Itzhal Volkihar
Character

At least, that was how it had been till now.
One murder was all it took. In most regards, Kaelin Deras was unremarkable, an off-world merchant with little wealth of his own and frequently lousy luck at the local gambling tables; when the time came to collect his debts, everything should have gone according to plan. Such was the cruelty of life, however, that when the time came, Kaelin Deras grew a spine and resisted without a care in the world for how many credits he owed. Greedy or courageous, the result was the same—public and blatant murder for the disrespect delivered to the Ash Blades. It was a mistake that would cost them everything.
Fifteen thousand credits dead. Twenty-five thousand credits, alive and screaming for the judgement of a vengeful family.
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The planet of Kabal was picturesque, with Idyllic beaches of warm golden sand traced by the soft waves of a clear blue ocean. A paradise world filled with beauty and wonder as far as the eye could see, nature in all its splendour.
Jerratha was a black mark upon such a world, a hideous wound that spewed disease and malaise with every huffing rupture of its industrial machine. Black clouds of ash and fog drifted across the landscape, closer and closer to the grey beaches and the defiled seafront, a testament to civilisation's cruelty. It was not just nature that suffered under such a regime.
Blocky fabrications of metal and stone housed thousands packed in like crushed sardines. Most of them were resigned to a life without the bright light of a natural sun, tarnished as it was by dark clouds that rarely lifted. Their inhabitants scuttled around in a way more akin to rats than the living thinking beings they were, without even a thought for how aberrant their life under the synthetic lights of barely functioning fixtures really was.
Here, a figure like Itzhal Volkihar stood out, unintentional as it was. His steps were too confident, his stride unhindered, his head raised high. His armour, dark and imposing in the dim light that frequently flickered due to an exposed lighting strip, cracked and torn with wires that sparked when the current slipped past a damaged resistor in the next chain.
None stopped him as he walked past, pistols on his hips.
Still, dozens of eyes followed his path as he came to a stop in front of a grey door. He ignored them, harmless as they were. Behind his visor, eyes traced the contours of the door, unmarked with the debris and refuse so common elsewhere. There was a gap to the door, remnants of a larger, yet noticeably less hardy material, much like the others around them. When he knocked, the sound reverberated with an echo that carried along the corridor, yet garnered no response beyond its own.
The Mandalorian tilted his head, first to the right and then to the left, an unnecessary gesture with the sensor equipment in his helmet but an ingrained one. Then, with a stretch of his arm, he placed the nozzle of his wrist-mounted flame projector against the door lock; his other hand adjusted the controls before the corridor flared to life with another source of light and heat. The sudden warmth was barely noticeable through the protection of his black bodysuit, though the sound of metal melting screeched through the corridor, dampened as it was by the ear protection in his helmet.
A few seconds later, the lock collapsed inwards, and a push of the door solved the rest. He stepped over the puddle of dripped slag and into the living room on the other side; a closed window covered in ash from outside faced him. One hand dropped back to his pistol, wary as he moved deeper inside, past the open bathroom door and the floor dirtied with emptied syringes and stimulants. A few he recognised, though the brand was different, most didn't even have an identifier with only the dregs of a hazy crumpled tube to judge.
In the living room, there was a single low-hanging table in line with a ratty old couch. The wood was a faded brown, yet the faint claw marks and knife gouges that had just barely scratched the surface spoke of something much more valuable than any ordinary furniture. It might have even been worth a pretty credit if not for the blood stains that dirtied the table with crimson flecks that weren't the right colour for a Trandoshan.
As close as he was to the table, he could see through the door to the left into a dark room with a shrine the colour of bone decorated with notches and marks that were partially covered by a dark brown pelt. Through the remaining door to the right, only visible from a slight creak in the entrance, a grey slab of stone pressed against a wall, where a nearby radiator unit slumbered beside the bed, and empty racks were stacked aside trophies of weapons and ammunition.
Quietly, he crouched down to the table, his eyes locked upon a holocomm that had fallen beside the table leg.
Then, with a flick of his wrist, his blaster pointed at the doorway and the unexpected sound.

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