Trent
Active Member
The moonless night of the ice world was stunning to anyone who had the opportunity to see it. A planet left mostly untouched, with no light pollution, and strategically located by several stunning clusters of stars. Everyone but a local.
TS-101 stood, eyeing the frozen waste he'd once called home with a critical, slighly annoyed eye. He'd joined the Stormtrooper Corp to get off frozen rocks like Rhen Var, and had found himself immediately assigned to a Snowtrooper Training Battalion after graduation. Made sense, but still made the young man a little aggrivated as he sat stood inside his company's snowy trenchline, his Dlt-19 oriented westword in the dim, foggy twilight. The thermal scope on his blaster's view was solidly cold, as it scanned from behind his dug in emplacement on the side of their position up a small hill, elevated enough on the plains to give a slight advantage. Norman couldn't believe the tenacity of the group of offworld rebels they'd spent the last several months hunting, in the horrid conditions they found themselves in. Rhen Var was a cruel place to outsiders. The 29th Snowtrooper Division had dug in and raided the surrounding countryside ceaselessly, finding little besides an occasional local or tribe, who would often help them with information on rebel movements once they heard their own tongue come from one of the faceless, armored troopers asking the question. TS-101had found himself Corporal, as his company's translator in addition to his normal duties as a DLT
-19 gunner.
So far the rebels had been expectedly shy, not wanting to face the overwhelming firepower that the Empire had, except for a skirmish here and there, but eventually they'd have to do something bigger. He doubted they could hunt enough game or fish enough on the run to feed a group as large as their's. Estimated to be about forty or so left after months of attrition.
Norman blinked. Blinked again. A small bright interruption in the deadness of the plains, blaring hot. His heartrate spiked as another cluster of blobs found themselves bobbing his way. He began to key into his helmet and was interuppted by the blare of the DLTs positioned 50 meters either direction on his left and right, with another troop yelling contact into their headset. Muscle memory kicked in.
Steam rose off the heavy blaster's barrel as it spat plasma flying towards the advancing figures. His scope sparkled brilliantly as a rebels blaster bolt flew past his head, cinging the finish on his hooded helmet as he fired short bursts into the shapes, cursing and praying silently as he continued to fire. A rocket took out the pillbox to his left, sending a jet of flame, ice, dirt, and man flying into the air.
Norman fired a little faster.
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A small, faded transport ship drifted listlessly towards the stormy world of Durace. Along it's starboard hull sat a barely visible, but still recognizable as that of the now ancient Galactic Empire. Aboard sat rows of almost entirely defunct cryo pods, silent tombs for the troopers that had been unfortunate enough to have been in that particular location. Among them sat a few intact ones, fading nuclear powered lights dimming after a millenia of aimless wandering. Inside the few had lived and died a thousand lives, relived their own histories and haunts on a ceaseless loop, the pods feeding them just enough recycled nutrients from miraculously functioning algae farms that had grown uninhibited in the vessel for the duration of the voyage. A hyperdrive malfunction had ended the lives of the crew early on and left the passengers adrift.
As they slept the ship found itself pulled into the gravity of the barren planet it had unknowingly been headed towards for what would've been an eternity for anyone experiencing it. The survivors, if one could call them that, would find the pieces of their minds scattered into the expanse of their souls, with varying degrees of sanity and cognitive functions.
TS-101 stood, eyeing the frozen waste he'd once called home with a critical, slighly annoyed eye. He'd joined the Stormtrooper Corp to get off frozen rocks like Rhen Var, and had found himself immediately assigned to a Snowtrooper Training Battalion after graduation. Made sense, but still made the young man a little aggrivated as he sat stood inside his company's snowy trenchline, his Dlt-19 oriented westword in the dim, foggy twilight. The thermal scope on his blaster's view was solidly cold, as it scanned from behind his dug in emplacement on the side of their position up a small hill, elevated enough on the plains to give a slight advantage. Norman couldn't believe the tenacity of the group of offworld rebels they'd spent the last several months hunting, in the horrid conditions they found themselves in. Rhen Var was a cruel place to outsiders. The 29th Snowtrooper Division had dug in and raided the surrounding countryside ceaselessly, finding little besides an occasional local or tribe, who would often help them with information on rebel movements once they heard their own tongue come from one of the faceless, armored troopers asking the question. TS-101had found himself Corporal, as his company's translator in addition to his normal duties as a DLT
-19 gunner.
So far the rebels had been expectedly shy, not wanting to face the overwhelming firepower that the Empire had, except for a skirmish here and there, but eventually they'd have to do something bigger. He doubted they could hunt enough game or fish enough on the run to feed a group as large as their's. Estimated to be about forty or so left after months of attrition.
Norman blinked. Blinked again. A small bright interruption in the deadness of the plains, blaring hot. His heartrate spiked as another cluster of blobs found themselves bobbing his way. He began to key into his helmet and was interuppted by the blare of the DLTs positioned 50 meters either direction on his left and right, with another troop yelling contact into their headset. Muscle memory kicked in.
Steam rose off the heavy blaster's barrel as it spat plasma flying towards the advancing figures. His scope sparkled brilliantly as a rebels blaster bolt flew past his head, cinging the finish on his hooded helmet as he fired short bursts into the shapes, cursing and praying silently as he continued to fire. A rocket took out the pillbox to his left, sending a jet of flame, ice, dirt, and man flying into the air.
Norman fired a little faster.
------------------------------
A small, faded transport ship drifted listlessly towards the stormy world of Durace. Along it's starboard hull sat a barely visible, but still recognizable as that of the now ancient Galactic Empire. Aboard sat rows of almost entirely defunct cryo pods, silent tombs for the troopers that had been unfortunate enough to have been in that particular location. Among them sat a few intact ones, fading nuclear powered lights dimming after a millenia of aimless wandering. Inside the few had lived and died a thousand lives, relived their own histories and haunts on a ceaseless loop, the pods feeding them just enough recycled nutrients from miraculously functioning algae farms that had grown uninhibited in the vessel for the duration of the voyage. A hyperdrive malfunction had ended the lives of the crew early on and left the passengers adrift.
As they slept the ship found itself pulled into the gravity of the barren planet it had unknowingly been headed towards for what would've been an eternity for anyone experiencing it. The survivors, if one could call them that, would find the pieces of their minds scattered into the expanse of their souls, with varying degrees of sanity and cognitive functions.
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