Star Wars Roleplay: Chaos

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Skirmish THE BANNERLESS | Jedi Raid of TSC Held Tython


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The twisted, guttural tone of Eurydice’s banshee shriek died rather abruptly. The Dark was powerful, but the girl wasn’t harnessing it as much as it was harnessing her.

And when its vessel weakened, the Dark was not there to catch her.

Wavering in and out of consciousness, Eurydice felt an aching numbness begin to creep along her extremities. Her knees buckled, and the last thing she felt was the cool sensation of floor tiling against her cheek.

Maybe it was good that it ended this way. The pain was beginning to fade with each struggling heartbeat, relieved a little further on each shuddering exhale. Diogo had been right, after all. She had hurt people. The righteous thing to do would've been to defy Nefaron. Die a valiant death. But self-preservation and cowardice would win out time, and time again.

...

Footsteps echoed down the corridor as she lay there, clinging to a thread of life. Across from her, among the destruction, was Eloise’s broken body.

Between them, holocrons lay scattered among slivers of wood and shards of glass. The Sith before them might’ve been felled, but now everything around them was in utter disarray.

Diogo had a choice to make, and not much time at all to make it. A choice that, on its surface, might seem simple for a Jedi.

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Anet drew power from her mask, a sanctuary of corruption that denied the Light its touch on her. Still, she remained wary of that weapon and the boy's power. Even in his state, apparently injured, he gracefully avoided her stone as if dodging it were an act of choreography.

Her attempt was not useless, however. In his movement, she noticed the way his body resisted strain along his ribcage, just before their eyes met again. Each icy in their own regard -- his born of patience, and hers cultivated fury. She raised her lightsaber, expecting him to attack her in some way. But again, that attack never came.

Instead, the boy carefully situated himself on the defensive as far as she could tell. His pained reaction spoke the loudest, drawing her attention back to his ribs.

A duelist, Anet was not. Her lightsaber was not an instrument of skill. It was a tool of murder. If he was just about dead, then maybe she'd move in for the kill. Until then, the Force remained her first weapon.

She reached out to his body, focusing on his injury, before clenching her hand shut to crush his ribs.


 



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For reasons Valor did not quite understand, the small Spear of Ashla gifted to him by the scar-faced hag, ( Corazona von Ascania Corazona von Ascania ) was the only item in his possession with any true power in the Force; a compact little stake of songsteel, light enough for a child's hand and easily carried, it had been deliberately fashioned to cleanse corruption, harry Dark-sided energies, and wound those things steeped too deeply in them. Darkened relics, foul creatures, and practitioners sunk in malignant power could all be weakened beneath its Light.

The Spear of Ashla was not much to look at, hardly grand, hardly impressive in its design… but it had been made as a tool of purging, a spiteful little shard of Light meant to press against wicked things and make them suffer for lingering too near its radiance.

The scar-faced hag had apparently lied to him. For all its holy importance, the precious Jedi artifact felt little better than a child's night-light within his trembling hand; a foolish little relic out of some nursery tale, dressed in borrowed myth and handed down by doddering old fools as though their reverence alone could make it dangerous.

Injured already, with several broken ribs along one side, Valor was left propping himself up with the mad-dog durasteel sword cane in hand. It carried no blessing, no hidden power, no miracle to soften what was to come. Worse, it was not even free to serve him properly as a weapon; for the moment, it had been reduced to the lowly task of keeping him upright.

He had no armor, no enchanted cloth with warding worked through its weave, no alchemized protection fitted close against the skin, no charm hanging at his throat to shunt death aside. He did not even have the comfort of an Initiate's lightsaber resting at his belt.

Nothing shielded him. Nothing softened the field. Nothing stood between his battered body and what waited to break it further, save a paltry holy trinket in one hand and stubborn violence in the other.

He was injured, exposed, and painfully mortal.

That was all.

Anet's answer told him enough. Rather than meet him cleanly, her will slipped toward the broken place in him, seizing upon battered ribs as though pain alone would make him easy prey.

It was a foolish assumption.

Valor was already keenly aware of her presence since she had revealed her self with the initial force push that had slammed him against the tree. His attention was now locked onto her, already contesting her in the same invisible current through which she now tried to crush what had already been damaged. Such things were never so simple between Force-users. The will of one met the will of another; pressure met resistance; intent met something that could feel it coming and answer in kind. Unless one towered over the other in power, control, or focus, there was no easy certainty in that sort of attack.

Force-users resisted one another by instinct as much as training, through will, awareness, and the simple fact of their own living connection to the Force. Whether through Force resilience, Force deflection, or sheer force of will, mental intrusion, telekinetic domination, and direct internal pressure did not come cleanly against an opponent who was conscious of the threat and able to push back. Such things could still be attempted, yes, but not without contest, and not without the risk of meeting resistance instead of collapse.

She would find the stubborn Echani's force of will and defiance to be a far more formidable obstacle than she had first assumed. Even so, the pressure still landed. Pain cinched viciously through Valor's side as though unseen fingers had found the broken places between bone and tried to close them tighter. Breath rasped sharp in his throat, and sharp pain flashed beneath his ribs hard enough to hollow the edges of his vision for a brief, miserable moment.

Valor had not gotten the clean split he wanted. The haunted thing still clung close to Anet's shadow, cautious now rather than emboldened as a protector, and the girl herself had proven just wary enough to deny him any easy finish. Fine. Let her keep her little shelter. Let the malignant thing skulk where the Light could not fully scour it.

He recognized that Anet and the armor were yielding him very little. The haunted shell had grown cautious, and Anet was not overcommitting, choosing instead to drag the exchange out and bleed his time away. With his ribs in the state they were, a prolonged fight was a poor trade; that much he understood. Continuing to press the apprentice would cost him more than it was worth.

His gaze shifted past her then, toward the wider chaos unraveling across the hillside. That was where the true pressure on this battlefield lay.

Ko was being overrun.

The Kel'dor had perhaps been the only person Valor had ever known to offer him something like genuine kindness… and that stirred a small, unfamiliar feeling within him, something that caught and swelled hot in his chest.

Valor had been made to protect. Raised to understand that his only true purpose was the survival of the one he stood beside. He himself was expendable; they were not. He had been shaped to guard, to intercept, and to answer threat with violence before it could ever reach what stood behind him.

The priority became clear; Anet was no longer the problem he intended to solve first.

Valor pulled in a sharp breath, the hand bearing the sword cane drawing tight against his ribs as pain carved through him again. His posture dipped, his attention seemingly dragged inward for that brief miserable moment as he steeled himself against the inevitable flare of hurt…

The hillside had curdled into a fresh nightmare. Sithspawn boiled toward Ko, and the Master's position within it was plain enough. Valor's focus cut that way at once, instincts older than any fresh Jedi teachings locking into place with an ugly sort of clarity.

He suppressed his pain and burst forward with sudden speed and vicious agility, far more than someone in his battered state should have been able to muster. He drove himself into the fray faster than his battered form had any right to allow, all sharp purpose and stripped-down intent, aiming to place himself where the oncoming horrors would have to come through him first.
 
Eurydice Eurydice Eloise Dinn Eloise Dinn

The mission had been simple: get in, retrieve the holocrons, dispose of any Sith along the way. Just remember Tapani. Remember Tapani... the endless cries, the salty tears turned thick and crimson. All the stars in the galaxy felt fragile then, to Diogo, like glinting shards of fractured glass.

He wanted to take one of those shards in his calloused hands and drive it through the heart of the Covenant. One by one, if he had to. And he had, in a way, when he plunged that Spear of Ashla right into the girl. Only, she hadn't been at Tapani. Only, she was a terrified little thing. A poor excuse for a Sith. He didn't know how to square that circle, had never experienced it before. The Sith were all evil, weren't they? Weren't they? The shard seemed to cut both ways, the sense of vengeance he felt still present but withdrawing, a slow bloodletting.

It hadn't been so simple after all.

And now the girl lay on the floor tiling, weak and pale. A missing limb, multiple wounds in her torso. Dying, or so Diogo thought. He wanted to save her - if there was anything left to save. He was the real reason she had ended up like this. If only he'd just taken the holocron and left. Guilt grasped him by the throat. But...

Then there was Eloise, crumpled on the floor amidst splintered wood and shattered glass, blood and bones rearranged. Alive, but out of commission. And priority number one. As always.

Footsteps were coming too. So he had to move fast. He was constrained, forced to take a fork in a confusing road. The choice seemed made for him. It seemed like a joke. To have so much power as a Jedi, and yet still submissive to the indifferent whims of forces greater than he - time, circumstance, contingencies.

Diogo dashed to Eloise's side, fumbled with his medkit, and injected her with anesthetics and bacta. He scooped her up in his arms, holding her like a bride. He gave one last long look at the dying girl. Too long, for reinforcements arrived. He sped off down the same corridor he had come from.

All the holocrons were left behind. Including the one that had been given in offering, laying in surrender before the acolyte.
 

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