Star Wars Roleplay: Chaos

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Junction THE TRINITY AFFAIR | TSC & THR Junction of Commenor and New Plympto



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Chandrila's government-in-exile may lack the resources and might to reclaim their homeworld, but they remain a stalwart symbol of democratic resilience in an increasingly autocratic galaxy. Aboard the luxury star cruiser, Trinity, they tour the galaxy in the hope of building a coalition to drive the Sith from the Core Worlds.

En route to Alderaan, the Trinity's hyperdrive has failed, stranding the vessel, its crew, civilian passengers, and Chandrila's government-in-exile in deep space...

An emergency broadcast went out:

"THIS IS THE CSL TRINITY REQUESTING IMMEDIATE ASSISTANCE. OUR HYPERDRIVE IS OFFLINE, AND OUR POWER RESERVES ARE LIMITED."

The message repeats.

OBJECTIVE ONE
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A diplomatic vessel from the High Republic has docked with the Trinity without incident. While their diplomatic entourage meets with the Chandrilian government-in-exile and the starship's captain, the rest of the Republic's away team has promised to assist the crew across the starship -- making repairs and providing aid where they can.

As soon as all were occupied with their tasks, power across the star cruiser cycled. Blast doors closed. Lights out. It was silence and darkness until...

The hiss and glow of crimson blades. An ambush!

Hidden Sith have struck -- the Trinity's systems are now under their control, and they seek to keep it that way. Unless wrested from their grasp, the Republic's diplomats and away team are trapped aboard the star cruiser. Undoubtedly, Sith reinforcements are on their way...

OBJECTIVE TWO
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The Republic's diplomats have been invited to the Trinity's Chancellor's Suite. Once a luxurious abode, it has since been converted into a headquarters for Chandrila's government-in-exile.

When they had arrived, all exits were shuttered, revealing another Sith ploy. Obvious in the shameful look given by the Chandrilan leader; obviously coerced into this ruse from the beginning. The Sith were poised for a decisive victory, but their plan backfired.

Emergency generators fired when they shouldn't have, activating state-of-the-art security. Ray shields flicker into existence, trapping all within the confines of those lethal barriers. One particularly hot-headed Sith Lord attempted to break free before convulsing for a few seconds and collapsing to the floor; incapacitated.


Speakers crackled on, emitting a droid voice.

"WARNING: VIOLENCE DETECTED!!! LOCKDOWN IS NOW IN EFFECT. PLEASE REMAIN CALM. SECURITY WILL BE WITH YOU SHORTLY. IN THE MEANTIME, ENJOY THE CLASSIC SOUNDS OF BOBOLO BAKER'S ALL-BITH BAND."

Of course, security was occupied elsewhere. At least the music was good.

The Suite's high-tech security system pacifies the room. Any attempts at violence are met with immediate incapacitation. Both sides are stuck until someone lifts the lockdown.

Verity Stuyveris Verity Stuyveris Mercy Mercy Aurelian Veruna Aurelian Veruna Arris Windrun Arris Windrun Ghruna Ghruna Jax Thio Jax Thio Sibylla Abrantes Sibylla Abrantes Acier Moonbound Acier Moonbound Lysander von Ascania Lysander von Ascania Jett Aurin Jett Aurin Ives Ives Jacob Solay Jacob Solay Liana Organa Liana Organa Lily Decoria Lily Decoria Corazona von Ascania Corazona von Ascania Delvin jeth Delvin jeth Balun Dashiell Balun Dashiell Mykel Dawson Mykel Dawson Varin Mortifer Varin Mortifer Dominique Vexx Dominique Vexx Tamsin Starfall Tamsin Starfall Connel Vanagor Connel Vanagor Quinn Varanin Quinn Varanin Diogo Diogo Gram Arranda Gram Arranda Zark San Tekka Zark San Tekka Jorryn Fordyce Jorryn Fordyce Anet Raine Anet Raine Vestra Tane Vestra Tane

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fit check for my napalm era


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BEFORE
The Chancellor's Suite would have been a lovely stateroom once upon a time, if one was into interstellar cruising. Verity preferred the old-fashioned version: a ship cutting through the waves of some ocean or another, salty spray, the obsequiousness of a crew hell-bent on meeting her every whim, and a glass of something bubbly as she leaned leisurely against the real wood railing of her balcony. Maybe there was a lover just inside, fiddling with cufflinks, preparing to take her to an ever-so-luxurious dining room.

But instead she was here. No wood railings, no bubbly drinks, no cufflinks, no lovers, not even the promise of fine dining once the session was over. The luxury suite repurposed to serve as the seat of a planetary government-in-exile that in reality should have taken up most of a ship this size. Verity didn't envy them. She didn't know why she was here at all, other than that to decline would have seemed churlish in light of recent events. Dignity demanded this, as it demanded so much. Dignity, always dignity.

Yet she had felt instantly that something was amiss when she went into her briefcase. Rifling through the important contents -- snacks, mostly, because if you thought Verity Stuyveris was cranky, just wait til she had low blood sugar and a hunger headache, but also a hairbrush, spare hairpins, and a tiny spritz bottle of impossibly expensive parfum -- she came to the sickening conclusion she suspected: her lucky stylus was missing. She had left it on the shuttle. Surely Verity could have borrowed a stylus from someone -- Ayumi Pallopides Ayumi Pallopides probably had one that emitted a lovely floral perfume while gently warming the pads of one's fingertips while writing and autocorrected the prose in the bargain -- but this was a serious business and it demanded Verity's best kit.

She set her briefcase on the chair next to her and turned to her neighbor. "Would you keep an eye on this for a moment? I left something I need back on the shuttle, I think," she said, and then Verity slipped from the room, pace quick because the faster she got back to the shuttle, the faster she could get back to the negotiations.

NOW
Senator Stuyveris had reached the corridor just outside the hangar, lucky stylus in hand, just in time for the lights to go out on the ship. Her stomach lurched and she put a hand to the bulkhead to steady herself. "Oh, what fresh hell can this be?" Verity scowled, groping with her other hand for her comlink. The screen lit up her face and she scrolled through, looking to raise the brightness. Maybe she could use it as a torch.

The ship had been in bad shape according to distress signals, she reasoned. This didn't have to mean something was wrong.

Verity Stuyveris was old enough to know that that didn't mean something wasn't wrong, either.


 
Verity Stuyveris Verity Stuyveris

Mercy herself had stepped out of the conference room to have a smoke.

It was a necessary thing to steel her resolve before they'd get to diplomating. Truly a disgusting affaire, but according to Arris Windrun Arris Windrun and Vestra Tane Vestra Tane she couldn't tap out of this one. It was important she was in the room 'when it happened'. She wasn't certain what 'it' could be, besides just endless talking and chattering between people who thought their words were so incredibly important.

She finished her cigarette and was walking (stalking really) back to the conference room when the lights went out.

"Oh, what now again..." Mercy muttered as she looked around, trying to pierce the darkness with her gaze, before realizing this wouldn't do. She seized on the Dark Side of the Force and amplified her senses.

Until amber bled into her eyes and the corridor became perceptible again.

The Empress of the Core continued her stride until she reached the doors of the conference room. Or rather, reached a particular figure in front of it, holding a tablet up at maximum brightness.

"Senator..." Mercy's voice, low and almost like stone being grind down, came up behind her. "I do believe you are on the wrong side of the doors."

The mountain loomed behind her.

"What ever shall we do about that?"

Lysander von Ascania Lysander von Ascania had been nice enough to update her about the various things the Senator of Druckenwell had said about her.

Cute.

So... so cute.
 
fit check for my napalm era


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A sense of foreboding settled over the figure of Verity Stuyveris, like darkness layered over darkness, stillness bearing down on stillness.

Her fingers reached for the controls to the Chancellor's Suite. In the darkness, the corridor was like a place she had never been before -- a foreign country and a foreign concept. The controls did not respond to her touch. Verity stepped back a moment, turning the lit-up screen of her comlink up toward the ceiling, inspecting the plaque above the door. No, she was in the right place. "What the hell?" she hissed to herself and pressed the controls again, as if merely pressing harder could restore power to the lock.

Nothing.

Then the voice made its presence known. Verity didn't recognize the voice -- intelligence dossiers didn't have that particular detail, or at least the ones she had been briefed on had not -- but the confidence in it suggested that Verity had been cornered by someone of some authority. She tensed, her head turning first, then she turned her body, and with a hand she tried not to let tremble, she raised her light source, casting the the woman's face in a pale blue-white glare.

The Big Woman™ stood in front of Verity,

Something went cold in Verity's gut and her hand gripped tighter on her stylus. "Mercy," she said quietly, her voice conversational despite the spike of discomfort that had seized her. As if she had stumbled across something surprising, but quite common. "I should be surprised to find you here. I don't recall seeing your name on the invitation from the Chandrilan government-in-exile. But then again I know better than most how little you people think of social graces."

She had taken a step back, then another. Verity didn't know where this corridor led, but she was certain she wanted room to run if the self-proclaimed Empress of the Core decided to make trouble. "What's going on in there? A trap, obviously, but -- are they alive?"


 
Verity Stuyveris Verity Stuyveris

She had just smoked but looking down at Verity made her pull out another one.

Then after some consideration, she offered it to Verity. If she accepted she'd give it over and pull one more out for herself. Otherwise she'd lit up the original new cigarette before pushing it between her lips and dragging from it slowly. Enjoying the act of killing her cells slowly, before feeling them regenerate inside of her again.

"Social graces are for the weak." Mercy said conversationally, while those burning amber eyes tracked Verity's trajectory as she pivoted backwards. It made the large mountain smirk.

That would let the Senator know it had been a mistake.

After all, fleeing before a predator... only made their instincts kick in, as the Sith stepped forward. Each step of hers was worth several of Verity, so Mercy kept up easily.

"Those that need convention and structure to protect their positions, because they do not possess the strength to maintain it themselves." She blew some of the smoke out as Verity's question made Mercy pause in a way that her stepping back had not. "Trap? You would know better than me, Senator."

A light shrug of shoulders shaped like a mountain range.

"Isn't this sort of thing more your ball game? Hiding like rats, setting up traps... what part of my MO suggests I'd ever stoop so low?"

Mercy had no idea, of course, that Arris Windrun Arris Windrun was exactly the type of fiend who would try and do an ambush like this. But neither had her fellow Triumvir counted on a third party taking advantage... to try and do more than just disable the ship.
 
fit check for my napalm era


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The Senator rejected the cigarette with a slight shake of her head.

Verity rolled her eyes. The Big Woman sounded exactly like Lysander von Ascania Lysander von Ascania . At least he had the good grace to look pretty while smirking. "Yes, yes," she said, as if bored, despite the pulse hammering below her jaw. "If you're trying to get me into some philosophical debate about how only those who cannot work inside civilization would try to destroy it I can tell you now I couldn't be less interested if there were a pill to achieve it. I'm quite familiar with your whole all of sentient life's vices in a trench coat, pretending to be a justifiable ideology shtick. I didn't find it compelling while watching you people butcher the Tapani Sector and I'm not at all that impressed by it now."

The Senator considered what her response meant, really. Accusing the Republic of the underhanded deed of luring themselves here as part of a trap seemed farfetched. Mercy's presence put things in perspective; the Chancellor would not have authorized such a scheme, and she could hardly envision even Yittreas putting his colleagues' lives at risk in this nature. Even if so, he would not have had the pull with the Chandrilans to arrange a meeting invitation.

A noise sounded from within the conference room, hardly audible through the bulkhead, but she could pick out some words: lockdown, security, and Bobolo Baker's All-Bith Band. Her eyes flicked back to the Sith as the smooth-jizz standards -- heavy on the slitherhorn and bass viol -- sounded on the other side of the door, barely audible. "Someone is subjecting a bunch of people to Bobol Baker, and you expect me to believe that's not some deranged Sith torture?" She shook her head. "Truly, your MO would more likely be to blow this ship to slag, because mass murder is about the most complicated arithmetic you people are capable of. But something has gone amiss here, and along comes you? Too convenient. Too pat."

Her glacial eyes poured contempt into the space between the Senator and the Sith Lord. "Genocidal maniacs don't get to claim the benefit of the doubt. If you have nothing to do with it, put your money where your mouth is and get these doors open. Then I'll acknowledge there is, indeed, a depth to which your kind would not stoop."

It was an odd hill to die on, but Verity's experiences with the Covenant suggested that odd hills to die on were the only kind available.


 
Verity Stuyveris Verity Stuyveris

"My continued existence is its own justification, darling." Mercy drawled lazily as her eyes went back to the bulkdoors. She could hear the sounds just as well as Verity did. So far no blaster fire or anything else, which boded well. Arris would never let her hear the end of it, if this ended in bloodshed and Mercy had missed it because of a smoking break. "I don't need ideology for that."

Her knuckles rapped against the bulkdoor.

It was a casual touch... and yet the sound echoed through the corridor as metal warped and whined at the mere hint of her gesture.

"Mm, not a great idea..." She said over her shoulder to the Senator. "I could rip this apart, yes, but it would either reduce everyone behind the doors into pulp, or the structural cohesion of the ship would come under threat."

The Sith turned back to Verity.

"In other words, I might accidentally blow a hole in the ship's hull and suck everyone into the vacuum of space."

Two big steps and suddenly the mountain was looming over Verity once more.

"I know a thing or two about size... and you have about the biggest fucking mouth in town so far, sweetheart." Her hand moved to pat Verity on the cheek before she could blink. A threat, if there was any, since the indents of her knuckles were still on the bulkdoor made out of reinforced steel.

"Lucky for you I find it charming. Now, you can sit here and listen to the music, or you can follow me. I will investigate who is raining on my parade. First stop, the reactor room, because the emergency power is still working... that is how we are still breathing."
 
Heir to the Emperor, Senator of Denon
Verity Stuyveris Verity Stuyveris Dominique Vexx Dominique Vexx Mykel Dawson Mykel Dawson

OBJECTIVE 2
Notable: Veil of Denon above)

BEFORE
The first sound is not music but breath, soft and steady, threading through the quiet of a vast chamber before any instrument dares to follow it. A single slipper brushes the polished stage floor, toe grazing the wood with the delicate certainty of long practice. The dancer's weight settles and lifts again, as though gravity itself has become a courteous partner in the performance. Pale light pours down from high above in slender columns, turning the stage into a pool of silver surrounded by darkness. Within that light, fabric stirs. Layers of pale material sweep outward as the figure turns slowly, the motion controlled enough that the trailing edge of the costume hangs in the air for a moment before gravity reclaims it. Arms rise, not abruptly but with patient precision, hands shaping the air as though guiding something unseen through the quiet. Fingers extend, fold inward, and open again in a sequence that seems older than the music that has yet to begin. Each motion is deliberate and measured, careful without appearing cautious. The dance carries the calm rhythm of ritual, a quiet language written in steps and turns, waiting for the orchestra to catch up.

When the music finally arrives it does so gently, strings emerging from silence like distant wind over still water. The melody floats rather than commands, drifting through the theater with a quiet dignity that feels almost ceremonial. The dancer answers immediately. A smooth pivot carries the figure across the stage, the long fall of fabric tracing an elegant crescent through the air before settling again around the legs. Each step lands with barely a whisper, toe touching first, heel following an instant later. Hands sweep outward in a controlled arc, drawing invisible circles that linger in the mind long after the gesture itself has ended. The choreography unfolds without haste. A glide forward becomes a turn, the turn dissolving into another step that sends the dancer drifting toward the edge of the light before returning again to its center. The embroidery along the costume catches the stage lights in faint flashes, threads of silver shimmering briefly before fading back into shadow. There is grace in every motion, but also restraint. The dance does not seek applause yet. It moves with the calm patience of a story that knows it will be understood eventually.

The rhythm deepens as additional instruments join the orchestra. A quiet percussion line slips beneath the melody, tapping gently like distant footsteps echoing through a marble corridor. The dancer's movements shift with it, growing sharper without losing their elegance. One spin becomes two, each faster than the last, the hem of the costume flaring outward like the petals of some pale flower caught in a rising breeze. A sudden pause follows, the performer balanced perfectly on one foot while the other hovers just above the stage. The stillness lasts only a breath before motion resumes again. Arms sweep downward in a movement so swift it might almost be mistaken for a strike if not for the open hand that finishes the gesture. The illusion fades immediately back into graceful choreography, yet something about the motion lingers. Another pivot follows, the dancer's body angling slightly as though turning away from something unseen. The sequence carries a strange tension beneath its elegance, as though fragments of another language hide within the dance. What appears ornamental from a distance holds the faint outline of something far more practical.

Beyond the edge of the stage, the theater reveals itself gradually to anyone patient enough to look away from the motion below. Rows of plush seating curve through the chamber like gentle terraces, each one filled with well dressed spectators whose quiet attention forms its own silent rhythm. Pale marble columns rise along the walls, their polished surfaces catching the glow of crystal chandeliers that hang high above like captured constellations. The ceiling arches overhead in an enormous dome painted with tranquil scenes of lakes and distant sky, colors so soft they almost seem to drift when viewed from the balcony. Everything about the hall carries the quiet confidence of wealth and tradition. Fine fabrics shift whenever someone leans forward in their seat, and faint glimmers of jewelry flash briefly when the stage lights scatter across the audience. The atmosphere is not loud or restless but carefully attentive, the sort of silence that only settles when a room is filled with people accustomed to observing art as much as enjoying it.

High along one curved balcony, a woman sits with one arm resting lightly against the railing, watching the stage with the calm interest of someone who has attended more performances than she could easily count. Her gaze drifts occasionally toward the architectural details of the hall before returning again to the dancer below. Beside her, her date seems less enthralled by the unfolding performance. The other woman's posture has softened gradually over the past several minutes, shoulders settling deeper into the plush seat as the quiet rhythm of the orchestra drifts through the air. One hand loosely holds a folded program that slowly tilts toward the floor each time her grip relaxes. Her eyes open briefly when the music swells, blinking toward the stage as if attempting to gather the thread of the story before drifting closed again. The woman at the railing glances toward her with a faint, amused smile before turning her attention back to the stage. The theater continues its quiet ritual around them, the orchestra guiding the dancer through sequences that appear elegant at first glance and strangely purposeful upon closer observation.

The performance itself grows more elaborate as the music builds. The dancer crosses the stage in sweeping arcs now, each movement carving graceful patterns through the light. One gesture resembles a greeting offered to an unseen crowd, the performer's arm lifting outward before lowering again with poised dignity. The next motion reverses the posture entirely, the dancer pivoting sharply as though avoiding an invisible advance before flowing seamlessly back into a measured turn. The choreography walks a careful line between ceremony and something more kinetic. Steps land with increasing clarity against the stage floor, their rhythm echoing faintly beneath the orchestra's melody. Even the leaps carry a sense of direction, as though the dancer is navigating a space filled with obstacles no one else can see. To the casual observer the performance remains a work of elegance and artistic precision. Yet hidden within the sequence of gestures lies the unmistakable suggestion of training. Each pivot mirrors the angle of a defensive movement. Each sudden turn carries the controlled balance of someone accustomed to reacting quickly under pressure.

As the orchestra swells again, the stage itself begins to change. Light shifts along the backdrop, subtle projections emerging through the haze of theatrical illumination. At first the shapes appear abstract, pale curves and faint towers barely visible against the painted horizon. Gradually the forms sharpen. Elegant domes rise against a sky brushed with warm color, their reflections suggested in the distant shimmer of water below. The architecture carries a distinctive beauty, smooth and luminous in a way that feels both regal and serene. Recognition spreads quietly among the audience as the shapes become clearer. The city revealed in light is not imaginary at all but unmistakably real to anyone familiar with the worlds of the Republic. Graceful lakeside structures stretch across the backdrop in soft golden hues, their curved silhouettes rising like sculptures shaped by wind and sunlight. Even from the balcony, the image is easy to recognize. The stage now overlooks the tranquil skyline of Naboo.

The dancer stands at center stage as the projection settles fully into view behind her. One arm lifts again in a gesture of greeting, posture tall and dignified as though addressing a chamber filled with distant voices. The orchestra quiets to a sustained note while the movement holds. In that moment the story hidden within the choreography becomes unmistakable. The graceful turns that once seemed abstract now echo the formal poise of a ruler acknowledging her people. The sharper pivots carry the subtle discipline of someone trained to defend herself when ceremony gives way to danger. Even the delicate steps resemble the careful composure required of a leader standing beneath countless watching eyes. The dancer lowers her arm slowly, the gesture dissolving back into motion as the music rises again. Beneath the flowing elegance of the ballet, the life of Padmé Amidala unfolds in fragments of movement: queen, senator, diplomat, and reluctant warrior, each role expressed through the quiet language of the stage.

Up in the balcony, the woman at the railing leans slightly forward as the next movement begins, her attention fully captured now that the story has revealed itself. Beside her, her date stirs again, blinking slowly as she lifts her head from where it had begun to dip toward her shoulder. The music swells through the chamber once more, strings and brass rising together as the dancer launches into another sequence of sweeping turns. For a moment the drowsy woman watches the stage in mild confusion, still shaking away the edges of sleep. She glances down at the folded program slipping from her hand and then back toward the performance below. "Is it over?" she murmurs quietly, voice softened by lingering drowsiness. The woman beside her smiles faintly without looking away from the stage. "Not yet," she replies under her breath. Below them the dancer moves again, graceful and resolute beneath the lights, continuing the elegant battle that transforms the life of Naboo's most famous daughter into art. Ayumi looked at the woman.... not nearly as interesting.

NOW
Ayumi sat at the meeting table with a calm, upright posture that made her height evident even while seated. At six feet two, her long frame carried a quiet presence that naturally drew attention without any deliberate effort on her part. Her shoulders remained relaxed, though the balance of her stance suggested a constant awareness of the room around her. She watched the others gathered across from her with patient focus, her deep honey eyes moving slowly from one speaker to another as the conversation unfolded. Flecks of amber caught the room's lighting whenever she shifted her gaze, giving the impression of warm gold beneath the darker tone of her irises. Her expression stayed neutral and attentive, revealing little of her thoughts while she listened. The faint pale nick below her lower lip was only visible when her mouth shifted slightly in a restrained reaction to something said at the table. Otherwise, her features remained composed and steady, the kind of expression cultivated by someone used to listening carefully before speaking.

Her clothing reflected a deliberate balance between formality and practicality. The sleeveless vest she wore was tailored in a white and gold color scheme, the clean structure of the garment framing her torso while leaving her arms free for comfortable movement. Gold accents traced the seams and closures in precise lines, subtle enough to avoid appearing decorative while still reflecting the careful craftsmanship of the outfit. Beneath the vest, the design of the ensemble followed the same restrained pattern, fitted without appearing restrictive. The clothing sat naturally on her tall frame, emphasizing posture and balance rather than display. A layered necklace rested against her chest, its pale metallic pendant hanging at the center in a simple, deliberate arrangement. Matching earrings moved slightly when she turned her head to follow the discussion. None of the elements were overly elaborate, but together they gave the impression of someone who had chosen her appearance with intention before entering the meeting.

Ayumi's hair fell freely down her back in a long sheet of straight dark-honey strands that reached nearly to her waist. Natural threads of gold ran through it, visible whenever the lighting caught the smooth surface of the hair as she shifted slightly in her chair. The color closely matched the warm tones in her eyes, creating a consistent palette that stood out subtly among the darker shades of the room. When she leaned forward slightly to rest one forearm against the table, the length of her hair shifted over one shoulder, settling against the pale fabric of her vest. The movement was quiet and controlled, much like the rest of her posture. Her features carried a calm strength, her expression focused without appearing tense. The small scar beneath her lower lip remained a quiet detail in the overall balance of her appearance, easy to overlook unless someone watched her closely while she spoke or reacted.

Though her clothing concealed most of the marks of her past, Ayumi's body still carried several faint scars from earlier fights. They were not prominent, existing instead as pale lines that could occasionally be glimpsed where fabric met exposed skin. None of them defined her appearance on their own, but they contributed to the quiet sense of experience reflected in the way she carried herself. Her build was lean and balanced, more defined by agility than by bulk. At one hundred thirty pounds distributed across her tall frame, she appeared light at first glance, though the steadiness of her posture suggested considerable physical control. Even while seated she held herself with the poised alignment of someone accustomed to movement and readiness. Her attention remained steady throughout the meeting, tracking subtle changes in tone or posture around the table. Rather than interrupting, Ayumi seemed content to observe the discussion carefully, gathering information before offering her own contribution.

Throughout the conversation her gaze moved thoughtfully across the room, occasionally settling on whoever currently held the floor before drifting again to others listening nearby. The quiet patience in her expression suggested she was studying the dynamic of the group as much as the words being spoken. When she did shift in her chair, the motion remained controlled and minimal, a simple adjustment of posture rather than restlessness. Her honey-colored eyes remained attentive and steady, reflecting the calm confidence of someone comfortable in environments where careful observation mattered. The room's discussion continued around her, but Ayumi maintained the same composed presence she had held since arriving. She listened without interruption, her posture relaxed yet alert, as though weighing each statement against her own understanding before deciding whether or not she needed to respond.

The sounds of the lockdown came and there was more. Ayumi stood prepared and at the ready as she had a brief moment and watched several things happening at once. Her hand slipping to her small Compact on the table while the High Republic Modern Attire from Denon was protective enough. She looked around though and her small accessories had for protection a Combat Blade but she rarely needed to use something like that. Rojuhr Pouihl Rojuhr Pouihl her security chief was one to insist she do things when he wasn't around and he was busy making Denon safe. Instead she had Zahira there with her as the sounds of danger would come... This was already seeming to be another Moorja when it was a trap and that did not sit well as she remained in stillness allowing the force energies to breathe throughout her body. She could sense Verity but kept her eyes and senses focused while she kept a hand on the compact opening it up and using the mirror as she wiped off her lipstick before her fingers danced over a different shade and she took it out. "And it seemed like it was going to be such a nice day."
 

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[Objective 1: Sabotage]
Equipment: Dual Blaster Pistols, Forcepike, Cycler Rifle, Rocket Boots, Rebreather + Tubes, Misc.
TAGS: OPEN


If he had a credit every time the Sith have ambushed him...
Actually, nevermind. He's pretty sure he's made that joke to himself before.

But, here he is again, having to deal with yet another sudden attack by the Sith. What had started out as an escort for Aurelian Veruna Aurelian Veruna quickly became...not, that. He had been sent off to help with the issues that had been plaguing the ship, despite his lack of any major mechanical skill. But hey, getting paid to stand around and do nothing is always a highlight.

Unfortunately, he wasn't able to do nothing. A trap had been sprung, and from the shadows, people in dark cloaks with red blades descending, and attacked. He can't say he's not surprised, but he can't say that he is surprised, either. If there is ever a problem in the galaxy, there's a good chance that there is a Sith involved with it. Especially if it's a matter of peace, or violence.

After fending off the initial ambush, Gavin now finds himself venturing off alone, looking to clear out rooms of any potential hostiles inside of them. As he was walking into a room, he was busy muttering to himself. "...Damn Sith...always causin' problems for everyone else..." With that and other similar sentiments being grumbled. He was, pretty clearly, not really happy with the entire ordeal. At this point, he doubts there'll ever be a time where he can go on a diplomatic envoy, and not have to fight.

But, from the corner of the room, a crimson blade ignited, and quickly made for his head. With a quick reaction time, and the fortune of already having his forcepike in his hand, he was able to deflect the attempt at giving his life an early end, to the side. It was a Sith Apprentice, who was looking to prove themselves. As such, the two exchanged in a brief clash with their respective weapons. But, it didn't take long. At one point, the Apprentice had done a wide slash across, looking to chop off his head in one swipe. At that same time, he had ducked downwards, reeling the forcepike back, before swinging it across. The lightsaber had blurred past, while the tip of the forcepike struck true, and slashed deepy across the Apprentice's stomach.

The Apprentice crumbled to the floor, clutching their gut as they dropped their lightsaber. He rose back up, letting out a small huff. Staring down at the Apprentice as they groaned on the floor, while he gradually raised his forcepike. And, it was driven into the neck of the Apprentice, silencing them. The forcepike was dragged out, after, before he gave another glance around the room. No one else, it seemed.

With that, he stepped on out, moving on.

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Tags: [ OPEN OBJECTIVE II - LOCKDOWN ]



' Lockdown '

Starways ferried an enigma in the void between Alderaan. Obfuscated behind a pair of metallic shades and a demeanour of one who coveted conspiracy against the Sith, Her endeavoured to conspire some more. Brosi lamented in the bloodstained fields of Shoengen as a stepping stone towards progress and civilisation would have it's day again, she envisioned. Her was on the move. Senator Stuyveris' call-to-arms resonated with the fallen Jedi turned provocateur amid those who followed in the image of Bane and so Chandrila's government-in-exile had become of interest to a minor mining consortium based in the Kenari system where the elusive Her had joined Triarch in a gambit to evade a hoard of enemies lingering out there in the Outer Rim systems.

To begin again. Coruscant laid within her sights, and she desired home again.

"Kenari is a minor star system in the Republic," Her explained to one of the Chandrilese delegates as they conversed to the side. "However, I am sure that the K.R.C could be persuaded to lend it's support, however small it may be seen, towards a motion to liberate the Chandrila system from this covenant..."


As the delegate begun to murmur their response Her found their voice starting to tune itself out as she took to looking about the Chancellor's Suite. Something was going on, at the other end of the room, that made whatever was being said to their right suddenly uninteresting. She was met with the look of a man who seemed flustered, uncomfortable and apologetic. Her knew that look. It was reflected, daily, in the mirror, or the transparisteel glass, of a woman had done far too much and had gone too far. A familiar sound ushered itself through the din before Her could stop it. A Jedi's weapon once-upon-a-time, it was taught. Turned to bad when possessed by those of her ilk. Sith.

SNAP-HISS!!!!

Crimson lights erupted around the room as the ambush came to bear. Her stood there stunned.

Were they here to finish what she had started?

Here for her?

Instinctively the left hand lowered itself towards the utility belt where her own Lightsaber hung, but before a flash of blue could join the red all around them, a flash of turbolasers rained around Her as a cacophony of chaos erupted around the enigma. All she could think to do was to pull the Chandrilese delegate close and tuck herself behind them. Cowardly. Not Jedi like. Ella Nova had died a long time ago. The eternal father had his way. Heroes are dying all around us, can't you see?

True enough, Her felt the thuds of lasers cutting their quandary to pieces as she positioned their body between herself and the auto-mated defenses in the room. Screams and shrieks erupted around her. Yet, the Force continued to guide Her to remain down and hidden behind the corpse of a man she had just murdered to save herself...



 

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Alderaan was recently welcomed to join the Republic though their present circumstances made free-transit difficult. The threat of the Black Sun had diminished, but that of the Sith Covenant had increased of late. Naturally, this made for a very precarious strategic position, which Dominique had sought to subtly convey to all parties before and during recognizing Alderaan's potential as a member of the High Republic. Nonetheless, the Republic had dispatched forces to Alderaan to 'wave the flag' as it were and help convince the Covenant to leave them be. To bolster that impression -- that the far off world was protected -- a delegation had taken to the region.

It was not just any delegation, however. Alderaan was significantly outside the well-patrolled and regulated border of the High Republic. And the Sith had just played this card at Moorja. Slowly, a few capital vessels had arrived at Alderaan ahead of time while others had been staged elsewhere, but nearby. It hadn't been necessary to use Zeltros as a staging area -- as accomodating as the Mandalorians likely would have been -- as that was a bit further away than necessary. Still, distributed so there wasn't an obvious build up of vessels. When the time came for the High Republic delegation to visit Alderaan those vessels repositioned to escort convoy, prepared to jump in should something untold occur.

Or, rather, as had occurred, in the event of the Trinity's call for help as it headed for Alderaan. Refuge for the Chandrilan government, interstellar law and moral codes strongly suggested the High Republic heed the summon. Dominique noted the coordinates of where their hyperdrive happened to fail, and ordered the Naval officers to see to not provoking the nearby Sith Covenant even as they secured the way.

Upon arrival, the Chandrilan government bid the Republic dignitaries to en treat for a time while repairs were underway. A circumstance that did not have the Chancellor breaking out in a smile or a great cheer. Her subdued reaction and stare over the local star chart passed in silence for a time even while other debated around her.

"Admiral, it would seem about time those new procedures were exercised." Dominique couldn't help but have a bad feeling about everything.

Dressed in her white uniform-inspired suit, the Chancellor strode purposefully down the corridor toward the so-called Chancellor's Suite. Aboard the Trinity, she did smile as a show of confidence and good intentions with the exiled officials and in consideration for their people.

A smile that evaporated when the exits were sealed. "Your Eminence, it would appear something has gone awry," the Chancellor commented dryly even as they looked abashed for their participation in the deception. Amusing that the Sith had, apparently, also learned some lessons from Moorja. Namely not to allow the delegates the opportunity to leave the room. They were not the only ones.

Yet, before things progressed much further, the ship's security system sprang into action... against all parties present. Dominique held up a hand for everyone to remain calm.

"Well," Dominique paused to give everyone a broad, mirthless smile, "it would seem we have all the time in the galaxy now to discuss this unplanned opportunity concerning the future." A light tap to the side of her glareshades for show, and she added, "Well, a few minutes, at any rate. I hope the crew of the Trinity won't mind, but the Republic did take this opportunity to bring a few... specialists with us. I'm certain this technical error will be resolved and we'll be free to move about the ship once more."

"So,"
she spread her hands out to either side, "what shall we discuss? The emancipation of Chandrila? An obvious topic, but under the circumstances perhaps premature. The fate of Coruscant? I'm certain you'll give me the same line as a certain Darth did in that the world is full of peace and love as we speak. Or should we skip the pleasantries and simply state what we require of one another?" A beat. "I'll start. The High Republic finds these ambushes droll and obvious. Far beneath the capabilities of the Sith as I have historically heard of their accounts. Shall we speak as civilized people, or is this the full extent of relations to be expected?"


 
fit check for my napalm era


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The Senator watched the Sith Lord consider things. The idea of scuttling the ship by busting the door down seemed -- not quite credible to Verity. She had some experience in this regard, and it seemed quite farfetched. But then again, there was every indication that the Covenant had some advance knowledge of all this. They probably had a better idea of the state of the ship and the condition of its structural integrity by virtue of likely having caused it.

"Fine," Verity conceded. "Not that, then -- " She was caught off guard by what Mercy did next.

Verity recoiled in disgust as Mercy's hand touched her cheek, as if it was still -- if it had ever literally been at all -- covered in the blood of those slaughtered in the Tapani Sector, and those ground beneath The Big Woman™'s distinctly unstylish heel at Coruscant. She brushed her cheek as if to make sure none of that viscera had smeared on her picture-perfect patrician features. "Size, huh?" Verity muttered. "Yes, I imagine you are." If I were the size of a rancor, with the temperament of a rancor -- not to mention the face of a dewback -- I'd lash out too, Verity reasoned. Not that that justified the atrocities this giantess inflicted on the galaxy.

Strong people outgrew and overcame the limitations of the hand life dealt them. They didn't make it the galaxy's problem.

"That's why they pay me the medium bucks," she answered. "If you asked my colleagues in the Senate they would suggest that you are the person in the galaxy least annoyed by the size of my mouth. I am not known to be a particularly taciturn Senator," she said dryly as she fell into step next to the Sith Lord. What on earth am I doing here? This is mad. "Incidentally, my mouth is large enough to bite your fingers off if you touch me again, so let's keep it professional."

A beat, a pause. Then: "Do you know what professional means?"

Mercy Mercy

 
Verity Stuyveris Verity Stuyveris

"Medium bucks? You poor thing..." Mercy drawled further as she began to walk, amused when the Senator fell into line next to her. It was like the making of some sort of practical joke.

This didn't bother Mercy that much.

She had been through a lot of funny business lately, starting with conquering the Core. Almost as if the Universe was paying her back dividends for giving her so much good fortune.

"And here I thought a Senator of a whole planet would be paid rather well." She drew again from her cigarette. "You can hold onto my elbow, by the way, while we walk in the dark, darling. It wouldn't do to have your pretty face hurt if you walk into a wall." The Sith Lord purred down at her as they walked, offering the elbow indeed as suggested.

Mercy smirked again at the threat.

"Go right ahead. I have never minded pain. But if you bite... do know, I will bite back."

They turned a corner and arrived at the elevators.

Which were also down.

"I could probably pull these open... they are more central in the ship, compared to the conference room." The joys of putting the conference room at the edge of the ship, so all the high and important figures would have a nice view with a viewport. "Or we could look for a maintenance shaft." Mercy considered that briefly.

"Then again, I doubt I will be able to squeeze through those sort of shafts."
 
fit check for my napalm era


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"I'd rather walk into a wall," Verity said bluntly.

She found the giantess' demeanor off-putting. Who called a stranger -- a woman who had been publicly calling for the destruction of Mercy's empire for weeks -- darling twice within minutes of meeting her? It reminded Verity of the kind of machismo she had encountered in university, as she had invaded spaces traditionally occupied -- on Druckenwell and in her social class, at least -- by men: debate society, law review, the golf team, etc. The sleaze then had been garden-variety misogyny, but from Mercy it felt to Verity like a kind of performance of masculinity from a woman whose primary frustration in life had probably been being born one.

Which, Verity admonished herself, was probably all nonsense. She didn't know Mercy really at all. The public figure and the intelligence dossier figure weren't the woman any more than Verity's own public profile told her entire story.

Besides, this wasn't a buddy cop comedy. The two women weren't going to be best friends after they saved the day. Verity loathed Mercy with every fiber of her being, and Mercy probably couldn't coexist with a representative democracy if her life depended upon it. They weren't going to come to a sudden realization that we aren't so different, you and I -- this wasn't that kind of movie. The best case scenario would be that they would part ways, both alive and unharmed. Each one probably secretly hoped that they could remove the other from the equation. For her part, Verity was already composing the press release in her mind: Senator Stuyveris Instrumental in Apprehension of Sith War & Fashion Criminal Mercy -- but no. It was time to focus.

"Here," she said, pointing at a bit of red paint illuminated by her comlink. The battery wouldn't hold out forever, but it made use now. "Emergency access. I've got it," Verity snapped before the ronto of a woman could insert herself into the task of removing it. Verity refused to rely on the heavy, not on a task she was perfectly capable of. "Turbolift shafts usually have a ladder. At least they do on the ships I've toured. Let me see if I can find a door release on the other side."

A spike of anxiety went through her. Perfect time to run, Verity mused. She considered the wisdom of such a plan as she levered the access panel off and slipped herself into the cramped confines of the maintenance corridor. If Verity was even slightly bustier, she would have had an uncomfortable journey.


Mercy Mercy


 
Verity Stuyveris Verity Stuyveris

"Oh, you are a sassy one..."

But Mercy left it at that. She didn't really know much about the Senator of Druckenwell, nothing beyond what Lysander von Ascania Lysander von Ascania had told her and that wasn't a lot either. Apparently the two had had quite some correspondence before, but in truth Mercy didn't particularly care about the ravings of some bureaucrat of a middling planet in the Outer Rim.

The woman seemed eager to do her part, which Mercy had no issue with.

"Don't take too long, sweetheart..." The Sith Lord added there as she saw some sort of calculation behind Verity's eyes. She wasn't sure what it was, but she looked a little bit like a rodent.

A rat.

Could this be a trap?

It was rather odd how the power had gone out only after she left the conference room and was isolated from the rest of her people. Surely the High Republic couldn't be stupid enough to think they could contain her?

"If I get bored, I might end up tearing the doors apart anyway and we wouldn't want you to be rained on by metallic shrapnel, do we?"

Once the Senator was gone, Mercy leaned against the wall and watched the doors, humming to herself while having her smoke.

Gods, she wasn't even feeling impatient, what had gotten into her ever since she took the Throne of the Core?
 
If you need a label for me, then you don't know me
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OPERATION SILENT REQUIEM
STAR CRUISER TRINITY
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Deep space was quiet.

Too quiet.

The luxury star cruiser CSL Trinity drifted against a field of distant stars, its once elegant hull now dark along entire sections. Running lights blinked sporadically like a dying heartbeat.

The emergency signal repeated across open channels.

Code:
"THIS IS THE CSL TRINITY REQUESTING IMMEDIATE 

ASSISTANCE. OUR HYPERDRIVE IS OFFLINE, AND OUR 

POWER RESERVES ARE LIMITED."

Inside the message loop, buried beneath normal transmission frequencies, a second signal flickered briefly. Encrypted. Old military protocols. Not meant for the public. Not meant for the Sith.

A kilometer away, a shadow moved across the stars.

The Annunaki Mk III never broadcast its presence. No running lights. No active transponder. Just a silent wedge of matte-black alloy gliding on thrusters barely above idle.

Inside its cockpit, SERAPHIM spoke calmly.


Code:
“Passive scans confirm hostile system intrusion aboard the Trinity. Sith signatures detected across multiple decks.”

A tactical display blossomed in midair. Red markers spread through the ship like infection. Omega Squad studied the projection. Bren Alazar, callsign Michael, leaned forward. That's a lot of red.

Connel Vanagor stood beside him, already masked. The narrow visor of the Ariel mask glowed faintly. He didn’t answer immediately. Because the Force was whispering. And it did not whisper gently.

Sith.

Several. Moving. Waiting. Connel finally spoke quietly.

Not a lot. He tilted his head slightly.Enough.

Soon after, a schematic of the Trinity rotated slowly. Gabriel highlighted multiple system nodes. Primary command pathways are compromised, Gabriel said. They've got system authority through the ship's central spine.

He zoomed in. Which means we don’t take the bridge.

Azrael grinned. Good. I hate bridges.

Gabriel continued. We take the ship itself.

SERAPHIM projected a new overlay.

Code:
Three blinking vectors appeared.

TECH OPERATIONS

Raguel: False sensor anomalies
Jeremiel: System ghost pings
Gabriel: Core infiltration

Michael nodded. Noise on both sides.

Jeremiel crossed his arms. Make them chase ghosts.

Raguel cracked her knuckles. I can make ghosts.

Gabriel finished calmly. ... and while they’re chasing ghosts… His finger tapped the central node. ... I take the keys.

SERAPHIM added:

Code:
“Each reclaimed system will be silently transferred to my control.”

Azrael leaned back. Meaning when the Sith finally notice…

Raphael finished the sentence in his gravelly voice. They're already dead.

The room grew quiet. Because Connel was still staring at the projection. Not the ship. The Force. A ripple moved through him.

Cold. Predatory.

They’re hunting, he said.

Michael glanced sideways. For us?

Connel shook his head slightly. For something. He looked at the squad. Which means we should move fast.

He turned toward the airlock. Quietly.

Five Minutes Later, the Raven stealth dropship separated from the Annunaki like a falling shadow.
No thrusters. Just silent maneuvering jets guiding it toward the darkened belly of the Trinity. Inside the troop bay, Omega Squad stood ready. No chatter. Just final checks.

Raphael adjusted the heavy weapon slung across his back.

Azrael checked the detonator clipped to his chest rig.

Jeremiel secured his datapad interface.

Raguel flexed her gloved fingers.

Gabriel calmly slid a slicing spike into place.

Michael checked the squad one last time.

Then looked to Connel. Anything I should know?

Connel tilted his head slightly. Listening again. Feeling the currents in the dark. Then he answered simply. Yes.

Michael raised an eyebrow.

Connel’s voice lowered. They’re afraid, not all of them, but enough.

The squad looked at him. Azrael chuckled. Good.

Connel stepped toward the airlock. Because they should be.

Before long, the Raven kissed the cruiser’s hull with magnetic clamps. No sound. No warning. No sensors triggered. Azrael planted a compact breaching charge. Small. Precise. He tapped it once.

Doorbell. A silent flash. A perfect circular cut.

Michael pulled the hatch inward slowly. Darkness waited on the other side. Emergency lights flickered weakly in the corridor. Dead silence. Omega Squad slipped inside one by one.

Shadows entering shadows.

SERAPHIM spoke softly in their helmets.

Code:
“Welcome aboard the Trinity.”

A pause.

Then the AI added:

Code:
“Let us begin.”

And somewhere deep within the cruiser… A Sith turned his head suddenly.

Because the darkness had just gotten crowded.


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TAGS ARE OPEN
Personal Effects - Omega Squad Loadouts
 



VARIN MORTIFER


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Equipment: Durum Mantle | Black Blade of Chandrila | Eye of The Dragon | Heavy Sith Mace​

Power flickered within the cruiser, first were looks of confusion and murmurs. They believed the maintenance crew would fix the surge issue, then it all went dark for a long moment. The corridor was silent, people breathing in confusion, looking around for a way out. Anxiety in the air.

Then the hum of his armor flared towards the end. A red glaring beacon that brought forth their fears. Smoke billowed from his back as people started screaming to run away.

A security officer tried to attack him with a baton, Varin caught the weapon in his armored palm, twisting his arm with a loud crack, he brought his less dominant forearm up towards his face and activated his light-shield from his armor.

The plasma-like surface igniting like a saber cut through his screams and incinerated the body. The white shield slowly bled crackles of red energy as his corrupted crystal beat with the rhythm of a heart of war.

He stepped over the pile that once was a man shield up, taking the brunt of blaster fire as he drew closer, he unsheathed his blade and surged forward to the first man, bringing his shield down onto his weapon, cutting through the barrel as he reversed his grip with his sword and rammed the hilt into the man's throat. His airway collapsed.

Varin’s shield stayed up as other blaster bolts shot towards him, his hand reached out and flexed, crushing their weapons. He surged forward, driven by a starving bloodlust as he slaughtered the last few guards. Leaving the panicking bystanders to lead him to the corral of chaos ahead.

Behind him his Nagai force started emerging from small hideouts within the shadows. Any security that dared to show their face were met with a wall of blaster fire as Varin continued through the halls, his blade hacking through any other security members that did breach close enough to him.

Heat rolled off his back as the smoldering cloak bound to the runes of his back flared.


 

The curvature of the room was crafted for something beyond function. Perhaps a place for comfort and even reflection. A space where decisions were given shape. Soon, it was to become a stage. Naturally, the meeting concerned Chandrila's.. political destiny. This was a subject fraught with nuance and consequences that even the Covenant could not afford to overlook. Battles for planets were commonplace across the galaxy these days.

Legitimacy required a voice. Someone to lend grace to their image. Lysander found himself prepared to fulfill that role when called upon in recent months, to prove beyond the doubt that their order was capable of more than only brutality. Now, he was voice below the Triumvirate that so often echoed their desires.. and occasionally granted just enough latitude to interpret when necessary.

In the beginning, he'd arrived with Mercy Mercy . One that represented their thunder and authority. Once his Master, now something closer to an ally. Maybe it was a dangerous assumption, but for some time now, he did suspect himself capable of balancing the Sith Lord. Or at the very least.. offering better translation. Where she was the image of strength, Lysander carried the language of governance. Statecraft.. with no desire for spectacle.

The black wool of a peacoat draped across his shoulders. Beneath it, trousers of matching ebony. Far from the ensemble of a knight. The coat hung slightly open at the front as he rested in the chair, angled away from the table.

Something else would unfold beyond anyone’s plan. The moment the doors sealed, his gaze shifted toward them. One brow lifted ever so slightly.

While suspicion began to warm the room, he found himself growing colder. The young Sith’s mind filtered into lines of consideration. Fear was a terrible companion, but he did find a note of intrigue in this situation.. which was more than he could say about several meetings elsewhere recently.

Light from the ray shields washed across the chamber. The response time was impressive, really. So much, that one unfortunate Sith was bold enough to test the system. But.. it was a disappointing sight. In truth, discipline wasn't universal among any order that claimed strength.

A different voice echoed through the chamber next. The woman's opening climbed to those lofty heights of principle. Of course, a refrain he'd grown accustomed to hear more often of late. It was.. predictable. Regardless, he refused to let the conversation begin with one side preaching down to a seated audience.

So, the chair was pushed back as he rose slowly.

“The Republic’s confidence is reassuring. You’ve already managed to cover a remarkable number of accusations in just one breath. I assure you that if we arranged a trap, you would not have been left to speculate.”

Whatever 'specialists' she spoke of carried little weight. As recently remarked at the Summer Palace to Verity Stuyveris Verity Stuyveris , the Republic could hardly protect its own. The former Chancellor had been kidnapped, and then there was Edic Bar. Another ambassador had gone missing not long ago. A pattern of weakness, visible to the entire galaxy.

“Civilization requires something simple. Mutual honesty. We could begin there. What we require of one another.” A small pause. “The Covenant requires recognition of the realities that now exist in the Core. And the Republic, I surmise, requires reassurance that those realities will not spread further.”

A far more fruitful path than debating the broken door.

“I will not limit the conversation, and I am prepared to discuss whatever topics you deem worthy. Chandrila, Coruscant, borders, alliances. We might trace them back to a single question. How the galaxy wishes to move forward.”

Twin emeralds pinned on her. "It occurs to me, however, we've bypassed the customary formalities." The intelligence dossiers were thorough enough. He knew who she was. Still, such things would always have their place. “From experience, negotiations tend to improve when introductions are properly made."

He inclined his head. “Lysander von Ascania. Point Emissary of the Covenant.”
 
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Objective: Lockdown
Tags: Liana Organa Liana Organa | Gram Arranda Gram Arranda

"WARNING: VIOLENCE DETECTED!!! LOCKDOWN IS NOW IN EFFECT. PLEASE REMAIN CALM. SECURITY WILL BE WITH YOU SHORTLY. IN THE MEANTIME, ENJOY THE CLASSIC SOUNDS OF BOBOLO BAKER'S ALL-BITH BAND."

...Well, Chit.

Vestra Tane slumped against a wall and then slid, unceremoniously, until she was on the ground. Violence had kind of been the whole point of her being here. She'd been angling for a purgative storm of bloodshed; more than simple fun, she needed something to clear her head. The last four...five months, maybe? Had been a blur to the Triumvir. She remembered a party on Coruscant, and too much stim, and then...

She'd woken up home. With a missing arm and a burning lump in her gut that needed to be extinguished. Her subconscious recoiled at every attempt to piece together obvious, painful truths about her little sabbatical.

Her right hand, jet black and mechanical, clutched idly at a scrap of fabric tucked into the pocket of her coat. It refused to be discarded.

"So..."

Finally, she spoke, and lifted her gaze to take a look at the two people she'd set out to kill. An older man, and...a child? Well, who was she to judge? Maybe they let teenagers into the Senate these days.

The man appeared to the Sith as both utterly mundane and therefore completely unworthy of her attention, but the child had a presence to her, a connection to the Force that hit Vestra like a line of glitterstim.

Telepath, maybe? Something like that.

She'd have to prod while neither of them could kill the other, if only to satisfy her own curiosity.

"Either of you got any hobbies?"

She sounded Corellian, or Narsh, maybe. Her accent was hard to place.
 


Diplomacy: It should have been at the forefront of Balun's path as a follower of the Light, yet wherever there was a fight to be had, he had volunteered. Over the years, he had become accustomed to the chaos and the violence; Never accepting it, but being required to rationalise offensive tactics for the benefit of the Galaxy and those often overwhelmed by the forces of greed and tyranny.

Perhaps it was that the Grandmaster of the Jedi Order, his mentor Ala Quin Ala Quin , had recognised this and therefore informed Balun that he would be part of this delegation. Perhaps she had sensed something in the Force that he could not, but it would seem that he was to be in the right place, at the right time when chit hit the proverbial fan.

Meeting with the Chandrilan Government officials might even have given Balun a glimpse into the politics that Judah Dashiell Judah Dashiell and his brother Makai Dashiell Makai Dashiell had talked about, hinting that they wished the family to become involved at that level. The Dashiell's seemed to have their hands in the pockets of almost every other angle that was considered legal and profitable, yet while Balun had idly considered politics at one point, he didn't feel he had the mind for it. Better to remain a servant to the force and to the people than to become a cog in the machine, he had thought at one stage; Yet he also understood the importance that politicians played, particularly those with integrity, which seemed few and far between in his opinion.

When they entered the chamber that was to serve as the meeting place, however, it was abhorrently clear that the diplomatic envoy had been set up. The Sith Covenant, though Balun struggled to distinguish between any individual sect of Sith, were there waiting. The Doors shut with a hiss at their backs, and the ignition of a lightsaber would see Balun pushing his way forward, reaching for his own, when instead they would all be startled by a mechanical voice overhead.

"WARNING: VIOLENCE DETECTED!!! LOCKDOWN IS NOW IN EFFECT. PLEASE REMAIN CALM. SECURITY WILL BE WITH YOU SHORTLY. IN THE MEANTIME, ENJOY THE CLASSIC SOUNDS OF BOBOLO BAKER'S ALL-BITH BAND."

Balun watched, his mouth agape as the aggressor seemed to be caught in some sort of security response to the violence, their body hitting the floor in time with the base of Bobolo Baker's All Bith Band. Perplexed by the scene, Balun hesitated to tug his weapon free, caught between confusion and the desire to protect those nearby, he apprehensively withdrew his hand away from his Lightsaber and scanned the room carefully, noting the Sith among them yet also looking for the emmitters in the roof and walls around them, struggling to identify which side the Sith had been immobilized by.

The situation called for pause and observation, and though he was more prone to action, Balun didn't particularly wish to be taken down in the same manner as their would-be assailant. There remained the threat of the Sith Covenant before them, and people around him that might still require protection should the security in the room suddenly falter and release them from their present folly.

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Jedi Master: Ala Quin
Major Faction: The High Republic
Sub-Faction: Jhaessa Prime
Conglomerate: Dashiell Incorporated™

Subsidiary Company: Dashiell Retrofit™



"Speech"
'Thought'
 

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