Keeping a Promise
TYTHON
TRAINING COURTYARD
Welcome everyone. Limber as well as you can. Braze’s health did not fall on blind eyes.
Though I assure you that this will not be physically taxing, do not push yourself. He did not speak directly to the Knight, but they were knowing.
The warm amber glow of the sun filters through the trees. Ancient stonework from a long-forgotten Jedi outpost serves as their backdrop. Caltin Vanagor, massive even at rest, kneels in the dirt. His arms are bare, tribal markings visible beneath the sun-scarred skin, and the long handle of Conservator rests beside him, deactivated. He let them do what they needed to, but when all eyes were finally on him, he spoke.
In a calm, deep voice rumbling like distant thunder.
You’ve all seen Connel use it. Quick, brutal. Direct. That’s The Way of the Saber. But it didn’t start with him.
He looks down for a moment, brushing a finger through the dirt.
It started with me. Not because I wanted to be clever, or different. But because I got tired of dying by the book. Nodding as he looked around.
The Forms. They work… well. But only if you have the time, the space, and the control. I’ve been in too many places with none of those things.
Standing slowly, towering over them, yet calm. His voice never rises. It doesn't have to.
So I created something that wasn’t about elegance or discipline. It was about survival. About turning instinct into art, and art into muscle memory. A way to make your lightsaber do more than just dance.
This was during the Clone Wars. Parts of it, at least. But it came together after. After the Purge. After the galaxy decided Jedi were meant to burn. That’s when I realized I couldn’t keep fighting their way. I needed to fight mine.
He then activated Conservator for a brief moment. The golden blade crackled with energy, the permafrost edge humming gently. Then deactivated it.
Way of the Saber isn’t a form. It’s a mindset. A style that merges close-quarter combat with your saber. Grapples. Strikes. Blocks. Throws. It's a combination of instinct and movement—50% martial, 50% blade. 100% yours. Then there is the Force. If you’re attuned, you’ll move like water. If you’re not, you’ll learn. This isn’t about pushing the Force outward. It’s about letting it flow through you. Letting your muscles remember what your mind forgets when adrenaline takes over.
He takes a slow breath, then begins to demonstrate a chain: a sidestep into a punch, followed by a sweeping leg takedown and reverse grip saber swipe—all deliberate, smooth, devastating.
These are Tier One moves. Basic. Survival-oriented. They teach you how to live through the opening seconds of a fight. Kick-Hilt Jab. Forearm block—Body takedown. Elbow—Weapon strike. No wasted movement. No flair. Just results.
Holding up the Holocron, he looked at it.
And the Holocron? It’s locked. You answer its questions—honestly—or it shuts down. This isn’t a style for the arrogant. It’s for those willing to confront the ugly truth: that sometimes, to protect life… you have to fight like someone who doesn’t want to lose their own. There are some who may look at this and think that it is “not very Jedi like”. That is why I chose the three of you. Not because you are the best fighters, not because you are the best Jedi. You are You fight for something. Not because you're told. Not because it’s tradition. But because it's right. That’s why you’re ready to test this. If you succeed, great! If you don’t that is okay.
He looks at all three, gaze steady, voice like carved stone.
None of you are going to master this in a week. Maybe not in a year. But if you walk this path, you’ll never be the same. You'll bleed. You’ll grow. But you’ll also live. And one day… you’ll stand in front of someone who thought they had you figured out—form and all—and you'll end the fight before it ever began.
He shrugged, with a bit of a smirk.
Isn’t that the best way to end one?
Three combat rings are marked in the dirt. A trio of custom-built training droids—humanoid, armored, and unnervingly fast—stand dormant at the edge. Each is keyed to the student it faces. One for power and endurance. One for speed and chaos. One for precision and counters.
Caltin Vanagor stood at the center, the silhouette of
Conservator strapped to his back. A faint breeze stirs the edges of his cloak. His presence filled the air like gravity.
Each of these droids are marked with your documented history into their programming. Even your recent events Braze. They will take your strengths into account. They will take your weaknesses. Right now they are “Tier One” rated, so you can practice what I showed you a few moments ago. They will also take into account your instincts. So as you learn them, they learn you. You’re in no danger, but this is real.
He spoke.
Only once per student.
No further instruction.
No further mercy.
The droid before Aris activates with a hum. It moves like a juggernaut: heavy, relentless, punishing.
(to Aris)
You’re built like a warhammer—strong, deliberate, hard to move. But strength without rhythm is wasted. Count your steps. Breathe through your bones. Don’t strike where they are—strike where they’re forced to be. Move like a glacier with teeth.
The next droid is sleek, erratic, dual-wielding blades and flickering with sudden bursts of speed.
(to Azurine)
You burn hot. Fast. But fire without focus burns out. You're not here to race. You're here to end it before it begins. Time your breath. Count the silence between each heartbeat. Make chaos your rhythm, but never let it consume your center.
Braze’s droid is patient, calculating—its programming built around timing, counters, punishment.
(to Braze)
While I reiterate not to push yourself and make your situation worse, I know enough about your culture to know that pain is a forge. It will break the parts of you that were never real. Don’t fight with who you were. Fight with who you are now. Measure each step. Let the enemy write their own ending—then finish the sentence.
Caltin watched them all—one bruised, one bleeding, one grinning like a devil. But all three are standing. He turned to the edge of the training circle and deactivated the remaining droids. The clearing went still. The stars begin to blink into the night sky overhead.
Braze
•
Aris Noble
•
Azurine Varek
• Anyone else (but please ask first)
[Text in Brackets is spoken on Comm-link] ~
Like this is through the Force~