Star Wars Roleplay: Chaos

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Populate The Gravesong War || Ashes of the Undying [ ME Populate of Ploo ]


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Through the Veil

Crimson swiped through flesh and sinew without care or hesitation. The rising mass of decaying flesh and rotted bone was almost the perfect outlet for everything that Cordelia had been holding back for what was entirely too long. Almost perfect. The stench of these creatures alone would have been enough to deter her from slicking her thirst, if she hadn't already known better than to attempt such a thing with the undead or reanimated. A frustrating notion, one that did not stop her from allowing a corpse here and there to get just close enough to sink her fingers into the flesh of their throats and remove the remains by literal force.
She did not remain alone on the ground for long, not that she minded having an over-spawned gaggle of decay at her personal disposal. Delia had felt the movements as they happened, and when she had cleared her immediate personal bubble from risen threats, she turned her gaze to the pair who had dropped from the shambles of building above to where the action actually was.
"Nice of you to join in." she nearly crooned at the pair, but it was not due to some sultriness she felt towards either of them. It was merely the way the monster within her communicated when it was pleased, and all of this carnage stoked a (mostly) content flame within the redhead.
In not having her helmet on, it was good that she had been signaled, though she probably would have followed along anyhow, if only because the need to move on had come. While she was enjoying the slaughter brought on by the hum of her blade, she also knew there was a job to do, people to actually protect. Clearing the city was important, but so was making sure these rotten shells couldn't get to the survivors.
It was good to see that she was also not the only one who brought her Force training to a zombie crawl. The sight of Montello alone made her feel a thousand times better about her choice to no longer hold herself back. She had tried to play nice, had tried to do things another way, but she was so much more at peace with herself now, already. Seeing that she was not alone in this only let her embrace the reawakening power she had with metaphorical arms wide open.
Her attention snapped to the alley where more corpses were coming. "Whether that up there is blown down or pulled down, these things aren't going to wait." She didn't comment further and instead moved to the alley to keep the dead fended off. Whatever the decision, she would get out of the way in time, but right now she was cutting through whatever got within her reach.
 



//: Delsin Shaw Delsin Shaw | OPEN //:
//: Weapons: LO-18D ASSAULT RIFLE, & Vibroblade Knife//:
//: Attire //:
//: Central Park Encampment, Upper City, Taris //:
//: OBJECTIVE II: LIGHT IN THE ASH //:
AD_4nXfxRgcX_ZR8-kC0rqm7lvSG8EOJOSL940dsU7OVzeVmup3dGax4Cdo-X1Ai2HPzuUrh9Y6hDIM-xiR_v30pnSC7pOoluQWUtgV0MzONnAotvKrplxED5btOvA5RLfqXgxU4NZXdDA

The dead didn’t sleep and neither did CT-312.

Moving with practiced efficiency through the ruined edge of the park. Skeletal trees casted jagged shadows across the overturned carts and abandoned shelters. CT-312’s patrol route had taken her beyond the outer set perimeter. The air was thick with rot and in the distant, wailing echoed of something unnatural. The Camouflaged Scout came across two half rotted undead, still twitching with a puppet-lurch animation. Two shots rang out as she put down the stragglers. Marking the location for clean up before heading back towards the encampment.

As CT-312 got close, the brighter the lights and louder the noise became. Just survivors trying not to die. The world of Mandalorians was new for her. The Scout never had ventured this far out into the galaxy before. It was interesting to see how these armored warriors, soldiers handle themselves.

Crossing the perimeter, she gave a brief nod to the Mandalorian holding the barricade. Catching sight of a woman in the distinctive armor, Sari'la Kandosii Sari'la Kandosii standing at the center of a small group of warriors. Holding the line from any unwarranted trespassers who dare to disrupt the peace. It was good to know that there were others here capable of handling the undead as the people in the encampment try to survive this ordeal.

She passed without a word. Shifting her attention to the medical section. CT-312 was looking for her contact, Delsin Shaw Delsin Shaw . Her boots crunched in the dirt as she entered the camp properly. There was no blaster fire or shouts of cover. This was a different kind of warzone. The battlefield changed. It was the “human” kind.

There was crying, moaning, and quiet prayers. The smell of blood and disinfectant barely masking the rot that was in the air. CT-312 observed her surroundings. Bodies marked in ink. Some lying still while others writhing. She paused, learning the system of how the people in here were tagging the wounded.

An X. Severity with the order of treatment. An X with a circle. That was new.

A body thrashed beside her. It seemed that the wounded by the bed near her passed, as it began to convulse. Limbs snapping into violent animation. Her hand dropped to her blaster, but redirected to the back of her belt. Unsheathing her vibroblade knife and plunging it into the reanimated undead's skull. Once. Twice. Until it stopped moving. There was no need to have blaster fire inside the medical tent. It would’ve caused a commotion and spread panic. It was best if it was handled silently.

‘So that’s what the other marking means. Unfortunate.’

She moved deeper inside. Side-stepping bodies, bandages, medical personnel shouting orders, the injured who were staring at anyone or anything. Trying to make sense of what misfortune was brought upon them. CT-312 caught a glimpse of a woman with blue green colored eyes, Eenia Vahn Eenia Vahn . She was crouching beside a patient. Radiating calm and warmth amongst the sea of chaos. No job was menial, as they were tending the wounded or distributing supplies.

CT-312 kept moving.

Everything around her faded into white noise. The screams, chatter, clatter of medkits. It was all static. Her mission was clear from the moment she arrived: Find her contact. Delsin Shaw. Finally locating him among the masses, CT-312 approached just as he was marking a child. It was unfortunate. The child was marked with death. A nearby soldier moved to guide the woman and child away. She observed the Lord. He was composed, but CT-312 could tell it wasn’t easy.

Stepping up beside him. “CT-312. Reporting for duty, my Lord.” She gave a nod. “I’ll take care of the ones marked like that child.” She said quietly.

This was new for Scout. The thought of a Sith far from the Empire, helping out with the injured? Perplexed her. Her voice lowered “Is there something more to this mission I should know about? Somehow I doubt I was sent here just to keep you company.”

CT-312’s tone wasn’t unkind. Just direct. Focused. She had orders and if Lord Delsin had something more to this madness, she need to know.


 




[D,7]
TAG: Jonah Jonah / Cordelia Malkavian Cordelia Malkavian / Manti Wyrvhor Manti Wyrvhor / Adonis Angelis IV Adonis Angelis IV

OBJ I: THROUGH THE VEIL​

A light chuckle emerged from Praviah as his blades split the undead.

“Appreciate it, Jonah. Wouldn’t want any Rally Master at my side but you.”

The song of twisted slaughter prevailed as they pushed onward. Whispers of the dark continued to mutter from his lips as he meditated on the Dark Side. The carving of flesh and coagulated blood was precise and effective. In tandem, the group had a splendid way of showing their effectiveness. Proof that all could work together regardless of what part of the Great Heathen Army you aligned with.

Fighting with others of a like minded goal was something he didn’t know he needed. Not that he would admit that openly. It brought a sense of nostalgia that he couldn’t shake off. He had become so accustomed to working alone that squad based combat just brought joy to his darkened heart. And it felt good.

The presence of horde reinforcements from the alley brought a smile to his face.

“I’ll deal with them.”

His voice dropped into a growl as he plunged deeper into the current of the Dark Side. Two fingers lifted from one of his tonfa lightsabers as he focused briefly. He focused on the weak points within the structure. His eyes began narrowing beneath his visor.

Dust clouded the street, the alley now choked with rubble.

Whether aided or unaided, the destruction had been sufficient. Enough to block the advance. Enough to satisfy him.

Praviah exhaled slowly. The chaos, the unrestrained expression of the Dark Side, left him feeling almost… content.


 



Tags: Vytal Noctura Vytal Noctura Aether Verd Aether Verd


Teaching those of talent. Did that count for Kirae? Did she count as someone who was talented? Normally she'd be opposed to learning something connected to the Force, but she was learning how important and valuable it was. It was a power she had that some didn't have. It would help to protect people, and so she should use anything that was at her full disposal.

"If that is an offer for teaching...I would be honoured to take it."

Kirae gave a short nod of her helmet at that. She had never expected to ask anyone who wasn't a Mandalorian to teach her anything. It wasn't that Kirae believed Mandalorians were superior than other cultures. No, it's just that Kirae believed that she didn't deserve to know it because she wasn't a Witch. She wasn't in anyway related to Dathomir. People deserved their secrets. So if she was going to be taught anything about Magick, she'd try to learn more about the Dathormian people. She wasn't as concerned with the Dark Side.

As soon as they arrived at Aether's location, Kirae took in the situation. A frown spreading across her face at the music filling the air as she finally took a moment to listen to it. Was that it? Could music really influence things like this? Either way, she stood at the ready. There wasn't much she could do right now apart from taking down the undead with her blade...If she had the Shield with her, she'd have suggested the idea of trying to play their own music in a way to counteract it. Instead, she kept her mouth shut and waited to follow their lead.​


 


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"I teach those with a mind to learn," the pale Witch affirmed. There were plenty of secrets. Plenty of "forbidden" spells, but even those became less forbidden once a young Witch demonstrated the self-controlled and ability to wield such power. Otherwise, where someone was from, or what they'd come to believe did not matter. What they intended to do with the power did.

The Mand'alor took note of their arrival, eager to get under way it seemed.

"There is," she replied with a slight nod, "but I will not be able to aid you further." Her emerald eyes rose to the figure at the center of the maelstrom. "There is great power beyond them that sustains this." If she had more Witches, or perhaps Knights, to form a proper Circle then it would be easier to multitask. As things were, one-on-one was doable, but the more distracted she began the more Risen slipped through her fingers.

Vytal glanced over at Kirae and gave the woman a slight nod.

Left hand brought up as a saucer, Vytal's right hand formed a vertical blade. A tuft of green flame ignited, centered in the open air by her palms. The Witch's eyes slid shut as she began to murmur to herself. The Mandalorians gathered and formed ranks. Aether plied his people well to the task. And while they readied, she drew the turbulent currents of power that buffeted the world and fed them into the flame.

"Tate owe topa na ate Wakan Tanka namahun po," Vytal cried out a the tuft of flame snapped out of existence as a whirlwind of spectral figures spun out from around the Witch of Dathomir as she stood in the street with her hands raised toward the skies. The spirits came in a flood and crashed upon the shores of Taris at her call. As the essence soared into the city, more appeared, and more still as the Mandalorians ran ahead.

Wherever the conjured spirits went, they pierced the body of the dead and they dropped as cord wood. Harrow was not the only one that thought to speak with the dead; whether his was the inane ramblings of a madman or not, Vytal knew what it meant to form pacts with spirits and she had formed many over the years. The Mandalorian warriors would quickly find themselves free to strike at the root of evil on Taris.

 
The Last Son
Objective II and III: Provide Medical Services and Investigate
Location: Central Park, F-5
Tags: CT-312 CT-312

As the child was being whisked away with her mother, I felt a slight heavy heart knowing they would die soon. it was not a good thing to feel. Such an innocent life taken with no reason. I may have been heartless to others. Done many things that could have been considered abhorrent, but taking the life of a child who was innocent just didn't sit right. Shaking my head before hearing the voice of a trooper behind me, I looked up and stood to face her.

She made mention of being willing to take care of others who may have been marked as such. Also continuing to ask more of what being here was for. The purpose of being in this situation. A small smile crept to my lips. She could tell I was no Mandalorian. However, my skills as a biologist and alchemist were needed here. With so many locals and civilians injured, and most Mandalorians only knowing basic medical practices, something more in depth was required in this case.


"I am not your lord, though I appreciate the moniker of respect."

Starting out with clearing the air. Her speaking of lord and using such title could put a sour taste in the mouth of those who I may be helping. Should they hear that I, a Sith, helping people. A very soft way of telling her to not call me such in public.

"This infection. It spreads easily and quickly. I have seen something like this before, but this is different. It's acting completely differently to what came before."

Looking around to the others I had yet reached, I instead opted to lower my voice. Speaking directly to her. Wanting to make sure others would not hear.

"Collect those who are marked. They are dying or are already at the crossroads. Secure and isolate them so we can study what this is. Maybe there is some way to- do something to fight against this."
 

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Objective: Through the Veil
Location: D-6
Tags: Jonah Jonah Cordelia Malkavian Cordelia Malkavian Montello Deshra Montello Deshra Manti Wyrvhor Manti Wyrvhor
As the current of battle surged around him, Adonis felt it: something worse than the stench of decay or the pressure of fatigue. It was darker than rot, heavier than blood. It crept along the edges of his senses like an oil slick over water, cold and suffocating. This wasn't the mindless terror of the undead or the weariness of war. It was a presence- watchful, coiled, hungry. And it didn't come from the horde.

It came from the others.

The warriors around him—Cordelia, Montello, even Jonah—moved like storms incarnate, red sabers and steel blades casting violent shadows through the smoke-choked air. They didn't fight like soldiers. They fought like predators. Like gods on furlough. There was power in every step they took, and that power wasn't light. It was something older, darker. Something that made the Force feel less like a gift and more like a loaded weapon with no safety.

Adonis didn't fear them, not exactly. But there was an edge to it all. A wariness in his gut. Not just of being outmatched, but of being seen. As though these Mandalorians weren't just measuring his strength, they were evaluating his soul.

The Jedi had never trained him. The Alliance had taught him tactics, rank, and policy, but not the mysteries of the Force. He'd heard whispers of the Sith, the monsters in children's stories who left fire in their wake, but those myths had never prepared him for the reality. And here, among the ranks of the Great Heathen Army, such titles felt meaningless. These weren't Jedi or Sith. They were warriors of a creed that transcended binaries. Still, the weight of it lingered. He wasn't sure if he would ever be like them, and the question of whether he should be gnawed at the back of his mind.

And yet… they were his people now.

Jonah's words echoed in his thoughts: House Verd, my brother. That meant something. Even if their shadows stretched long, he would walk in them until he cast his own.

The hiss of movement to his left pulled him back to the present. A Twi'lek corpse lurched forward from the smoke, its mouth stretched in a voiceless shriek, teeth yellow with rot, lekku severed and swaying like snapped cords. Adonis reacted instinctively. One quick slash of his saber split the creature from hip to shoulder, the blade burning through sinew and bone in a burst of ash and steam. The stink of charred flesh joined the soup of smoke and blood already clogging the air.

He didn't have time to think...because the street moved.

A shudder rippled beneath his boots, faint but unmistakable. It wasn't a tremor. It was weight. Something big. Something wrong. The horde shifted, like water around a stone. The moaning chorus of the undead broke as bodies parted, stumbling aside like worshippers clearing the path for something sacred, or monstrous.

And then it came.

A figure emerged from the haze, towering over the others like a mountain raised from the dead. Its armor was rusted, misshapen, and bolted directly into its rotting frame- more iron coffin than protection. The creature's skin, once a deep blue, had curdled into a diseased gray-green, its flesh sloughing off in places to reveal the bones beneath. One massive arm ended in a grotesque club of fused durasteel and broken rebar, still wrapped in old battlefield chain. The other arm was simply gone, torn off at the shoulder, the wound blackened and festering.

A Houk. Or what was left of one.

Adonis had read about them once, flipping through old Alliance dossiers. War-beasts. Brawlers. Near-indestructible tanks in humanoid form. Seeing one dead was rare enough. Seeing one still walking after death, this wasn't natural. This was designed. A perversion of something already violent made worse.

Its eyes found him across the blood-slick street- sunken, milky, but aware. The kind of gaze that spoke of memory, not instinct. As if some ember of the creature's rage had survived even death. Then it opened its mouth and roared, the sound shaking dust from the shattered buildings above, splitting the moans of the horde like thunder cracking open the sky.

This wasn't just another corpse. This was a fight.

Adonis tapped his comms, his voice low and steady despite the spike of adrenaline. "I'll take this one."

He assumed no one would object. Maybe they trusted him. Maybe they were letting him prove himself. Maybe it didn't matter.

The Force surged around him, responding to his will like lightning to a storm rod. He drew it in, shaping it like a sling, launching himself forward in a blur of blue light. He reached out with one hand, pulling a lesser corpse toward him like a missile and impaling it on his saber. The body hissed, burned, and was flung aside, clearing a path for his approach. He sprinted hard, armor clanking, sweat stinging his eyes, heart hammering in his chest like war drums.

The beast raised its club, bellowed again, and slammed it into the ground. The street buckled. Debris flew like shrapnel. Adonis had to adjust midair, veering left, landing in a tumble that brought him crashing into a knot of standard undead. He rolled, sprang to his feet, saber flashing as he cut a vicious circle around himself, clearing space.

And in that moment, he grinned.

It reminded him of Necropolis Prime, an old holo-game he used to play on Vaal as a kid. Pixelated graphics, cheesy music, impossible difficulty. He remembered the way the screen would dim, the soundtrack would drop into a deep, ominous thrum, and a massive health bar would crawl across the top of the HUD with some insane name like "GORVAX THE WORLD-EATER" or "THE ABYSS THAT WALKS." You always knew it was about to get bad. Real bad. The kind of fight where you weren't sure if you'd survive, just that you had to try.

And now, here he was. No reset button. No save point.

Just one shot.

The creature started its charge.

Adonis wiped blood from his brow, raised his saber in one hand, the other reaching behind to grip the handle of his scattergun. The sigil of House Angelis burned bright on his chestplate, catching the firelight like a star in the storm.

He stood firm, just long enough to whisper:

"Alright, big guy. Round one."

And then he charged.
 

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"Sometimes an explosion solves a lot of problems."
Objective: Through the Veil
Location: D-7

Tags: Adonis Angelis IV Adonis Angelis IV Jonah Jonah Montello Deshra Montello Deshra Cordelia Malkavian Cordelia Malkavian

Muscles cramped, breath heavy, armor slick with red and black, and with a pounding heart Manti moved forward through the horde. The force did not aid her, did not strengthen her muscles and fuel her cells with energy, yet she was a flurry of blade and shield in the horde of shambling corpses. She was completely surrounded, but she played this to her advantage. The creatures were fumbling over each other, getting in eachother's way, and she danced between them.

Her blade wrench through the captive creature's neck, her arm wrapped around its head to hold it still before she'd kick it into the oncoming horde, turning and side stepping to press her shield against a lunging corpse and push it past herself and into another group of undead. As two fronts stumbled back at the almost simultaneous impacts she would turn on another side. Bringing herself low she'd sweet with an armored leg, cracking one creature's leg out from under it and as it fell she planted the heel of her boot firmly through the rotting skull. Using the momentum of the stomp she'd bring the long-knife up, slicing a hole in another creature's stomach.

Reaching into her belt she'd procure a thermal detonator and shove it in the stomach of the gutted creature before kicking it away. Using the momentum of the kick she'd turn just in time to put the blade in the mouth of a lunging bite. The force of the creature would push her onto her back. She'd snarl, putting her free hand on the other side of the blade and with two hands bisect the creature's head, but rather than push it off she'd grab another's leg and pull it down on top of her.

The temporary meat shield fell just in time for the detonator to explode, a shower of blood carpeting the horde as a bubble of red viscera would clear. Manti would push the two scorched corpses off, rolling to her feet. She'd once again procure her blast, taking careful but rapid shots at head-level of the crowd. Several creature's fell.

The others were talking. It was difficult to hear them over the pounding of her heart but she tried, her attention drifting to the alleyway. Stem the flow.

"Hanth! Give me your bag!" she'd command one of her men, the commando handing her a simple cloth backpack.

Looking inside was what she expected, thermal charges.

"Covering fire!" she'd shout out, gesturing with her fist in the direction of the alley as she began to charge.

Her squad answered a second later, a hail of multi-colored bolts raining down and widdling away at the wall of shambling flesh.

While Jonah pushed on one side, Montello carved through hordes on the other side, and Adonis solved a looming and particularly large problem nearby it allowed Manti to follow after Cordelia. The covering fire was careful to aim away from Cordelia, but the woman acted as the spearhead to Manti's desperate attempt to solve the problem.

As she pressed close to Cordelia she'd call out, exhaustion clear in her tone as she would procure one of the metallic cylinders "Alley is coming down. Cover me?"

She was shaking, and setting the charges wouldn't be easy. But she began, taking her time, rushing it would only get them killed.
 

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THROUGH THE VEIL
Coordinates: (D,7)

Jonah felt her before he saw her.

Cordelia. A blur of violence and crimson, her blade moved like it knew the rhythm of every rot-stiffened neck before it came close. She danced through decay, half a blur, half a butcher—and he swore he could feel the hunger spilling off her, like heat off coals too long banked. Whatever she was holding back before, she’d unleashed it now.

Good. This battlefield didn’t need saints. When she addressed them—crooning, almost playful—he didn’t skip a beat.

“Happy to be here.” The snark in his voice cut through the comms like steel. “Next time, leave me a few.”

He turned back to the alley just in time to catch Montello in motion. His blades still sang, but it was his mind that shifted the balance. Jonah watched as debris groaned under unseen pressure—walls crumbled, supports cracked, and then—boom—an avalanche of duracrete and dust slammed into the approaching dead.

“OYA!” Jonah shouted, teeth bared, as corpses were crushed beneath falling ruin. The way forward narrowed.

Not sealed. Not yet. He started forward—then felt it.

A ripple in the world’s skin.

Not Light. Not Dark. Something older. The kind of current you didn’t channel. The kind that chose to move through you.

He stumbled mid-step—not physically, but spiritually—as spectral winds howled through the battlefield, piercing undead hearts with blades unseen. They dropped like stringless puppets. The Force around him didn’t scream or snarl—it whispered. With memory. With blood.

Ancestral.

“Vytal,” Jonah muttered under his breath, almost reverently, “what in all hells did you just call down?”

His comm buzzed. MAND’ALOR-IRON. Priority target. A floating bastard at the center of this mess. Ground-based strikes. No air support.

“Copy,” Jonah growled to himself, vibrosword flashing through another corpse that hadn’t quite dropped with the others. “We’ll be there soon brother.”

And then he heard Adonis. Calm. Focused. A man standing in the mouth of the storm and calling his shot.

“I’ll take this one.”

Jonah’s head snapped toward the sound of the Houk’s bellow—and there it was. A mountain of meat and metal, shambling forward like the grave itself wanted to fight. Adonis didn’t hesitate.

Neither did Jonah. But he didn’t interfere either.

He could have lent his power. Could’ve pushed the beast back, cut it down with him, made sure it ended quick.

But that wasn’t the point. This was Adonis' proving ground.

So Jonah simply turned slightly, stepped between him and a small pack of approaching rotters, and guarded the flank. One undead lunged, and Jonah’s sword split it clean down the middle. Another met a vibrodagger to the skull. The last didn’t even reach him before he sent it sprawling with a boot to the chest.

Adonis didn’t need help.

He needed witnesses.

With a sharp breath, Jonah broke from the cluster entirely and raised his left arm. A low hiss—then a jet of fire surged from his wrist-mounted flamethrower. It engulfed two corpses mid-charge, their wails brief and final.

He cut hard across the field—heading straight toward Manti.

“Wyrvhor!” he shouted, as blasterfire and blades lit the alley with death. “I’ve got your back!”

Another twist of his wrist, and another wash of fire screamed out—clearing, burning, consuming.

Jonah took position just off her right flank, drawing attention with every blast of flame and every guttural roar of his vibrosword.

Because if she was planting those charges—he was going to make damn sure nothing got close enough to stop her.


 



//: Delsin Shaw Delsin Shaw | OPEN //:
//: Weapons: LO-18D ASSAULT RIFLE, & Vibroblade Knife//:
//: Attire //:
//: Central Park Encampment, Upper City, Taris //:
//: OBJECTIVE II: LIGHT IN THE ASH //:
AD_4nXfxRgcX_ZR8-kC0rqm7lvSG8EOJOSL940dsU7OVzeVmup3dGax4Cdo-X1Ai2HPzuUrh9Y6hDIM-xiR_v30pnSC7pOoluQWUtgV0MzONnAotvKrplxED5btOvA5RLfqXgxU4NZXdDA
"I am not your lord, though I appreciate the moniker of respect."

Standing still, CT-312’s visor fixed on the figure before her. She inclined her helmet in acknowledgement. The title had slipped out of habit. He wasn’t wrong. Titles like that, spoken out loud in a place like this, teething on the edge of collapse and panic. It could fracture the fragile trust holding the wounded together. The people here needed help, not fear.

CT-312’s voice came through her helmet's modulator, low and neutral. “What title would you prefer?”

She listened to his explanation about the infection. Her stance was casual as she observed the other wounded around them. Every detail he shared burned itself into her internal log. The assignment was clear. Collect the marked. Those with little time left, circling death.

“Understood.” giving a curt nod. Speaking in a quieter tone “I’ll secure a location.”

Making her way out of medical, CT-312’s gaze swept the encampment. The chaos hadn’t changed. But her perspective had. This far into the galaxy, this isn’t where she normally went. This wasn’t Sith or Imperial territory. This was fringe worlds, places where maps blurred and order died. For CT-312 who was bred and trained within structure, this was like walking through someone else's dream… or nightmare. It was all new.

She needed to find space. Somewhere unobtrusive yet contained. After a moment, CT-312 located a supply tent near the edge of the triage area. Inspecting the tent all around and inside, it was cleared out, forgotten. The canvas walls were thick enough to conceal and the placement was far enough to avoid drawing attention, but still close enough to be seen as part of the medical tents. ‘This will work.’

Making her way back to her contact, CT-312 spoke in a low voice. “There’s a tent two rows down to the west, it’s clear. I’ll reinforce it, and should serve.” As she turned back, “I’ll bring them. Quietly. But that tent won’t stay discreet for long.”

CT-312 disappeared into the maze of wounded bodies, medics, and noise. She rolled out two marked patients on the stretcher to the isolated tent. Quietly. Efficiently. No questions asked. Pulling a blanket over another barely conscious body. The Scout wasn’t sure they would make the trip to the tent. But she did what she was ordered. Armor blood-slicked now, nothing she hadn’t endured in the field. But this was different. The stains, dried blood were from civilians. Not combatants. There was no glory in this kind of clean up.

Once inside the tent, CT-312 took out her knife. Slicing strips from the blanket that once was covering one of the patients. Using that to secure the wrists of the three marked to the railing and covering their mouths. She inspected the third patient who was now bound. His eyes closed and breathing shallow. Just barely. Soon eyes shot open. They weren’t his anymore. No fear. No humanity. Just hunger and pain.

Her eyes flickered to the mark on his forehead. Reminding herself: This is the dead. This is the mission. Knife in hand. CT-312 drove it into the undead man’s skull. Clean. No theatrics. Just mercy. Death came quiet. Wiping her knife before putting it away, her helmet hid her face. Jaw tight, but inside thoughts swirled. Thoughts she didn’t want. This wasn’t how she was trained.

Exiting the supply tent, CT-312 turned a corner making her way back to the main area to secure more patients. Raised voices caught her attention. Someone was trying to keep things quiet. She moved without hesitation towards the sound, weapon ready.

It was the woman whose child was marked earlier on. Disheveled, half-sobbing. Trying to push past the soldier who held her back with a firm arm across her chest. Behind them lay the small child. Limp. Pale. Both argued about the status of the girl as the woman tried to reach for the body. The soldier shoved her roughly off to the side. As she stumbled forward from the shove, the mother fell by her daughter's side. The corpse twitched. The child had the same eyes as the man in the tent. Mouth snapped open, latching onto the mother’s shoulder. She screamed in agony and terror.

BANG.

A single shot fired. CT-312 lowered her weapon as the child’s body collapsed once more. For good. She hated everything about this moment. Silence filled the air as the Scout approached slowly towards the two. The mother collapsed beside her now twice dead daughter, sobbing uncontrollably. As she neared, her rifle came up. CT-312 brought the butt of her weapon across the soldier’s helmet.

THWACK.

The blow sent the man to the ground. Unconscious. She knelt beside him, removing the cuffs from his belt and secured his wrists behind his back. Pulling a strip of extra fabric from earlier and stuffing it into the soldier’s mouth, tying it off to muffle him. The woman had gone quiet. Staring at her in shock.

“Grab your child.” CT-312 said. Her voice modulator made it sound calm. “Follow me.” The mother obeyed without question. Shock did that. She cradled her daughter in her arms as she followed. Making their way to the tent, CT-312 threw the soldier’s unconscious bound body to the ground with a thud as they entered. Unbinding the man that previously turned, she lifted him off the stretcher. Placed him face down in the ground at the corner of the tent. Carefully grabbing the child from the mothers arms, the Scout placed the corpse on the stretcher. CT-312 grabbing the blanket off of one of the marked and covered the child’s body. Turning to the mother, observing the bite wound and health status. Her breathing became labored, body becoming weak, veins dark around the bite. CT-312 could tell she was fighting. “For safety precautions.” The Scout tied her hands back as well as covered her mouth.

As she stepped out of the tent, CT-312 realized something for the first time in a long while. She wasn’t just here to secure a perimeter. She learned something after the war. After the battle. The one with no medals. No speeches. Just people. Maybe she hated it… Or maybe… maybe it was starting to matter. Her grip on her weapon tightened, turning on her heel, and securing the tent’s perimeter, waiting for Delsin Shaw Delsin Shaw .

The screams and crying around the encampment faded into white noise again. CT-312 wasn’t here to mourn the dying.


 

.
O B J E C T I V E: THROUGH THE VEIL
Coordinate: C-4
Tag: Aether Verd Aether Verd + Open
The comms erupted with the deafening roar of afterburners as Siv's voice sliced through the chaos—cold, sharp, and utterly devoid of hesitation.
"Kryze copies. Adjusting fire support."
The bone-rattling thunder of low-altitude jetpacks shook the channel as Siv's warriors banked hard, their thrusters screaming in protest. Thermal signatures flared across tactical displays, painting the battlefield in hues of blood-red and ash.
"Mortar teams are locking on to your avenue now. Shells will land in staggered waves—thirty-meter spread, advancing toward the epicenter. You want that bastard's attention? He'll have it."
A sudden burst of static, then the metallic snarl of a missile lock.
"Surface-to-air teams are repositioning to (B,4). If that thing so much as twitches, we'll fill the sky with enough shrapnel to shred a star destroyer."
The sound of a gauntleted fist slamming against a thruster control.
"Nite Owls are already moving to reinforce Varkor's position. Med evac is priority—any civvies still breathing get pulled out, no exceptions."
Then, the sharp hiss of a rebreather cycling.
"Aether—we're dropping in hot on your six. Stick the landing? Please. My boys haven't botched an insertion since Kestri."
The transmission cut with the sudden, gut-punch silence of a channel going dead—just as, somewhere in the distance, the first mortar rounds began to fall.

HttnTHC.gif
 



Tags: Vytal Noctura Vytal Noctura Aether Verd Aether Verd


Kirae could charge with the rest to take on the commander. To fight for the chance to take their head and end this once and for all...but that wasn't her. She left glory for the others. Glory might have warmed the recipient's heart, might have made them feel strong, but it only benefitted the recipient in her eyes. Maybe it benefitted the recipient's clan...But her clan was near enough gone. Survival was more important to her than glory. Instead she held herself back, letting the stomping of boots carry on into the distance whilst she kept her eyes open on their surroundings. It wasn't as if Vytal needed any help...but if there was any chance that the Undead would somehow be able to get towards her, Kirae wanted the Witch to be able to focus on this ritual. It didn't matter if it was perhaps a waste of Kirae's time.

The sight of the Spirits erupting from the WItch however caused Kirae's heart to clench for a moment. This didn't feel right to her. She knew it was right at the end of the day. That it was what they needed to go against the Undead but that much power...It was terrifying to think that was something that people had. That they'd be able to use against others. As much as Kirae understood steel, blood and fire, she couldn't understand the non-physical. The spiritual. The Force still befuddled her and she'd have to work towards learning more about it so that events like this wouldn't come as a total shock.

She shook the thought from her mind and returned to her main focus. Taking on any groups of the Undead that might have somehow avoided these Spirits. She couldn't use anything fancy or impressive to take them down, but at the end of the day, the steel in her hand was more than good enough to dispatch them. As long as she was contributing to the battle, Kirae would defend as much as she had to.​


 

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