Star Wars Roleplay: Chaos

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Populate The Remnant War - Sularen's Folly [ ME Populate of Selnesh ]



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Tags: Mia Monroe Mia Monroe

He stayed where he was at first. Close, but not too close. Close enough to hear, far enough to not get in the way. That felt like the safest place to exist these days.

Then she waved him forward. Right. No hiding now.

He stepped in beside her, slower than he meant to, eyes locking onto the display like it might bite him if he looked wrong. Red, green, blue, yellow. It took a second for it to stop looking like chaos. Then her voice cut through it. He followed where she pointed, forcing himself to keep up.

Enemy. Ours. Movement. Trajectory.

His brow furrowed. The sudden bloom of green dots made him flinch before he could stop himself. Fighters. Real people. Moving into that mess. He exhaled slowly. Get a grip.

She talks like she's done this a thousand times. Of course she has. You're the only one here playing catch-up.

His gaze drifted to the small cluster pushing deep into red space. Brave or stupid. Probably both. "You can actually see it," he muttered, almost to himself. "Before it happens."

His eyes flicked toward her, studying her profile for a second before looking back to the display. There was something strange about standing next to someone like her and realizing she was just… watching.

He shifted his weight, arms hanging awkwardly at his sides. Say something normal. Just once.

"You've done this a lot, haven't you?" he said, voice quieter now, less uncertain but still rough around the edges.Then he added, because apparently self-preservation wasn't one of his skills, "Is that why they call you the Liberator?"

There it was. Out in the open. No taking that back now.

He kept his eyes on the screen this time, like it might shield him from whatever answer came next.

 

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Oh, she had boarded ships before. But not, in any way, like this. There was a distinct difference between hitting a ship in an act of piracy, and making a military boarding action. She didn't really get it until she was around them.

The Mandalorians.

The former, or more accurately part-time, pirate had no qualms about Crimson Dawn's affiliation with the Mandalorian Empire. To the half-Sephi, it sounded like a fair deal. But she didn't expect to work quite so closely with them.

While some of the Dawn's operatives were embedded in Mando boarding parties, others did not. The Lamia was with the Veil of Ashes, among other Dawn vessels, manned by those with experience similar to Charlana and her crew. Only when Sidonia Sidonia gave word, not the Mando's, did those ships slip into the fray.

Charlana's heavily modified salvage ship had slipped into the chaos of the Mandalorian assault. It's custom designs made it easy for Imperial sensors to miss it in the confusion of the assault, its agility surprising for it's ugly appearance. The Lamia had made it's way under an imperial ship. Using the ship's force cylinder, Charlana and her party made an unsettling (for some), journey up the nearly transparent tube between the vessels to breach an air lock. Soon, they joined others, Mando and Dawn, within the Imperial ship.

Klaxon alarms blared within the imperial warship, and distant blaster fire echoed down the sterile hallways. "Come on, party people." She urged sardonically as the half-sephi made her way towards the docking bay. At an intersection, she saw a patrol of stormtroopers running in their direction. The Dawn team returned fire, except Charlana. She smirked. The Force sudenly twisted unwitting imperial minds, who saw a dozen wookiees running at them letting loose a barrage of bowcaster bolts. The stormtroopers nearly fell over each other as they fled.

Charlana scowled, two thugs had fallen in the brief exchange. They happen to be rather useless to begin with, and not part of her crew. With a shrug, she moved on, jogging towards the docking bay. An explosion resonated through the passage and the sound of a fierce firefight followed. "Arms ready! No Mando heroics here, loves. Nothing wrong with a dirty fight, right?"

With that Charlana sprinted into the fray with her fighers behind her. Her heavy blaster pistol began to snap sharply as she joined other Dawn operatives as they mingled with their Mandalorian allies.

Minerva Fhirdiad Minerva Fhirdiad


 

Liorra had one earbud in, the other hanging loose as she bobbed her head faintly to whatever was playing. Her helmet rested loosely atop her head for the moment, chewstim tucked between her teeth as she idly scrolled through her holodevice.

"Why is Mia leaving me on read… again?" she muttered, mostly to herself. "She said she'd be here. Then she said she got caught up in something."

A beat.

"Hope that something isn't another darksider."

She exhaled through her nose, slouching just slightly where she stood.

"Bet this is one of those growth things," Lio added under her breath, rolling her eyes. "Or whatever."

The nineteen-year-old glanced up, voice carrying just enough to include the others nearby.

"Anyone else have these issues with their vods?"

When Adelle spoke, Liorra blinked, pulled halfway out of her thoughts.

"Huh?" She popped one earbud out. "Vacuum?"

She considered it for a second, then shrugged.

"Yeah, okay. Sure."

Her attention flicked back to her holodevice for one last scroll before she tucked it away. Earbud back in. Helmet lowered. The seal engaged with a soft hiss as it locked into place, the sound swallowed by the rising tension in the pod.

"Alright," she muttered, more to herself than anyone else. "Maximum effort."

The impact came hard.

The pod slammed into the side of the flagship with a violent jolt that rattled through her armor. Liorra steadied herself, eyes tracking as Adelle moved first, decisive, immediate.

Lio turned slightly, catching sight of the other Mandalorian.

"Liorra," she said quickly, nodding once. "Pleasure to shoot with you, what's your name?"

Then the hatch was opening, and that was that.

"I'm goin'!" she shouted, already moving as she surged out behind Adelle.

As she hit the deck at a run, blaster coming up, she tossed back over her shoulder. "So, on a scale of one to Monroe-sized nukes, how crazy am I allowed to get?"
 



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OATH OF IRON
The corvette cut through the battle in a straight, controlled line. No drifting, no hesitation—just moving where it needed to be.

Siv stood near the viewport, watching the mess outside. Ships scattered, some still trying to hold formation, others breaking off and hitting whatever they could.

"Diarchy's gone. Confederation too," he said. "Didn't take their people with them."

A beat.

"I've dealt with some of them before. Officers. Logistics types."
"Smart enough to survive."


His visor shifted toward the Eye of Lianna, sitting at the center of it all.

"That one didn't fall apart with the rest."

A ping hit his HUD.

Korda.

Siv didn't wait. He keyed into comms.

" Jaikell Wyrvhor Jaikell Wyrvhor —adjust course. Veil of Ashes perimeter. We're picking one up."

The ship banked slightly, keeping speed.

He switched channels.

" Korda Veydran Korda Veydran , we're inbound now. No stop. You'll get a window—take it."

Simple.

He cut the line and stepped away from the viewport, heading toward the boarding section.

"Once he's on, we go straight in."

His visor locked forward again.

"End it at the flagship."

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The comm channel cracked open.
"Korda veydran, we're inbound now. No stop. You'll get a window, take it."
Korda froze for half a second.

That voice.
A low, quiet laugh escaped him inside the helmet.
"Siv Kryze," he muttered. "You're still alive."
His tone shifted to open comm.

"Been a while."

He glanced toward the hangar's edge as the Oath of Iron altered course, cutting a clean line toward the Veil of Ashes perimeter without losing speed. No docking sequence. No courtesy drift.

They weren't stopping.
Korda's laugh deepened.
"Looks like you're not planning to slow down," he said over the channel. "Good."

The corvette's silhouette tore across his visor display, engines burning hard. As it passed the open mouth of the hangar, a rear cargo ramp lowered just enough to make a promise, not an invitation.
His helmet sealed fully with a sharp hiss. Internal pressure stabilized. HUD confirmed vacuum integrity.

He gave his gear one final check by feel:
Ashen Maw, locked across his back.
Detonators, secure.
Vibroblade, seated tight.
Gauntlet seals, green across the board.

The engines of the corvette roared closer.
Korda broke into a sprint.
Boots hammered against durasteel as he crossed the length of the hangar, Crimson Dawn personnel parting instinctively without understanding what he was about to do.

He didn't slow at the edge.
He launched himself into open space.
The void swallowed him instantly. Silence replaced engine thunder. For a fraction of a second, Charros IV spun beneath him and the battlefield flared across his visor in streaks of fire and debris.
The Oath of Iron tore past.
Korda angled his body mid-flight, thrusters firing in short corrective bursts. The lowered ramp filled his vision;

He hit it hard.
Mag-boots sparked as they caught the metal, but momentum carried him forward. His shoulder clipped the inner edge, balance lost..
His hand shot out, catching a hydraulic strut beneath the ramp lip.
His body swung briefly into open space.
Then he hauled himself up with a sharp grunt, boots slamming down against the deck as the corvette surged onward.
No wasted motion.

He rolled once to absorb the remaining force, came up on a knee, then rose to his feet inside the cargo bay.
Without hesitation, he slammed his fist against the ramp control. The hydraulics whined as the ramp sealed shut behind him.
Atmosphere cycled back in.
He keyed his comm.

"I'm aboard."

A breath, steady now.
"Appreciate the pickup."
Another short pause.
"And it's good to hear your voice again, Siv."
His visor lifted toward the interior corridor leading deeper into the ship.
"Let's go carve out a flagship."

Tags: Siv Kryze Siv Kryze Jaikell Wyrvhor Jaikell Wyrvhor
 

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CRIMSON DAWN
Objective I - Sularen’s Gambit

Torik would be lying to himself if he were to say he was here for just Crimson Dawn. He was here partially for his pride. There was more to gain than just the self satisfaction that came with silent “well dones” that may not even be uttered. The pride of his clan rested on his shoulders. Not being Mandalorian by birth brought a different kind of responsibility for him. One that meant he couldn’t just let those that got him here and what they worked for rot away. He needed to survive. Did he feel bothered by the objective bestowed upon by the matriarch of Crimson dawn? The answer would ultimately be a resounding “no”.

A call was given and he would answer. He would have expected the same of those under him if he were still a shotcaller on the streets of Taris. The reason mattered not. Only that he was a representative of this group and he had responsibilities. Expanding the influence of Crimson Dawn was on the top of his to-do-list. He would be a willing vessel regardless of what weapon the matriarch chose to wield him as. Whether it be a sword or blaster, he would make sure that he was the best tool for the job.

A still figure in the background would present himself. Torik stood with weapons sheathed awaiting orders. Mandalorian beskar covered his frame as his eyes peered through the traditional t-shape visor. There was no opposition from him. The man didn’t think anyone here would even dare to be in opposition and stand among the lot of them all. Torik rested his left hand on his utility belt as he carefully watched everything that went on around them. Deep down it felt good to be out in space doing something that was more than illicit goods. Being a part of something bigger than oneself was a big reason he enjoyed working with Crimson Dawn.

TAGS: Sidonia Sidonia

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O B J E C T I V E O N E
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From the quiet vantage of the Veil of Ashes, she watched the operation take shape the way one might watch a tide come in; inevitable… and carrying more beneath its surface than it first revealed. Mandalorian precision struck first, clean and deliberate, their assault carving open the edges of Sularen's Gambit exactly as expected. But where they created order in violence, Crimson Dawn followed with something far less predictable.

Like something harder to contain.

Her gaze drifted across fragmented reports and flickers of intercepted feeds, each one a brief window into the chaos now blooming within the fleet. Boarding actions had taken hold. Systems were beginning to stutter. The wheels were being set in motion, and she was there with front row seats.

Aten Karr Aten Karr ’s voice had reached her earlier, filtered through layers of comm traffic and encryption. She hadn't interrupted it. There was no need. Debt was a language Crimson Dawn spoke fluently, and he wielded it well and for some, that was more than enough.

Others required a different touch.

Her attention shifted slightly as another feed stabilized, before dissolving again into interference. A salvage vessel, threading itself through the chaos with surprising grace for something so inelegant. Familiar in its movement, if not its shape.

Sidonia's lips curved upward into a faint smile.

"Charlana," she murmured, almost to herself.
Of course she would choose the most direct path through disorder; and make it look like something else entirely. There was a certain consistency in that, like how she had done almost the same in Ashen Corridor.

Her fingers traced lightly across the edge of the holotable, and the projection shifted in response, isolating key pressure points across the enemy formation. Not the largest ships, not the loudest battles.

The ones that mattered.

Supply lines faltering. Internal defenses misaligned. Command pathways beginning to strain under conflicting inputs; some natural, some… encouraged.

She did not need to see every individual to understand the whole.

That had never been how she operated.

Behind her, the command deck remained quiet, disciplined in its own way: not rigid like the Mandalorians and not chaotic like the raiders flooding the fleet. Something in between.

"Let them take," Sidonia said at last, her voice calm, almost absent-minded. "Credits, weapons, ships; whatever they believe they've earned. Encourage it."

One of her operators inclined their head, already moving to carry out the adjustment across Dawn's channels.

Greed, after all, had its place.

Her gaze returned to the fleet, watching as its once-pristine structure continued to erode; not from a single decisive blow, but from a hundred smaller fractures forming all at once. Mandalorian force pressed from the outside; Crimson Dawn unraveled from within.

"They will think this is victory," she continued quietly. "A raid. A profitable one, at that."

“Let them”


Because by the time anyone realized what this truly was…It would already be over.

Her eyes narrowed slightly, focusing on the drydock at the heart of it all. The quiet center. The place everything else depended on, whether they understood it or not.

"Mark priority targets," she added. "Navigation control. Fuel distribution. Internal communications, not destruction.”

Sidonia stepped forward just enough for the starlight beyond the viewport to catch against the silver of her heels, a brief, cold glint against the darkness of her silhouette.

Out there, men and women fought for pride, for debt, for purpose; each believing, in their own way, that this moment belonged to them.

Sidonia watched it all with quiet patience, her smile, one that she rarely showed on her face, betrayed her true intentions.

Because it didn’t…

"Charlana," she said softly, though there was no direct channel open, no expectation the words would reach her. "Do try not to break anything we might still want."

A faint smile touched her lips. “Or at least… not all of it."

Sidonia wasn’t running Crimson Dawn like what other crime syndicates would and had; she didn’t require those under her to ask for permission, to report every action and definitely not to understand the full plan of each engagement.

Rather, she expected people to act just the way they are; greedy people continue to be fueled by greed, those who enjoyed violence lean in to said violence, while all under the umbrella of loyalty.

She expected alignment.

Her gaze lifted once more to the fractured fleet, to the slow unraveling already well underway.

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Mia let out a small hum at the quiet words he uttered. When you’d seen as many battles and wars as she had it became easier to see the patterns, to predict how an opponent would move, there were only so many new tricks one could learn and if truth be told, the number of people in this galaxy with the power and intelligence to pull of something that had never been done before she could probably count on one hand.

His question made her chuckle. “Not quite.”

“When someone takes the mantle of Mand’alor, they are given a name. Aether’s is Iron. His father was the Reclaimer. And mine was Liberator.”


Her fingers drummed lightly once on the table's edge before she tore her gaze away to study the foundling. “I have been fighting in one war or another for a very long time, so yes. I have done this a lot.”

She turned fully to face him. “You don’t have to look quite so worried about asking questions, you are a foundling, asking questions is how you learn and I encourage you to do so.”

Mia tilted her head, sapphire gaze glittering in the holo’s light. “What is your name?”

Prisoner #36929 Prisoner #36929


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