something seemed to have caught him off guard. Distracting him enough to take a bolt to the ribs.

Varin saw it and moved. Their bolts rained down on him, bouncing off the armor. He drew his hilt and swung upwards causing the trooper to flinch. That was when his bracer activated the shield, vertically bisecting the man into two halves that slumped to the sides. The Kyber Shield hissed and roared as its crimson center beat and crackled like a heart with veins within the flesh of the white outline of kyber energy, containing the shape.

His saber roared to life as he held the shield up to his front in a phalanx position, deflecting bolts with his saber by his side. He held off two fronts allowing his allies to breathe and stand back up.

Within him something began to build. His chest thudded like a drum, his vision began to tunnel.

The Mortifer Bloodlust was building.

Another trooper swept to his side getting close, Varin reeled his head back then slammed it forth into the troopers helm shattering it with his own strength. Bone cracked beneath the troopers helm as Varin stood over him, he still squirmed.

Varin lifted his boot and stomped on the man’s skull finishing the job. He continued holding his line for his crew.


 
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On the eve of collapse..

For months he had been surrounded by surviving corporatists who had slipped through Arage’s purges by bribery, cowardice, or sheer luck. They arrived to him famished and eager for influence, and Lysander had needed only exert gentle pressure to fold them beneath his hand. Desperation made them compliant; ambition made all their moves foreseeable. Much like the Sith themselves. So, he offered them purpose, just as he slowly taught them how to unmake their own world. It started small; a grain shipment rerouted through a shell company, a fuel convoy that vanished between checkpoints, and even the medical supply chain redirected into bureaucratic haze. He orchestrated inflated contracts, forcing the Governorate to shell out triple for obsolete military assets with a single signature. The ease with which a planet’s lifeblood drained, once the elite were seduced by incentives amused him. Piece by piece the infrastructure began to erode. Collapse was inevitable. When that time arrived, it would arise anew as a financial hub loyal to the Covenant; its rebuilding would be entrusted to the Corpo firms kneeling at his feet. More importantly, to Mercy Mercy and Arris Windrun Arris Windrun . Naturally, a select few were spared such.. subjugation. Sanguine Enterprises, Hydian-Wyl, Aurora Industries, among a handful more. Who knew that power’s sweetest prize was the illusion of choice..

Present..

Near a viewport, Lysander rose from his seat with grace, a city’s distant sirens wailing like ghosts. Beyond that, the lockdown would ensure few could intervene. The boardroom fell into silence, "Let the fall begin,” spoken softly. A lone executive dared to plead, “Which sector, sir?” Lysander’s golden gaze fell upon him. “Every last one,” he breathed. "When the Governorate intervenes.. confiscate their reserves, and eliminate all attempts at recovery.”

Upon leaving the building, the commlink on his wrist vibrated once; he already knew who it was. Astra Sadow Astra Sadow . It was easy to register the panic in the background. Perfect timing, really. “Initiate Phase Three. I want the streets starving before dawn. And Shadow.. any syndicate still loyal to the Governor? I want you to break them. Publicly. Your work ensures that mine succeeds..” Perhaps, she might even feel his smile through the static. “If they beg, silence them.”

Those within the Core still ignorant of her name would learn it today.

He pressed onward with blistering speed now, black robes snapping behind him like a banner. Nightstar lay sheathed across his back while weaving through the streets of an industrial district. Another tone pulsed against the wrist. Lysander slowed only enough to lift his arm. “Eternal Father. A route has already been prepared. I am transmitting the rendezvous now. Now the Mandalorians shall hear the entire planet scream beneath their god.”

The channel was closed, and he moved once more. There were many signatures registering across the city. But one rose above them all; unmistakable.. akin to the arrival of an apocalypse. The Silver Dragon. Srina Talon Srina Talon . The blonde's awareness expanded; sharpening as her melody unfurled like a veil. ‘Twas an echo of winter those attuned to her could truly hear. Dark tendrils reached out to her. <<Sister, lend me your strength and wisdom; for that, I will break them all.>>

The graves he had dug beside Efret Farr Efret Farr now lay open.

For the Covenant's glory, too, which was why Mercy's nearness became an omen. For one deemed an ally, he would ensure success was the only outcome.
 
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EARLIER

Vess had expected questions. Showing up uninvited to an operation tended to generate those. The painted woman's attention settled on her immediately, followed by a sentence in a language Vess didn't understand. She blinked once, then glanced briefly toward Lily, who looked just as confused.

"Sorry, didn't understand a word," Vess admitted with a small shrug. "I'm hoping that wasn't important." Before she could ask, Arris voiced the question that had clearly been on her mind since the cargo doors opened. Who is this? Vess opened her mouth, only for Lily to beat her to it. The stumble midway through the introduction immediately caught her attention, and despite herself, the corner of her mouth twitched upward.

"Vess," she supplied helpfully. "That's usually enough."

Her hazel eyes shifted back to Arris. "Lily's right. I'm a slicer. If this place has security systems, encrypted networks, surveillance grids, or anything else with a processor, I'm the person you want breaking into it." A faint grin appeared. "And unless you've got another one hiding in a crate somewhere, I think you're stuck with me."

INSIDE THE ARMORY

The alarms screamed overhead while blasterfire chewed through the corridor outside their cover. Lily pulled her into the alcove just before the autoturrets descended, and Vess immediately unfolded her dataspike, eyes racing across streams of Imperial code while sparks showered from the wall nearby.

"Please tell me you've found the mainframe?"

"Working on it."

A burst of fire slammed into the corridor hard enough to make her flinch. Then Arris yelled something about her girlfriend, and despite everything happening around them, Vess found herself staring very intently at her dataspike.

"Not helping," she muttered.

Her fingers continued moving while she reached through the Force; machines had always made more sense than people. Beneath the alarms and gunfire, she could feel the systems threaded through the facility; the blast doors ahead, the autoturrets above them, the security relays buried somewhere below. The nearest turret shuddered as she grabbed hold of it, its targeting systems flickering before the barrel rotated away from them and opened fire into the advancing Death Troopers instead.

"That's better."

A satisfied grin hit her lips as the dataspike finally gave her what she was looking for. Security wasn't being controlled from the room beyond at all. It was routing through a node here, but the mainframe was through the room and down the hall. The blast doors ahead groaned as she forced her way through another layer of authorization, heavy locks disengaging one after another.

"Through this room, down the hall on the right," she called over the alarms, sweat beginning to gather at her temples from the strain of juggling both slicing and Mechu-deru while under fire. "There we go," The warning sirens abruptly cut out down one side of the corridor. A second turret changed sides. Then the blast doors finally began to slide open.

Vess exhaled and pointed through the widening gap.

"Get me to that room, and I can make this entire building somebody else's problem."

TAG: Lily Rhodes Lily Rhodes Arris Windrun Arris Windrun Acier Moonbound Acier Moonbound Varin Mortifer Varin Mortifer Tamsin Starfall Tamsin Starfall

 

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Kasir emerged from the remains of the shattered storefront, a specter cloaked in shadow. The faint heave of his chest was the only sign of a living nightmare; otherwise, he might've been mistaken for a statue. Behind him, concealed by ruin and grime, lay the Imperial he had subdued; the man's armor was warped. The man had been frantically running down the street, full of adrenaline, shouting into a comm, when a pale hand closed around the forearm and pulled him sideways into ruin. The struggle had lasted seconds. The warmth lasted longer.

A glistening stain traced his jawline, dried in the firelight's dance. The Sith would not wipe it away. It was a brand, a token even from carnage of death and dominion.

Obsidian armor clung to his frame, marred and blackened by ash and flame. His footsteps fell like whispers of doom on the fractured ground. Dark orbs were fixed across the street as the warrior's gauntlet crushed one of his brethren's skulls. And so, his head tilted. Clearly, this quarry would be different from others.

He advanced through the swirling smoke like a demon called forth from the ashes; the haze parted unwillingly at his approach. His gaze was cold and hungry, the stare of a shadow with dreadful fascination.

Step by step, he closed the space between them. A slow inhale; a shadow of a cruel smile curling his colorless lips.

His calm voice threaded through the battle like a whispered curse, one that often silenced everything around him.

“Show me what you think you are.”

First, weight shifted, grounding his stance as he widened his footing. Then he moved; a blur of motion cut across the fractured street, dragged by a violent wind. Dropping low, he lunged, a strike aimed to disrupt the Mandalorian’s balance, probing for weakness, daring to test the strength that lay beneath the beskar.
 
Motion.

Motion moved one’s eyes before color, before following sound, and before one could move their body. His HUD registered it first- and only a few things moved like that.

He barely had time to drop his blaster to avoid being caught by the fist. In the process, that same fist- broke his rifle. Shattered it, even.

Feydrik turned his head. Impressed. Feydrik might have been disarmed on purpose- or perhaps his new enemy was testing him. Either way, his rifle was out of the fight.

He heard the voice. Whispers in his mind. Invisible fingers trying to pry open his mind. His mind was a fortress. A steel cage only the greatest could break. His willpower, his violence- his tenacity. All matching with the legends of the Mandalorians.

He drew his Beskad from his back, and placed the blade face down on his bicep armor, cradling the blade in his opposite arm. He gave him a salute.

“Fight well, Dar’Jetii. You face Ori’ramikade.”

He did not move after taking a combat stance, blade in hand. He did not break tradition. He waited for the Sith to draw his blade. He would not cheapen his victory by sullying his honor. Even the Sith deserved honorable deaths. Even if they had none.

Kasir Dorran Kasir Dorran
 




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THE RESCUE
TAG: Eira Dyn Eira Dyn

The droid's arms whirred as they re-sealed the deep laceration on Brent's head. The explosion that had rocked the tavern he was in had done more damage than he had realized. While he had already been patched up, the recent fighting had reopened the deep cut.

Whoever had detonated that bomb, destroying the listening post and killing dozens of civilians in the area, had nearly got the better of him. Brent turned his head and looked at the other Clan Warnel members who had accompanied him here. Broken bones, internal bleeding, and death lay around him; the sounds of groans and coughs permeated the mostly silent storage room.

"Please don't move, sir," it buzzed at him.

Brent held still, feeling the stitching on his scalp. He wasn't sure who had destroyed the listening post; however, he hadn't been engaged directly after it. In the days after the explosion, however, he most definitely had been. The Sith had tracked them through the city, engaging any Mandalorian they found on the world. Many had died, and many more were missing.

A cool mist marked the end of the stitching as the droid sprayed bacta onto his scalp, accelerating the healing.

"If you will proceed to the pharmacy and speak to Dr. Tushoro, I will write you a script for pain medication."

"That's not likely," Brent retorted, "See to the other members again, please."

"Without further medical supplies, I have done what I can for the wounded. I am not equipped for surgery, and several of these patients need immediate surgery if we are to save their lives. I strongly recommend that they be transported to the SC Hospital located 1.4 kilometers from our location."

"That's also not gonna happen, mate," Brent replied, "Just check on them for now."


Brent turned his head and looked at the men and women around him. He sighed deeply as he looked at the blood covering their armor, the bandaged limbs and heads. There may be no way out of this. They were sent here, deep behind the Sith's lines, on a stealth mission. The odds of retrieval if the iron fist of the Sith clenched down on this planet were slim. On top of that, instead of dying a warriors death at the hands of their enemy, many of his Clan were now dying from lack of medication, wasting away in their armor. Brent hung his head, realizing he did not know what to do. What hope could he give? What plan could he come up with?

A rustle at the door snapped his attention around, his blaster drawn and pointing toward the small entrance to the storage room they were hiding in. A golden-armed Mandalorian stepped through, his ragged purple cloak trailing behind him.

"News, alor," Devon said as she removed her helmet, nearly breathless, "The Covenant comes."


****

The deafening crack of ships breaking the sound barrier reverberated all around Brent as he looked up into the sky. The Mythos Fleet had come, and with it, reinforcements.

"This is Brent Warnel," he said on the Iron Covenant frequencies, "I have many wounded with me and need extraction. Sending coordinates now."

"Prep the wounded," Brent said to Devon, "I'm going deeper into the city. If our vode can't come to us, we'll need transport. I'll get it."

Devon nodded before disappearing back into the crumpled building they had been staying in for some time.

Brent leaped off the edge of the building and into the alleyway below, drawing his pistols and stalking into the city.


 


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THE FOUNDLING
Humbarine | Planetside, Nondescript Part of the City
Equipment: In Bio
Allies: COV | Reggie Rau Reggie Rau | Romul Saxon Romul Saxon | Gel Karn Gel Karn | Koda Fett Koda Fett | Darion of Myrkr Darion of Myrkr | Signy Bralor Signy Bralor | Carduul Akahl Carduul Akahl | Feydrik Munin Feydrik Munin
Enemies: TSC
Engaging: OPEN

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Exfiltration

The arrival of their deliverance was nothing short of spectacular.

At first, their secured com-net was abuzz with activity that seemed to only sharpen by the minute instead of growing dull.

And then, fat streaks of angry-red plasma cut towards the earth from the bleak heavens above before long, their trails vanishing behind the distant spires and skyscrapers alike – but their effect could be felt trembling one’s very marrows. Each fading arc was shortly accompanied by a teeth-chattering tremor a moment later, following in the wake of the former’s step, growing quicker and stronger the closer she saw them sweep down.

But this was not a one sided exchange.

The Humbariners returned the warm greeting in kind. Sharp bolts of acid-green plasma shot up to the skies from all across the city as the Imperials scrambled to meet the wrath of the Mythos Fleet with their own.

The Harpy’s lips peeled back, a lopsided grin etched on her features as she watched the TIE fighters take to the skies through the filter of her visor. Their sharp banshee-howls but a small footnote under the thundering ground fire that threatened to drown out thought. Her smile reached her ears the second she saw what they streaked towards –a squadron of Jai’Galaar’s ( Iris Beroya Iris Beroya ) shooting down with the absoluteness of a deity’s judgement.

Combined, it all painted a canvas not unfamiliar to the Shistavanen.

"Shit - that road's blockaded too."

A small grumble rolled from her throat, looking at the warzone from over the window sill, its pane blown inward. Almost begrudgingly, she turned away from the spectacular razmataz, feeling Red’s gaze burning through the back of her head. The soles of her boots scraped over the ferrocrete floor as she turned with a pivot. The shards of glass crackled beneath her feet as she lowered herself to a crouch.

The obsidian black of Vara’s visor met hers. The Harpy was none the worse for wear, save for the lash over her navel – the bacta patch held firm under the hole in her bodyglove. Her hands shifted, gravitating towards the blaster rifle on her chest, secured from a three-point sling. Several fresh scorchmarks scarred her breastplate, her armored skin looked more like the marred yet hardened hide of an apex predator.

Her visor scanned the area again.
"Let's try that alley. We need to be quick. Come on, while we have a gap." she said, motioning toward a little alley somewhat down the street from them.

Keeping her rifle at the low-ready, the Harpy followed her gaze towards an alley. Her glance cut through the open doorway down the stairs. The alley stretched toward a corner choked with rubble and debris.

A small chuckle filtered through her helmet vocabulator with a puff of breath, barely a noise. Vara rose from her crouch, shoulders pitched forward as Reggie looked back towards the alley. A beat later, she would feel the Harpy tap her once on her right shoulder. <”Race y’there!”> With a cackle, the Shistavanen slipped past her from the left.

Like an arrow let loose, the Harpy surged down the stairs and shot out the exit. Vara sprinted through the dust of the wartorn city. Breath slashed in and out through her fangs. Her boots scraped and kicked through rubble and debris as she powered forwards. She kept to the shadows, under the sudden, unnatural night at day. The Harpy slammed her back against a wall just before the bend. Her gaze shifted to the dark sky set alight by red and green tracers, then to her surroundings before settling back on Red.

A hand shot forth, a sharp gesture followed that beckoned Reggie to join her before Vara moved again, and slipped around the corner. In a beat she disappeared from her Mentor’s sight, but her voice over their commlink was clear as ever. <”We gotta do somethin’ about those guns, ye?”> their thundering roar almost drowned her out. <”Y’reckon we can take ‘em out?”> Her excitement palpably grew with each syllable, blood singing for war.

And then she saw them.

Far down the boulevard, beyond the smoke and the ruins, the battery thundered atop a tall building, as if a herald to the end times. Each recoil shook the ground beneath her boots. Crimson eyes widened beneath the visor. <”Oh yeah,”> a manic grin split across her maw. <”Question is—how much havoc d’we wanna cause?”>


 
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