Lord Muz Ashen Keibatsu, Son of Sadow

Grand Master, Clan Naga Sadow, Force Disciple, Krath
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Displaying fiction activity reports 121 - 130 of 147 in total
Competition
[GJW XII Phase II] Fiction - Survival
File submission
3714-survival.txt
Textual submission

I knew I should have stayed on the 'Spear.

I don't really blame the Consul for wanting me on his flagship, because it is exactly what I would have done, if the roles

were reversed. Having a Grand Master on deck is a big deal, and not just for morale. But the clever little bait didn't put

together that the same reason made us a priority target. And now I am trying to hold together a sorry escape pod as it is

trying to make what can only be classified as an 'extreme landing'.

Which is to say, something already basically shot it out of the sky, and I am trying to make it out of this thing with my

internal organs still internal. However many years later, and I still am not the best of pilots. I remember back in one of

the last Sith Rites of Supremacy where I...

And that'd be the ground now. The sound of a crashing spacecraft is not what you'd expect it to be, metallic and grinding.

It squeaks more than it grinds, the alloys crumpling against the rocks and whatever else in ways that set your teeth on edge,

if they weren't already there based on the not insignificant fact that you were hurtling at the ground at the speed of

seventeen cursewords a minute.

The stink of ozone, burning air, and crackling electronics are the first things you notice when the adrenaline slows down.

It's going to take me forever to get that smell out of my warcoat. And of course, the escape hatch is jammed, half buried

under debris and whatever other junk that the planet has lying about on it. Not terribly sure why this Collective set up shop

here, unless they have some sort of giant smelter that they can use to reclaim all of this junk. I suppose it's not out of

the question. Oligard was a resourceful man. Probably still is.

Twisting in my chair, I try to determine how bad the door is shoved in, wondering not so idly if the fool in the headhunter

had any idea who was riding in this pod, or if he was just stabbing at the low-hanging fruit. The way my luck has been,

probably the former, which means I can expect company, and soon. I go to release the safety harness and get up, but find

myself held back. The console to my left had collapsed down, pinning my arm to the seat, a pretty heavy gouge in the metal.

I'm not entirely sure of the provenance of the stream of profanity that rushes from my lips, not that it mattered anyway.

I go to move the fingers, my ear trying to tune into the sound of those tiny servo motors, the fine ears and electronics that

have quite literally been at my side ever since...That doesn't matter right now. What matters is that I can't hear them, and

the synaptic interface isn't giving me any feedback anymore. At the very best, the neural interface is fried. At the likely

worst, the whole arm is scrapped. I find the release at my bicep, detaching the failsafes and breaking free from the

wreckage. If I have the luck to come back and get it, I will. The last thing I need is to have one of these half-droids

bouncing around the galaxy with my arm strapped to them. I'd never hear the end of it.

I take a quick look around the pod, finding a few odds and ends that might make the next few minutes a bit more bearable

before trying to shove on the escape hatch. At least there was water on board. Someone was thinking. I try the door. It

doesn't even pretend to budge. I try a second time, then decide there's no time for any of this. The throb behind my eyes

tells me the door is gone before my eyes themselves do, the thick metal skittering across the ground a few paces away like a

kicked pet.

Brown. This planet is brown, there's no other real way to describe it. A thousand year old rust, dirty sand and filth from

what must have been a hundred wars just caked the entire landscape. It was not winning any awards for vacation destinations,

that was for certain. If I had to guess, this was what they called 'the Badlands'. Inventive.

It occurs to me that standing this close to a crashed escape pod is a good way to be found by things that would rather you

hadn't escaped, so I bolt toward a dune a few hundred paces away. A dune of what exactly, I am not entirely sure, but it at

least gets a little distance between me and the bullseye. Not that the black warcoat didn't make me stand out already in this

endless brown.

The whine of engines reminds me that this was not a sightseeing trip. I close my eyes for a moment, reaching upward, barely

into orbit, finding the point I recognize. Confused and worried beneath a veneer of bravado and a lifetime of callouses.

Kojiro.

I survived. Here.

I speak into his mind, then show him what I see as I open my eyes before stopping, the swell of pain behind my temples

growing. The landing must have rattled me more than I wanted to give it credit for. There would be time enough for that

later, because right now, there are a few things coming my way, and odds are pretty good they aren't trying to sell me a

holonet subscription.

The engines stop suddenly. I let their essences wash over me, reaching out, sensing my surroundings. Three of them. That

tells me that they don't know who was in the pod. Oligard is going to be angry when he figures it out.

The first one falls too easily, smashed into the pod, pulled back and pounded into it again, her neck going all floppy by the

third time her flesh met the metal. I let her go, then send the golden sabers from behind my coat take flight. They drop at

first, then scream toward them, igniting at the last moment, their golden light leaving the second girl in a neat and steaming

pile of what used to be angry. I step up, cresting the dune, calling them back to me with a thought. The third girl has some

spunk, lowering her center of gravity and raising a bow similar to what I had seen Ashia play with. Nightsister toys didn't

seem to make sense with what I had heard about the Collective.

She draws back the weapon and let loose, the frozen in the air in between us as I narrowed my eyes at her. Her boots dragged

at the sand and rust as she found herself pulled forward suddenly, the blast from her own weapon ripping through her as she

stumbled forward against her will. I watch her gasp for breath against the ruin of her lung and probably heart, trying to

place her race. The tattoos look Kiffar, which stands to reason with the skintone, but it was weird. The other two look like

clones. Did Oligard buy himself some crazy premium grade clones?

The dull roar of atmospheric entry focuses me for a moment, looking up to see a lambda-class. Good, Sanguinius did not decide

that he wanted to take advantage of the situation. I imaging that Locke would have. I reach into the bag of stuff from the

escape pod, finding the flare gun and using it, the wide arc of colored light and smoke letting everything know where I was.

It occurs to me how remarkably un-clever that was a moment after I pulled the trigger, throwing the flare launcher to the dirt

in disgust with myself. I watch the shuttle circle, then come in closer. It would only be a minute now, but with the roar of

the engines, I wouldn't be able to hear if any more of those clone whatevers were coming.

It took a moment for me to recognize the armor of the Black Guard, the black washing out against the gray of the shuttle,

surrounded by that fecal brown. He asks the normal questions, almost by rote. I barely answer him, as usual.

"Did you have any trouble, Lord?"

I gesture to the huntresses, then walk up the ramp past him. He laughs to himself. "Only three of them."

Yes. Only three of them. I could handle twice that number with my hand tied behind my... never mind.

Competition
New Ties: Run On
File submission
3714tarcnsrunonposts.txt
Textual submission

attached for entry

URL
https://www.darkjedibrotherhood.com/competitions/12144 https://discourse.darkjedibrotherhood.com/t/cns-tar-new-ties-run-on-competition/1665
Notes
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Competition
New Ties: Week 2 Poetry 2
File submission
3714-tarcnswk2poetry2.txt
Textual submission

so cold i have turned
was this what i wanted now
it should have been less

Competition
New Ties: Week 2 Poetry 1
File submission
3714-tarcnswk2poetry1.txt
Textual submission

Loudly, we came.
Our heads held high, our hearts on display
as if to say
"here, do your worst"
And oh so quiet they stirred
Thinking we knew them, this, it all
Suddenly we're small
shattered, hurt
Taken from within, broken in grief
There is always a 'lie' in 'belief'

Competition
New Ties: Week 1 Scene Writing 1
File submission
3714-scene1.txt
Textual submission

The damp scent of old rot filled the still air. Overcast grey skies filtered through the damaged walls and roof of the atrium to blur the fine details from sight. A hand reached out, fingers tracing the intricate carvings of the doorway, the spirals and curves smooth to the touch, fine craftsmanship polished by wind and sand. The sound of boots grinding ancient dust into the stone worked crisply into their ears as each of them moved forward. Something was bothersome, an itch at the periphery of their senses, the vague unease that originated from the deepest recesses of their minds, the unevolved lizard senses of fight or flight confused by the dead.

Motionless, they hung, their facial features blurred like a drawing made by someone who had forgotten what they looked like. Translucent, the dust and light seemed to waft through them. The dais ahead of them seemed like a loose prison, columns from the ceiling to the raised platform spaced out to allow passage but not much else.

When the Savant stepped through, the chill burned through them all as the howl ripped through their ears. Pain, loss, fear, all was as acrid on the tongue as the bitter cold twitched through their senses. The dead moved through them now, tearing bits of their willpower with them on each journey, leaving hollows where it once stood. Their own screams joined in the symphony, all singing the same song without words.

This place was theirs.

Competition
Old Fart Sadowans
File submission
3714-oldfartsadowans.txt
Textual submission

He stared at the sealed door, the ancients stones interlocking in ways that hurt his mind, the joints too perfect, too seamless. A hand pushed dark hair from his face, rubbing the bridge of his nose, feeling the squeak of age as he rubbed into the corners of his eyes. It had been too long.

The icons came into view again, the pale light cast by the chemlight flickering as it too felt the ravage of age. He reached out a hand, a thin veneer of soft leather between his fingertips and the stone, coated in antique dust. Images flashed before his eyes, a typical defense from the ancients. He smiled, teeth glinting as he traced the symbols round their spirals, across runes and ideographs. And there it was, the dull creak of the catch. He paused before applying more pressure, the stone sliding back into the door, stone cogs rotating from within, rumbling with deep bass resonance as they moved away, exposing the room ahead.

His hand went to his belt, skipping over a blaster holster and a hanging lightsaber, fingers closing around another chemlight. He snapped it in his hand, shaking it to activate the reaction within, pale golden light flowing from it as he threw it into the darkened room. The tapestries were the first thing he saw, rich and dark, hanging from the ceiling to the floor, black embroidery telling stories older than anything he had seen in his lifetime. He stepped cautiously, half holding his breath as he moved across the threshold.

The golden light bounced off of his violet eyes, framed with creases as he scanned the room. There were cabinets, the old wood carved with steady hands in a display of fine craftsmanship. Chests of the same make flanking them, no doubt full of treasures meant to accompany the long dead lord into the afterlife. Then, the raised dais in the middle of the chamber, a waist-high platform covered in more tapestry. He stepped to it carefully, leery of the pressure plates and myriad other traps that the old architects were fond of using to protect their gods. He raised another chemlight, his eyes falling upon the platform, finding nothing but dust.

He let out a sigh, turning away, eyes drawing across the rest of the chamber. A silhouette caught his attention, lurking against one of the walls. He moved toward it, raising the chemlight again, mind reeling. The old lords were known for building intricate suits of Force-imbued armor, and to find an intact set would be worth millions of credits easily. He let his mind idly consider the fantasy of a long vacation in a paradise climate, moving toward the dull sheen of black armor.

It turned.

He froze, mouth falling open as he blinked. The chemlight poured his own shadow over the corner of the room, and his mind tried to tell him he had imagined it, but somewhere back in the unevolved parts of his mind he knew better. The fear grew behind his eyes, and he let it hold him to that spot for a moment.

It moved again, the armor shifting without the benefit of wind or breeze. It was deep below the stone, after all, nearly fifty stories below the spot that they said a keep once stood. It was ten years of research and expensive scanning equipment that revealed the opening, the culmination of his father's work and his own. He shook off the doubt, stepping forward.

It definitely turned toward him, stepping in mirror toward him. A trick, a trap, ghosts of the old lords were only legends, used to keep interlopers and gravediggers from their treasures. He waved a hand, seeing if it would do the same.

The squall of energized crystals filled the air as the deep crimson light did. He stepped back, nearly stumbling as a second blade erupted, the color of a stormy sunset crashing over him. He staggered backward, hand reaching for the hilt at his own waist, the weapon his father had built with him. It fumbled from his fingers, sliding down the leg of his pants and to the stone of the floor. He couldn't think, his mind caught in the fear. Dropping to his knees, he scrambled for the saber, the dull ache in his fingers reminding him that he was too old for this work. The hum of sabers louder as the distance shortened, he felt his breath catch.

"You're not real!" he cried out, eyes wide.

The dull throb washed over his senses as the helmet raised from the specter, floating back on unseen hands and setting down on a cabinet behind him. Dark hair flowed out from under it, cascading down his back, a mustache flowing down his chest. His skin was paler than moonlight, eyes darker than space as he looked at him.

"None of us are." The words crashed against his ears and his mind, the gravel tone assailing him from all sides.

He let the visage burn into his eyes, recognizing the man almost immediately. He had read about him, heard the stories ever since he was a boy.

"You died." He found the saber, standing up slowly to look at the ghost, his heart pounding in his chest. Bravery was stepping past fear, his father taught him. He clasped the saber to his belt in feigned defiance, something in his head still screaming at him for foolishness.

The lord's head tilted at him, as if considering it, and then he abruptly turned around, looking back toward his helmet, the saber blades evaporating into darkness. "Why are you here?"

That was a long story. He tried to sum it up in his head, tried to distill it down into an easy to pronounce and easy to digest bit of speech. It wasn't easy. "We had to be sure you existed."

He turned back, looking at him with those black predatory eyes. "You know what I was and yet..." He gestured toward the opened door with a sweep of a hand. "There is nothing for me out there." He paused, looking off into space. "Not any more."

"I know. You're dead."

He felt a tug at his belt, his saber detaching from the d-ring and soaring toward the Lord's open hand. His mouth fell open as he watched it move through the air, tongue working silent obscenities before coagulating into real words. Ghosts did not possess that ability. "You can't be... it's been seven hundred... no. There is no way."

He closed fingers around the weapon, turning it over in his hand, letting the Force reach into the hilt, feeling across the crystals, the power cells. He looked back up at him. "Who are you?"

He blinked. "It's mine, I swear." He stammered, wondering.

"Who are you?"

"I didn't steal it. My father and I built it."

The Lord stepped forward, the bootfall echoing across his senses. "I am Lord Musashi Daraku Keibatsu, the Lion of Tarthos, Emperor of the Golden Lotus, and Dark Lord of the Star Chamber." He paused for a beat. "Who are you?"

He blinked, drawing in breath. "I am Isar Kuros, of the Sanjuro clan." He paused for a moment before the words spilled from his mouth. "Your descendant."

Muz paused, watching him for a moment as the chemlights slowly flickered.

"You should be dead." Isar shook his head.

Muz lowered his head, looking at him through the tops of his eyes. "You should not have come here. You know what I am."

The stories screamed past his mind as he considered. Tall tales, legends, myths. The God of Kyataru, wreaking havoc on the heavens, tearing worlds apart, building technology from the stars back to his old home. They couldn't be true.

"Just like I can't be alive." Muz completed Isar's thought aloud.

Isar just stared at him, letting the unasked question hang in the air.

Muz ignored it. handing him back his saber, waving him at the door. "Leave me in peace. Your world wants me even less than I want it."

"You don't want to see..."

Muz just looked at him, no expression on his face. Isar stepped backward, his feet shuffling the dust as he backed away from the man. The stories said that once his queen passed that he had changed, withdrawing to the Rock of Kuroshin, the castle that once lay where his hometown grew. Afterwards, every time his people came calling, both from the stars and from the capital, they would come to regret it. The legends said he buried himself in the rock so deep that even the Force couldn't feel him, then laid down to die. Isar looked back at the Lord, searching his face.

Muz turned away, an outstretched hand waving, the stone gears rotating again to seal him back in his hole. Isar watched as the clasps reconnected, the sigils reforming as the parts combined and fell back to flush. The curves came together, the symbol of the lion's head assembling before his eyes.

Isar sighed.

No one would believe him.

Competition
Pursuit of Knowledge (joint fiction)
Textual submission

Manually added by Prophet Howlader Taldrya