Daera Varias
Time had not been kind to the Arx' residential area. Once this place had been bustling with life. Visitors had been assaulted by a barrage of bright lights and commercials, the stores had been filled with goods from all across the stars, the apartments had been clean and, in this section, luxurious. A utopia, for those who could afford it.
But now it was quiet, almost like a graveyard. Buildings had been burnt and looted. In places, the apartments had been overtaken by greenery. Not even all of the bodies had been cleared away. And yet, people still lived here. Did Zamkala feel sorry for the stranded, and the desperate? In an abstract way, she supposed. They had all fuelled Firemane's engine of oppression in some form, some more so than others.
She understood. Firemane had, for a time, been the biggest Yazgid matriarch so they had gravitated to it, hoped to earn some coin for themselves and their clan. Such was life, such was war. She understood, but didn't forgive. She was here to take their stuff. Because she and her soldiers had earned it with their blood, sweat and tears. Because back home her people were suffering. Her Jaziri had commanded her to go here, and Zamkala trusted her.
The broken street was choked with urban detritus. Moving through the smoke and past the rubble, her soldiers advanced towards the barricades. First contact with their foes, scavengers, pirates or whatever they were, was not long in coming. Their transport's unexpected charge had temporarily thrown the pirates' lines into chaos, but now they were rallying again and coming from down the square. Several squads, by the looks of it. Decently armed, but brash.
All the smoke, the rubble and other detritus reduced visibility. The place was an urban maze of chaos. The Qadiri did, however, have damn good hearing. Crouching, they took up position among the barricades, their force split in two. They waited, and waited, and waited. Zamkala gave the signal, and a grenade thoomped out of a launcher, arcing through the air and impacting upon one of the skimmers. Some pirates were lucky enough to get the hell off the vehicle. Not all of them though. The explosion picked up two, tossing them off the burning vehicle, shrapnel mangling their armour. One of the men managed to sit up, and tried to stand, only for his leg to collapse, and for him to collapse back into the pavement. A burst shattered his helmet's optics and splattered his brains.
Gunfire burst through the air towards their foes. The staggered barrage caught several pirates into the open. Rounds cracked towards Zamkala and she fired a quick burst before dropping back into cover, then firing again. Her first shots missed. Return fire bit the metal plating beneath her chin, and she ducked. Her next shots tore shredded a pirate's thigh. He dropped, crying in pain and drawing forth a comrade who rushed to help him. Big mistake. He was soon on the ground, wailing from shots tearing through his torso.
"Move! Jemedar Jal Khalim," she called out, "flanking fire, don't let them escape. Subedar Jai Zinal, cover our backs!" Whereas a Jemedar was a roughly equivalent to an NCO, a Subedar played a role akin to that of a Captain. Zamkala retrieved her shield from her back and grabbed her vibrospear. "Charge!" With a loud, high-pitched war cries, Suquan soldiers burst from their hideouts like ravenous Yazgids seeking prey to sink their claws and teeth in. Up close, the Qadiri held the advantage. Efficiently, ruthlessly, they cut through foes. Her shield took a shot that sent pain stabbing through her shoulder, but she ran onward, thrusting the tip of her vibrospear into a pirate's gut. He went down, the shots from his blaster going wild. Blood coated her spear when she stabbed him in the neck.
Her commlink buzzed, and she crouched behind a broken skimmer, shield up. "Appreciate the information," she finally said, ears ringing from the sudden eruption of heavy repeater, "we have the situation in hand. Make sure none of the enemy crosses over from your sector." She terminated the call. "Where's the repeater fire coming from? We need eyes on that shooter!"
"Second floor window, building to the right down the alley!" Her Jemedar shouted. Or rather hole where the window had been.
"You see their firing position?"
"Not well enough for a shot. And it sounds like two of them."
"Alright, everyone stay alert, and hold where you are." Fiery bursts erupted towards them, tearing up pieces of masonry and bombarding the wall she had hidden against. No fire discipline there.
She activated her commlink again, but her call went to their transport. After all, for all the damage the ship had taken, the guns still worked. "Jal Nakine, can you hear me?"
There were bursts of static. "I'm here, ma'am. What can I do?"
"'Alley, rightmost building, second floor. Have the cannoneers light them up."
"On it, Sargord. Be advised, it's not going to be that precise." She cut the connection.
Her Jemedar's voice came crackling through the commlink. "Two wounded, we got them into cover. One dead. We need to lock this place down quickly."
"Once those bastards are suppressed, we make a break for the building. I go in, you keep any surprises off our back." A frown. "The palekin say the Kerrigan palace is the HQ of a pirate gang."
"You trust them?" The Subedar's's voice was laced with scepticism.
"No. Pays to be prepared. Subedar Jai Zinal," she triggered her commlink. "Shadow the Xio's approach, and tell Xalda to expect stiff resistance. A pirate leader may be present. Capture if possible." As she spoke, laser cannons blazed, unleashing a hailstorm towards the second floor of the broken building.
xxx
There was an unspoken rule about Kerrigan's palace: it had to be the biggest residence in the area. Just like she had to have the biggest chair in any conference rooms so she could look on anyone else. Once Xalda had looked upon her in awe. She had called her Saviour, Queen, Karishzar. Now she knew better.
The Karishzar was greater than any human could be. Siobhan had been her instrument for a time, before fully embracing evil. She had not uplifted the Xio as her sisters, but trampled upon them. For this, the Karishzar had withdrawn her blessing. Her demise had been the inevitable result. Her empire had fallen. Now all that was left was scavengers, fighting over the wreckage.
She and Ajul pounced two pirates on patrol who had been alerted by the sound of gunfire and distant explosions. Hers was a Twi'lek. Her dagger sliced through the blue woman's vulnerable lekku, while the hand around her foe's mouth muzzled her cry of anguish. The corsair's body spasmed, and Xalda finished her off. Quickly, they hid the bodies and then hastened into cover behind some wreckage as a skimmer blazed across the broken street.
She and her small group moved on, crouching and sneaking through urban detritus. The bloated moloch of a palace loomed ahead of them, surrounded by wreckage and ruins. Scanning the area with her binoculars, she found the entrance was under heavy guard. Still functioning turrets, criminal thugs or scavengers on patrol. She knew of a side entrance though...
Her commlink beeped quietly. When she spoke, her voice was barely above a whisper. "I greet you, we are on target, how do you fare?"
"The Sargord is advancing. Be advised, pirates are using the palace as a base. Sargord wishes their leader captured if possible," Subedar Jai Zinal's voice came crackling over the comm. "I am moving towards you with some of my troops."
"Spirits guide your path, Subedar."
Xalda scanned the area with her binoculars again, looking pensive, then gestured to Karou and brought forth a rough map of the residence. "You see the side entrace here?" At Karou's nod, she continued. "Take a few of our sisters. Avoid the guards, plant explosives to shatter the wall. When they are drawn out, hide. Jai Zinal is coming."
Her Karrigan sister smiled grimly. "You had me at explosions. Where are you going?"
Xalda pointed at one of the upper levels. "Scaling up there. Ajul, come with me." She began to prepare some ropes.