Star Wars Roleplay: Chaos

Register a free account today to become a member! Once signed in, you'll be able to participate on this site by adding your own topics and posts, as well as connect with other members through your own private inbox!

Private The Reality of the Force - Corellia

Light? No. Shadow? No. Responsibility.
VVVDHjr.png
Actions have Consequences
CORELLIA
CORONET CITY





pHjD5Dp.png


The capital city of the planet Corellia, Coronet City, also known as Corellia City, or Golden City, had one known district, the Teeno Village district, as well as mag-lev subways and trains, which stopped at various stations, among them Juni Street Station. The city was known for its nightlife which included several casinos and Peace and Security stations, one of which shared a basement with a museum. Diadem Square was located in the downtown area of the city, and had stores and air-tuks. The city also had its own HoloNet news channel, known as Coronet City Info, abbreviated as CCI.
Many dignitaries were in the city at any given time which is why fierce political fighting out of greed and a lust for power were common place, opening up a market for bodyguard agencies. Assassinations occurred from time to time.
Located on the outreaches of the city, away from the many skyscrapers, were conveyer belts, assembly plants and cranes.

What does this have to do with today?

One of those assembly plants, doing demolition to expand, came across something over 900 years old. They came across a vault that was buried in the ground, and full of what looked to be artifacts related to the Force. The foreman of the group that was called to salvage this was a C.I. (Confidential Informant) of Connel Vanagor. So he knew to “put in the call”.

Vanagor had little time, he had just completed (with Omega Squad) a very taxing operation on Ord Mantell, so he was not in a good mood. However, Alada was a good person, and really trying to make a better life for himself, this was an honest call, and he had never let Connel down before, or called unless it was important, so here he was.

He had to land in the Starport, which was annoying, because he saw the map of the city and knew that a landing strip was not far away. So he was forced to either walk, rent a speeder(his was in the Defender, and he was in his X-wing) or take public transportation. He decided to rent a speeder, as it was the quickest option, despite the inconvenience. The city's layout was unfamiliar, and he was eager to reach the salvage site before anyone else could interfere. Time was critical, and he couldn't afford any delays in this sensitive operation.


 
✠ Draconis Nihilus Indomitus ✠

VVVDHjr.png

LORD INDOMITUS
Through Fire and Blood.
Through Justice and Strength.
On the Anvil of War, We forge our Destiny.

Connel Vanagor Connel Vanagor


Indomitus-Divider.png


DRAGONSTONE
Corellia | Bastion | Grand Strategium

Bare walls, the smell of freshly mixed duracrete, the noise of tools drilling, hammering and screwing filled the air. Imperius' engineers, builders and forgemasters had moved in as soon as the Galactic Alliance had fallen. Corellia was a world rich in production and population, a world with immense pride and will of self-determination. A beacon of Republic and Alliance freedom and independence. He had witnessed what happened when the elites and workers were fighting during the Battle of Corellia, orchestrated by Darth Decimus. It was where the Sith Empire was bled dry.

Imperius and the Galactic Empire would not repeat such mistake. At least He hoped so - as He had no influence on the latter except for potentially spearheading their efforts through initiative and success. Even though the faith He had in that institution was dwindling by the hour.

The Zakuulan oversaw the fortificating and expanding of the Bastion in Coronet City. He had made the plans for the citadels, bulwarks, walls and overall defences as well as the demands for what the interior had to be able to hold and provide to be a suitable governmental and military headquarters.

Prior to His arrival and plans, He had sent out His Questors, the eyes and ears of Imperius' operations. Now He had received a message from one that not far from His current whereabouts, Force artifacts had been discovered by a company digging to expand their production lines. As the Zakuulan had no military presence yet on Corellia, avoiding premature insertion, the Pureblood made ready to move Himself.

Instead of walking across the streets in proud, pristine armour - He changed into a simpler outfit with a simple leather and mail armour but completely covered into cape with a deep hood. He kept Valoris on His back though, the hilt looming over His left shoulder. Even below the hood, He covered most of His face with a black scarf, ensuring the red skin was not exposed.

Like that He made His way towards the dig site - using public transportation.


AE-Sword.png
 
Light? No. Shadow? No. Responsibility.
VVVDHjr.png
Actions have Consequences
CORELLIA
CORONET CITY





pHjD5Dp.png


So, this is the planet where my mother and father met…

A misleading observation. It was true, no doubt, Caltin Vanagor and Chrysothemis Atreides had met on the Gold Beaches. That was irrelevant history, just the tone suggested that Connel had never been here before, yet he had several times. The Shadow had no issue with the Core world, but was never truly impressed with it.

That was neither here nor there, as he noticed all of the alleyways and corners, all of the graffiti. It all made the relatively short drive there. This was one of the much older shipyards, they were expanding into a larger capacity. That was the story…

… story… prophetic words.

This all felt “wrong”.

Dockyards District, Shipwright Complex 17-A
The air on Corellia always smelled like momentum: hot metal, engine oil, and the weight of decisions that moved starfleets. Connel stepped out of the speeder with that scent burning through the fabric of his hood and armor. The shipyard’s steel bones creaked under the construction droids welding an entirely new hangar bay into place — and deep beneath all that noise lay the vault.
His comm clicked twice as he keyed into the Green Jedi frequency.

Vanagor here. I’ve arrived. Tell Master Khoan I’ll review the artifacts myself. If there’s no Jedi claim, they fall to Corellia’s stewardship.

The Jedi on the other end, a Knight as well, responded. “Understood. You’ll meet an escort at the vault in twenty minutes.”
Copy. He cut the channel before they could say anything else. There was no hostility — only the sense that his mind had already moved ahead of the conversation. Something was wrong, and it had nothing to do with relics.

Workers were too alert. Guards too broad-shouldered, too evenly spaced. The droids scanned people instead of cargo.

This isn’t protection. This is a cordon.

Connel drifted through the noise, posture relaxed, saber hilt hidden beneath his cloak, the other weapons were visible, visible for a reason. His eyes locked on an armored personnel crawler parked against a cargo container. The serial number had been sanded off, but the machining marks were military tech — Imperial, not Corellian.

Before he could follow the thread further, someone whistled from behind a stack of hyperdrive coils. A familiar low whistle. A warning whistle. Someone who once ran from him.
Connel’s jaw tightened. He stepped into the shadow between two frame struts.
The figure waiting for him was short, filthy, jittery, wearing a mechanic’s vest and holding a ration pack like it was priceless. Connel recognized him instantly.
Jassik Venn. Slicer. Arms trafficker. Once fled Connel’s blade through the warrens of Brentaal IV. He’d only ever gotten away because Connel let civilians evacuate first.
And Jassik knew it.
He raised his hands slowly.

Give me a reason… one…

“Before you decide I’m overdue for payback, we both know you didn’t come to Corellia for me.”
If you’re in this dockyard, you’re involved in whatever’s wrong with it.

Jassik swallowed. “Then you’re going to want what I know.”

Connel didn’t move. He didn’t ignite anything. He just watched. Speak.
Jassik nodded twice, then stepped closer like he was afraid someone else was listening. “The vault wasn’t the find. The vault door was. It’s not storage — it’s a map. An access gate.”

Where? And where is Garon Diko? He was of course referring to one of the foremen, his C.I., the one who contacted him. Did he know about this?

“Old Republic Bastion. Deep under the industrial ring. The Empire wants to refit it — use it as a siege anchor. A buried launch bay. Armored. Unbreakable. Diko disappeared soon after. He wanted to contact Corsec. He didn’t know. I SWEAR!”

Connel’s eyes lifted toward the unfinished hangar overhead. “They’re already loading material down there. I’ve been slicing their shipments. I know the code they’re using. That’s what I’m offering you.”

He held out a datapatch. Connel didn’t take it. He scanned it with his wrist-terminal instead. The data hit immediately — encrypted manifests. Imperial format. Fresh.
Connel looked at the slicer. You’re not giving this to me, giving it to me would mean that this is for free.
Jassik shook his head. “For my life. A trade. I leave. Today. You'll never see me again.”
Connel stared long enough to make Jassik tremble. Then grabbed him by the neck, not hard enough to do damage, but to make his point. If I so much as see you…
“You won’t… ever… I swear!”
Go.
The little criminal ran — not fast, but honest in his fear.




Connel reopened comms, walking calmly through the workers who were suddenly watching him too closely.

Vanagor to Green Temple. The vault may be compromised by off-world military interest. Secure the perimeter. Do not send a civilian escort.

The same Green Jedi responded “Master Vanagor, we request you wait for us. Do not engage anyone. Corellia’s Treaty—”
If I don’t move now, Corellia becomes a staging ground for another war. I won’t wait for that. You want someone there, send them!

He cut comms again.





He started to Walk Toward the Bastion

No stealth. No flourish. Just silent intention.
Three workers stepped from behind shipping crates ahead of him. Too synchronized. Too heavy-footed. Connel slowed slightly, one hand drifting beneath his cloak. They reached for weapons before he drew.
They never finished pulling them.
Windu’s Guile snapped to life with a crackle of violet lightning — short-blade, fast.
Two cuts. One deflection. A knee strike. They fell before they realized a Jedi had moved.
He kept walking.
A false foreman shouted into a commlink — Connel seized the device with the Force and smashed it into the man’s throat hard enough to drop him.
Another group rushed him with stun batons. They didn’t get close. A shockwave of telekinetic force crushed them against a cargo lift and left them gasping on the ground.
He didn’t slow down.




Soon, the Bastion came into view.

A distant, armored lift-tower breaking through the foundation of the shipyard — old stone beneath new steel. Heavy shielding rigs. Reinforcement frames disguised as scaffolding.
A war machine wearing the skin of a building.
Connel stopped and studied it. His saber hummed quietly at his side. He exhaled once — not in anger, but in decision.

“If the Empire wants a launch site… I’ll make this their last one.”


He started walking again.

This time, no one tried to stop him. No one could.



 
✠ Draconis Nihilus Indomitus ✠

VVVDHjr.png

LORD INDOMITUS
Through Fire and Blood.
Through Justice and Strength.
On the Anvil of War, We forge our Destiny.

Connel Vanagor Connel Vanagor


Indomitus-Divider.png


DRAGONSTONE
Corellia | Coronet City | Construction Site

The streets of Coronet City were filled with workers, commuters and all the others that lived, breathed and dwelled in the place. There was no pattern or general direction, it was simply chaos that was directed by the workings of streets, public transports, maglev trains and individual agendas. It was how freedom looked like, how liberty felt, how peace smelled.

It reeked. Imperius moved between the endless stream of individuals as one amongst many thousands. Though slightly larger and somewhat menacing, it was not of any concern to any of the people around Him. They just followed the paths of their own lives and avoided unnecessary contact with complete strangers. The experience was rather unusual for the Zakuulan, usually travelling by less common means. But with the Empire only advancing, the planet was still independent and the petty Jedi offspring that called this their home, had still some oversight and influence.

Therefore He laid low. He full well expected there to be issues at the target destination, but that would be decided there.

The construction site appeared before Him and He managed to slip in quite smoothly. Though immediately upon arrival, He noticed that something was off. There was violence in the air, a residue that was creating a tense atmosphere. It did not take long for the Pureblood to find the wounded and knocked out workers that were clearly attacked by a lightsaber.

That was the kind of issue He had expected to encounter.

Imperius proceeded, leaving the figures as they were, following the path further into the shadows of lifts, towers and buildings. Deeper into the unknown.

The presence He felt ahead was familiar.

Coruscant. He remembered it but ... that was not possible.

AE-Sword.png
 
Light? No. Shadow? No. Responsibility.
VVVDHjr.png
Actions have Consequences
CORELLIA
CORONET CITY





pHjD5Dp.png


Standing on the edge of moving toward the Bastion, Connel took a breath. The air hummed with intent. That’s when he noticed it:

Not with the Force. Not because they move. Not because of some mystical omen.

Because they don’t move.

Snipers hold too still. Spotters breathe wrong for Corellian air pressure. One gun barrel is tuned for a colder climate — frostbite paint, not shipyard dust.

These aren’t security. They’re waiting for him. In a quiet flash, he understood:

This isn’t a siege site. It’s bait… and I’m the mouse they think they’ve caged… he sold me out again… oh well.

Making a mental note to address it with his “good friend”, Connel stepped backward. Not away. Around. He needed a new approach, something unexpected. Connel shifted his weight, calculating every step. The air hummed louder, but he ignored it, focusing instead on the subtle cues of his surroundings. He wouldn’t play their game—not today.

He abandoned the main approach entirely.

It was time to hunt the hunters. The backup, would need a contingency,




One by one, each of the teams fell in the same order. First the cover man. The one protecting the spotter, and the sniper. This soldier would fall by ambush, be it through falling debris, or one of Connel’s Throwing Lightknives. Then comes the Rangefinder / Spotter second — a quick throat strike to stun them, then a weapon jammed and shattered through the Force(mostly Shatterpoint), and tossed into the street. Then the sniper. Pulling the blade out of the chest of the cover man, and using it to sever the rifle, before sending it into the shooting hand of the would be assassin.

He doesn’t kill them all.

Some are thrown alive. Not as bodies. As warnings. They land in the streets below, battered, gasping, armor cracked. The message was being received as Corellians looked up. The city was seeing them.

Workers. Pilots. Dockhands.

They witnessed the uniforms.

They saw the Empire.

And Connel ensured someone always survived long enough to talk.

Tell them. Show them. Arm everyone you know.

This wasn’t execution. This was mobilization.

Why throw them into the streets?
To expose the infiltration. To break the Empire’s secrecy. To wake Corellia up before the invasion lands

He wasn’t saving a planet.

He was preparing one.




Backup arrived quietly at first — a team, then a squad. Every set of reinforcements moved in silently, , efficiently, they were highly professional. However that was their downfall, thinking they’ll flank him.

But the more numbers they committed, the more efficient Connel became. No wasted motion. No wasted Force use. He broke bones with railings, slammed skulls into bulkheads, disarmed entire squads by smashing their own weapons into their armor.

He didn’t talk to them.

He made sure someone survived every encounter. So every survivor told the account of what they saw. Fear, Anger, Disgust… it didn’t matter the slant as long as they knew of the Ghost-Masked Jedi who was already inside their trap.
This was not the entire Empire, but those involved in the secrecy melted into panic.




Then he felt it. A presence. Something he didn’t sense when he entered because it wasn’t using the Force to hide. It was using silence. Not suppressive Force techniques. Not cloaking. Not fear. Something colder. Clinical. Precise. The same emotionless efficiency he felt on Coruscant, when his father died.

Not the killer.

But someone who reported the kill. A strategist? Someone who admired the massacre. The sensation is like a memory of a scalpel sliding under the skin of the Force.

He didn’t know the face… but he knew the intent.

The last time he felt this presence, it stood on the courtyard of the Jedi Temple, attacking, watching and witnessing the fight like a piece of data being filed away.





This isn’t the killer of his father. He might as well be.

And now they’re here to observe him. A scientist dissecting a specimen. A tactician measuring the threat.

They don’t fight yet.

They will.




And For the First Time, Connel Wanted to Cut Loose

Not to avenge Caltin. Not to defend Corellia, but because he wanted this thing to fear him. If the Empire is sending architects of genocide, then he will become a lesson they never hoped to study.

Not Light.

Not Dark.

Just the consequence of their choices.



 

Users who are viewing this thread

Top Bottom