Star Wars Roleplay: Chaos

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Mission to Balmorra
Balmorra’s factories now churn for the Empire, powered by enslaved labour, including captured Jedi sympathisers. Breaking them free may turn the tide of local resistance.
Objective: Liberate key prisoners and disrupt Imperial weapons shipments.
Complication: The city is heavily patrolled. Imperial officers hide behind the civilian population as shields.
Difficulty Rating: Hard
Mission Leadership: Jedi Knight or above to lead, Padawan may accompany.

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BALMORRA
Bastila

The air above Balmorra was thick with smoke haze, it’s once clean air choked by the insufferable need for steel. From the shadowed ridge where the two Jedi crouched, Bastila could hear the factories groan, their colossal engines grinding away like the heart of some chained beast. The smell of molten ore and scorched metal clung to the back of her throat, making her want to gag and cough it back up. It was oppressive in every single way. Somewhere inside those walls, people were being broken and fed into the Empire’s war machine. People who had once believed in the same light she carried. People who had once and hopefully still called themselves Jedi.

Her fingers tightened on the cold permacrete ledge as she crawled closer to the edge and leaned forward just enough to see beyond and allow her to study the facility below. Rows of floodlights cast the courtyards in hard white light, making every figure below stand out in stark relief. Imperial Stormtroopers paced in pairs, rifles ready, their discipline exact and purposeful, their watchful eye on their charges. Between them shuffled thin silhouettes; prison-workers stripped of all dignity, easily distinguished by shock collars and the hollow eyes of defeat. The rhythm of their leg chains rattling carried even up to their vantage.

It was worse than the briefing had feared.

A glance to the side caught Aiden’s presence, steady and silent. A beacon of surety among the chaos that the planet wished to devour them with, but Bastila had to force her focus back down and carry on with the mission, they didn’t really have the time to delay. The odds were stacked against them; the Imperial’s had layered patrols, sensor towers on the corners, and transports docking to ferry weapons off-world. The Empire had built a fortress and filled it with the innocent. This is why they were here, the Rogue Squadron had wanted to make a move but the call to strike here meant risking the very lives they were meant to save, so a small insertion team was decided on instead.

Her heart thudded faster than she liked at the thought. Every Jedi lesson urged calm, but Balmorra was pressing on her nerves; the hum of industry, the stench of exploitation, the endless reminder of what failure meant. It was such a far cry from the green plains of Naboo and the wide open sky. She could almost hear the voices of the imprisoned, though she knew it was only her imagination stitching pain into the silence between clattering machines.

“I’m pretty sure this is the one from the report.” she whispered, more to herself than to Aiden. “It’s pretty heavily guarded.”

Below, a shift bell sounded, and the flood of labourers changed direction; one group herded out, and another driven in. The moment might offer their first opening. But the factory gates were flanked by two heavy gun emplacements, and the troopers guiding the workers carried more than rifles.

Bastila drew a breath, forcing the fear down into something colder, sharper. She had to focus with that famous Jedi ability to do the right thing no matter the personal cost. This was no place for doubt. The prisoners had to be freed. The weapons had to stop. Even if the path ahead seemed impossible.

Her gaze flicked once more across the grounds, marking movements, patterns, weaknesses, however small.

“Your mission, Aiden, so it’s your call?” she murmured, eyes narrowing on the gates. “But whatever way we take in…I have a bad feeling about it.”



 
The smoke-streaked air bit at his lungs, each breath tinged with the metallic tang of Balmorra's suffering. Aiden kept his form low, a hand braced against the ledge beside Bastila, eyes tracking the sweep of spotlights below. He could feel her unease even before she whispered, a tremor running beneath her words like a string pulled too taut.

“Your mission, Aiden, so it’s your call?”

"My mission?!" Aiden whispered back to her as he gave her a gentle nudge with his arm. "You are the one who dragged me out here. 'MaStEr PoRtE, PlEaSe hElP I cAn't dO it wItHout YoU.' " Aiden said with a gentle teasingly mock, just a small chance to give her a sense of relief as he sensed her heightened feelings. "I'm just kidding." He said with a small smile as he looked back over the edge.

The Empire's fortress churned with precision: stormtroopers moving like cogs, laborers herded like livestock, weapons ferried to fuel a war without end. It was the kind of sight that could erode hope, grind it down until even the strongest spirits faltered. Aiden shut his eyes for a heartbeat, letting the Force wash over him, catching the faint sparks of willpower buried in the prisoners' despair. Fragile, yes, but not gone.

He leaned just enough for his shoulder to brush Bastila's, a grounding presence against the cold ridge. "It's bad," he admitted quietly, gaze sharpening on the rhythm of the shifts, the fleeting pattern of opportunity. "But it's not impenetrable. Nothing is."

His focus flicked to the gun emplacements at the gates. Heavy weapons. Too much to take head-on. Yet the laborer shift… that was their opening. If they timed it right, slipped into the stream of prisoners, they could vanish into the belly of the machine instead of charging its teeth.

He tilted his chin toward the courtyards, toward the ebb and flow of the chained. "We move with them. The collars will make it risky, but the patrols won't be watching for anyone slipping in." A brief pause, his jaw tightening. "We'll need to disable the emplacements before freeing the prisoners, it won't mean much if the Empire slaughters them at the gates."

His eyes caught hers, steady and unflinching. The doubt he sensed in her, he countered with calm resolve—not dismissing her fear, but tempering it. "You're right to have a bad feeling. I do too. But that's how we know this matters. And if something goes sideways and we are forced to run, you run. You don't worry about me, you get to safety. Is that understood?"

With all things considered, she was a Sal-Soren, she was talented and gifted. Yet she also had a family to go back to. He couldn't look Briana, Brandyn, Blaire , any of them in eyes if something happened to Bastila.

He glanced back at the shifting lights below, then slid his hand to the hilt at his belt, the gesture not of a warrior eager for a fight, but of one preparing for inevitability. It wasn't getting in that was bothering him, it was the getting out and escaping that was the issue. Aiden glanced up as a flicker in the distance caught his attention, an access shaft, no doubt leading inside, but to where.

"When the next shift bell sounds, we go."

He tapped Bastila on the shoulder as he pointed out the access vent. "We can risk going through the front via cover of prisoners, or try that access hatch? There should be more around here, if we press inside we can keep a sharp eye for those, just in case as a quick means of escaping."

Bastila Sal-Soren Bastila Sal-Soren
 

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BASTILA

Her lips tugged into something halfway between a frown and a smirk at his mocking impression of her voice. Typical Aiden; always trying to bleed some levity into moments that felt anything but light. She might have snapped back, but the truth was, it helped. A knot of tension in her chest eased, if only a little, and the corner of her mouth betrayed her with the faintest grin.

“Very funny,” she murmured, eyes still on the factory below. “I’ll have you know, I only begged because the mission needed a Knight and as much as everyone doesn’t believe it I am not a knight. Plus I got told you’re like a glorified battering ram… if battering rams had questionable manners.”

The smile faded as her gaze caught again on the workers’ bent backs, the glint of shock collars at their throats. His plan had sense, meld into the flow, disappearing in to the masses in plain sight. But she couldn’t quiet the voice that whispered how easily it could go wrong. If one trooper looked too closely. If one collar’s control is triggered by accident. If the gun emplacements opened fire before they reached them. It would be a blood bath.

Her hand strayed to her vambrace, fingertips brushing over the comm stud, though she didn’t press it. There’d be no reinforcement waiting. No cavalry to ride in if it all fell apart. Just the two of them.

She drew a long breath, letting the smoke-laced air fill her lungs before exhaling slowly. Fear leads nowhere. Fear blinds. The lesson was older than she was, but it helped, steadying her heartbeat against the rush of doubt.

“You’re right,” she admitted finally, though her tone carried a spark of defiance. “It matters because it’s impossible. And if it does go sideways, if you think I’m running and leaving you to clean up alone, you’ve chosen the wrong Sal-Soren to go on this mission with.” A quick glance at him, eyes glinting despite the tension. “You don’t get to have me be the coward in this story.”

The shift bell clanged again, echoing through the courtyard below. The stream of prisoners began to shuffle forward, guards barking orders over the clatter of chains.

Her pulse picked up. This was the moment.

She lowered herself further along the ridge, body close to the stone, scanning the perimeter. The access vent Aiden pointed out yawned like a mouth across the far side of the wall. It was closer than she liked to one of the towers, but it might be the cleaner path if they could get to it unseen. The prisoner flow was the riskier play: if their timing slipped by a breath, they’d be exposed.

“Two bad options,” she whispered. “I feel right at home already.”

Her eyes lingered on the huddled stream of prisoners only a breath longer before shifting back to the vent across the wall. Too many variables with the guards, too much risk if even a single trooper caught the wrong detail. The vent might be narrow, tight with unknowns, but it was quieter and probably safer for the prisoners.

She tipped her chin toward it. “The hatch. Better chance of getting in without raising the alarm. If we’re lucky, it won’t lead straight to an incinerator chute.” The dry edge to her tone was deliberate—an attempt to veil the truth that her stomach knotted tighter with each step closer.

The two of them slid into motion, keeping low. Bastila’s breath matched her stride, steady and shallow, each inhale fighting against the acrid sting of the smoke-laden air. The world narrowed to the rhythm of their boots over gravel, the sweep of floodlights overhead. One beam passed so close across the ground she froze mid-step, heart battering against her ribs, until it swept away again. Only then did she dare exhale.

They reached the factory wall, collapsing against its durasteel surface that was cold even through her gloves. The vent loomed just above them, wide enough for a person if they pressed tight. But its grille was fastened down with bolts that gleamed faintly in the harsh light. Bastila crouched beneath it, jaw tightening.

“Of course,” she muttered under her breath. “Would’ve been far too easy otherwise.”

She pulled a small tool from her belt, glancing up at Aiden with a fleeting grin that didn’t quite reach her eyes. “I’ve got this. Cover me. If anyone looks this way, distract them. Tell them we are from the Alliance or something. I’ll make it quick.”

The tool whispered as she worked, each twist a heartbeat stretched into eternity. The hum of the factory seemed louder now, the patrols’ footsteps closer. She could almost feel the pressure of time grinding down on them as surely as the machines chewed metal behind the walls.

One bolt came loose. Then another. Her fingers brushed the grille free, and she caught it before it could clatter against the durasteel. A small victory, but her pulse raced like they’d already stolen the prisoners out from under the Empire’s nose.

She slid the grille aside, glancing at the dark maw of the vent. Air stirred faintly from within, carrying the metallic tang of oil and heat.

Bastila looked once more at Aiden, voice low, the ghost of humor curling her words. “After you, Master Porte. You are the glorified battering ram after all.”

She kept her saber close at hand as he moved first, ready to follow him into the belly of the machine.

 
Aiden smirked faintly at Bastila's barb, the low light cutting across his face as he peered into the dark chute. "Battering rams don't crawl through vents," he whispered back, but there was warmth in his tone, the kind of wry humor meant more for her nerves than his own pride. With one steadying breath, he pulled himself up and into the opening.

The vent swallowed him in shadows, metal groaning under his weight before his boots found purchase. The air inside was warmer, closer the reek of oil and burnt circuits pressed into his nostrils. He crawled forward, movements deliberate, each shift of limb carefully quiet despite the steel's protest. Behind him, he could sense Bastila's presence like a torch in the dark, steady despite the strain. He didn't have to look back to know she was pushing past the same knot of unease he felt. This place was a crucible, and the Empire would want it to grind more than ore.

The passage angled downward, deeper into the facility's bowels. Ahead, faint slivers of light marked a grille overlooking an interior chamber. Aiden slowed, pressing close to the slats and peering through.

There was a small stretch of cells, individuals laid within, collars on their neck. Potentially force suppression, he couldn't' tell.

He drew back from the vent, breath low. The air hummed against his teeth, alive with the risk and the choice before them.

"Found us something" he murmured to Bastila, eyes catching hers in the narrow dark. The vent path diverted to the right just before the turn here. Could lead to the outside of the room. "What do you think? Distract them from the outside hall, one of his pushes through here?"

Bastila Sal-Soren Bastila Sal-Soren
 

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Bastila

The heat from the vent clung to her skin, sweat prickling beneath her gloves as she pulled herself up behind Aiden. Every groan of the metal seemed loud enough to summon an entire platoon, though she knew most of the factory’s roar drowned them out. Still, she kept her breathing tight, and her restricted movements measured. The dark pressed in close the smell of oil, rust, and recycled air filling her nose. She forced herself not to think of how far the shaft might drop if it gave way beneath them.

After far too much time Bastila finally caught up with Aiden, the faint light ahead carved the sharp lines of his face in silver. She leaned forward, peering through the grille.

Cells. Collars glinting faintly in the gloom. The prisoners weren’t numbers or distant abstractions now; they were right there. Some lay still, beaten down by fatigue, but one or two stared ahead with eyes hollow yet alert, alive in a way the Empire hadn’t smothered entirely. Bastila’s throat tightened.

She drew back, the vent’s edges biting cold against her palms.

“Distract them?” she whispered, dry as dust. “Yes, I’ll just stroll into the corridor and offer to polish their blasters while you slip in and play hero. No chance that goes badly.”

But the barb only masked the churn of her thoughts. Both options were dangerous. A clean split could work, her drawing the guards off, Aiden breaching the vent; but it risked leaving one of them isolated if it all turned.

Her jaw set. She tilted her head toward the fork ahead, voice low but firm.

“The vent path. We stay together. If it brings us out past the cells, we can cut in without splitting up. I don’t like the idea of being divided in this place.” Her eyes flicked back toward the grille, softer now. “Besides… if those are Force collars, it won’t take much noise to bring the whole garrison running.”

Her fingers hovered over the saber hilt at her side, the weight of it both comfort and reminder.

“We take the long crawl. And when we drop in, we drop fast.”

Bastila’s gaze found his in the narrow dark, her wit sharpening to a quick grin despite the tightness in her chest.

“And if you get stuck in the vent, Master Porte, don’t expect me to pull. I’ll just tell your Padawans you died heroically wedged in a duct.”

She gestured for him to move, bracing herself for the descent. Whatever waited at the end of that path, there’d be no turning back once they stepped into the open.

Aiden Porte Aiden Porte
 

Aiden let Bastila's mockery slide off him with the ease of long habit, a small curve at the corner of his mouth that the dim light caught like a promise. "Try not to elbow me out of the vent," he murmured, voice nothing more than a thread in the heat. Then he moved.

The vent accepted him with a metallic sigh, every inch of the shaft tightening his focus until the world narrowed down to the scrape of his boots and the steady presence of Bastila behind him. He felt her, calm, taut, determined, the way a keel feels under a ship in bad weather. It steadied him more than any mantra.

When they popped out through the vent the air hit them with a wet, oily slap. Aiden's boots found grit and coolant slick; light from the catwalk above slit the corridor into hard bars. The cells were more close enough now that he could see the collars blink like tiny, cruel constellations at their throats. The sight cut through him, and for a long second there was nothing but the hum of the machines and the fragile, furious ache of people who had been reduced to survival.

He moved to the wall and drew Bastila to his side, nodding toward the dais. "There," he said, Two relay consoles, sentinel lights, the little cluster that fed the collars' code. Freedom lived in those housings if they could get to them.

It was then it begun.

Personnel acted quickly, but Aiden did his best to divert their attention, his full strength on display not for show but for purpose. The first contact came quickly, Aiden stepped into the gap between the first trooper and the nearest cell, blade cutting a clean, disciplined arc. It wasn't bravado, it was the only choice that kept the line from folding.

Every strike was measured, no wasted motion, only the geometry of defense and passage. He felt the Force like a pulse at his back, a thin band of light to push the momentum forward and shield the prisoners spilling into chaos behind him.

They carved what they could, as he they moved towards the relay consoles.


 

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Bastila

The shaft spat her out after Aiden, boots skidding on the slick metal until she steadied herself against the wall. The air was thick with heat and coolant stench, cloying enough to sting the back of her throat with it’s unpleasant after taste. For an instant she couldn’t breathe, couldn’t do anything but look upon the rows of cells, the pale faces within, the cruel flicker of collars locked against raw skin.

Her stomach twisted. For all the lessons about balance, about composure, nothing softened the shock of seeing people broken down to pieces of machinery.

Aiden’s nod drew her eyes to the relay dais, the choke point of their hope, the lynchpin of the collars’ hold. Freedom was right there, packaged into a tangle of wires and cruel Imperial design.

Then the moment shattered.

Shouts rose. Stormtroopers turned, rifles swinging. Bastila felt Aiden surge forward, his saber a clean line of gold that cut the dark like lightning. He stepped into the path of the first volley, his blade catching the bolts with flawless economy, sending energy crackling into the walls. Prisoners flinched and scrambled, chains clattering as fear turned to chaos.

And Bastila moved fast.

The saber hissed to life in her hands, purple fire spilling light across the coolant-slick floor. She pivoted, blade snapping up to swat aside a bolt before it reached a cowering worker in the nearest cell. The shot scorched the wall, harmless now, but the heat of it stoked her pulse.

Her voice carried, low but sharp enough to cut through the din: “Stay down! Don’t give them an excuse to fire at you!”

A trooper lunged from the side, shock baton crackling as he swung for her ribs. Bastila twisted, her blade slicing the weapon in half before her elbow drove into his chest plate. He went down hard, breathless and dazed.

Every instinct screamed to charge for the dais, to tear the relays apart and free the prisoners, but the guards were too thick around it. She risked a glance towards Aiden who was still holding the line, cutting through the press with methodical, punishing precision. The Force thrummed through him, steady as a heartbeat, anchoring them both in the storm.

Bastila forced her breathing level, her blade a wheel of violet light as she caught another bolt and sent it crashing back into the trooper who fired it. Measured. Sharp. No waste.

Still, the odds pressed in like a vice. The consoles were a dozen meters away, guarded by four troopers dug in behind cover. The prisoners had no chance unless those relays came down. Plus these were not the prisoners they were here to free, these were the prisoners who would die if they didn’t think this through.

Her mind raced. A straight rush would mean death. But stealth was gone, and time was bleeding out with every shot.

She ducked behind a strut, sparks raining down from Aiden’s last parry, and hissed through clenched teeth: “We need the consoles disabled. Now. You hold them, like you…” she risked a glance, a smirk flashing despite the danger, “...Are already very confidently doing.”

Without waiting for an answer, she pushed off the strut, purple light cutting a searing arc as she dashed for the guard’s taking cover at the relay dais.

She hit the first guard with a planted, twisting strike that sent him spinning off the catwalk and slamming into the coolant trough. No theatrics, just clean and efficient combat. The second tried to raise his rifle; Bastila stepped inside its arc, the saber’s tip finding the barrel with a single precise cut. Sparks, a curse, then a dead weight. The third came in harder, a belt-fed weapon swinging; she met it with a backwards heel, wrapped her arm through its line and turned, the momentum of his own shot knocking him dumb as he tumbled into his fallen comrades. The fourth tried to flank, knife flashing under his glove, she caught his wrist, twisted, and the blade skittered into the gutter. He went down with a fragile whimper, more surprised than hurt.

Adrenaline made her fingers shake when she finally let the blade gutter to idle. Bodies lay like discarded toys around her boots. This was the part of Bastila few had seen, the unspoken truth of her isolation on Jakku, the cause of the resentment. She had been trained as a weapon for the Jedi, if she had wanted to or not.

The relay dais was only a few meters away now, ringed by the crackle of still-live circuitry and a spray of sentinel lights. Overhead, a klaxon began to wail, one thin, pulsating note that promised reinforcements within heartbeats. Time, she thought, was a currency the Empire spent like blood.

She dove for the nearest console with the speed of someone who had rehearsed this in her head a thousand times and never once found it easy. The access panel resisted; bolts, encrypted seals, an Imperial signature humming in rigid, arrogant lines. Her palms were slick with sweat as she wrenched aside the shielding to expose a nest of data blocks and a whining power core. The console’s diagnostics blinked murderous red. Somewhere inside the tangle, the collar control protocols lived.

“I’ve got this,” she rasped without looking up. Even with the saber resting in its retreat back at her belt she didn't trust the rest of the room to be quiet. The hum of Aiden’s breath at her shoulder steadied her; he was a presence like a stone through the storm.

Fingers faster than thought traced the circuit arrays, her training with old pre-High Republic systems sparking memories; a syntax here, a checksum quirk there. The relay’s security was clever: an interleaved authority that expected a local heartbeat and a remote key from the tower outside. Cut the local feed and the collars would default to a failsafe pulse; it was a brutal shock to discourage tampering. Cut the remote key and the gate emplacements would flag them as saboteurs and open fire. Either choice might kill the prisoners they were trying to save.

Her jaw set. Bastila breathed in, felt the Force braid tight and sharp against her skin, and pushed. She didn’t try to brute-force the kill-switch. Instead she threaded a soft loop between the local heartbeat and the relay, a small simulated rhythm that would hold the collars in stasis. It was delicate work: too slow and the safety would trip, too quick and the system would detect an anomaly and raise the alarm. She ran the loop, humming its cadence in her head like a lullaby for code.

A green light flickered. Then another. The red ebbed to orange and finally she allowed her chest to unclench a fraction.

The next stage would be the records, the real reason they had been sent here. If the collars weren’t screaming, she had seconds to scour the logs before someone outside noticed the diversion. Her gloved hand danced over the holo-screen, dragging through user hashes, transfer manifests, detainee intake records. Names scrolled like the bones of a city, a never ending display catalogued as “labor resources.”

She hunted for one name she’d been given before they had left Naboo: Halden Rys.

The database was layered behind compartmentalized permissions, but Bastila had managed to pry it open enough to find the secrets. She peeled back a transport manifest from four nights prior, matched biometric hashes in a locked archive, snipped a timestamp and a storage tag. There!

A flagged entry buried in a maintenance log: RYS, HALDEN — solitary intake, Block C-7, Cell 3. Entry timestamp: 0300 local, three nights ago. Notes: Resistance contact suspected; Potential New Jedi Order; high Force signature; containment protocol: reinforced collar, remote suppression.

She dug deeper, hunting for the thing that would make rescue possible: the collar control key. The entry had a maintenance handshake routed through Gate Emplacement 2’s relay. The same emplacement that would shred anyone trying to take the front gates. The same emplacement whose fail-safes would fry a cell block if it detected tampering.

Bastila felt the edge of panic; a small, hot flame licking at the trained calm. She forced it down with the same discipline that guided her saber strokes, cleaned and cold. Decisions sat like weights in her hands. This was starting to get more and more difficult.

“Aiden,” she said, voice thin with something like steel. “Halden Rys is here; Block C-7, Cell 3. The collars are tied into Gate Emplacement 2, the collars have a failsafe that’ll purge if tampered with. I’ve ghosted a heartbeat loop to hold them… for now.” She looked up at him, violet eyes bright in the console glow. The klaxon’s keening had sharpened; boots were pounding on the catwalk above them; reinforcements, faster than she liked. “I can keep the loop steady for maybe two minutes if you give me cover,” she finished. “Long enough to get Halden's collar free; if nothing goes wrong. If it does… we run I guess?”

The corridor ahead tasted of oil and possibility and the small, dangerous hope that something could still be saved. Either way they would have to split up for now.


Aiden Porte Aiden Porte


 

The prisoners recoiled, chains rattling, and Aiden planted himself square between them and the troopers. He pivoted on his heel, blade rolling down in a tight guard, sparks spraying where a third bolt met the edge of his defense. The glow illuminated his face in brief, shifting lines, calm, concentrated, the rhythm of battle drawn down to breath and muscle.

He shifted again, sliding to intercept a new line of fire from the catwalk. Each strike followed through cleanly, no wasted motion, every deflection sent somewhere harmless. A trooper tried to close distance, baton crackling, and Aiden's hand shot forward, not with a saber strike, but a shove through the Force. The man lifted off his feet and slammed into the railing with a dull clang.


More fire came from the far side, bright and unrelenting. Aiden dropped low, rolling across the corridor to intercept, saber spinning through an arc that carved a brilliant streak across the gloom. The blade caught three bolts in succession, sending one ricocheting back into the shoulder plate of its shooter. Aiden rose fluidly from the movement, cloak stirring in the wake of his motion.

He angled himself closer to the dais, covering Bastila's path. His stance widened; his saber rotated into a defensive flourish as if drawing an invisible line in the air no enemy would cross. When a second squad rounded the corner, rifles leveled, Aiden drew his free hand out, fingers splayed. The Force gathered in an invisible grip, a subtle pressure that turned their footing uncertain, boots scraping against slick metal, aim faltering just long enough for him to close the gap.

He moved through them like current through water , one cut, a turn, a sweep that took a rifle clean from its owner's grasp. The next strike was low, a sharp kick that sent a trooper sprawling. A blaster bolt hissed past his shoulder; Aiden twisted, caught it on his saber, and used the momentum to drive his elbow into another guard's chest. Each movement fed into the next, a seamless chain of purpose and control.

Behind him, he could hear Bastila's tools working at the relay, the sharp hiss of circuitry, the stutter of systems rebelling against her touch. He anchored himself to that sound, to her presence like a lodestar amid the storm. His breath came steady despite the press of bodies, the sting of ozone, the iron taste of heat.

More troopers spilled from the far entrance, shouting orders, blasters glowing hot. Aiden's blade met their fire in a furious dance of light and motion. The corridor filled with the crackle of energy, the hiss of scorched air, the distant thrum of alarms spinning faster, louder.

"Go, they will not get by me." Aiden spoke with sheer determination, as he twirled his blue blade, once before settling into his stance.

He fought with precision, not anger. His steps were calculated, every retreat angled to draw fire away from Bastila's path, every advance timed to break a new line before it could close. Where a prisoner stumbled toward him, dazed by sudden freedom, Aiden shifted to shield them without breaking rhythm one hand sweeping them behind cover before returning to the fray.

A sharp explosion of sparks burst overhead, raining down from a ruptured conduit. The light caught on his saber's arc as he brought it across his body, severing a rifle barrel inches from his face. His eyes never left the flow of battle, reading the room through motion, the flicker of red lights dimming one by one, the ripple in the Force that told him something was shifting.

His jaw clenched as new alarms joined the first, a keening wail that rattled the very metal underfoot. Reinforcements. The sound carried promise and threat in equal measure.


 


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The klaxons screamed in her ears as she broke from the dais, offering a nod to the Knight before sprinting into the corridor beyond. Each turn bled into the next, all the red light flashing across steel like a warning she did not heed, the roar of blasterfire fading behind her as Aiden’s presence stayed bright in the Force.
Her boots struck the grated flooring hard, echoing through the factory’s bowels. Every shadow looked alive; every pipe overhead hissed and spat at her. The map she’d burned into her memory from the relay logs guided her left, then down until finally she saw the printed words upon the wall: Block C-7.

The smoke thickened here, and the sound of machinery was replaced by something quieter: low voices, intermingled with the rattling of chains, a stifled cough from not far away. The hall was lined with containment cells, far smaller and colder than the labour pens they’d seen before. These weren’t for workers, Bastila knew almost immediately what they were for, they were for Force-sensitives.

Her saber hummed to life again with a subdued growl as she approached the control node. The security grid flickered under her touch, collapsing into silence. The first door she opened released a stench of oil and burnt cloth. Inside, a man sat hunched on the floor, wrists raw from bindings, the shimmer of a collar catching the crimson light. His hair was streaked with grey, his posture still proud despite everything.

He looked up as the cell opened. “I wondered,” he rasped, voice cracking with thirst, “how long it would take before the Order sent someone too young to know better.”

“Halden Rys,”
Bastila said, lowering her saber but not her guard. “You’re a difficult man to find.”

His tired smile cut through the grime. “And you’re a Sal-Soren. You’ve your mother’s fire… and her lack of patience.”

Something in her chest twisted. “We don’t have time for compliments. I’m here to get you out.”

“Out?” He barked a short, humorless laugh. “You don’t understand where you’ve walked into, girl. They want you here.”

Bastila blinked. “What?”

Halden pushed himself to his feet, every motion laced with exhaustion and anger. “There are children here: Padawans. Caught after the siege at Tython. They were transferred in two days ago. I kept them alive by making myself useful.” His eyes flicked toward the hall. “They’re in the next block, sedated. They’ve been experimenting on them.”

Her pulse hitched. “How many?”

“Six. Maybe seven if one of them’s still breathing. But listen to me.”
He stepped closer, lowering his voice to a hiss. “The Inquisitor who commands this facility; she’s still here. She came to oversee the extractions personally. You free the children and she’ll come for them. For you.”

Bastila’s mouth went dry. The air itself seemed to shrink around her, heavy and sharp. “We can’t just leave them.”

“You can’t fight her.”

“Then I’ll
distract her.”

Halden’s eyes flashed with a mixture of anger, pride, and something like sorrow. “That’s the Sal-Soren talking again.”

“Maybe. But it’s also the Jedi.”


For a heartbeat they simply stood there, the alarms pulsing through the walls like a heartbeat. Somewhere above, the clash of sabers and blasterfire still echoed from somewhere above them, Aiden, holding the line.

Halden drew a slow breath, then reached for the collar around his neck. “Get this thing off me, and maybe we’ll have a chance to argue about it later.”

Bastila stepped forward, igniting her saber with a soft hiss. The violet glow washed over both their faces. “Hold still,” she murmured, and with one careful strike, the collar fell away, clattering to the floor.

Halden staggered as if the air itself had changed weight, his presence in the Force flaring suddenly bright after so long suppressed. For a moment, she saw what he must have been once, a teacher, a warrior, a believer.

Then his eyes snapped back to the corridor. “They know. I can feel her moving. The Inquisitor’s awake.”

Bastila turned toward the door, every instinct screaming that he was right. A cold ripple ran down her spine, an intense pressure like a stormfront pushing through the Force, dark and deliberate.

“Then we move now,” she said, voice hardening. “We get the Padawans, and we get out.”

Halden looked at her for a long moment, then nodded grimly. “You’d better pray your friend out there can still hold that line.”

Bastila’s hand brushed the comm stud at her ear. “Aiden, I’ve got him,” she said quietly. “But there are younglings here too. We’re not leaving them. We will move to…”

Static hissed back through the channel and a voice, low and cold, slide through the air:

“You shouldn’t have come here, Jedi.”

The blood in Bastila’s veins turned to ice.






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OUTFIT: XoXo | TAG: Aiden Porte Aiden Porte EQUIPMENT:

 

The comm hissed with Bastila's voice then with something far worse. The cold, drawn tone that followed made the air in Aiden's lungs tighten. He stopped mid-stride in the fractured corridor, boots crunching on broken glass and dust, and reached out through the Force. What came back wasn't a whisper or a call. It was a void, deliberate and watchful.

His fingers flexed around the hilt at his belt. The violet glimmer of Bastila's saber flared faintly in his mind's eye, far down the hall. He could feel her presence now urgent, burning bright against the darkness that had begun to coil around them both. The Inquisitor was moving.

Aiden exhaled slowly, centering himself in that heartbeat between light and motion. The corridor ahead was alive with flickering emergency lights, shadows jumping like ghosts across the walls. Each pulse of red warning light revealed more of the ruin: the scorch marks, the smell of ozone, the faint sound of breathing that wasn't his own.

He moved. Swift, silent, every motion trained and measured. His senses spread outward not eyes but instinct guiding him through the maze of collapsed metal and smoke. The Force thrummed beneath his skin, ready, alive.

"Bastila." he murmured into the comm, voice low but steady. "I'm on my way. Hold position. I can feel her too."


The next corner opened into the old detention wing. Aiden slowed, crouching by a fallen guard, hand brushing the scorch wound at his chest. Fresh. The darkness here was heavier, as though the shadows themselves breathed.

He stood, ignited his saber the pale blue light cutting a sharp line through the gloom and started forward again, the sound of the blade humming against the silence. Somewhere ahead, he could feel Bastila's determination, the flicker of fear beneath it.

The Force screamed a warning he didn't think, only moved. His boots hit the durasteel, sliding between Bastila and the oncoming red arc. Blue meeting crimson in a violent flare that filled the area with light. The impact shook his arms to the shoulder, the Inquisitor's strength grinding down against his own, sparks spraying as their blades locked. He pushed upwards forcing the inquisitor back with his own strength.

"You will all die here."

"I don't think so." Aiden said through fierce determination as he then said her name. "Bastila" It was just her name, in a soft and easy tone once he spoke to her. Something to ground her to what was going on. He needed her, they all needed her. She was strong, much stronger than she would ever know.



 

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