T A I C H Ō
LORRD, OUTER RIM TERRITORIES
Cross-division operations did not occur with any regularity, not among Mandalorians who prized clarity of chain and purpose, yet the Mandalorian Empire no longer lived in ordinary times. Exceptions were no longer rare, and Azen had learned that such moments were often where history began to bend. A Supercommando did not normally work alongside a Nite Owl, not by doctrine and not by tradition, but the orders had come from a height where tradition thinned and intent sharpened. He was to assist one of Mandalore’s shadows in the fulfillment of her objective, to ask no questions beyond what the mission required, and to leave no impression once the work was done.
The planet assigned to this task would never warrant a name in the songs of warriors or the records of historians. It lay along the Mando-Diarchy border, unremarkable in every way that once mattered, its massive cities having thrived on trade, predictability, and quiet ambition. Before the escalations, its streets had known peace and prosperity in equal measure. Now it existed in a state of slow fracture, pulled between two powers that both spoke of restraint while sharpening their blades, and each passing day made the space between them more dangerous to occupy.
Azen entered one such city from below, moving through its underbelly with measured precision. The cantina waited in the ghetto’s depths, a structure sagging beneath years of neglect and indulgence, its exterior scarred by old blaster fire and newer marks of ownership that changed hands weekly. Inside, the stench of alcohol mixed with unwashed flesh and chemical residue, an assault on the senses that made no effort to hide what sort of place this was. Azen paused only long enough to reseal his helmet, the familiar enclosure restoring clarity as it muted the filth and noise around him.
He took a seat at the bar with deliberate calm, gauntleted hands resting against the counter as if the environment itself did not merit acknowledgment. He did not scan the room openly, nor did he posture or announce himself. The kind of contact he had been assigned would find him without invitation.
“Efficiency,” Azen said at last, his voice carried through the helmet with composed authority, “is all I require from this arrangement. My presence here is temporary, and I intend to keep it that way.”
He waited after that, posture unyielding and patience intact. He did not know what he was meant to look for, nor what form his contact would take when she emerged from the noise and smoke. Orders were orders, and this mission would be completed swiftly, so that he might return to serving the Empire directly, and in places far more deserving of his time.