Star Wars Roleplay: Chaos

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Public The Empire Protects (PvE Fleeting)

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"I just don't see how you can be so short-sighted," the older man said, his voice like sandpaper wrapped in velvet. His fingers, adorned with two signet rings, curled around a half-full glass of amber Corellian reserve. It caught the light from the ceiling in glinting flashes—expensive, aged, and utterly unnecessary.

Tiber stood across the room, back straight, arms folded behind him like he was already standing on a bridge deck. "I'm not being short-sighted, Father," he said evenly. "I believe there's more out there than credits and quarterly gains."

His father scoffed, loud and theatrical, as he paced to the massive transparisteel window that overlooked Bonadan's endless cityscape—tiered towers glowing in sterile gold and white, smog rising in the distance. The lights were beautiful if you didn't think too hard about who lived beneath them.

"You're signing your life away," Tiber Senior growled, jabbing the glass toward his son as if it were a weapon. "This so-called 'Empire' you've joined—this version—won't be any different than the ones that came before. A decade, maybe two, and it'll rot like the rest."

Tiber's jaw tightened. "The Empire is a light in the dark, Father. And it doesn't matter who's sitting on the throne. What matters is the structure, the discipline, the order."

His mother sat on the edge of a pristine white couch, silent as ever. She was dressed in a flowing gown far too elegant for a woman who had nothing left to say. Her eyes flicked toward Tiber, made contact for only a heartbeat, and dropped again. She had never intervened. Not when Tiber was younger. Not now.

His father turned, slowly, eyes narrowed to slits.

"I did not raise a zealot," he said, voice low and trembling with controlled fury. "You will stay here. You'll finish your education. You'll learn the Sector, work your way up in the firm. Just as I did. Just as your son will—if you don't get yourself killed trying to play admiral in some broken fleet."

The next word came before Tiber even realized it had formed on his tongue.

"No."

It was quiet. Firm. Absolute.

His father froze, expression unreadable. Then his head tilted ever so slightly, as if he hadn't heard correctly. He turned fully, the liquid in his glass sloshing dangerously close to the rim.

"What did you say to me?" he asked, voice deathly calm.

Tiber stepped forward. Not a tremble in his limbs. Not a single breath wasted.

"I said no. I've enlisted. The forms are filed. Background cleared. I leave within the week."

"You arrogant little—"

"I will rise through the ranks," Tiber continued, voice clipped, cold. "And I will bring control to the chaos that surrounds this galaxy. Because someone must. Someone capable."

"You think you're going to be a war hero, is that it?" his father barked, pacing toward him now. "You'll lead a fleet, march across the stars, reshape the galaxy? You're a boy, Tiber. A spoiled, stubborn boy with no idea what real power is."

"Perhaps," Tiber said softly, eyes locked to his father's. "But even that's better than spending my life buried in boardrooms, selling overpriced parts to dying colonies and calling it a legacy."

That did it.

The glass flew first, shattering against the wall beside him. Screaming followed, loud and raw—his father's fury unleashed in a torrent of curse-laden rants. His mother didn't move. Didn't flinch. She merely turned her head, as though the storm was routine.



Tiber jolted awake, breath caught in his chest.

The room was dark. Silent. The sterile glow of distant starlight filtered faintly through the viewport, casting long shadows across the steel walls of his quarters. Sweat beaded along his brow, cold and unwelcome.

Another nightmare.

He didn't need to reflect on its source. He already knew.

A sharp beep cut through the quiet—his personal com-link blinking with urgency. He reached for it without hesitation.

"Sir? Apologies for the hour, but… we need you on the bridge." The voice was young. Nervous. Carefully measured—like someone afraid the act of waking him might cost their commission.

Tiber's voice was even, unshaken. "Understood. I'm on my way."

He was dressed within seconds. Every movement was precise: uniform pressed, boots laced, belt aligned, rank plaque secured. He moved like a man assembling armor—ritualistic, automatic.

The corridors of the ISD Resolute were alive with low hums and red emergency lighting. Technicians and troopers froze at his approach, snapping to attention. Tiber returned their salutes with subtle nods, his long coat trailing behind him like a shadow. He didn't waste words. Time was not a luxury he afforded his crew—or himself.

The Resolute, a Donnager II-class Star Destroyer, was no palace of war. It lacked the imposing size of its ancient cousins, but made up for it with hardened shields, forward-facing firepower, and speed that put most cruisers to shame. Designed for escort duty and edge-of-space patrols, it was a scalpel in a fleet of hammers—and Tiber had wielded it well.

He had once served as a junior officer aboard this very ship. Now, it was his flagship. His command. His spearpoint.

For now.

The Imperial Sector Authority was still rebuilding from the ashes of failure, trying to unify shattered remnants under one banner. Tiber's fleet was modest—scarce resources, limited tonnage—but it was enough. Enough to enforce discipline. Enough to punish chaos.

As the blast doors parted with a hiss, he stepped onto the bridge.

The atmosphere shifted instantly. Officers straightened, chatter ceased. The junior officer who had dared wake him stood rigid at the helm, pale, eyes fixed on the floor. They'd likely drawn lots. Tiber didn't acknowledge the discomfort. Fear, properly applied, was a stabilizing force.

"Status report." His voice cut cleanly across the silence.

The junior officer stepped forward, fingers flying over the console as he brought up a holoprojection. "We received an emergency broadcast, sir. A trading vessel en route from Bonadan—under attack. Medical supplies on board. Manifest confirms humanitarian cargo."

A flickering holo of the distressed ship appeared between them. Audio distortion crackled from the transmission—frantic voices, bursts of static, overlapping systems damage reports.

Tiber's eyes narrowed slightly.

"Proximity?"

"Close, Admiral. Two jumps. Perhaps less."

He didn't respond right away.

Instead, he stepped forward to the viewport, folding his hands behind his back. The stars stared back at him—endless, silent, uncaring. This could easily be an ambush. Raiders hoping for bait. A rogue faction with delusions of grandeur. Or worse—someone probing his perimeter for weakness.

He had a small detachment of patrol craft with him. No cruisers. No backup. If this turned into a trap… the cost could be catastrophic. Not just in ships, but in perception. In control.

He began calculating probabilities in his head. Risk tolerance. Fleet vectors. Enemy loadouts. Engagement time. The numbers aligned slowly, like pieces of a puzzle he'd solved a thousand times.

Then he moved.

"Prep our squadrons. I want all pilots in launch tubes within five minutes. Full power to combat readiness. Redirect reactor flow to forward shielding. Wake engineering. Get me a full systems report."

Officers snapped into motion, the bridge becoming a hive of activity.

The same junior officer stepped closer, voice hesitant. "Sir… are we moving to assist?"

Tiber turned only slightly—just enough for the young officer to see the faintest ghost of a smirk at the corner of his mouth.

"The Empire protects," he said.

Outside the viewport, the massive triangular form of the ISD Resolute began to turn—its sublight engines flaring with renewed power. The stars shimmered. Coordinates locked. Hyperdrive spooled.

And then, in a flash of light and thunder, the warship leapt into the void—toward the fire.
 



Tags: Tiber Saal Tiber Saal

Demveath Paced on the bridge of her Raider class corvette. The ship bore her houses Sith pureblood skin color with a stripe of white and black to show allegiance to Lord Rasnuhl's domain & the fledgling ISA. Since she was freed from an almost eternal prison the Sith pureblood had been trying to recreate a modicum of her now past life. Ever since the collapse of Empire of the Lost Demveath's three raiders had been put to use projecting Lord Rasnuhl's order in the sea of chaos.

For the last month she has been going where the force lead her. He thoughts are interrupted by the Comm's officer "Lady Okamsiu, there seems to be a civilian ship in distress. Orders?"

Her gaze locks the Comm's officer "Helmsman, chart a jump based on the triangulation of the message. We will deal with whatever rabble is stirring in the shipping lanes."

A flurry of activity and comms between the three vessels commenced before they jumped.
 
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The Empire Protects
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"I would rather die a meaningful death than to live a meaningless life."
- Corazon Aquino -



Location: Outer Rim
Gear: In Sig
Tags: Open​

I stood on the bridge with hands clasped behind my back, eyes staring out into the darkness of space, and my ears listening to the Admiral who commanded one of the new protype Assault Corvette-class warships, who still lingered without a name for the beautiful crafted ship, talking about political aspects of the Imperial Navy and new tactics being discussed in regards of protecting eventual ISA space. I, personally, held no reserves for naval tactics or the fascination of commanding a fleet, more less than a single warship; but I was invited to tour the Outer Rim in the new ship.

As the Overseer of The Directorate, I failed to connect the lines of thought as to why I, whose passion was connected to politics and the intelligence agency of the ISA, had been offered the opportunity to be here today. I could only assume it was my position in the ISA, a show of force that the powers that were charged with rebuilding be seen publicly and militarily. That I could understand. Be seen, not heard from beyond the walls of offices. And admittedly I do crave adventure, after all I am intrigued with the galaxy as a whole.

"As you can see, Overseer," the Admiral was saying to me, "Most of our patrols will be as silent as the grave. Very few troubles this far out with the exception of possible piracy operating in the area, but that is to be assumed regardless."

I was just about to reply when from below us came the voice from the communications officer. Disciplined and well versed in his wording, the officer explained there was a distress call in the region, just a few clicks from our position. Smiling, the Admiral turned his attention to me first saying, "It seems we will have some action today." The he turned to the navigation officer below ordering, "Plot our course and make the jump to hyperspace at once."

 
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Tags: Lady Varokscar Lady Varokscar / Demveath Okamsiu Demveath Okamsiu

The ISD Resolute snapped out of hyperspace with ruthless precision, its triangular silhouette cutting through the dark like a blade. Before the crew could even adjust to realspace, the chaos ahead had already filled the forward displays.

A large trading vessel, Bonadan-registered, was under siege. Shielding flickered across its bloated hull, sparking from multiple impact points. Four corvettes—old, ugly things with scavenged armor plating—pounded the freighter with synchronized volleys, while smaller fighter craft swarmed it like insects. The vessel had no visible escort. It was dying.

Admiral Tiber Saal stood motionless at the center of the bridge, his presence quiet but commanding. One gloved hand rested behind his back while the other gestured in small, precise motions to the officers around him.

"Scramble both squadrons. I want TIEs in the void and peeling those fighters off the freighter before its hull gives out."

The orders snapped across the deck like steel wire. Hatches opened along the hangar spine, and twin squadrons of TIE fighters launched with their signature scream, forming into attack formations as they tore toward the combat zone.

"Patrol vessels one and two," Tiber continued, "advance and provide suppressive fire. Box in the attackers. Focus on the flanks—corral them if you can."

His voice was calm, clipped, and surgically clean. Around him, the bridge crew moved like clockwork.

"Get me a channel to the freighter," he added. "Tell them to reroute all power to engines. Their shielding is compromised and they need to clear the zone before our batteries come online. If they hesitate, remind them that we cannot protect them while they're sitting in our line of fire."

"Aye, sir. Signal away."

Tiber's eyes remained on the tactical display. He watched the red icons shift as his fighters closed in, already engaging the pirate craft. His jaw tightened slightly. It was a familiar pattern. Predators preying on trade lanes, knowing the Republic wouldn't come and the Empire was fractured. But this corridor belonged to the ISA now. Discipline would return, one battle at a time.

"New contacts," came the call from the sensor officer. "Two ships just dropped from hyperspace, bearing toward the engagement. One Raider-class corvette, matching House Okamsiu signatures under Lord Rasnuhl's banner. Second contact... unknown configuration. Small, sleek profile. No registry, no name. But it's broadcasting clean ISA encryption."

Tiber's gaze narrowed. A prototype without a name meant someone high enough to warrant discretion. He wouldn't speculate out loud, but it was clear the field had drawn attention.

"Establish a secure, encrypted channel to both vessels. Tight beam. I want no signal bleed."

Seconds passed in silence before a quiet tone confirmed the connection.

Tiber stepped forward, his voice even.

"This is Admiral Tiber Saal of the ISD Resolute. We are engaged with hostile pirate forces attacking a civilian freighter. Four corvettes, multiple fighter elements. My forces are in position and engaging."

He let the data stream across, no embellishment.

"I welcome your presence. The Resolute will draw the main brunt of their fire. Your support—if offered—will be noted. I advise flanking fire or long-range targeting solutions once you have tactical analysis. Maintain secured comms."

He paused, gaze fixed on the battle unfolding ahead.

"I will await your reply."

The channel remained open, silent for now. Tiber didn't mind. Time was measured in decisions, not seconds. And his were already in motion.
 

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