Star Wars Roleplay: Chaos

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Junction The Spoils | Sith Order/Mandalorian Empire Junction for Apoptosia and Empty Hex


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Tag: Alara Ordo Alara Ordo Mig Gred Mig Gred


Minerva stood holding onto a rail with one hand. Outwardly she was as calm she could be, yet inwardly… Within the helm the veteran warrior gritted her teeth and her whole body shook with absolute fury.

There were two groups she hated the most in all of the galaxy. Sith and Imperials.

The latter were collapsing onto themselves as her vode moved in for the kill. Yet it was in collaboration with the bloody Sith!! She shook her head, sickened at the very idea. Minerva couldn't fathom why Mand'alor continued to insist on maintaining that contract with a cultist queen despite centuries' worth of evidence of how allying with Sith, any Sith leads to suffering, slavery if not outright genocide for their people sooner or later.

Suppressing a sigh Minerva thought. If it wasn't for the opportunity Mig Gered gave me to save people I wouldn't have come at all.

She exhaled at last turning to Mig Gered in gratitude. She listened attentively to his instructions while sparing a glance to Alara of Clan Ordo. The warrior nodded back to Mig.

"You got it vod. Those cultists and Imps can kill each other for all I care. We need to save as many innocents as we can, whether they want our help or not."

Pausing for a moment she added. "Besides the Sith we've had to be on the watch for Imperials. They're cornered and will lash out."
 
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TAG: Mercy Mercy + [Open]
LOCATION: The Ferocity [Near Planet Tion]
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"I have been thinking of Tion…"

Her words were for the Dark Councilors…Though she didn't speak to any of them individually. It would plant the seeds of where her thoughts had gone, anticipating, the next crusade. She brushed delicately past the one of the few Sepulchral who didn't summarily loathe her existence and her empty expression would relay nothing. Darth Caedes would have felt differently, however, perhaps, even sensed through the painted mask that left her serene.

"I have been thinking…Of how it might have missed me...It would be cruel of me to deny it much longer."

A pause.

"Do you not agree?"

What use did she have for Imperial trash?


The wintry Empress of the Sith Order was silent while watching the minor planet of Tion grow in the distance. Most of her children would be focused on the practical purpose of claiming shipyards while wiping out swindling Faithless resistance. The Ferocity cut through velvet space like a knife while the Second Legion moved in silence. True to form…She had not hidden her plain intention to visit Tion in the near future. Her Dark Councilors were well aware of the monstrous shape her wrath could take and had wisely coordinated movement with the Mandalorian Empire before she could take matters into her own hands. Her patience had grown thin.

The vessel that Isley Verd Isley Verd had gifted her when she had been new to Force and this galaxy was among her favored treasures. It wasn't as flashy as the warships she had created for the Mandalorian Empire but there was something timeless about it. It had been built to last, fast, powerful, and it held the same quiet certainty that Srina preferred in herself. There was no wasted motion and no excess of visual noise…Only the inevitability of arrival. All around them, the battle had already begun, with some of the shipyards burning in slow collapsing spirals.

She didn't bother with them.

They had no value.

There was nothing that existed with former Imperial territory that would benefit her Empire more than what they could create themselves. Certainly, they could use it for salvage…But she didn't find any value in utilizing something an enemy had left behind. Not when there could be back-door codes that would allow Imperial remnants access, likely, as some kind of "gotcha" when they "least expected it" from what should have been a dead carcass.

It was pathetic how swiftly their enemies broke when victory was naught but a dream.

Tion did not glow the way the battlefield did, not yet, merely existing as a perfect marble in the ruin of its orbit. Srina stood near the viewport with one had resting lightly against cool transparisteel. Black and gold silk fell in clean, deliberate lines along her frame, with runes laying dormant. She had no need to hide her presence. This was not war. This was...

A walk. A long, long walk.

The faint scent of jasmine and rain lingered, soft and unnatural, against the sterile air of the command deck. Everything was quiet within the Ferocity, almost peaceful, in comparison to the hell these worlds would soon endure. Srina had no quarrel with them individually. It was the yoke of Faithless scum that would see them burn because their witless masters had turned their eyes toward what belonged to her.

They had injured and killed her children.

Bombed and burned her world, wounding, her young Psilofyr…Who knew not why, he burned.

This was a response to those actions, warranted, or not. It would seem like overkill to target so many planets at once. It was. It was an extraordinary response to the body fighting a virus and excising it with extreme prejudice. The Faithless in all forms, all of their dirty cousins, were a blight.

Blights deserved to burn.

Mercurial eyes pulled from Tion when she felt the air shift behind her. The diminutive woman didn't need to turn or look to know that Mercy Mercy approached. She could feel the much larger woman and her hand moved from the window, raised, waiting, for it to be taken. Her battle-sister had been strangely silent during this venture, or, overly loud. This battle seemed to have more weight to it but the Empress of the Blackwall wasn't quite certain where it came from. There was much of Mercy's history that was…Blurred. Perhaps, not deliberately hidden—But cut away.

"The shipyards will either be taken by the Legion…Or they will fall."

The words would feel less like information and more like a sword falling on the neck of a fallen foe. It was damning, hungry, and full of fury for the sins the Faithless had dared to perpetuate. Alabaster skin would seem almost translucent when her teeth ground together and the line of her jaw sharpened. She was aware of the hypocrisy—But cared little for it. Her fingers would curl around the much larger hand of the Titan of Coruscant once her hand was accepted… Taking another, long, slow look at Tion.

"…Shall I destroy it for you?"


 
Relationship Status: It's Complicated

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WEARING: This
WEAPONS: Ferrum Solus | Blodmåne | Strømafbryder
SHIP: Vigfjall
TAG: Naedira Darcrath Naedira Darcrath | Srina Talon Srina Talon | Mercy Mercy | Barragh Nenn Barragh Nenn

Gerwald Lechner left the council chamber on Mirial after the discussion had run its course.

The matters before the Sith had been laid out and answered in the way they always were, and each had taken position as the lines between them settled. Nothing in that room required his continued presence once it was clear where they stood.

Beyond it, events had already begun to move.

Reports spread quickly across the Blackwall and along the Parlemian Trade Route, describing Imperial forces withdrawing from positions they had held only days before while other elements turned on one another. What should have been a unified response after Brosi had fractured into something far less controlled.

Gerwald had already given the order for the Second Legion to move when Srina Talon Srina Talon called for it, and they were underway before he ever stood to leave, committed to the advance while the rest of the galaxy was still trying to understand what it was seeing.

He remained only long enough to see the room settle before stepping away.

The Vigfjall came out of hyperspace at the edge of the fighting over Tion, and the shift from hyperspace to open conflict brought a sudden flood of motion and light across the forward viewport.

Imperial ships drifted at uneven angles around the shipyards, some still venting atmosphere in long white streams that trailed into the dark while others burned in sections where hull plating had split. A cruiser near the outer ring turned slowly as its engines failed, its mass carrying it into a cluster of smaller vessels that could not move clear in time.

Closer to the station, the fighting tightened.

Boarding craft cut through the space between ships in steady lines, their engines flaring as they adjusted course toward exposed docking ports and fractured gantries. Turbolaser fire crossed between advancing ships and the outer defenses of the shipyard, lighting the structure in sharp flashes that revealed torn plating and open sections where the battle had already forced its way inside.

Along the far side of one of Tion’s industrial moons new movement broke the pattern.

A fleet emerged from behind the curvature of the moon, using its mass as cover before turning into the engagement. The largest vessel led the formation, its bulk dwarfing the ships that followed, while the rest of the fleet spread around it in a defensive array. Weapons signatures rose across the group as they cleared the moon’s shadow, and a moment later the first missile barrage cut toward the shipyards, targeting the streams of boarding craft moving in from every direction.

The effect was immediate. Several dropships broke apart under the barrage, and others scattered to avoid the incoming fire. The pressure on the shipyards shifted as the new fleet forced its way into the engagement.

Gerwald watched the change without moving.

The bridge of the Vigfjall held steady around him, lit in low red tones broken by the muted glow of control panels and the constant flow of data across them. The hum of the ship ran beneath everything else, deep enough to be felt through the deck. Officers moved within that space without wasted motion, and their voices remained low as orders passed from one station to the next without interruption.

His Legion was already inside the engagement, and their formations held where others had broken as they advanced in measured pushes and secured what they took instead of overrunning it.

The Vigfjall maintained its position along the outer edge of the battle, where movement remained possible and the press of ships had not closed in. The center of the fighting was already crowded, and the arrival of the remnant fleet only tightened it further.

Gerwald’s attention moved across the shipyards as the battle shifted.

Some sections were already being abandoned. Others were still being held under increasing pressure. The new barrage had bought those defenders time, but not enough to change what would follow. There were still places where the outcome had not yet been decided, where resistance remained in pockets that had not yet been broken.

His focus settled there.

A shift moved through the Force that had nothing to do with the battle.

It did not appear on any display, and no sensor marked its arrival, but it carried a weight that did not belong to ships or weapons. Srina Talon Srina Talon had entered the system, and her presence spread across the field with a quiet certainty that was untouched by the chaos around it.

Gerwald did not turn from the viewport.

He knew she was there.

The timing was not lost on him.

Gerwald did not move when Naedira Darcrath Naedira Darcrath came to stand beside him, and for a moment nothing passed between them that the room could see.

Her presence settled at his side and held, and it did not fade into the background or allow what had been chosen to be set aside. He did not turn his head, and he did not create space between them.

A slight shift of his hand at his side closed the last inch between them, and his fingers brushed against hers before pausing with quiet certainty that the contact was intentional, even if no one else on the bridge would notice it.

The contact did not linger, but it was enough to acknowledge her presence and answer it without drawing attention.

Srina Talon’s call had taken him from Naedira, and he had answered it knowing exactly what it would cost, and that choice remained what it had always been. Standing beside her now did not change that decision, but the distance it had created did not hold in the same way once she was there at his side.

“You’ve done well here,” he said quietly. “Shall we remind them what happens when we stand together?”

Around them, the fighting continued to tighten around the shipyards as boarding craft struck in waves while the remnant fleet pressed its attack and sections of the station were forced open under sustained assault.

The Vigfjall held its position, and Gerwald remained at the viewport with Naedira beside him.

He was not alone.

“Your boarding ship is ready along with a contingent of Dreadguard, my lord,” a voice came from behind him.

The Dread Wolf turned his gaze to his she-wolf.

It was time.

 
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Current Outfit
Kitty

As Lazzasha Jovee Lazzasha Jovee and Olyssandra Olyssandra disembark their ship to try to wreak havoc, a giant portal with jagged orange edges appeared before them. All the Sith warriors could see through the portal was nothing but inky black darkness. A spilt second later, a young woman jumped out of the portal a wielding a massive blade as large as she was. A cocky grin was etched on her face. Despite the Imperial Faction going down in flames, Amni was eager to battle. She wanted to win of course, but if it's her time die then it's best to drag these Sith down with her all the way to hell.

"Oh hello there!" Amni said. "You know it's rather rude for you to just waltz onto someone's planet and start wrecking the place! I didn't even start handing out invitations to the party!"

As she said that, Amni raised her hand summing a large Force push towards the two ladies. "But I suppose I should give you a warm welcome!" She shouted with a grin.
 
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//: Objective III //:
//: Kaelen Voss Kaelen Voss //: Lysander von Ascania Lysander von Ascania //: OPEN //:
//: Attire //:

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Diplomacy. That was her use to the Empire. Unlike the others, she didn't cry out for death and blood. She fought differently, using her words and influence rather than her blade or power. Many looked down on her, and many considered her the weakest on the council. It was a common rumor that she had been appointed only through nepotism. Her Master, the greatest deceiver, Taeli Raaf, and her mother, the Empress of the Order, it was easy to assume.

Quinn ran her hands down the fabric of the dress she wore. Today, she was a Dark Councilor, the heir apparent to the throne — her place as Queen would be on the forefront as well, but in these relations, she was a Sith above all else. Exhaling softly, she listened to the student she had brought along speak his feelings on the matter.

She sponsored him, and seeing an Echani power rise through the ranks at the Jutrand Academy was nice to see. There weren't many, since the Jedi had heavily influenced Eshan for so long. Kaelen was a small breath of fresh air. His words echoed his teachings at the academy: fight, conquer, words that were the core of the Sith Doctrine.

It wasn't the core of hers, but she understood its appeal. Perhaps she's been sitting in Republic space for far too long.

She did enjoy their assortment of teas.

Another call from the boy as she could hear him pacing, his presence fluctuating, showing its power. The opposite of her in many ways. Quinn moved quietly, unnoticed by the rest of the Empire. Her face was known because of her status. Sighing softly, she finally emerged from the shuttle and allowed the click of her heels to be what announced her arrival.

She nodded her head towards him, motioning him to follow. Quinn didn't answer right away; her eyes remained focused on the route ahead of them. The moment he caught up, she would keep pace just with a bit more distance between them, a subconscious action — one she never drew attention to.

"Councilor, Queen, or Princess, are fine ways to address me. Overseer makes me sound like an old man." A small smile curled at her red-stained lips as she looked towards the taller boy. He was everything a Sith Echani should be, everything she was not.

She thought about his words.

"You think they should have fought?" She asked between them. Then she shook her head once.

"I don't."

Quinn often went against the grain when it came to the other Sith; she disagreed with many of her elders' desires. Maybe it was her upbringing or her Master. But she saw potential in certain things.

"Fighting isn't the only way to have strength, it's just the loudest one." Her emerald eyes would flicker once more to the boy, to study his face and reaction to her words. As Echani, their bodies often spoke more truth than their words.

"They looked at us… at what we are capable of… and chose to keep their people alive instead of proving a point."

She tilted her head slightly, thinking about the instruction.

"That is not being weak." Quinn smiled as she sighed breathlessly, almost amused at the young Sith's bravado.

"Not everyone needs to burn to matter." Her tone softened, trying to show the ease with which this line of thought could come.

"And not every victory requires force." She mused and continued walking towards the welcoming party.

"If anything, this tells you more about them than a battlefield ever could. They value survival and seek stability." Eyes narrowed slightly in thought as she took a small glance at a gentleman near a pillar.

"That means they can be reasoned with. Worked with. Maybe even trusted, under the right conditions." Her eyes moved from the man to the Acolyte. It was his turn to participate in the lesson.

"You're asking why they don't fight." Her smile widened as she looked away and finished.

"I'm asking why you think that's the only thing that makes something worth having."

The young Queen left the boy with a thought, one that she wondered how he would eventually answer her. But first, she needed to say 'Hello' to an acquaintance — one she only knew through reputation and gifts.

"Lysander?" She asked carefully, offering her hand to shake. "I received your gift, it is a beautiful speederbike, I've quite enjoyed toying with her a bit."

Her smile soft toying with a hint of mischief and playfulness.

"You have quite the eye for speeders, I will say. Hopefully, that same attention to detail is included in your diplomatic repertoire." Pausing, she looked at the Acolyte and offered to introduce the two.

"Kaelen Voss, this is Lysander von Ascania — he's with the Sith Covenant, our neighbors in the Core."
 



The war did not feel distant simply because Voss had chosen not to resist.

It followed them.

It settled into the quiet between ships as they descended through clear skies that should have been burning. There were no defensive formations waiting in orbit, no desperate fleets buying time for a world that refused to yield. The systems they had passed on the way here had told the same story in fragments, Imperial forces withdrawing, turning inward, breaking apart under pressures that had nothing to do with the advance pressing in from the outside.

Aerik had felt it the entire approach, not as victory or relief, but as something unfinished, something that had not yet decided where it would fall.

Voss did not carry that weight the way the rest of the galaxy did. The landing platform stood unmarred, the stone beneath his boots untouched by war. Even the air lacked the sharp edge he had come to expect, no trace of ionization, no distant echo of bombardment. It would have been easy to mistake it for peace if he did not know better.

It was a choice.

He stepped away from the edge of the platform as the others began to move, his pace unhurried as his gaze tracked those ahead of him. Diplomats and officers moved alongside Sith who understood that not every victory needed to be taken by force, even if most preferred it that way.

His attention did not stay on them.

It found her without effort.

Quinn Varanin Quinn Varanin stood apart without trying to, the space around her shaped more by presence than distance. There was nothing in her posture that reached for attention, nothing that demanded it, and yet it settled there all the same. He watched her for a moment as she moved, her steps measured and controlled, the conversation she carried with the Echani student unfolding in a way that most would not expect from someone in her position.

Not weak.

Never that.

Different.

His gaze shifted slightly as he drew closer, and it did not settle on her face at first, but lower, to the place where her hand had once rested along his jaw.

There had been a time when that moment carried something unguarded and real in a way neither of them had tried to define. That place was no longer untouched. The line of the scar had settled there in its place, not jagged and not careless, but unmistakable all the same.

Brosi had left its mark.

She had told him what she was.

Dangerous. Not in the way others pretended to be, but in the way that did not need to announce itself. She had told him to keep his distance, and at the time he had understood the words without needing to test them.

He did not slow as he closed the space between them.

Distance had never been the point.

He closed the remaining distance without changing his pace, his attention fixed forward rather than lingering on the exchange beside her, even as the conversation carried clearly enough for him to follow.

Only once he stepped into it did his gaze shift, briefly taking in the Echani at her side and the man she had turned to greet before returning to her.

He had not come to Voss as an observer. With the Second Legion mobilized and his father remaining with the fleet, there were few within the Order positioned to carry that weight planetside. The Kainite were not present, and that absence did not leave a void. It left something that needed to be held.

Irina Jesart Irina Jesart would meet him here. Until then, it was his to carry.

“Then they chose well.”

He did not interrupt. He allowed the conversation to reach its natural pause before stepping fully into it, his presence settling into the space without forcing attention and drawing it all the same.

“Councilor.”

He turned slightly as he spoke, hating the formality he had to show, the acknowledgment beginning with Quinn before extending to the others beside her.

“Aerik Lechner.”

 

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