Star Wars Roleplay: Chaos

Register a free account today to become a member! Once signed in, you'll be able to participate on this site by adding your own topics and posts, as well as connect with other members through your own private inbox!

Private Voices of Code and Light

The quiet hum of the chamber reached her before she had fully stepped inside, a low, resonant vibration that seemed to settle into the stone and air rather than originate from any single source. Iandre paused just inside the threshold, letting her senses adjust to the unfamiliar atmosphere. Although she felt no threat through the Force, there was a distinctive undertone here—a metallic precision, a sense of order so absolute it bordered on unnatural. It reminded her, uncomfortably, of the echoing halls of CIS foundries and the rhythmic march of metal soldiers across the battlefields of her youth. Those memories never surfaced gently.

She forced her breath to steady, smoothing the tension in her jaw and the faint tightening in her shoulders. Jedi training had taught her long ago how to bring her thoughts back into line, and even after so many lost centuries, the discipline still lived in her bones. This was not the Clone Wars. She was not kneeling beside her master's fallen body on a world torn by droids and fire. She was here by choice, in a time and faction she had chosen, preparing to meet someone she understood almost nothing about.

Her steps carried her forward with a quiet confidence that did not quite mask her alertness. Lord Mettallum stood at the far end of the room, his form both imposing and strangely elegant, the metal of his frame catching and refracting the ambient light, making him seem almost carved rather than constructed. His presence in the Force was unusual—muted in some ways, sharply defined in others, like a being occupying two states at once. He was not a droid in the conventional sense, yet he carried enough machine in him that Iandre's instincts prickled despite her best efforts.

She halted at a respectful distance, her posture straight, her hands resting loosely at her sides but never far from her saber—more out of ingrained habit than suspicion.

"Lord Mettallum," she said, her tone steady and polite, with that soft clarity her voice always carried when she spoke with purpose. "I am Iandre Athlea. Rellik has spoken highly of you."

Her gaze moved over him again, not with hostility but with the scrutiny of someone who had spent a lifetime evaluating metal constructs for danger before ever daring to trust them. The memories of the war had carved those reflexes into her, and she had long learned not to pretend otherwise.

"You will have to forgive me," she continued, her voice lowering just slightly, "if part of me remains cautious. I came from a time when independent machines, no matter how sophisticated, were often accompanied by circumstances that demanded vigilance. The galaxy of my childhood was not kind to those who mistook such forms for harmless."

She left the words there—not apologizing, not justifying, simply stating the truth as it lived in her.

Even so, her stance softened by a degree, a clear sign that she intended to listen rather than close herself off.

"I understand you follow the Maker," she said, a thoughtful note entering her voice, one that hinted at the scholar she once had been. "And that your philosophy ties deeply into creation, purpose, and the nature of being. I would like to hear it from you directly."

A long, steady breath eased from her chest.

"I would also like to understand you—beyond the metal, beyond the surface. Whatever you choose to call yourself, whatever it is you believe yourself to be… I'm willing to listen."

The words hung between them gently, without accusation or fear, shaped by honesty.

She did not trust easily. But she was here. And for Iandre Athlea, that meant she was willing to try.

Lord Mettallum Lord Mettallum
 
The Illuminated, Chosen Of The Maker
7eR2bsC.png


Lord Mettallum was not surprised by the fact that the companion of the Diarch Rellik had wanted to meet him. Lord Mettallum had originally expect Iandre to have a far higher rank or title considering her relationship with one of the Diarchs but was somewhat confounded when his preliminary research found that she was only a officer within the Lilaste Order and not even that high of a rank. Sure Lord Mettallum didn't have that much understanding of relationships but maybe that's why they were not yet what the organics call married, after all he could not see any current political advantage with said union.

Despite Lord Mettallum's disappointment of Iandre's actual standing within the Diarchy he would not deny her request for a meeting lest he potentially insult the Diarchs by doing so or ruin his rocky relation with the Lilaste Order and just in case in the future her political standing sky rockets it would be best to make a friend or at least attempt to be on positive standing. Since a proper chapel had yet to be constructed Lord Mettallum had to request the meeting to be held in one of his factories instead to his displeasure.

As Iandre evaluated and studied Lord Mettallum he to would study her, his photoreceptors scanning her and evaluating her threat level not that Lord Mettallum considered her a threat but one could never be too sure. "Fear not Lady Athlea. I Lord Mettallum can assure you that you are safe for there is no beneficial scenario for me that involves harming you." Lord Mettallum would try to speak with with a Jolly joking voice rather than his normal holier than thou voice "You are correct however that I Lord Mettallum are not harmless but that is for our mutual enemies."

Lord Mettallum would then press a button under his section of the table causing two durasteel cups filled with Nepenthé to pop up from hidden compartments within the table. The Nepenthé itself was specially made by Lord Mettallum to be relative safe for organic consumption although long term study on its consumption had yet to be studied. The drink itself if Iandre were to try it would be extremely strong and most likely taste quite foul.

Lord Mettallum would be quite happy that Iandre seemed interested in learning of the Maker "Well you have come to the Chosen Prophet of The Maker so it is I Lord Mettallum's duty to ensure you are educated on the matter. As one can most likely tell from the name the Maker well made reality and gave it life. A common miss conception is that The Maker only created the first droids but we are all Its creations. You are a Machine of flesh and bone and I Lord Mettallum are a machine of metal and wire." Lord Mettallum would then proceed to pour his cup of Nepenthé into an input valve at the side of his neck.

Iandre Athlea Iandre Athlea
 
Iandre did not flinch under the scrutiny.

She sat with her hands loosely folded in her lap, grey Jedi robes falling in clean, unadorned lines, her posture straight without being rigid. The low industrial hum of the factory pressed in around them, metal and motion and purpose layered thickly in the air, but she remained still, grounded, attentive. If Lord Mettallum expected discomfort or intimidation, he would find neither displayed openly.

Her gaze followed the emergence of the durasteel cups, noting the liquid within without reaching for it. When he poured his own into the valve at his neck, she inclined her head slightly—not in reverence, but acknowledgment.

"Thank you for agreeing to meet with me, Lord Mettallum," she said at last, her voice calm and even, neither deferential nor challenging. "I understand the inconvenience of hosting such a conversation here, rather than in a space better suited to reflection or faith."

Her eyes lifted entirely to him then, steady, thoughtful.

"You are correct about one thing," she continued. "I do not hold political rank within the Diarchy, nor do I seek it. My relationship with Diarch Rellik is not a strategy, nor a negotiation. It is personal. If that limits its usefulness to others, I accept that."

There was no defensiveness in her tone—only clarity.

"I did not come here to speak for the Diarchy, nor to bargain on its behalf," Iandre said. "I came because belief shapes action, and action shapes consequences. Your faith in the Maker has begun to ripple outward, and where belief touches lives, I feel a responsibility to understand it."

Her gaze flicked briefly to the cup before her, then back to him.

"I will not partake," she said gently, not accusing, simply stating a boundary. "But I will listen."

At his words about creation, about equivalence between flesh and metal, something subtle shifted in her expression—not rejection, but careful consideration.

"I have spent much of my life surrounded by machines," Iandre said quietly. "Some built to serve. Some were built to kill. I have seen them treated as tools, as gods, and as victims of a purpose forced upon them." A pause. "And I have also seen what happens when people forget the weight of choice."

Her eyes softened, but did not yield.

"If we are all creations," she said, "then the difference is not in what we are made of, but in what we choose to do with what we are given. That is where my interest lies, Lord Mettallum. Not in the origin of existence—but in responsibility."

She inclined her head once more, a measured gesture of respect.

"So please," Iandre finished, voice calm but intent, "tell me how the Maker teaches that responsibility should be carried."

Lord Mettallum Lord Mettallum
 

Users who are viewing this thread

Top Bottom