Star Wars Roleplay: Chaos

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Junction Storm Chasers || SO and HR Junction of Moorja and Terrijo


Location: Agriculture Guild Hall
Tags: Mercy Mercy | Corazona von Ascania Corazona von Ascania | Gavin Restur Gavin Restur | Glissara Glissara

Aurelian held Cora's gaze over the Guild Leader's shoulder. He could already hear it. The lecture. The carefully measured disapproval. I told you so, Aurelian. He almost rolled his eyes, then remembered the knife still at his throat and decided to remain extremely still.

Fine. Still it is. The pressure at his neck shifted. The blade stopped moving entirely. The Guild Leader's wrist trembled, confused, but the knife did not budge.

Ah. Cora. Aurelian's mouth twitched. He did not look back. He did not need to. He simply waited.

Gavin moved first. The shot cracked through the hall. The Guild Leader slumped forward against Aurelian's back before sliding off him in a dead weight heap.

Aurelian shoved the body away with visible irritation. "If there is blood on this coat, Gavin, it is coming out of your payment."

He glanced down at the fabric, brushing at it with sharp, offended flicks of his fingers. Of all the ways to die, ruined tailoring would have been the true tragedy.

The building shook again. Dust sifted from the ceiling. The air carried the distant echo of heavy footfalls in the corridor beyond.

He stepped toward Gavin and clapped him once on the shoulder. "That was adequate," he said. High praise.

Then he straightened, expression hardening. "We are not here alone. We find the Chancellor. And my Voice of the Houses."

He would not leave them to navigate this mess without him. A king who survived while his allies fell was not much of a king at all. Another tremor rippled through the floor. Closer now. He felt it in his bones before he heard it clearly. Something heavy. Something confident. The rhythm of something approaching that you did not need the force to sense.

He adjusted his cuffs as if preparing for a gala instead of a fight. "Well," he murmured, eyes shifting toward the doors, "shall we go?"




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If you need a label for me, then you don't know me
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DECEPTION
Moorja
Spire





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Lower Residential Ring – Moorja Capital

The deeper he moved from the spire, the quieter it became. No grand corridors. No strategic choke points.

Just homes.

Narrow streets stacked along the inner curve of the metallic “tree.” Market stalls overturned. Cargo haulers abandoned mid-route. Doors half-open where people had run and then hesitated. He heard it before he saw it.

Crying.

Orders barked in harsh cadence. Armor boots on tile. He stepped around the corner.

A cluster of civilians were being herded toward a transport truck. Hands bound. Troopers shoving them forward. Two Acolytes overseeing the operation like shepherds of something less than livestock.

A child stumbled.

The trooper kicked him back to his feet. That was enough. “Dawn’s Light” ignited in a vertical snap of permafrost blue. “Windu’s Guile” flared to life in his left hand a half second later, violet humming tight and dangerous. He didn’t roar. He didn’t charge recklessly. He walked. The first trooper fired. Connel angled the blade and returned the bolt directly into the trooper’s thigh plate. Not fatal. Disabled.

The second aimed for a civilian.

Connel threw one of the lightknives. It didn’t hit the trooper. It hit the blaster’s barrel mid-shot. The weapon detonated in sparks. He closed distance. Two precise strikes. Shoulder. Knee. Troopers collapsed screaming. One Acolyte lunged with a red blade. Connel pivoted inside the arc and drove “Windu’s Guile” up under the arm joint. He didn’t linger. He didn’t savor it.

The Acolyte fell. The second Acolyte hesitated. That hesitation cost him. A single, clean cut across the wrist. Weapon fell. Connel kicked him backward into a stack of supply crates and pinned him there with Dawn’s Light hovering inches from his throat.

For a moment…

He could have ended it, any time he wanted. No witnesses would judge him for it.

This was war.

The Acolyte spat something about Sith dominion. Connel extinguished the blade instead. He drove the pommel into the man’s temple and left him unconscious. The troopers still breathing were disarmed and kicked away from weapons.

Efficient.

Ruthless.

Controlled.

The civilians stared. Children clung to parents. Smoke drifted through the narrow street. Connel turned to them, visor reflecting their fear back at them.

West corridor, he said, voice filtered but steady.Emergency stairs. Stay together. Don’t stop moving.

A woman hesitated.

“Are there more?”

Yes.

Honest.

A little girl stared up at him, eyes wide at the blades. “Are you a Jedi?”

There it was.

The moment.

He looked down at “Dawn’s Light” in his right hand. “Windu’s Guile” still humming in the left. The lightblaster holstered heavy at his hip. He could have said yes. He could have said no. Instead, he deactivated both sabers. The street dimmed.

I’m here so you can get home,

He said, not deflecting. Not claiming. Just truth.

The woman swallowed. “Are you with the Republic?”

He tilted his head slightly. The Republic sent people who care whether you live.

That was as far as he would go. No speeches. No mystique. No “we don’t exist.” Just responsibility. A small boy stepped forward suddenly and grabbed the hem of his mantle. “Will they come back?”

Connel crouched slightly so he wasn’t towering over him. Yes, he said. But next time they’ll be looking for me.

Not bravado. Promise. He rose. The sound of more boots echoed from deeper in the district. He drew the lightblaster this time. Powerful. Heavy. Necessary evil. No shield. No rifle. No extra weight. Just judgment. He looked once more at the civilians moving toward the west corridor.

Children glancing back at him.

Watching. That mattered. So he adjusted. Every shot that followed was placed with care. Disable when possible. End only when there was no other option. Because it wasn’t just Sith he was fighting now.

It was perception.

The Vanagor name. The Jedi name. The Republic’s fragile claim to moral ground. Smoke swallowed him as he moved deeper into the neighborhood, blades reigniting in twin flashes of blue and violet. Somewhere above, Carnifex and Jax were closing on each other.

Down here— Connel was proving something quieter.

That strength without cruelty exists. That ruthlessness can serve mercy. That the man who fights like a storm can still choose where the lightning lands. He heard the shots, more shots. Not blasterfire exchanged in combat.

Execution shots.

Single. Measured. Controlled.

A pattern. He turned the corner already moving. Too late.Three civilians were on their knees. One fell forward as the fourth shot rang out. A child screamed. The trooper adjusted his aim toward the next. Connel didn’t ignite his saber.

He fired.

The lightblaster roared like contained thunder.

The trooper’s chestplate caved inward in a burst of ionized force. He hit the wall and stayed there. The second trooper swung his rifle up toward the remaining civilians. Connel threw a lightknife. It struck through the visor seam. The trooper collapsed mid-trigger pull. The remaining two executioners opened fire wildly. Now the sabers ignited. Permafrost blue. Electric violet. He moved through the bolts instead of redirecting them. No time for finesse. One clean horizontal cut. One vertical. Both ended before their bodies hit the ground.

Silence returned too fast. Smoke drifted. Four bodies lay on the pavement. Three were civilians.

Connel stood still.

The surviving civilians stared at him—not with awe. With shock. A mother clutched her son’s face to her chest so he wouldn’t see. He saw anyway. Connel extinguished the blades. He stepped toward the fallen civilians first. He knelt briefly beside the nearest one. No pulse. No breath.

Too late.

His jaw tightened once behind the mask. That was it. No outward grief. No rage. Just a ledger entry that would never balance. Boots echoed again from further down the street. More troopers. More Acolytes. They had heard the blaster. They would finish what was started.

Connel rose.

When they came around the corner, they saw him standing alone in the street. Bodies at his feet. Smoke rising around him. The first Acolyte ignited his blade and charged. This time Connel did not hold back. There was no space for restraint. The first strike removed the Acolyte’s weapon hand. The second removed his head.

He didn’t pause.

Two troopers fired from behind a cargo stack. He advanced directly into their line of fire. Blue blade carving through incoming bolts, closing distance without flourish.

One trooper tried to retreat. Connel closed the gap and drove “Windu’s Guile" through the trooper’s sternum.

Quick.

Final.

The last trooper dropped his weapon. Connel didn’t lower his. The man’s eyes flicked to the civilians behind him. To the bodies on the ground. He lunged for a hidden sidearm. Connel ended it before the weapon cleared holster. Silence again.

Not frantic.

Not chaotic.

Decisive.

He turned to the civilians. They were watching him differently now. Not just as rescuer. As something else. The little girl from before stepped forward again, tears streaking her face. “You couldn’t save them.” It wasn’t accusation. It was a child stating fact.

Connel didn’t deny it.

No, he said. The word weighed. But I stopped it.

He knelt to her level again. You leave now.

The mother hesitated. “Are you… are you a Jedi?”

He looked at the three civilians lying in the street. Then at the troopers. Then back at her. I’m here because they aren’t, he said quietly. A beat. And because someone has to be.

He stood.

More distant detonations rolled through the district. The city was collapsing into open conflict. As the civilians fled toward the western corridor, Connel turned back to the bodies of the executed.

He ignited “Dawn’s Light” one more time. Not in anger. In precision. He severed the execution restraints from their wrists and deactivated the blade. He would not leave them bound in death. Footsteps thundered from the next avenue over. He stepped into the intersection alone. No rifle. No shield. Five lightknives left. Two blades. One lightblaster.

And no restraint left for those who chose execution over surrender. Above him, through layers of steel and fire, Carnifex’s presence pulsed. Connel felt it. And for the first time that night…

There was no mercy in him for what wore red.




 
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The shock of Eira's presence gave way to shock anew. Cerys stumbled back — just slightly — as the torrent of hyper-aggressive dark side passions was spilled from her sister's mouth.

What had happened to Eira?

The Dark Side had corrupted her. It had laced venom and hubris into every fibre of Eira's being. It was more than just the words, but the feeling of how deeply her adopted sister felt these words that stunned Cerys.

Her longer blade ignited, taking the brunt of the crackling energy of the Dark Side that was thrown her way.
"This is not you, Eira!" Cerys called out, "Please! I beg you! Come back...come back to me!"


A decade of training with her late master fought against her desire. Her own decision to step away from attachment, and follow the Force alone battled against the need she felt well up within her chest.

"I don't want to fight you," she said, tears falling unbidden as she struggled against all that she believed and held dear.


The screams of those running for fear of Eira provided a horrifying soundtrack to the betrayal Cerys was about to make. Not a betrayal to the Light, or the Jedi. But a betrayal to her own path.

She positioned herself, stance readying for combat. As the lower-level market cleared of citizens, Cerys called out to her sister one final time.
"Eira. Please! Stop this madness! I...I love you!"



 
Location: Agriculture Guild Hall
Tags: Gavin Restur Gavin Restur | Corazona von Ascania Corazona von Ascania | Glissara Glissara | Aurelian Veruna Aurelian Veruna

Glissara seemed to weave through any obstacle in her way with the grace of a Nexu.

Mercy on the other hand had the grace of a battering ram. While Glissara jumped over things, she just smashed right through the obstacles. Be that tables, balusters or anything else. Almost as if she had a hatred for architecture and internal design.

“Oh. I think this one’s blood got in my hair.”

"That just means you aren't bloody enough." The mountain called over her shoulder right as her shoulder smashed through a trooper that had been sprinting out of a side room. His armor broke on collision and then Mercy swatted him away with her hand. Palm open. It was a lazy gesture, but the force of it still put him through the wall right back into the room he had come from.

"By the time we are done, if you aren't covered in their blood, you haven't been trying hard enough."

Coming up the corridor she could sense it.

Three people on the other side of that wall.

One of them felt familiar. Corazona von Ascania Corazona von Ascania ... she'd recognize that heart beat from anywhere. It would take precious minutes to get into their room, by the time they circled around, they'd be long gone. The hallway now truly trembled as Mercy accelerated without warning, not even giving Glissara a hint of her intentions.

She became a blur.

Then she smashed through the wall, her body breaking through heavy masonry and duracrete as if it was Atrisian paper walls. And to Mercy it was. It would be a fright for the King and his companions. A monster flying through the air, stonework flying like shrapnel to the side, but it was her maniacal smile that said it all.

The mountain had come to dance.
 


Where I have passed, grass will never grow again.
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"Where is he?" she asked, once again falling into step beside the towering inferno.

Lo, the hulking Vahlan did point with his sword at the slab of duracrete which hid his foe from view.

"There."

He forced himself upright behind a fractured slab of duracrete, pain flaring through his ribs but nothing broken. He leaned out and raised his rifle, firing in quick bursts at both figures, forcing them to adjust.

Blaster bolts shrieked like angry hornets through the air. One winged past, red and smoldering. Another smote Gerra full upon the breastplate, the golden alloy he wore charring black around the pockmark of the plasma's impact, though it did not slow the advancing Vahlan. A third came for his head, but Gerra batted this aside with his Sith sword.

But then the defender shifted tactics.

"Hey!! You dumb........" he barked at the white haired woman. Elian trailed off as he whispered to himself. "I'm usually better at this...." He began shifting his aim squarely onto her and pouring fire in her direction, momentarily losing sight of the giant in his focus.

A wordless snarl came from Gerra in that instant and though Vahl by Vatres commanded him not to slay this defender, his wroth grew hot and wild. Holding up his fingers, he splayed them and lightning erupted forth from each fingertip in snaking, sizzling tendrils of blinding azure that crackled against the duracrete slab and all around it in a cascade. Chunks of debris exploded into dust and the air stank of ozone.

The bolts might not strike the defender, but that was not the intent. Gerra needed only keep him trapped there, ducking behind the slab, while he used the lightning to advance forward.

Heavy footsteps thudded as Gerra advanced until he stood over the slab of duracrete and readied to cleave both it and the defender behind it in two.

Vatrës Dhalis Vatrës Dhalis | Elian Abrantes Elian Abrantes

 
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Despite not being trained in the use of the Force, Dominic still felt her presence before he saw her. From his crouch, behind a pneumatics control terminal, he looked up towards the end of the broad hallway. First, it was just an amorphous silhouette, but he felt no fear, no need to run and hide for his life. Then, through the steam her outline appeared, and he felt no fear. Then, the steam parted from across her face...

"Ah. Chit," he murmured.

He almost believed it was some mysterious supernatural force that was fating them into one another's presence. Almost like beings from outside their universe were scripting their connection. Dominic loathed feeling controlled.

Still, it was always her. After the passionate detonation of their friendship on that stormy night, she rescued him in the Senate Raid. Now, after she had so thoroughly destroyed all hope of him ever looking at her fondly again...something resembling fate engineered her to save him Moorja.

"You always did prefer the scenic route."

"It makes a more interesting story," he said, while trying to stand, but finding his head swimming. Something within him had stopped pushing him, he felt himself relax, and the injuries obliged by revealing him as the adrenaline began to subside. Even now, when he almost hated her, she had a disarming effect on his very core.

"Moorjan maintenance. Charming. Industrial and such a very you place to meet Dominic."

"Yeah. Well you aren't here because of me...surely just a happy accident?" he said, sitting down again and rubbing his forehead. The headache was starting. The fact that it aligned with Bastila's arrival did not escape him.

"You look concussed?"

"Would you believe that I feel that way too?" He muttered.

"Hold still."

"I am not moving," he said back, under his breath. There was no resistance. Her command was seemingly preventative more than anything. She had never sounded more like a Sal-Soren. Bossy.

"I was tracking the flare from the causeway. It's all turned to Chit out there."

His only response was a smirk, and nod. He would have said more, but he really was quite enjoying the lack of headache. But then, she added another.

> "And before you say anything. I owe you an apology."

Hell, yes she did. But whether he accepted it was another story. Though, it was likely true that he did not deserve one either. Dominic's conduct prior to their last meeting, with regards their friendship, would probably have been considered less than stellar.

"I shouldn't have left it like that."

"Have more barbs to leave behind?" He said, immediately wincing. Force, he was insufferable.

"You can reprimand me later. Right now, we have approximately thirty seconds before your admirers find you."

Pursed lips, and half-bitten tongue were his only response. He was already beginning to stand before she prompted him. Thanks to her brief Force trickery, he was feeling like he would, at the very least, not be falling over every second step. "I'll do my best to keep up," he said, still not quite processing what to make of the apology.

"I'd prefer not to lose you twice in one afternoon."

He moved in stunned silence for the time being. She had already moved back into the easy banter of times before the Lightspire encounter. Her words being almost that of that same possessive quality that it had always leaned toward.

"Don't worry about me," he said, futiley.

Steps could be heard behind them, Dominic's pursuers making their way down the stairs. He needed no further prompting, and was moving, grabbing Bastila's arm to guide her, while partially following her lead, through the maze below.

"You're looking good," he said, wincing. Not just because she actually looked disheveled, drenched and slightly desperate, but also because it was exactly not how he felt — not any more. After the Lightspire, Dominic had finally moved on.

And yet, the Force thrust them into each other's orbit once again.



 

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