Star Wars Roleplay: Chaos

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Junction The Sundering Dawn | Act II: Galaxy in Crisis (Chapter 4 | Axis Mundi)

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Objective IV | Axis Mundi
Tython

Blizzard skies parted only long enough for descent craft to pierce the cloud deck and behold the Rusted Spire—a needle of oxidized alloy plunging out of the ice cap like a planetary rivet. Scouring winds keened through petrified buttresses, carrying flakes of red oxide that stained snowscape and visor alike. Sensors spun wild: gravity readings slid from lunar‑low to crushing high in heartbeat spikes, and magnetic compasses corkscrewed into nonsense. The Spire’s own latent vergence repelled straight‑line landings; pilots were forced to belly‑skid across an icy shelf that cracked like glass beneath repulsor shockwaves.

Entry was a yawning breach where past prospectors had plasma‑cut the outer shell before disappearing. Inside, walls of weathered durasteel warped into a spiral passage that turned endlessly inward, rotating round a central gyroscope the size of a gunship. Its rings spun at blistering speed—molten streaks that cast strobing shadows across walkways. Dust cascaded up, down, sideways; footing shifted as gravity re‑wrote allegiance every dozen meters. Expedition members clipped safety tethers to handrails that might be ceiling in the next step.

Three equidistant archways loomed at the first major junction, each throat washed in alien luminance:
  • Ashen Gold—corridor smooth, walls engraved with mantras of mercy and absolution.

  • Midnight Violet—passage lit by violent crackles where engraved sigils bled Dark‑side static.

  • Verdant Teal—a flickering hybrid path where glyphs of Light and Dark fought for space like competing lianas.
Mission leaders quickly discovered that pressure plates at the arch‑thresholds responded only to aligned presences: the Gold path accepted calm minds, Violet welcomed raw ambition, Teal demanded those willing to balance contradiction. Comms proved erratic—each route existed in its own shifting gravity pocket—so three teams advanced in parallel, relay beacons pinging every fifty meters to maintain loose sync.

Challenges mounted: Light corridor presented “mercy puzzles” where saving an illusory prisoner cost precious minutes of shifting grav‑cycle; Dark corridor spawned alchemic guardians that rewarded brutality but devoured the faint‑hearted; Balance corridor forced pairs to traverse zero‑G chasms by exchanging counterweighted tether‑lines in perfect coordination. Only simultaneous solutions would unlock the next coil of the spiral. Fail, and the gyroscope rang like a colossal gong, resetting every solved mechanism two turns back.

Deep within the core lay the immobile Axis Loom—a rust‑clotted lattice of Celestial gyros frozen at a crooked tilt. Stasis energy emanated from it in temporal ripples that eroded personal memories: a name forgotten, a loyalty blurred, an oath half‑remembered. Re‑aligning the Loom (tilt precisely twenty‑nine degrees, thirteen minutes) promised dominion over local spacetime for a single hour—long enough to sync or sabotage Calladene’s faulty gear. But the recalibration demanded the simultaneous insertion of Light, Dark, and Balance crystals retrieved from each corridor apex. Sabotage one path—or betray its bearer—and the Loom would seize, freezing reality here and perhaps across far‑flung lanes for who‑knew how long.

As tri‑comms crackled with half‑intelligible status reports, the gyroscope’s rings began to slow—first time in millennia. Dust changed direction mid‑air. Somewhere above, the blizzard ceased, and an unseen choir whispered once more: “Turn the loom, mend the dawn… or let the axle snap.” Teams tightened grips on lost memories and stepped toward the final lock, knowing the choice ahead would set the Galaxy’s clock—or shatter its face forever.

 
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Objective | Verdant Teal​
Tag | Open​
Empyrean expected he would go down the Violet path, one that suited his dark nature, but the reality was that the Emperor may be unredeemable, but he respected the Force for something deeper. It was true he intended to upend its order, but his studies pointed towards a deeper knowledge that he had yet to uncover. The Force has a reason for what it was doing, so when the choice came to find the pathway he chosen the center one.​
To his annoyance, so did many Jedi. He had faith that the Sith would work through the Violet chamber without concern, but the Emperor strode into the path of 'balance' with aught not but his staff and robes. Others would soon join him, soon question him, soon fear him. These things were as natural as breath to the still-living, but to Empyrean it was life.​
And thus he waited at the first door, studying it. There was a passage to the side, waiting for them to approach it, but he would wait for the others first. No matter the small cadre of sycophants and administrators that followed him, even here.​

 
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Objective | Midnight Violet
Tag | Open

Avel Som watched at the Emperor chose Teal path. He was not sure what any of this actually meant. Sure, he was plenty intelligent to probably figure it out if he cared to, but he simply did not care. While he had a decent "education" uploaded to his mind when he was created, he had never been and never would be a scholar. All he knew, was that the Violet path looked really cool, and that was how he would make his decision. He had no doubt he and Darkwing could handle whatever was on the other side.

The ebon hawk ruffled his feathers from his perch on Avel Som's left arm. The raptor also wanted to go this way. As a predator, he sensed an opportunity to hunt. Come what may, they knew they would be fine. And it might even be fun.


 
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Objective: Midnight Violet
Tag: Darth Moskvin Darth Moskvin

Kasir was never one to chase visions; instead, he was typically the type to search for more clues that might lead to a logical approach. However, Dagobah had already begun to change that. The green mists lured him straight from the flames and shadows of Mustafar, magnetic in their allure, which led him to a meeting he could have never truly anticipated. Before long, in the depths of his mind, another vision began taunting him; images of an alien structure stood tall amidst a frozen landscape brewing with storms, feeling as if the icy winds from across the galaxy now whispered in his ear.

Leaving the murky planet proved to be far from simple; as the Sith departed, his 578-R's systems were cursed with unusual interferences, causing him to fight relentlessly for control. A lesser pilot may have faltered, but he would eventually be able to set a direct course towards this new destination: Tython, a place he'd heard many tales of over the years.

The moment his transport shuttle cut into Tython’s atmosphere, he was thrown around violently. But perhaps what had been the strangest, was as if the exact coordinates were programmed deep within his mind, beckoning him forward with determination. The storms showed no mercy, its chaotic energy slamming him into the unforgiving surface below; the impact shook him to his core, which only threatened to unleash a raging fury capable of consuming everything within close proximity.

Minutes passed before he could steady himself, reluctant to note that his ship was still intact. Finally, he descended the ramp. Kasir immediately locked onto the massive spire in the near distance. It was unlike anything he'd ever seen. Flakes that seemed to bleed swirled about, but his heightened senses told him there was more to them than what met the eye.

The winds raged all around, yet he felt no chill; at most, the cold could only compliment the ice coursing through his veins. One thing was clear: a calculated killer was prepared to delve further into this mystery.

Gaze fixed ahead, he tapped into the dark energy of the Force; each breath inhaled was filled with its taint. Then, a tendril wove itself between his consciousness and that of the other Sangnir.

<<Set aside your spite, and I shall do the same until later. We should work together here. This place looks like it's ready to devour us both if we don't.>>


The threshold was dark and violet, alive with vile energy.
 
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This whole world is a foreign land
Mission leaders quickly discovered that pressure plates at the arch‑thresholds responded only to aligned presences: the Gold path accepted calm minds, Violet welcomed raw ambition, Teal demanded those willing to balance contradiction. Comms proved erratic—each route existed in its own shifting gravity pocket—so three teams advanced in parallel, relay beacons pinging every fifty meters to maintain loose sync.

At the three thresholds, having tested the plates, Quill conferred with the arch-witch Brooke Waters Brooke Waters . She'd called a small summit of Keepers of the Order of the Selab, and there they'd compared notes that had brought them here, to this collaborative endeavour, on the theory that someone had to make this work.

That instinct had been sound. The Sith Emperor, complete with entourage, had entered the teal path, which also appealed most to both Brooke and Quill and others. Several beings were entering the violet path too. But very few had successfully entered the gold path. There were no Jedi at Gold's mouth that Quill could see, despite this being Tython.

All for the best. He didn't like most Jedi anyway. Then again, he didn't like doing their job for them.

"I can enter Teal and Gold," he said, careless of the arctic wind and the ice crusting in his beard, "and I think you can too. I'm afraid Gold is calling my name. As you said, someone has to do it."
 
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It had been some time since his spirit had alighted upon Tython.

Not since the Brotherhood of the Maw had attempted to ravage the planet, and the galaxy beyond it in their lord's mad quest to rewrite reality itself. Now, it seemed, the ancient birthplace of the most dominant philosophies to study the Force was once again brought into galactic focus, and he was once again drawn to it. The echoes of the spirits he had unleashed there, to aid the Galactic Alliance in their fight against Solipsis and his minions, against Carnifex and his opportunism...he could still sense them. The spirits themselves, thankfully, were long gone.

Yet he knew the grand experiment itself was threatened. Calladene. The name he had heard in a vision, though he had yet to uncover just what it was...yet it seemed that his fellow Sith, among others, had been making progress while he was a galaxy away.

The darkness spun itself together into the image of a young man, pure black eyes observing the surroundings, one clawed hand stroking at the tendrils that hung from his face...pausing at one, shorter than the rest, a scarred bulb where the tip should have been. Always, he had the opportunity to take on different appearances when he projected himself, and yet so often he chose that of his own body, scars and all, at different points.

His own aesthetic conceit, he supposed.

More impressive was that...he could feel the world's gravity. This close to such a powerful nexus, his projection was nearly as real as his own body.


"What seems to be the manner of things here..."

He stepped forward, testing each of the pressure plates as he saw others do. To his mild surprise, it was the golden that responded to his false weight. Truly, Tython's nexus and the works of the Celestials...they did not operate under the same rules that all the rest of them understood, so many millennia down the line. 'Calm minds,' he'd heard one of the others say. Ambition, balancing contradictions, and calm minds.

It made sense, in a way. He'd never really been given to losing himself as his fellows did, and his ambitions were all long since satisfied. Observation and learning were all that was left, and preservation of that which he wished to learn from.

He walked through the open doorway, stopping and turning back at the others that were just beyond.

One of them, an old man, the frost collecting in his hair and beard; the other, a human...at least, mostly human. Without putting his real eyes on her, he couldn't be certain.

"Try not to freeze while you decide where to go," he bid them, before walking further, and the archway shut once again behind him. If the gold path was the one that beckoned him onward, then the gold he would follow; and hopefully he would learn something of worth of this fresh calamity, or at least gain enough to consult with the others in the convoy once he could return to them.

Jend-Ro Quill Jend-Ro Quill Brooke Waters Brooke Waters you don't have to interact with him much if you aren't feeling it I just think I'm funny
 
Location: Tython
Objective: Axis Mundi
Mission Objective: Verdant Teal
Tag: Teckla Tane Teckla Tane

The passage was just as her dream had envisioned. The Rusted Spire loomed ahead, its imposing, needle-like structure seeming to have drilled through the ice. Gazing upon the scene, Ellissanthia surveyed the area with an expression of wide-eyed wonder and fear. It had been a striking coincidence that she had been assigned here out of all of the places—exactly where the dream had placed her.

However, the one thing that her dream had not accounted for was the presence of the Emperor.

Ellissanthia dared not look in his direction for longer than strictly necessary. Instead, she glanced towards the others, her gaze sweeping across the various figures present within the spiral passage. There were of course the followers of the Emperor and various Sith, but also present were other Force-sensitive adepts of various sects and creeds. She caught sight of an older male with scarred features approaching the Emperor, A lean-figured tan-skinned figure with an ebon hawk perched on his arm made for the Violet path.

However, the figure that caught the bulk of Ellissanthia’s attention was a woman. Her vibrant red hair flowed erratically amidst the ever-shifting gravity within the passage. Her eyes—a piercing viridescent hue—hinted at quiet power and a keen intellect.

“Are you seeking out the Teal path, as well?” Ellissanthia turned towards the woman, her gaze lighting up as she took in her lightly freckled features. “It requires two—one aligned with the Dark Side and the other devoted to the Light.” The Undine continued. At least, that was what she believed. Perhaps it could be taken by two Dark Siders, though Ellissanthia was not keen to test that theory and potentially risk failure.


“Are you capable of wielding the Light?”

 
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The Horror in the Darkness
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Axis Mundi
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"Horrors, I believe, should be original--the use of common myths and legends being a weakening influence."
- H.P. Lovecraft -

Objective: Midnight Violet
Gear: In Signature
Familiar: Archimedes


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O'Death

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The stench of Dagobah clung to me like a putrid perfume, those swirling green mists, I suspected, did their best to remain fixated to my memory even as I sat behind the controls of the transport shuttle. No sooner than I broke the hymen of Dagobah's atmosphere that another vision infected me, planting ghostly coordinates deep within my psyche. Subconsciously I entered the numerical code, and in mere seconds I was headed toward Tython.

It wasn't until my awareness was molested from the vicious breaking through of Tython's torrid atmospheric zone that I had become restlessly aroused. The recollection of how I got here, or the traversing through the galaxy from one planet to another, was nothing short of a foreign memory, one of loss that I would never decipher; forced to accept a fact that I didn't not fully embrace. Then I saw it, a massive spire or some ancient structure ahead, my mouth metamorphosing into a snarl of pure hatred. Was this the reason I had been directed like a moth to the flame?

After choosing a proper landing spot, I settled the ship down whilst battling the raging winds that threatened to topple the metal beast apart; my eyes piercing invisible daggers into that mysterious edifice. Cosmically, this all appeared unsettling, unnatural, and materializing in a phantasmic manner. I took deep breath, removing myself from the pilot's chair, feeling a dark energy morphing around me. It distinguished itself of the Dark Side, but it's after taste was not quite bland, bordering on sourness.

Standing between the parted lips of the shuttle, the ramp lowering down slowly to touch the surface I felt the winds, lacking in cold but filled with an indifferent sensation, brush across my face like small gentle hands of the dead. It was then that I heard the impregnating words from the one I had met on Dagobah; that captivating male Sangnir. It appeared our Fates were intertwined, for now. Through this growing link between us, I sent my response.


<This place shall not devour you, that is my responsible. But you have my word, I shall do my best to keep you whole until I deem you fit for dissection.>

My feet touched the surface, and I felt something was admis; my lips curling into a gruesome smile. I do love the unnatural aspects of the galaxy. I headed toward the base of this looming ancient architectural building with long, purposeful strides.

<I shall see you at the bottom of that spire.>


Kasir Dorran Kasir Dorran
 
It’s just tequila and the beach
The path before her was a wild one. Her and Keeper Quill had arrived on her semi-living ship, the Nautilos. With her current company she did explain the vessel. An ancient Arda shuttle. Locked away by the Followers of the Rapture. Cultists really. And how the ship responded to the Force.

She wasn't exactly happy to be in the cold. Navy blue jacket. And pants. Pale boots. Her hood up, covered in a fur of some Core beast or faux, she wasn't sure. It cost a small amount and she was fine with it. Looking to Jend-Ro, Token Waters shivered. She had a spell for this, certainly but she wasn't about to show a sign of weakness. Or the extent of her abilities.

There were others around. Including the extra remora soul they picked up.

"I can feel teal and gold too. Not so much the violet passage. But… not not?" She took a deep breath and shook her head. There was temptation for it. But she doubted it would be the best.

"I'm thinking we should split up." Reaching into her bag. She had two sensing stones. "Sending stone. Maybe they'd work?"

Or was this her freezing?

Jend-Ro Quill Jend-Ro Quill
Shade of Decay Shade of Decay
 
This whole world is a foreign land
"Try not to freeze while you decide where to go," he bid them, before walking further, and the archway shut once again behind him.

"I'm thinking we should split up." Reaching into her bag. She had two sensing stones. "Sending stone. Maybe they'd work?"
Quill accepted the stone and the plan. "Stay safe," he said. "Teal looks like a crowd." Large and not particularly trustworthy.

He moved back on to the gold pressure plate, waved goodbye to Brooke Waters Brooke Waters , and hurried after Shade of Decay Shade of Decay

"Hello!" he said to the young man's back. "I'm Quill."

Already he got a strong sense of foreboding, not about the man but about the hall after the gold passage.
 
He stopped, turning to look back as the old man rushed up behind him. Quill. What a coincidence, that he should run into another with that name, while being on an expedition with one of them. "Hmm. Any relation to Tilon?" He doubted it, as this was a human, and Tilon was Sharukan. But it wouldn't do to be entirely impolite. He stroked one tendril thoughtfully, waiting for the elder to catch up. He assumed he was his elder. It was entirely possible they were the same age, or near enough. He did not, however, give the man a chance to actually respond before he continued with his interrogation:

"I trust you've all managed to gather something of importance about this mess before I showed up. Even if my brethren chose to withhold any knowledge they could find, the presence of such a disparate group means they couldn't hoard it all to themselves." He could, of course, have deigned to ask Empyrean himself what there was to know about the mess. It could spare him the need to talk with others, who would likely bristle at his peremptory manner.

They always did.

Alas, he had made a point of avoiding the man that became Empyrean years before, and he possessed little desire to change that.


"Enlighten me, if you would."

Jend-Ro Quill Jend-Ro Quill
 
This whole world is a foreign land
GOLD
Shade of Decay Shade of Decay

That name brought Quill to a screeching halt. "How do you know my son?" he said once he'd collected his thoughts. He hadn't been aware that Tilon knew anyone like, well, this. That had been half the point of introducing him to exploration in general: maximizing the distance between Tilon and the Sith. But then again, that was long ago

"Consensus I've heard," he said, "is there's a broken Celestial machine behind all the visions, it takes three artifacts to shut off, one of them's in this tower and takes three...activations...gold, teal, and purple, to secure. So you and me are one part of three out of one part of three. One ninth of saving the universe."
 
"Leave it to the Celestials to be unwilling to leave anything alone."

So they were related. Perhaps these Quills might become like Starchasers, Perls, Zambranos, and Heavenshields, in time. "Though perhaps it benefits us that they had a different understanding of the rules than we did...inasmuch as it enables us to undo their workings." He thought back on the bits he had overheard from the technicians who had been studying the spire; something about simultaneous solutions being needed, it had sounded like. Three teams in parallel.

So he would, in some way, be working alongside Empyrean after all.

"How ironic," he mused, looking down the corridor. The spiraling path continued out of sight, though keen eyes would note from the movement of the air that the definition of 'floor' was a mutable subject. "Very well. Let us continue. If you don't have a way to keep our position in line with the others, I may be able to reach out to them. At least one is known to me."

He paused, turning his black eyes over to the old man.


"As for your son, we are currently in orbit around Wo'theth, and he is currently blaming me for some localized hyperspatial rift that seems to have transposed two systems atop each other."

Then he started walking forwards again, expecting the elder Quill to follow.

Jend-Ro Quill Jend-Ro Quill
 
Founder of the Quasesitorum


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Objective: Axis Mundi - Verdant Teal
Location: Tython
Equipment: See Bio
Tags: Ellissanthia Ellissanthia
Dialogue Key: "Galactic Basic" | <<Telepathic Communication>>

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Several had assembled on Tython. Teckla guessed that none would align their purpose with hers. Most if not all of these were led here by some sort of mystic belief in the Force. Some had received visions, others just felt their way here. Teckla had used the Force as a compass to find her way here in this important time.

With no visions and without blindly accepting guidance from the Force, Teckla used her command of the Force to find this congregation of powerful users who had been shown more. Her application of the Force had always been practical over mystical. Used as a soldier would use it. Now she had followed the signs provided to her here and this was the next step.

Unlike the Imperial summit where Teckla wished to remain anonymous and test the worthiness of the groups looking to take on the role of Imperial masters of the galaxy, here on Tython she was looking to prove her prowess. Three paths were provided by whatever had drawn them here. Teckla was quite proud that she felt she would be able to complete any of the paths. Most would consider her a darksider. She lacked compassion and would use any brutal method necessary to bring order to the galaxy. But she had trained in all forms of the Force. And valued both Dark and Light equally.

The question asked if the young woman of an unfamiliar species to Teckla, brought a smile to the older woman's lips. The being standing in front of her was something Teckla was not used to encountering in other ways as well. She was shorter than Teckla which did not happen often and her shape was not of the proportion that Teckla expected from a warrior. Still Teckla did not doubt this one's prowess.

"Teal, yes, I seek to conquer the balanced path. I had thought of trying to show that balance could be in a single being. But if pairs are required…I will warn you that I have not worked well with aquatic beings in the past. But, the stakes are high here and I don't exactly see many obvious allies."

The idea that the Force would require pairs struck Teckla as odd. However, that made it seem more likely to her that "people" were responsible for this chaotic event and not the Force itself. She would need to press forward to know for sure. "I am not devoted to the Light nor the Dark. I have trained extensively in both 'sides'. I can act as your light sided half, so long as you can keep moving forward."
 

Objective: Midnight Violet
Tag: Darth Moskvin Darth Moskvin


His gaze was locked on the spire ahead, a sight that looked more like a wound in reality than anything else. Tython's winds began to ebb; now, the raw energy pulsed from the corridor, threatening to consume his senses entirely, beckoning him forward. Far from a simple entrance, it was very much alive, as if glaring and weighing his worth. As the woman's words seeped through the void between them, there was a faint twitch at the corner of his mouth, daring to trace into a smirk. But it would not.

<<Should you attempt to indulge in me, know that I am no easy foe.>>

Each step behind the other Sith carried the weight of determination along with the echo of his leather boots striking against the ground like a hammer on an anvil. The Spire's entrance merely lay in wait, the pressure of its heat, surely meant to test his resolve, threatened to sear any exposed skin. He was neither greeted nor repelled; though, it did eventually bend to his will, submitting to the Sangnir's presence as so many had before, acknowledging that he did, in fact, have the right to enter.

The air inside threatened to throw him off balance. Gravity shifted with a subtle tug here and there, demanding nothing less than adaptation. Kasir's composure was firm; his ambition always burned with precision. Calls for power and control slithered through the walls like snakes, tempting him with different promises.

Then, as if his mind were playing tricks on him, violet tendrils of mist swirled around him— a reflection of something already experienced on Dagobah. Only now, the Dark Side energy did more than linger— it seeped into his bones, summoning memories thought to have been buried away.

They came in flashes, their meaning eluding him— but that did not make them any less sharp, cutting through him like glass. Blood against metal. Familiar voices yet somehow distorted all at once. He saw himself standing at the edge of a cliff, gazing down upon a battlefield engulfed by smoke, the scent of burning flesh thick in the air.

Whatever was truly around him began to coil tighter, and now, the presence of the other Sith was felt–-near, so near. He couldn’t see her, and though devoid of a beating heart like himself, he detected familiar ripples through the Force that were unmistakable.

The mist faded just enough to finally reveal what was awaiting them. There was another shift. At the end of the corridor, something was birthed into existence, manifested by something far deeper and possibly more sinister than Sith alchemy. A sentinel of dark power stood at its towering height, an undeniable challenge. Though it bore the resemblance of a human, its grotesque form twisted unnaturally. What truly set it apart were the ancient runes etched across both shoulders and chest.

Kasir's hand flew to his weapon, igniting twin blades that hissed to life, just it charged forward.
 
It’s just tequila and the beach
All she could rightfully do was take a deep breath. Her mind was focused, but there were the challenges ahead. The others with her? She’d have to deal with that. She clutched the sending stone. Brooke wouldn’t know what would work or not. She wanted to keep an eye on the other group, and knowing Jend-Ro Quill Jend-Ro Quill was in Gold? She could handle Teal.

"See you on the other side."

A deep breath, another spell. A spell that pulled her own Force aura into a blur, blinding others from her aura.

Hearing terms of conquering, blue eyes went wide open.

Quill was definitely right.

Teckla Tane Teckla Tane Ellissanthia Ellissanthia
 

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