DECEPTION
Moorja
Spire
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Michael, Gabriel, Azrael, Sariel, Raphael, Jeremiel, Connel, Raguel
[Any text in brackets signifies comm-link usage and not face to face conversation]
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Rides
"Enterprise" Station Ship
The Starlight Sentinel
"Jedi Defender" Corvette
Null Vector
X-wing
Speeder
Speederbike
Iron Psalm
Gear/Armor
Mask
Right Gauntlet
Left Gauntlet
Nano-Tech Armor (For Emergencies)
Headset Microphone Comm-Link
Mobile "Bodycam" Datapad
Lightblaster
Shortsabers (“Night” and “Day”)
Throwing Lightknives
Force Blinding Flashbangs
SURGICAL - CRYBERNETIC IMPLANTS
Repli Implants that would be for the limbs
Bonemer enhancements to strengthen structure of the body
Muscle enhancements.
Hemo enhancements for blood flow
Hawkeye implants for eyes
Advanced Medical Implant
Scentzy
Injected Nanotech upgrades
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Shadow Sanctuary - Enterprise
Moorja – Negotiation Complex Perimeter
Overwatch
From the rooftop, Connel saw the glass explode. Saw the speeder arc. Saw Jax enter like a meteor. Good. Then he felt it. Not Carnifex. Not Jax. Not even Jairdain’s lattice straining like wire drawn too tight. Something heavier.
Primal.
Balaya, and the beast. The Force shifted in a way that had nothing to do with philosophy and everything to do with hunger. Connel adjusted the foraged Sith rifle against his shoulder and fired twice. Two acolytes flanking Jairdain dropped before they understood they’d been targeted.
He cycled the bolt.
Another shot. A trooper attempting to flank Syreeta collapsed mid-stride. He didn’t linger on the duel inside. That wasn’t his lane. His HUD flickered from scavenged optics. Ammunition count low. Then the ground shook.
Gorgo.
The creature emerged like a siege engine made of sinew and malice, tearing through a support wall as though architecture were suggestion. Civilians screamed from a lower corridor. That was enough. Connel stood. No hesitation. He dropped the rifle.
… and leapt.
Wind tore at him as he folded tight mid-fall, limbs tucked close to reduce drag. Muscle memory. Reaper drop without the chute. He didn’t reach for a ledge. He didn’t try to slow gradually. At the last possible second—
He extended one arm.
Energy coiled through the cybernetics in his frame, through bone, through nerve. He drove his fist into the durasteel plaza. Force pushed into the ground to slow impact. Then repulsed outward on contact. The resulting shockwave erupted in a circular blast, and old trick he learned from his father. Glass shattered outward.
Troopers were hurled off their feet.
Acolytes stumbled mid-cast.
Gorgo reeled as the pavement fractured beneath it.
The Force wave from Connel’s landing hadn’t even fully dissipated when he felt it. Not the microflashbang coming from Balaya. Not the barbs either. Those he put himself in front of someone who might not be able to handle them. Not even the illerium discharge. That was something that would be dealt with
It was the intent. Balaya wasn’t just striking at Jairdain. She was striking at the people, like a hovertrain. At their will. At their moral center. Offering survival through betrayal. That was the line. Connel moved before the flash detonated. He didn’t leap toward Balaya. He pivoted toward the civilians.
“Dawn’s Light” flared to life in a sweeping arc, intercepting the repulsed barbs mid-flight. One vaporized. The other deflected into the ceiling in a shower of sparks.
The microflashbang detonated—and Connel’s free hand was already out.
Force Crush, more Force compression.
Not outward. Inward.
He collapsed the concussive wave into a tight sphere and redirected it down the corridor, detonating harmlessly against a reinforced bulkhead. It took a LOT of focus, but it worked.
Balaya’s saber slash would have reached Jairdain’s flank—except “Windu’s Guile” caught it mid-strike. Violet met red in a violent hiss. Connel didn’t push. He didn’t posture.
He stepped into her momentum and angled the lock sideways, diverting the strike away from Jairdain’s lattice instead of contesting strength. She.hit.HARD. The thing is?
He’s not exactly a weakling.
Not her,” he said calmly. No anger. No threat. Just a statement. Behind him, the delegate she had carved runes into trembled, knife still in hand. Connel didn’t look back. But the Force moved through him toward them.
Not a command.
A grounding. A steadying presence.
You don’t have to choose that.
Balaya’s artifact pulsed. Trying to bend weaker wills. Trying to amplify fear. Connel shifted slightly. Just enough that his body blocked the direct line between her headband artifact and the civilians. He wasn’t shielding them with a barrier. He was interrupting the vector.
Consequences.
An assassin surged, muscles bulking under Sith augmentation. Faster. Stronger. Almost like he expected him to meet that power with power.
He didn’t.
He dropped low under the assassin accelerated slash and drove a short, brutal elbow into his rib line, targeting the junction where augmentation met flesh.
Precise.
Disruptive.
“Windu’s Guile” snapped upward, not to kill—to shear the mechanism that housed one of the knee-barb launchers on Balaya’s. Sparks erupted. The weapon didn’t go dead, but the barbs failed, at least this time. He didn’t stop. He extinguished his shortsaber for half a second and drew the lightblaster instead.
Two shots. Not center mass. Not head.
One aimed at the choker crystal.
One aimed at the headband artifact.
Ion-charged.
He wasn’t trying to destroy her.
He was trying to depower her.
If the corridor would with static interference as if the artifact flickered violently, he would know he succeeded, if not, he would not stop. Either way, the subjugation pressure would ease, at least for the moment. Behind him, the delegate dropped the blade. Connel re-ignited his own.
You don’t get to offer them mercy, he said evenly.
You’re not capable of it. He knew that while he may not be winning this, there was some success. Because the civilians had not turned. Because Jairdain still stood. Because Syreeta still fought.
And because Connel had made himself the fulcrum.
Behind him: Light holding.
In front of him: Predatory escalation.
Above: Carnifex and Jax shaking the structure with titanic blows.
An Acolyte lunged, he would pivot through her guard, slamming his shoulder into her centerline and driving her backward through a shattered support column. The impact would crater the wall. Dust would rain. He would not pursue into the debris cloud. Either way He would turn. Look at the civilians.
Move!
They moved. Only then did he step back into the smoke. If Balaya was in the wreckage, she would escalate. So would he. Not louder. Not angrier. Just… sharper… brutal… efficient
Darkness would feel him.
The potential.
The refusal.
The discipline.
That made Connel more dangerous than raw power ever could. Because Balaya had tried to turn the innocent against the Light—And Connel had answered not with spectacle— But with consequence. “Windu’s Guile” ignited in his left hand. Violet crackling in tight arcs. He wouldn’t look at Carnifex. He wouldn’t look at Jax.
He would look at the civilians.
Run.
One word. Command, not suggestion. They moved. Behind him, Jairdain’s lattice pulsed, stabilizing as civilians cleared her radius. Good. He turned. Evil in front of him. Balaya with her wicked maniacal smile seeing him.
Recognition. Interest. Gorgo charged. Connel didn’t meet it head-on.
He sidestepped, firing controlled bursts from the scavenged rifle into its forelimb joints. Ion bursts disrupted the creature’s augmentations. The rifle clicked empty. He discarded it without thought. This monster was not an automoton, not a simpleton... but wasn't him.
The monster swung a hand that would have crushed a transport speeder. Connel ducked under it, violet blade carving across tendon. Not killing. Slowing. The beast roared. He vaulted onto its back, drove Windu’s Guile into a shoulder and twisted.
The creature bucked violently, smashing him into a pillar, grabbing and throwing him, without his shortsaber. The weapon? Gorgo crushed it in one powerful fist. Connel got up from the blast into the pillar, his armor absorbed most of it.
He landed hard.
Rolled.
Came up on one knee.
No “Windu’s Guile”? Fine. “Dawn’s Light”, ignited in his right hand now, replacing the discarded rifle. Blue arced before him. An Assassin unleashed a torrent of dark augmentation at his position. Connel met it. Not with counter-hate. With precision.
He split the energy at an angle, redirecting part into the fractured pavement and part into Gorgo itself. The beast convulsed angrily. Not dead. Maybe hurt. Disrupted. Angered.
He advanced.
Each step deliberate.
If he had been efficient before— Now he was surgical inevitability. Another acolyte lunged from his blind spot. He didn’t turn. Lightknife backward throw. The blade pinned the acolyte to a wall mid-stride. No flourish.
No roar.
Just consequence.
The Assassin retreated a step. She felt it. This wasn’t fury. This wasn’t a Jedi losing himself. This was a man who had already accepted death once and therefore did not fear proximity to it.
Behind him, Jax and Carnifex clashed in titanic arcs of blue and red. The building trembled with each collision. Connel didn’t look.
Trust.
But verify.
He positioned himself between Gorgo, Balaya, and the civilians’ escape route. A dark presence brushed against him then. Curious. Testing. Potential. Connel didn’t respond. Didn’t acknowledge. Didn’t rise to it. Didn’t need to do so. He stepped forward instead. Blade low. Shoulders squared.
Voice calm.
If you want through, he said to Balaya to all of them,
you go through me. No theatrics. No sermon. Just fact.
... and you won’t.
Behind him: Light. Life. Fragile breath.
In front of him: Monsters.
And for the first time tonight— The Sith would realize something subtle but dangerous.
The Vanagor line does not seek duels.
It establishes consequences.