Star Wars Roleplay: Chaos

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Invasion This is the Way || ME Invasion of DIA-held Yaga Minor

The bridge of the Tracyn did not shake as a smaller ship would have.

It shuddered instead, a deep, structural complaint that ran through the deckplates and into the bones of everyone standing on them, as if the vessel itself had taken a breath and decided it would rather not die today.

Iandre kept her footing without thinking. Muscle memory. Years of bracing on moving decks, years of learning how to stand steady when the galaxy tried to throw you sideways. Her eyes stayed on the holotable as the tactical picture updated in rapid pulses, icons blooming and vanishing, the Bastion Curtain's geometry trying to reweave itself around fresh gaps carved by impact and debris.

The Lucrehulk was gone now, but its death had become a weather system.

A storm of shrapnel, fire, and falling metal.

She felt the shift in the Force like pressure changing in a sealed room. Panic below, confusion above, a bright flare of anger from the invaders, and beneath it all the cold, mechanical logic of war doing what it always did: turning living intent into math.

Laphisto's broadcast rolled out into the void, sharp as a thrown blade, and Iandre did not flinch at it. She understood why he did it. She also knew what it would cost.

There were some foes you could bleed into caution.

Mandalorians were not those foes.

Her gaze tracked the new contacts as they resolved on the edge of the holoprojection, battlecruisers and escorts sliding into angles meant to force choices, meant to make a defender split attention and pay for every misstep.

Iandre stepped closer to the table, one hand resting lightly against its rim, not for balance but to anchor herself to the present.

Then she spoke, voice calm enough that it did not need to compete with alarms.

"We should assume they are testing our response more than our armor."

A bridge officer flicked a look her way. Iandre continued, precise, purposeful.

"They want a pattern. If we give them a predictable screen, they will carve through it and call it proof. Let them think they are reading us, then change the language."

She pointed to the holomap, not touching the icons, just indicating the seam where the line had thinned.

"Reinforce the gaps with movement, not mass. Corvettes and interceptor wings on rotating vectors, short bursts, fast returns. Force their pilots to commit to targets that keep changing. Make their opening passes expensive."

Her eyes flicked to the readouts scrolling beside the main tactical overlay, shield harmonics recalibrating, defensive nodes attempting to learn from the first exchange.

"And keep the adaptive network breathing. If they try to bait us into locking shields on one frequency, we stagger the harmonics manually. Let the system learn, but do not let it learn in a straight line."

Another tremor ran through the ship. Somewhere deeper in the hull, a bulkhead groaned. Iandre did not look away from the battle.

A comms tech spoke quickly, urgency tightening their voice. "Open channel still active, incoming response possible."

Iandre's expression stayed composed, but the Force around her sharpened. Not anger. Readiness.

"If they answer him, they will do it with pride." She said, tone steady. "If they do not answer, they will do it with action."

She inhaled once, slowly.

"Either way, we treat this as the first real push."

Then, softer, directed to Laphisto without needing to turn her head.

"You asked earlier what makes command hard." Her eyes stayed on the shifting icons. "This moment. When the enemy wants you to become what they already decided you are."

Her hand tightened briefly against the table's edge, then eased.

"We do not give them that."

She straightened, posture tall, shoulders squared, the same calm she carried into duels and disaster alike.

"Give me a fighter wing." Iandre said, and now her voice carried a clean certainty that left no space for doubt. "Not to chase them. To break their rhythm. I will take a screen out past the Curtain edge, draw their strike craft into bad angles, and pull them into overlapping fire where our guns can teach them what it costs to get close."

A pause, then the smallest tilt of her head, as if she could already feel the enemy's intent pressing in from the dark.

"If they want an opening, let them come take it with their own hands."

Outside the viewport, the void flashed with distant fire, a slow blooming constellation of violence.

On the holotable, new contacts flared.

And Iandre stood beside Laphisto on the bridge of the Tracyn, not as a bystander, not as a symbol, but as a participant with a blade's mind and a soldier's clarity, ready to meet the first Mandalorian push head-on.

Tag: Open | Objective I | Bridge Engagement Laphisto Laphisto
 
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The Basilisk war droids surged ahead the moment the squad disembarked, their heavy frames smashing through smaller defensive emplacements with ruthless efficiency. Autocannons barked. Rockets screamed. One of the war droids tore straight through a prefabricated barricade, scattering DIA infantry in every direction as it advanced on pure aggression protocols.


Korda didn't watch them for long.
They were tools now, loud, violent ones. meant to draw attention and break lines while the real work was done by flesh and beskar.
He motioned his squad forward, boots pounding across broken ferrocrete until a fresh burst of heavy laser fire carved the air in front of them. The beam struck a collapsed section of building and detonated it in a storm of molten debris. Korda dove, rolling behind the largest remaining slab, the rest of his Mandalorians piling in beside him as fragments clattered off their armor.


The turret nest came into view through drifting smoke, twin heavy laser barrels mounted on a reinforced platform, fed by a generator sunk deep into the ground. It tracked smoothly, mechanically, chewing through anything that tried to move in the open.
Between them and the turret lay a defensive trench: sandbags, firing steps, and dug‑in troopers who knew exactly where to aim.


One of the Mandalorians shifted beside him, voice crackling in the comm.
"I can draw its fire," the warrior said. "Give the rest of you a clean run."
Korda's head snapped toward him instantly.


"No," he said flatly.
The word cut through the channel like a blade. He didn't shout, didn't need to. Authority settled in his voice, cold and absolute.
"That would be a glorious death," Korda continued, visor turning back toward the turret. "But I didn't bring you here to die pretty. I need every blaster we've got on that nest."


The Mandalorian stilled, chastened but not offended. Korda softened his tone just enough to keep the edge sharp, not cruel.
"We win this together," he said. "Or not at all."
Another burst from the turret forced them lower. Korda leaned into the rubble, mind already racing through options. EMP was tempting, fast, decisive, but it would ripple through the trench and risk scrambling their own suits, optics, and weapon systems. Too blunt. Too messy.


His hand slid down to the harness still strapped over his chest plate.
Flash detonator.
He felt the weight of it through the armor, remembered exactly why he'd insisted on keeping ballistic redundancies in his kit. His gaze dropped briefly to the Ashen Maw mag‑locked at his side, solid, brutal, entirely mechanical in function except for the fire‑mode selector. No power cells to fry. No systems to stutter.


A smile tugged at his mouth beneath the helmet.
"Alright," Korda said, tapping his knuckle once against the rubble. "Listen up."
The squad leaned in.



"That turret's slaved to optical tracking. We blind it, we get five, maybe six, seconds before it reacquires. I throw the flash. We move immediately. No hesitation."


His visor angled toward the trench line. He'd already mapped it, two firing steps, a shallow bend, and a narrow stretch of cover that would get them within striking distance of the generator housing.


"Ashen Maw stays hot," he added. "Ballistic only. No fancy energy discharges. Once we're in the trench, we clear fast and push straight for the nest."
Another laser blast screamed overhead, close enough that heat washed over them. Korda reached up, unclipped the flash detonator from his harness, and rolled it once in his palm.


"On my throw," he said calmly, thumb finding the activator. "We go to work."
The Basilisk war droids roared again in the distance, tearing through armor and concrete, the battlefield shaking with their rampage.
Korda leaned out just enough to judge the arc.
"One shot," he murmured. "That's all we need."


 
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Location: Approaching Santhe-Sienar Shipyards, Yaga Minor Orbit - Cockpit - Relentless
Thread Objective: When the Sky Falls
Mission Objective:

  • Disable the sensor and tractor beam control station.
Allies: Jonah Jonah Tessa Thayne Tessa Thayne Siv Kryze Siv Kryze
Enemies: Trace Xyston Trace Xyston
Direct Engagement: The Shroud Knight The Shroud Knight

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As Tessa Thayne Tessa Thayne guided the freighter through the void, Hanna sat in the third seat at the back of the cockpit, carefully fitting her repulsorlift skates onto her feet. Although she was immersed in the task, her pointed ears perked up when Jonah Jonah spoke, his low and even tone filtering through the tense quiet that had fallen over the ship. In that, the mood mirrored the Relentless’ shadowed infiltration under the cover of the arriving Mandalorian fleet.

And now, it seemed that it would not be long before the silence was shattered.


"Figured I should see for myself what earns that kind of respect..." he added, the faintest edge of approval threading into his voice. "No pressure. Just don't get us killed before we make the Diarchy pay."

“You know...it might be just a few hours late to tell our pilot not to ‘get us killed.’ We’re already trusting her with our lives by being here.” Hanna replied to the dark-skinned Mandalorian in something of a light, playful tone, accompanied by a faint smirk which was visible beneath her helmet's now-transparent facial area. The Qilin held his gaze for a fleeting moment then, before turning her attention back to adjusting her skates.

Her thoughts drifted as she worked. She was here as part of her contract under the Writ of Iron. For this particular mission, she had been given the objective of disabling the sensor and tractor beam control station in the Santhe-Sienar shipyards. It was certainly a daunting task, but fortunately, the Relentless and its skilled pilot had offered the perfect way to infiltrate. If all went according to plan, this approach would allow her to bypass the teeth of the Diarchy’s defense, so that she could then reach the control station while facing minimal resistance.

A few moments later, the immense shadow of the Santhe-Sienar shipyards eclipsed the viewports, plunging the interior in darkness. Then came a soft, metallic lurch as magnetic locks engaged, drawing the freighter into place against the ventral airlock.

By then, the repulsorlift skates were secure on her feet, and Hanna was ready.

Thus, after powering on her skates, Hanna stood—rather, floated—up from her seat. She offered Tessa a quick nod of gratitude, before gliding smoothly toward the airlock!


 
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[]

Disobey - by ODDKO

Location: Vjunhollow, Industrial - Capital of Yaga Minor
Objective: When We Reach for Heaven

Tag: Open
Allies: DIA
Enemies: ME

Lady Izanami lingered in the shadowed crook of a government edifice, her back pressed to cold stone veined with centuries of soot and whispered sins. From this remove, the Capital unfurled like a ritual circle gone awry; bright lights jittered, banners snapped, and the air trembled with the barked incantations of Diarchy Commanders rallying their troops.


Their voices cracked like whips, names and numbers flung into the night as if order itself could be conjured by volume alone. She listened, eyes half-lidded, savoring the cadence of panic dressed as authority.

Below her gaze, soldiers scrambled in obedient chaos, boots skidding on polished avenues, armor clattering like nervous bones. They hustled to walls and barricades, hands fumbling with rifles and laser-mounted turbo cannons, glancing skyward as though the coming threat might announce itself politely.

The commanders paced and pointed, their silhouettes stiff with purpose, conducting a symphony of fear that grew louder by the breath. Her lips twisted; there was always such urgency when men believed history was watching.

"Boys and their wars," she puffed, the words a silvery mockery carried just far enough for no one to hear. "So terribly cliche."

Her gaze traced the frantic choreography and she gave a soft, indulgent laugh. "A simple charm," she continued, voice barely more than a caress, "a whispered word, even a smidge of attention; and you'd have similar results. Less chaos, perhaps. But infinitely more entertainment."

She feigned a sigh, theatrical and slow, then pushed herself from the wall with unhurried grace. Skipping lightly across the stone, an almost childlike rhythm amid the martial din, she drifted toward one of the defensive lines.


There, she intended to observe, to savor the poetry in motion as fear, faith, and steel entwined beneath the coming storm, a living stanza written by hands that never knew they were dancing.

And she was growing hungry.

 
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OBJ 3
Engaging: Dreidi Xeraic Dreidi Xeraic


Zinayn couldn't help but stare at the spectacle of the Lucrehulk battleship breaking apart and blazing down through the atmosphere. The ground shook with the constant firing of the planetary mass drivers, metal smashing into the metal of the Mandalorian warships. The buildings around him had nearly been turned to dust already, civilians fleeing for their lives while countless others were trapped under rubble. Plumes of dirt and duracrete shot up into the air as the enemy landed. Lasers criss-crossed through the air with the sound of the Diarchy counterattack. Anxiety, anguish, and anger flooded his senses in the Force.

Was this what it looked like when Csilla fell?

His body moved of its own accord as a blaster bolt sizzled past his shoulder; his back slammed into the remains of what was once a manufacturing plant to take cover. The Chiss closed his eyes and leaned back for a moment, breathing deeply to steady himself. Three DIA infantry rushed past his position, unloading a power cell on the armored invaders, likely to no avail. Zinayn winced slightly as glowing pink plasma shaped into an arrow shot straight through one of the men. He fell with his mouth open in an inaudible scream.

The arrow was familiar, one of the signature weapons of the Dathomiri witches. Zinayn peered around the corner, his glowing crimson eyes sweeping across the battlefield. He focused in on the attacker, a slender woman who he suspected to be a witch from Dathomir.

He stepped out from his cover, an explosion rocking the earth nearby, making eye contact with the witch. She didn't seem to have the patriotic zeal for warfare that the armored Mandalorians had, but she had her own kind of determination in her eyes that would make her dangerous. Zinayn's grip tightened on the Harbinger of Balance, already feeling the Force flowing into his blade, an extension of himself.

As blasterfire and earth-shattering ordinance impacted all around, Zinayn let out a breath. The Diarchy would prevail today, and the Mandalorians would pay dearly for this attack in gallons upon gallons of blood. Starting here.
 

It had been a long while since Liorra had done this.

She was nervous, fething nervous, but she held herself steady atop the basilisk, muscles locked, posture disciplined even as her pulse hammered loud enough she swore it might echo through the armor. Whatever fate, or the Force, had planned next was already in motion. Fighting it now would only make it worse. So she breathed, anchored herself, and let the moment carry her forward.

She didn't answer right away.

Mia.

How strange it was to be riding into battle again beside her former mentor. Back into a fight for Mandalore, a home Liorra had never quite learned how to belong to. The thought tugged at her, sharp and complicated, but there was no room for it here. No space for philosophy, no quiet corner where she could untangle feeling from memory. Maybe in another life. Another time.


Not now.


Liorra drew in a deep breath from the gunner's seat, fingers tightening around the grips as the basilisk's engines began to hum in earnest.

"Yeah," she called back at last, voice light with practiced glibness. "Sure. Zero out the dolts on the way down."


Humor. That was how she kept the edge from cutting too deep.


"Good ol' pew pew," she added, a laugh threaded through the words. "Yeah, vod, ready as EV-AAAAAAAARRRRRRR!"

Then the ground dropped out from under them, Lio's stomach flipped at least twice.

The basilisk lurched, engines roaring as gravity seized hold, and Liorra's shout tore free with the plunge, half laughter, half battle cry, pure adrenaline as the descent began.


"LET'S GOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO!"

 



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.
YAGA MINOR ORBIT - SANTHE-SIENAR SHIPYARDS

ME: Jonah Jonah Tess Tess Hanna Hanna Mia Monroe Mia Monroe Liorra Liorra Drego Ruus Drego Ruus
DIA: The Shroud Knight The Shroud Knight Trace Xyston Trace Xyston Souls of the Lilaste order Souls of the Lilaste order


Siv felt the station flinch as the Mandalorian fleet struck in earnest.

It wasn't subtle. Even tucked beneath the Santhe-Sienar yards, the effects bled through everything—power surges rippling across the structure, traffic corridors abruptly rerouted, emergency protocols half-engaged before being overridden by louder demands. Turbolasers thundered somewhere above. Interceptors screamed past on hot burns. The void itself felt crowded with violence.

The fleet had Yaga Minor's attention.

"That's it," Siv said quietly. "They're committed now."

His visor tracked the station's response rather than the battle outside. The yards weren't built to panic; they were built to endure. But endurance required coordination, and coordination was already starting to slip under the strain.

"They're throwing everything upward," Siv continued, voice calm, assured. "Fighters, batteries, command bandwidth. Every department's being told their problem is the most urgent one."

His gaze settled on the station's core—the administrative spire cutting cleanly through the plane of construction bays.

"That's why the spire matters," he said. "It's the only place that tells this whole station what it is at any given second."

A pause as another ripple passed through the structure—barely noticeable, but real. Siv felt it in the timing, the hesitation. Hanna's work would cause sensor data to lag, tractor systems to idle instead of committing. Somewhere, security teams would be dispatched with incomplete orders.

Siv inclined his head slightly, a quiet acknowledgment.

"They're going to call it interference at first," he murmured. "Fleet activity, signal saturation. Anything that lets them pretend they still have control."

He shifted closer to Jonah, keeping his voice low enough to stay inside the team.

"Concordia was built the same way," Siv added. "Centralized command. Distributed labor. Works perfectly—until stress forces it to choose priorities."

Outside, another distant impact rolled through the station's frame, a reminder that the Mandalorian fleet wasn't easing off. The sky above Yaga Minor was burning, and every commander in the yards knew it.

"They can't lock this place down," Siv said. "Production, personnel, clients—too much depends on staying accessible. That habit's about to hurt them."

His visor returned to the spire.

"If that spine stutters," he continued, "the whole station argues with itself. Security protects hulls. Admin protects data. Engineers protect schedules. No one agrees on what comes first."

A beat.

"And while the fleet keeps them looking outward," Siv finished, "we move inward."

He went still again, listening to the fractured rhythm of the station as it struggled to keep pace with a war it hadn't expected to fight from the inside.


"The fleet's buying us time," Siv said quietly. "The spire's where we spend it."


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Location: Yaga Minor | Orbital Elevator

Tags: Diarch Reign Diarch Reign Aether Verd Aether Verd Warpriest Prime Warpriest Prime




The 32nd Battalion moved with the precision and drive of soldiers who understood exactly what was expected of them. They did not rush, they did not hesitate. Each unit flowed into position with practiced efficiency, barricades raised, firing lanes measured, overlapping fields of vision established without the need for shouted correction. These were men and women who knew that failure was not an option, not because of punishment, but because they refused to disappoint the one who led them.

Gavin stood at the center of it all, arms crossed, an unmoving presence amid the controlled chaos. He watched every motion, every adjustment, committing the scene to memory. He did not need to shout orders. The battalion already knew their roles. They had trained under his eye on Harridan, had learned the difference between reckless aggression and disciplined violence. What they prepared for now was not defense. It was inevitability.

The cowards in armor.

His lip curled faintly at the thought. Mandalorians hid behind beskar and legends, convinced that metal and myth made them untouchable. Gavin knew better. Armor failed when faced with the right amount of force, applied with intent.

“We are ready to fight, my Lord!” the lieutenant barked, snapping to attention as he approached.

Gavin did not turn immediately. He let the moment stretch just long enough to remind the officer who set the tempo here. Then he gave a single, deliberate nod. It was all the confirmation that was needed. The lieutenant straightened, pride visible even through the tension, and moved back to his unit.

Uncrossing his arms, Gavin adjusted his stance and began to move. His battlefield attire marked him clearly, black and gold robes fitted for movement rather than ceremony, the fabric reinforced where it mattered most. Beneath them, his gauntlets caught the light, scarred and functional, tools meant for breaking bones as much as deflecting blows. Every step he took was purposeful, heavy but controlled, the stride of a man who knew exactly where he belonged.

He closed the distance to the Diarch quickly, stopping just off to Reign’s side. His presence there was no accident. It was a statement.

“Mandalorian dogs,” Gavin muttered, his voice low and edged with anticipation rather than anger. His eyes tracked the distant movement of incoming forces, already cataloging angles and possibilities. “I look forward to seeing how well that fancy armor holds up.”

The thrill of impending combat surged through him, heat flooding his limbs and sharpening his senses. This was the moment he had been waiting for. No negotiations. No posturing. Just action and consequence.

Gavin rolled his shoulders once, fingers brushing the hilt of his lightsaber without drawing it. Not yet. He stood beside Reign, towering and ready, a living weapon held in perfect restraint. When the first shot was fired, he would move. And when he did, there would be no doubt left about who held this ground.








 
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Avast Verd Avast Verd | @OPEN​

Location: Santhe-Sienar Orbital Shipyards, Yaga Minor

The dropship shuddered as it peeled away from the wider assault formation, inertial dampeners whining under the strain of a sharp course correction. Red combat lights flooded the troop bay, casting everything in harsh crimson: beskar armor, mag-locked rifles, the sealed rear ramp that waited like a clenched fist.

Tyr Mereel stood near the forward bulkhead, one gauntleted hand locked around an overhead rail. The vibration of the engines carried clean through his armor and into bone and muscle, familiar as a heartbeat. He let it settle him. This was the narrow space between intention and violence, and he had always found clarity there.

The Santhe-Sienar shipyards lay ahead, unseen but unmistakable. He could feel them in the way the dropship flew, short bursts of thrust, sudden vector changes, the pilot threading gaps through overlapping fire. A target like that never slept, never stopped producing, never imagined it could be truly reached.

“Two minutes to insertion,” the pilot called back over the intercom. “Point defense is active. Fleet’s pulling heat, but it’s getting spicy.”

Tyr inclined his helmet in acknowledgment and shifted his stance as the deck tilted beneath him. He glanced across the troop bay. Supercommandos filled the space, each locked into their own quiet routines, checking seals, reseating power cells, running final diagnostics with the efficiency of warriors who had done this too many times to waste words on it.

That was how it should be.

He glanced down at his vambrace display and thumbed through the readouts. Micro-charges: armed. Grapple: live. Cutting torch: synced and ready. Each green indicator felt like a promise.

Movement at the edge of his vision drew his attention briefly, but Tyr did not linger on it. He kept his focus inward, on the plan and the moments to come. Boarding action. Close quarters. Corridors built for engineers and executives, not for Mandalorians who knew how to turn tight spaces into killing grounds.

He opened a short-range squad channel, his voice steady and even through the vocoder. “Final check. Once the ramp opens, we move as one. No stragglers. No improvising until the objective’s secured.”

A series of clipped acknowledgments answered him. That was enough.

The dropship jolted hard, lights flickering as something detonated outside the hull. Tyr widened his stance automatically, armor compensators adjusting as the pilot fought to keep them on course.

“Light flak,” the pilot said, tone tight but controlled. “Still green.”

Tyr rolled one shoulder, feeling the weight of his jetpack settle firmly against his back. Somewhere ahead, forty-eight construction bays churned endlessly, feeding fleets that would one day be turned against Mandalore or its allies. The Diarchy believed distance and steel made them untouchable.

Belief was not armor.

The engines roared, pushing them forward in a final burn. Tyr drew in a slow breath, steadying, his visor fixed on the sealed ramp as though he could already see through it—see the hull beyond, the first cut, the first breach.

The deck plates hummed, then rang out with a heavy, unmistakable clunk as the mag-clamps engaged.

Contact.

Tyr tightened his grip on the rail, every sense sharpening as the dropship locked itself to the station’s skin. The countdown had begun, though no timer was displayed.

Not yet.

Soon.


 

It was a peace to preparation.

Drego had spent the last month drilling his clan relentlessly. His days as a GADF Shocktrooper were showing in how he woke them up at 3 AM, and only let them rest during meal times. It was grueling, but it thinned out the unready. Foundlings that had such bravado. Men who only sought glory. Clan Ruus had no time for such fools.

He'd whittled it down to 30 men. The best of the best of the best. His Meteors.

Looking to the right to see Mia and Liorra once more was a gift that gave Drego some level of confidence in the mission. A solace that they had not one, but two Mand'alors on the field.

And of course, Aether himself spoke. Drego couldn't exactly deny his magnetism, something Drego never possessed. He could inspire those to be better, inspire those to train harder, but Drego never could lead a people.

“Ready, ad’ika?”

That earned a chuckle, as Drego gave that blank stare of his helm. In Mandalorian Culture, it was easy to forget that just as much was the language of Mando'a a keystone of how Mandalorians communicated, as much was basic, often subtle body language. Drego didn't say a word back to Mia, only a nod.

A nod that meant many things.

While the men of the other clans use their basilisks, Clan Ruus went their own way. Their own path. Standing on the drop platforms were not war droids, but manned walkers. The warriors of Clan Ruus having spent most of the trip decking them out. Doing maintenance, changing load outs, refilling ammo stores. Clan Ruus was quiet on the way there, and yet never inactive.

As the countdown commenced, Drego hopped in his own walker, and clicked a few buttons.

He had his own message to send to the Diarchy.


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Down below, the comms of the Diarchy Troops began to crackle once more. Instead of all at once, it came only to the soldiers. Every channel, every frequency. A barrage of sound.

And it seemed to have an echo.

Not from their comms, but from above. From loudspeakers blasting it from on high.

The sound of falling metal.


The holoprojectors of the Diarchy troops crackled as well, changing to a single, unyielding message.


Kneel to Aether Verd Aether Verd or Die.


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Terminal Velocity. Fire and Death. Drego didn't focus on any of it, rather that same music that was blaring through his loudspeeders towards the ground below.

And then...


Impact.

The thud of thirty walkers hitting the ground, cracking the duracrete below. Heat shields retracted, and his AR systems and AI came to life.


<Acquiring Targets.>

Drego didn't waste a moment. His mass drivers opened up, as did his rear mortar. First came a set of five probe droids that were launched skyward, then came HE, raining down on the Metal Creed.

Clan Ruus's objective had been simple.

Smash the Front Line.


 
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|| AS IRON SHARPENS IRON ||
Emissary of the Unknown - Chapter 1
———

LOADOUT:
Yellow Lightsaber
Silver Needle (Star-iron needle-like hidden blade)
Biometric Pylon
Star-iron threaded cloak
DIA: Kallous Kallous | Shyra Calipsa Shyra Calipsa | Souls of the Lilaste order Souls of the Lilaste order | Trace Xyston Trace Xyston
ME: Quinn Varanin Quinn Varanin
STALKING: Hanna Hanna | Jonah Jonah | Siv Kryze Siv Kryze | Tessa Thayne Tessa Thayne
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ANESTHESIZE

SANTHE-SIENAR ORBITAL SHIPYARDS, YAGA MINOR

The station groaned, a deep, resonant shudder that vibrated through the soles of the Knight’s boots as Mandalorian boarding pods pierced the outer hull.

He did not join the frantic rush toward the primary corridors the Diarchy commanders were already rallying the defenders. Instead, the Knight moved upward. He ghosted into the shadows of the overhead maintenance gantries, his Star-Iron-threaded cloak clinging to him like a second skin, dampening the dull echo of his presence in the Force.

From the darkness of the rafters, the Knight looked down upon the breach zone.

The blast doors at the end of the transit hall buckled, then vanished in a white-hot bloom of thermal paste. Through the smoke, the predators arrived. They moved with a practiced, heavy efficiency, a spearhead of beskar and predatory intent that began carving through the first line of Diarchy resistance with terrifying speed.

The Knight’s pulse remained a steady, clinical rhythm. He watched them not as a soldier, but as a biologist observing a violent species in the wild.

His HUD flickered to life, the green-tinted display of the Biometric Pylon, scanning the chaos below. It filtered out the noise of the dying Diarchy conscripts and the tactical updates from Trace Xyston. It focused solely on the invaders as a collective unit. The HUD began to populate with flickering data strings: heart rates, adrenaline spikes, and Force-sensitivity markers.

To the Diarchy, this was an invasion. To the Shroud Knight, it was a data-rich environment.

He didn't move. He didn't breathe. He watched the squad navigate the debris, his eyes tracking the way they moved, the weight of their steps, the economy of their violence. They were magnificent specimens of an unrefined age.

The Knight followed from above, moving from gantry to gantry with the silent, rhythmic grace of a Shroud-predator. He stayed in the blind spots of their sensors, utilizing the station's own failing power grid to mask his movements. He was the shadow in their wake, a ghost that neither side knew was there.

He would let them clear the rooms. He would let them expend their energy on the loyal defenders of the Diarchy. For now, he was simply an observer, cataloging the tactical capabilities of the Mandalorian culture. The time for the Harvest would come, but for now, the Shroud Knight was content to wait, hidden in the dark, watching the storm unfold.

 
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YAGA MINOR
[ - |
Outer Rim Territories| - ]
ORBIT

Aether Verd Aether Verd | Tessa Thayne Tessa Thayne Itzhal Volkihar Itzhal Volkihar | Siv Kryze Siv Kryze
___________________________
_______
“This is the Way!”

This ship scared the hell out of her.

It didn’t matter how much they had trained on the Iron Eidolon or how often they learned to repair the runes that let it slip between the layers of reality; it was frightening, and she was woman enough to admit it. She could hear unnatural things slipping along the hull in a way she was sure was the intention. It took the symbol of the Mythosaur from something that resembled hope—To a threat. It signaled that Mandalore had gone to war.

She remained where she was with one gloved hand resting against the flank of Aether Verds basilisk droid, Kyr’valen, and her fingers traced familiar plating. There was no higher purpose to the action, but the automaton answered in its own way, with a low, resonant hum that ran just beneath her frame. They had become friends since they’d first ridden togethe,r and whether it was mechanical or not…It seemed to know the things she could not say.

Persephone did not want this war.

That singular truth sat in her chest like a stone, making it hard to breathe. Too many worlds had already burned. Too many names had been spoken their final time and then never again. The cruelty of the Diarchy demanded an answer; she understood that, but knowing what would happen did not soften the blow. The Crucifixions…

She still couldn’t decide where her anger settled for that. On the Diarchy for what they had done or on the Mand’alor for choosing to answer them in kind. Behind her helmet, Persephone’s expression broke. Not with rage or fury…But sorrow.

So many would die, on both sides, before the sun went down.

Her heart ached with the truth…But it didn’t matter.

Aether had already made up his mind.

When the time came, she stepped forward and vaulted smoothly onto Kyr’valen behind the Mand’alor with movements that seemed practiced, almost automatic. Her hands found their holds. Persephone settled at his back, silent and steady. Offering support without words because as time ran out…She had nothing left to say.

Vjunhollow was waiting for them.

The former Jedi Knight knew better than most what the war goal might be. It was a city that wasn’t a city; instead, a massive source of industry. This wasn’t about conquest or vengeance. Despite the news broadcasts that went out to the entirety of the galaxy detailing the many crimes of the Diarchy—It wasn’t even about shaming them into submission.

It was an amputation, in terms that she could relate to. They would aim to break the machine in such a way that it could not be repaired. Seize their means of production. This was an attack designed to hurt them.

The basilisk droid surged forward as they crossed the threshold into open space. It was so quiet. The starlight spilled along their path, hard and hold, and her arms moved to tighten around Aether. For a split second…It was peaceful.

She wanted to tell her friend that it wasn’t too late. That…There was still time.

But—He was the King.

Her head bowed, and her eyes closed for a moment, knowing that her heart was too willful for all of this. <<Aether…>>, she murmured through the comms, soft and light, while they started their descent. She bit her lip…But he wouldn’t know that. Her helmet was on snug and tight to keep the void of space from leaking in.

<<Don’t die.>>

It was a small, childish request. But then…She braced. She hardened into the combat medic he would need going forward. She had time to find her strength. After all…

It was a long way down.


Basic Equipment and Supplies (On Basilisk)
Armor: Protector-type Beskar'gam
Primary Firearm: Ori Sidaki "The Big Ripper"
Primary Blade: Mobius Beskad
Secondary Firearm: SM-10a
Secondary Blade: Euk Siha Service Knife
First Aid: RIDD-01 "Rids"
 
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The Illuminated, Chosen Of The Maker
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Enemies: Drego Ruus Drego Ruus Korda Veydran Korda Veydran Aether Verd Aether Verd Adelle Bastiel Adelle Bastiel Aselia Verd Aselia Verd Itzhal Volkihar Itzhal Volkihar Warpriest Prime Warpriest Prime Dreidi Xeraic Dreidi Xeraic
Allies: Diarch Reign Diarch Reign Aknoby Aknoby Souls of the Lilaste order Souls of the Lilaste order 'Sentinel' Janius Everwall 'Sentinel' Janius Everwall Norbert Oro Norbert Oro Lady Izanami Lady Izanami Gavin Vel Gavin Vel Zinayn Zinayn

Equipment:
Iudicium, Mettallum's Maw, PSFE

Army Composition:

Actions:
  • 1st Cohort: engaging Walkers with Anti Tank Teams(AT weapons LO-RPG20).
  • 2nd-10th Cohorts: Defending Positions and taking cover from artillery fire, firing at Mandos when that are attempting to land when possible.
  • Lord Mettallum: Engaging Drego Ruus.



He could hear the screams even after the transmission ceased Those droids who had no part with this war unjustly used as a shield by the Mandalorians.

Lord Mettallum uncharacteristically stared into the inferno of the lucrehulk's wreckage frozen in horror. This was a new feeling to Lord Mettallum one that he did not even know he was capable of having. His mind drifted back 50 years ago to that fateful day when his own Lucrehulk was hurtling towards a distant planet in the regions of unknown space. The screams of the droids the Mandalorians just sacrificed mixed with the screams of his own droids from back then.

Lord Mettallum found himself back in his command chair as the alarms blared, consoles were bursting into flames around him. If he could just reverse the ship's thrusters he might be able to slow down its descent enough to not fully destroy he vessel when it crashes down. Attempts to take manual control over the ship via his command chair were not responding as the screams of the droids on the bridge got louder and louder and the planet got closer and closer. "MY LORD, MY LORD WE MUST MOVE" repeated one of the droids in the bridge just as the ship was seconds away from hitting the planets surface

Lord Mettallum felt a heavy force slam into him as he was brought back into reality. One of his bodyguards had tackled him to the ground and taken the brunt of the artillery round that landed near them. If it was not for the sacrifice of this loyal guard Lord Mettallum would have most likely perished before the battle had truly started.

Now was not the time to be stuck in the past, If he did not focus then not would he fall but so too will all the droids and even organics who relied on him to lead them would fall. "I LORD METTALLUM WANT 1st COHORT AT TEAMS TARGETING THOSE WALKERS NOW, PHALANX UNITS PROVIDE HEAVY COVER SO THE AT TEAMS CAN GET A SHOT OFF." Lord Mettallum quickly looked at the visual feed of the walkers that just landed and recognized a specific one

That mandalorian had embarrassed Lord Mettallum far too many times and Lord Mettallum was damned if he would let him remain unchallenged. Activating his jumppack Lord Mettallum would charge towards the walker with his blade activated
 
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The Angels of Meu
Allies - Diarchy and Lilaste forces
Support - Friendly FOB 1km away
Current Objective - Restore LO-25/AA battery, down the road
Location - Objective 3 City Ruins
Manpower - 20 Elite Infantrymen
Equipment - LO-20D, LO-44 MKII, LO-RPG20, LO-12S, LO-22S, Beskar Vibro-Bayonet,
T9-XO Exo-Suit
Current Element Status - All 20 Alive


The Angels looked out the windows and watched as the building behind the gun was hit with a piece of debris from the sky. After spending a few seconds observing the gun, they quickly ducked back into cover. Half of the troops ran up the stairs and stayed just out of site of the windows, taking cover on each side.

Norbert radioed to his group:

"Audite. Nescimus quid in via ad dextram aut ad sinistram sit. Cum procedemus ut tormentum securum faciamus, volo ut illa latera inspiciamus. Intellectum?"

The men quickly replied:

"Intelleximus!"

With that, six men jumped out of the building, three of them jumped from the second story. The other three leaped from the first floor out the windows. Two of them on the left and right looked down their respective streets. The two on the left saw nothing but rubble, the two on the right saw what looked to be a fortified position getting attacked. The three on the bottom hit the ground and started sprinting to the AA gun, and then the three above hit the ground and sprinted after it as well. The feet of their armor dug into the ground and kicked up concrete from the sheer amount of force they used to launch themselves into a sprint. One of the soldiers radioed in what they saw:

"Commilitones, pugna infra viam agitur. Mandata exspectamus."

After all of them have left the building, five of them go prone and observe the fight, covering the street. The rest of them surround the battery. Norbert activates the emergency power supply of the weapon making it roar back to life. The Angels quickly clear the area and watch as it immediately opens fire at falling debris and other objects in the sky. A soldier observing the battle tells Norbert that the Mandalorians seem to be pushing the Order back. Norbert thinks for a moment before asking his second in command for a plan. He speaks:

"Existimo eos, fractis lineis, tormentum statim deleturos esse. Id defendendum est, Oro."

Norbert quickly agrees and decides that ambushing the enemy would be a good idea. He tells his troops to quickly set up in a building just on the corner of two streets and the other opposite to that. The Angels quickly ran through the courtyard and took up positions, hiding in the buildings, waiting to strike when the time was right.

Tags: Open, Korda Veydran
 
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Edwards began to recover himself from the lurching of the vessel, taking a few steps before needing to regain his balance once more. He looked around the bridge of the battlecruiser he was in. All the sights: The windows, the buttons, the sensor panels- were a lot to take in. Though he maintained his neutral composure, it was clear he was looking at all of it with a small hint of wonder.

"Ic wæs næfre an scipfruma."

He took a few steps closer to Laphisto Laphisto before stopping a few feet away. He pulled out a small watch from his breast pocket, antiquated even for his people, and pressed into its side with his thumb before setting it back into place. Edwards offered a brief glance of inquistion to Iandre Athlea Iandre Athlea before he set his eyes directly at Laphisto's face to speak again. "Ac þæt þunor þisse cynn awacnað sum þing ic hæfde þohte ic forloren." The tone of his voice was calm and direct, his eyes fixed directly at the guns aboard the vessel. Edward's gaze pierced through the window of the bridge as if it weren't there, analyzing the armaments intently and jumping between each. It was clear he was at least enthused by the blasts of the turbolasers, but the rest of his probable excitement was hidden behind a reasonably blank expression.

Edwards then peered down to his left forearm, revealing a small display perfectly wrapping it. After a few taps into the orange-lit interface, he looked back up before asking his question.

"Hū fela þearf hit to manian ānne bēag swā swā þā? Fīftig? Ēn hundred?" The end of the sentence increased in pitch, implying genuine curiosity over a rhetorical question. Edward's right hand hovered over the wristpad in preparation for a response to record.

Tags: Open | Laphisto Laphisto | Iandre Athlea Iandre Athlea
 
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Objective: 3 - Meet the Iron creed and help escort the tanks
Armor: LO-62C
Weapons:LO-20D, LO-22S, LO-10M [broken but usable as a dagger/ combat knife]
nearby Allies: 'Sentinel' Janius Everwall 'Sentinel' Janius Everwall
Oposition: Open

Null-7 moved through the debris with practiced precision, boots finding stable ground amid twisted durasteel and shattered stone. His LO-20D-SM was raised, muzzle tracking the corridors ahead as his left fist came up in a silent signal for his cell to halt. Dust hung in the air, unmoving, the kind of stillness that followed a recent fight. He keyed the side of his helmet, filtering out background static as High Command traffic cut through. Orders came fast and overlapping. The convoy was rerouting, and the Iron Creed had been tasked with securing the approach.

He had studied the Iron Creed long before this deployment. New blood by the Order's standards, but not inexperienced. Honor-bound fighters held together by doctrine rather than comfort or habit. That kind of culture reacted to stress differently. It either collapsed or tightened. Null-7 had made the effort to understand which way they bent, learning their language and customs not out of interest, but precaution. Anything that moved that decisively under pressure deserved to be understood before it became a problem.

What stood out was how they advanced. There was no hesitation, no visible uncertainty. The Iron Creed pushed into position cleanly, adapting to the terrain and situation without waiting for direction. Null-7 might have felt slighted at not being assigned directly to the convoy, if not for the nature of his role. The Silent Blades were not on manifests. They were not meant to be seen or accounted for. While others took visible ground, his cell stayed off-record, positioned to respond when the situation shifted.

By the time Null-7 reached the convoy, the Iron Creed was already establishing a defensive perimeter commanded by 'Sentinel' Janius Everwall 'Sentinel' Janius Everwall . Smoke still rose from scorched ground and damaged armor, the aftermath of contact clear but controlled. Null-7 approached without urgency, his weapon holstered but his posture unchanged. Being seen was not ideal, but in this case it was acceptable.

He stopped in front of the figure he assessed as the detachment's leader. Without ceremony, Null-7 drove his fist once against his own chest plate letting the metal reverberate int he air between them, a solid impact meant as acknowledgment rather than challenge. Salvete, fratres. Vocem per communicationes audivimus. Proelium nostrum confecimus atque auxilium vobis ferre venimus The language was deliberate. Simply confirmation that he had done the work to understand who they were.
 
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Objective III: Escort the Convoy
Supporting Units: Nearby Artillery, Possible CAS/CAP, Marius Hayes, Null 7 Null 7
Opposition: {OPEN}
Forces: The Iron Creed

Surprise was hidden beneath the Heavy Infantry helmet as one of them stepped forward to meet Null-7's team, returning the salute with deliberate force, enough to carry over the roar of weapons fire and collapsing masonry nearby.

"Maxime gratus, vir Ordinis. Hostem nondum invenimus, qui in stellis et umbris latere videntur, velut ignavi qui sunt."

The vocoder did little to mask the truth of the voice behind the armor. It was unmistakably a woman's, calm and measured, unconcerned with whether it was recognized. Behind her, her teams advanced in disciplined silence, escorting a convoy of walking engines of death toward the front. The infantry complement said nothing, but their stares lingered, hard and appraising, fixed on Null-7's detachment. The ground shook beneath artillery impacts, yet the Creed's soldiers never faltered, their formation unbroken.

"Elizabeth Ide, Paladina, sum. Si ad auxilium ferendum advenisti, explorationem regionum futurarum petimus; Angeli nostri caelum non obnubilant in nostrum favorem, ergo hoc faciendum est."

The Paladin did not wait for an answer. She turned and moved toward the forward infantry line, her rifle sliding smoothly back into her hands. The motion had barely finished when the weapon snapped upward.

"UMBRAE TUAE TE NUNC NON SERVABUNT, INTERFECTRICE!"

The scream tore through the chaos from the front of the convoy. A heartbeat later, targeting markers bloomed across multiple HUDs. Four LO-40s roared to life in unison, their barrels spinning as
fifty caliber rounds shredded the air and tore into a four story building ahead. Walls vanished beneath the barrage. Cover ceased to exist.

A handful of Mandalorians fired back from the wreckage, flashes of defiance amid the storm. It lasted seconds. The gunfire swept across them, dragging sprays of armor fragments and bodies through the dust. When the smoke cleared, nothing remained.

Less than a minute had passed before most of the structure collapsed into ruin. The cannons wound down, barrels glowing faintly as they slowed to a stop.

"Mox positio nostra revelabitur, cingula tormentorum inspicite et progredimini, ordo orationes vestras et contumelias non exspectabit."

Acknowledging nods passed between soldiers. Without hesitation, the Creed resumed its advance, tanks grinding forward once more as the battlefield swallowed them whole.

Frontal Force
[Cataphracts]

Armor IntegrityUser HealthArmor dataWeaponry Data
▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮ ▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮T-6 PACALO-20DLO-22SLO-10M
▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮ ▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮T-6 PACALO-20DLO-22SLO-10M
▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮ ▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮T-6 PACALO-20DLO-22SLO-10M
▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮ ▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮T-6 PACALO-20DLO-22SLO-10M
▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮ ▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮T-6 PACALO-40RLO-22SLO-10M
▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮ ▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮T-6 PACALO-40RLO-22SLO-10M
▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮ ▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮T-6 PACALO-40RLO-22SLO-10M
▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮ ▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮T-6 PACALO-40RLO-22SLO-10M


[Mud Waders]

Armor IntegrityUser HealthArmor dataWeaponry Data
▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮ ▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮T-6 PACALO-20DLO-22SLO-10M
▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮ ▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮T-6 PACALO-20DLO-22SLO-10M
▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮ ▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮T-6 PACALO-20DLO-22SLO-10M
▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮ ▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮T-6 PACALO-20DLO-22SLO-10M
▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮ ▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮T-6 PACALO-40RLO-22SLO-10M
▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮ ▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮T-6 PACALO-40RLO-22SLO-10M
▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮ ▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮T-6 PACALO-40RLO-22SLO-10M
▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮ ▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮T-6 PACALO-40RLO-22SLO-10M




Right Flank
[Crusaders]

Armor IntegrityUser HealthArmor dataWeaponry Data
▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮ ▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮T-6 PACALO-20DLO-22SLO-10M
▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮ ▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮T-6 PACALO-20DLO-22SLO-10M
▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮ ▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮T-6 PACALO-20DLO-22SLO-10M
▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮ ▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮T-6 PACALO-20DLO-22SLO-10M
▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮ ▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮T-6 PACALO-40RLO-22SLO-10M
▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮ ▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮T-6 PACALO-40RLO-22SLO-10M
▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮ ▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮T-6 PACALO-40RLO-22SLO-10M
▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮ ▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮T-6 PACALO-40RLO-22SLO-10M




Left Flank
[Iron Walls]

Armor IntegrityUser HealthArmor dataWeaponry Data
▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮ ▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮T-6 PACALO-20DLO-22SLO-10M
▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮ ▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮T-6 PACALO-20DLO-22SLO-10M
▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮ ▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮T-6 PACALO-20DLO-22SLO-10M
▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮ ▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮T-6 PACALO-20DLO-22SLO-10M
▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮ ▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮T-6 PACALO-40RLO-22SLO-10M
▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮ ▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮T-6 PACALO-40RLO-22SLO-10M
▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮ ▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮T-6 PACALO-40RLO-22SLO-10M
▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮ ▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮▮T-6 PACALO-40RLO-22SLO-10M

 

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Yaga Minor, Outer Rim Territories;
Santhe-Sienar Orbital Shipyards, Diarchy space.
Tags: [OPEN]




THIS IS THE WAY, OBJECTIVE II
' When The Sky Falls '

It was a tragedy by the turn-of-the-tenth-century.

For a millennia Santhe-Sienar had belonged to the Santhe family. A subsidiary procured on the behalf of the Santhe Corporation by a man who (Eirys would not confess to her relatives) had been forgotten to the annuals of time. Ledgers, dossiers, and the reports of a sale and subsequent acquisition of Sienar, for Santhe, had been long lost to time. What they would recently report was this: a family split, and with it, the loss of an excellent division that had left it's parent corporation bankrupt, destitute and ruined. Until an intervention at the behest of the second Imperial occupation in New Aldera. That was a story for another time.

Politics, combined with other levers awarded by a mixture of corporate influence, and a powerful ally in Lianna City, were the tools Eirys would utilize to reacquire the lost subsidiary taken by her cousin Vyllia Sancetti Vyllia Sancetti . Finding her way into the Chancellorate, founded on Bastion, was a first step towards Eirys ultimate goal to reunify her families legacy and corporate interests. Naturally, the orbital shipyards at Yaga Minor were one of several interests Eirys had within The Diarchy sphere. A tour of the facility had been arranged, discreetly, so that the young blonde could make inroads with her families former employees, associates and colleagues who had left with Vyilla, or had been subsequently recruited, after the alleged assassination during the fall of the Empire of the Lost.

"What I desire more than anything is to see Sienar and Santhe reunited again," Eirys confessed to the entourage as they traversed the walkways overlooking the Yaga system. "I can only hope that once I have tabled an offer to my cousin it will be accepted. Otherwise I fear the litigation could take us many years to reach a solution..."


Pssstrrrrrrt.

Eirys paused and turned to look around as the sound of static filled the hallway as it interrupted her corporate espionage. A frown replaced the confident smile she had adopted to court Sienar and share her plans with them. A nearby terminal served as a visual source, and so Eirys approached it. "Is this thing broken?"

Diarch Rellik said:
"You offered strikes on the Mandalorians first, then retreated the moment it became inconvenient for your politics. I have no interest in business deals that shift depending on who is sitting beside you..."

Rellik? Eirys frown deepened.

What was this transmission?

"By the Diarchs?!" shouted someone near her.

Breaking her concentration and turned away from the transmission which played parts of the Diarch-Black Sun meeting, Eirys turned to look around and saw her entourage gathering near one of the transparisteel windows overlooking the planet below. They were watching something out there. Faces etched in horror. A day that would change their lives forever and Eirys with it. Whatever that transmission was would have to wait until later. Something was wrong now.

Leaving the nearby terminal, Eirys joined them to look outside and bore witness as the Lurcehulk began it's fall upon the cluster of stations and automated defenses in orbit of Yaga Minor. "It's going to crash," Eirys said plainly, and as she did, nearby klaxons rung around her as the shipyards that she had come to buy were put into a security alert. "I think we are under attack?"



 
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The flash detonator left Korda's hand in a clean arc.
It vanished over the lip of the trench line, and a heartbeat later, the world went white.


The heavy laser turret shrieked as its optics overloaded, tracking motors stuttering as the brilliant detonation washed across its sensors. For just a moment, the nest went blind.
"MOVE!" Korda roared.


His squad surged from cover as one, boots pounding broken ferrocrete as they crossed the open ground and vaulted straight into the trench. Blaster fire erupted immediately, wild at first, disoriented shots snapping overhead as defenders reacted too late.


Korda hit the trench hard, shoulder-checking one defender into the dirt and driving his vibroblade down in a tight, efficient arc. He didn't linger. The Ashen Maw was mag-locked back onto his shoulder as he flowed forward, blade humming in his grip as his squad fanned out behind him.

"Clear left!"
"Contact right, down!"
"Moving!"


The trench became a killing corridor. Short, brutal bursts of motion. Mandalorians advancing in measured steps, vibroblades flashing, blaster bolts cracking at close range. Korda led from the front, visor tracking angles, blade rising and falling with mechanical precision.


They were halfway to the turret nest when it happened.
A sharp crack split the air, and one of his warriors went down hard, armor ringing as they slammed into the trench wall.


"Leg hit!" someone barked.
Korda was there instantly. A bolt had punched clean through the thigh plate, servos sparking as the wounded Mandalorian tried, and failed, to stand.
"Stay with me," Korda growled, hooking an arm under their harness and dragging them back toward a recessed firing alcove. Blaster fire chewed into the trench edge above them as another squadmate slid in, already applying a field seal and stim.


Korda crouched low, chest heaving once.
Then something snapped.
He sheathed the vibroblade in one smooth motion and ripped the Ashen Maw from his shoulder. The weapon felt right in his hands, solid, honest, hungry. His thumb flicked the selector.


Flame mode.
"Finish stabilizing them," he ordered without looking back. "I'll clear the rest."
He moved.

The next corner of the trench erupted in fire as Korda leaned out and bathed the position in roaring flame. He laughed as he advanced, not loud at first, but growing, raw and unrestrained. The sound echoed through the trench, half static-distorted madness, half pure joy.
"This is it!" he shouted, voice crackling through comms. "This is what they get!"
The defenders broke. Some tried to flee toward the nest entrance. They didn't make it far.



Silence followed, thick, broken only by the crackle of fire and the distant roar of Basilisk war droids still rampaging beyond the trench.
Korda turned toward the nest door.
He rested his forehead briefly against his vambrace and spoke softly, in Mando'a.

"Kad Ha'rangir… tome ti su'cuygar. Kote cuun gar dar'manda ni."

Then he kicked the door open.
The squad poured in behind him, flames and blaster fire ripping through the cramped interior. Control consoles shattered. Power couplings detonated.Two of Korda's Mandalorians dragged the final turret gunners out of their positions, hauling them bodily toward him. Korda didn't slow, didn't hesitate. The Ashen Maw thundered twice, ending the matter with finality.

Korda planted charges at the base of the mount and the generator housing with practiced efficiency.
"Charges set," he said. "Fall back."
They withdrew into the trench just as Korda stopped, standing alone in the center of it, staring back at the nest.
"This," he said quietly, almost reverently, "is for you."
He triggered the detonator.


The turret nest vanished in a thunderous explosion, fire and debris blasting skyward as the ground buckled and collapsed inward. The shockwave rolled through the trench, slamming dust and heat across beskar armor, but Korda didn't flinch.
When the smoke cleared, he lifted his visor just enough to scan the horizon.
Another silhouette stood out through the haze.


A LO-25/AA battery, still intact.
Korda smiled.
"Alright," he said to his squad, turning toward the next objective. "That's next."

Tags: Norbert Oro Norbert Oro
 
The Angels of Meu
Allies - Diarchy and Lilaste forces
Support - Friendly FOB 1km away
Current Objective - Restore LO-25/AA battery, down the road
Location - Objective 3 City Ruins
Manpower - 20 Elite Infantrymen
Equipment - LO-20D, LO-44 MKII, LO-RPG20, LO-12S, LO-22S, Beskar Vibro-Bayonet,
T9-XO Exo-Suit
Ammunition - LO-AP 19, LO-AVM 1
Current Element Status - All 20 Alive

All of the Angels, except Norbert, had entered the two buildings on the corner of the road and the courtyard. As he was catching up with his men and about to enter the building farthest from the AA gun, an explosion went off down the road. He had caught a glimpse of the smoke and fire, before ducking and sliding into the doorway, slamming into one of his comrades.

The soldier apologized, but Norbert paid no mind to it. He peered out of the doorway to see the column of smoke and fire coming from the Diarchy position. He ducked back into cover before the smoke cleared and went to the second floor of the building. As he was moving up the stairs, he radioed to his friend:

"Recte de illa positione cadente dixisti, Sariel. Dic tuis in illo aedificio ut se contineant. Haud dubium est quin etiam de tormento contra aërem petendo recte iudicaveris."

Sariel responded to Norbert:

"Ita."

Ramiel stood on the second floor, just by the window. She looked over to Norbert Oro sneaking up the stairs and spoke:

"Oro, certusne es nos plus aggredi quam possimus? Totam illam positionem everterunt."

Norbert crawled up, and crouched across from her. He then replied:

"Nescimus ex quibus copiis illa unitas constiterit. Quoad scimus, omnia explosiva sua in parva positione frustra consumpsere. Fidem in nobis habe, Ramiel—non licet nobis hos Mandalorianos hunc mundum delere. Meministine quomodo Ordo de his populis locutus sit?"

She nodded. They heard of a massacre that had happened, leading to the attack on this world. All the Angels knew was that unarmed people were harmed. That was enough for these people to travel to a world that they thought only gods could go. Norbert spoke to his men once more:

"Audite. Eos ad tormentum contra aërem paene pervenire sinemus antequam impetum faciamus. Volumus hostem custodiam demittere. Latete—scio vos id posse—tum signum dabo ut in eos subito irruamus."

With the order given, the Angels laid low in the two buildings. Their forces were split even, ten in one, ten in the other.

Tags: Korda Veydran Korda Veydran
 

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