I usually played pure light side or dark side but you could also give Jadus codes and sabotage his ship which results in capturing him but also many casualties because of Eradicator. It's more realistic way of defeating him as the non force user.
I love how much choice gives you imperial agent storyline, definitely top three if not the best of my favorite stories in swtor...
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For those of you who have played the imperial agent storyline in swtor imagine that type of female character in Andor working for Luthen.
Luthen double dipping in intel from both the ISB from Lonni and also receiving intel from Imperial Intelligence from her. Him viewing her as a daughter like he does Kleya. Her also scaring Lonnie like Kleya does. Her having to flee Courscant because she got compromised and itās the last time she sees Luthen alive. Her not knowing of his death until Kleya arrives on Yavin when they reunite.
Both of them becoming spymasters for the rebellion.
"An Imperial Intelligence mission to Vondarc pairs up an unlikely team. Working together to pull this off will require cautious steps... as well as a bit of bold action."
Finally published "A Longing Chiss," a one-shot with Dre'hen and Nykett Sparhawk that I've had in draft for what feels like forever.
Authorās Notes: The following story takes place on Hutta during Act III of the Class stories. I name-drop a lot of minor NPCs from the game, so I hope youāre into that sort of thing. Content warnings for references to off-camera extreme violence.
āChaos isn't a pit. Chaos is a ladder. Many who try to climb it fail and never get to try again. The fall breaks them.ā - Petyr Baelish, aka 'Littlefinger', HBOās Game of Thrones, season 3, episode 6, "The Climb"
Loyalty on Hutta is a complicated thing. The woman who called herself Linh noted to herself in a detached moment of clarity, drawing her consciousness away from the nearby stench of death and the distant sounds of fighting.
Nominally, of course, everything on Hutta was controlled by the Hutts. Any attempts to wrest control of their adopted home world away from the Cartel over the centuries ā either by the native Evocii or by the various rival crime lords and organizations that thrived on the nearby āSmugglerās Moonā of Nar Shaddaa ā had been ruthlessly crushed. Ā Ā
But in practice, the Hutt Cartel ruled Hutta solely through fear.
And it was an effective and even a pragmatic fear, one that allowed a relatively small number of Hutts to each rule over their own private fiefdom, with the backing of countless guards, servants and slaves, aided by any number of semi-independent mercenaries and bounty hunters, and supported by a culture that ensured that however much Hutts might quarrel, fight and rage against each other, they always seemed to band together the moment the status quo of their world was challenged; even if one Hutt did fall, another would simply take their place or absorb their territory, with predictable consequences. Ā
But it was still a control built on the foundation of fear nonetheless. Meaning that any loyalty anyone showed to the Hutts was an illusion, and that illusion was virtually everywhere.
Based on her own training and experiences, Linh had always suspected that the moment peoplesā fear of the Hutts was eclipsed by their fear of something else, those illusions would be dispelled, and those people would turn.
And that suspicion was now being confirmed as people were now turning on Suudaa Nem'ro, more popularly known as Nemāro the Hutt, leader of the Nemāro Clan and lord of the industrial town of Jiguuna.
It had all started less than an hour ago.
The unnamed Houk had shown up suddenly at the entrance of Nemāroās Palace, calling out the Hutt and bellowing a series of extraordinarily graphic and imaginative threats against Nemāroās person.
This had initially been little cause for concern to Linh and most of the other occupants of the palace at the time, who initially took this development for a rather convoluted suicide attempt. This Houk was clearly insane and was looking for a way to die.
Then Nemāroās guards had converged to intercept the intruder⦠and they had been the ones who started dying.
The amused indifference of the populace had turned to concern and then to fear.
Then the fear had turned to panic.
As the Houk made his way through the palace, killing anyone in his path in a merciless onslaught, everything had descended into chaos. Every second the Houk had spent viciously cleaving his way through defenders with his vibro-blade was a second where resistance seemed to melt away.
The panic had turned to rioting, as everyoneās immediate goals had shifted.
It wasnāt just the Houkās doing, of course. Had all the guards, servants, hangers-on and guests in Nemāroās palace bravely united to stand against the assailant, they surely would have taken him down eventually.
Surely. Linh thought to herself in reassurance, even though she was not completely certain at all.
Many of the occupants of Nemāroās palace were perfectly willing enough to feign bravery when the odds were overwhelmingly in their favor and there was a chance for personal gain. But they were quick to turn and flee the moment that equation was in doubt.
No. This crisis was the result of people on Hutta fearing something else more than they feared a Hutt. The instant that happened, all bets were off. Tomorrow, or a year from now, a new equilibrium would inevitably reemerge, with some other Hutt in charge.
No one cared about that now.
The majority of these people simply wanted to survive today.
Far worse than these sheep were the many individuals in the palace and throughout Jiguuna who had instinctively started taking advantage of the chaos. Many saw the opportunity to finish old scores with a rival at a moment when they figured they could get away with it. One or two were petty enough to simply took the chance to mug some of the wealthier patrons of the lord of Jiguuna. A few even risked looting the treasures of the Huttās palace.
Fools. Linh thought to herself. She didnāt know how many of these opportunists had made it out of the palace, but she had to assume it wasnāt many. No amount of credits (or personal satisfaction) were worth your life.
Not when everything is falling into anarchy. Linh thought to herself.
She heard fighting ā or rioting ā in the distance. She counted herself lucky.
For her own part, by the time the intruder had stormed through the palace cantina, where Linh usually spent her days, she had wisely made herself scarce, slipping out into the streets of Jiguuna in the confusion as she gripped her hold-out blaster.
Linh was an observer. By training and inclination. Now she finally had a moment to reflect on what she had observed during her final moments in the palace. Most of it seemed irrelevant. Who was running. Who was fighting. Why was dying.
One thing she was certain of was that Nemāroās luck had finally run out.
At what seemed to have been the penultimate moment, only one of Nemāroās remaining lieutenants, Carnus, seemed willing to take up the challenge posed by his fellow Houk. The two had come to blows in the cantina, even while Nemāro could be heard bellowing down the passageway in a panic for more of his guards to come to his side to defend his bulk, and offering outrageous rewards to whomever could end the threat to his life.
When even Carnus had fallen beneath the newcomerās rampage, the writing on the wall had become clear: Nemāro the Hutt was doomed. No one else would be willing to die for the Hutt. It was simply a matter of survival now, and who could run the fastest.
If the Lord of Jiguuna wasnāt already dead, he would be soon.
Still outside, cocooned in her moment of clarity, Linh realized that it was a fall that had been a long time coming. Things had seemed to be slowly deteriorating in Jiguuna for nearly two years.
It started with Karrels Javis. She decided.
He had been Nemāroās most capable and reliable lieutenant before heād been killed. He was certainly capable of violence, but Javis had understood that violence was a tool and not philosophical approach to everyday life. Heād been pragmatic and reasonable, usually taking pains to avoid putting decisions to his boss when the Huttās temper was acting up. Ā
Officially, Javis had met his end by an assassination team sent by Nemāroās rival, Voontara Fa'athra.
(Linh knew better than to believe that story.)
Nemāroās reprisals against Fa'athraās supporters had been unprecedented even by Hutt levels. Armed with a data file retrieved from Voontara Fa'athraās palace by the so-called āRed Bladeā, there had been a bloodbath in Jiguuna with dozens of Fa'athraās supposed sympathizers in the town purged on Nemāroās orders.
Still. Linh thought to herself. Despite his cold-bloodedness, the Blade sheād briefly met, that supposed pirate ā with his cool, emerald eyes and chiseled jawline ā had been capable. Very capable. He was just the sort of person I could have used to get off Hutta, now.
Unfortunately, he was far from here, on some job or another that she couldnāt even imagine.Ā
It had taken weeks for the city to calm down.
Even after the dust had settled from the purges, and even after the victory celebrations Nemāro had held when Faāathra had fled Hutta in apparent defeat, there was a sullen air to the place. As if whatever little vitality Jiguuna could have claimed before had been sapped, and things were continuing purely on momentum.
Illustrating her point in fact, just a few weeks ago, Nemāro had come down with a rare flesh-eating disease, placing the Huttās life ā and his sizable bulk ā in jeopardy. This development had led to considerable tension among the Huttās various lieutenants and supporters, as everyone jockeyed for position should Nemāro ātragicallyā pass away. There had been a number of killings, discreetly passed off as āisolated incidentsā by Nemāroās security, and Linh was fully convinced that thereād have been an outbreak of open infighting throughout the organization if it had lasted any longer.
Fortunately for what still counted for the status quo in Jiguuna ā and for Nemāro, personally ā a Republic doctor had arrived one day at the palace before that came to pass, having heard of the Huttās plight. Linh had noted heād been on āwatch listā for her true employer, as the man had previously worked for the Balmorran Resistance and had more recently been working with some upstart Jedi Knight running around the galaxy. This doctor apparently had enough pull to get an appointment with the Hutt, and within a few days, Nemāro was on the road to recovery.
Even with Nemāro cured, however, things had never quite gotten back to normal in Jiguuna. There was too much bad blood by then. Too much pressure on Nemāroās organization to produce refined fuel to cover his trade agreements with the Sith Empire. Too much lost inertia. Too many people with too many āwhat ifā thoughts. Ā
It had been a powder keg. And the attacking Houk had lit the wick.
Now she was outside the palace, and the only person on Hutta who knew that her real name wasnāt Linh and that she wasnāt just a small-time private fence with a pretty face working out of Nemāroās cantina was lying dead at her feet.
Lycus Mattle had (officially) been a freelance hired gun in Jiguuna, occasionally taking jobs with Nemāroās gang. An older mercenary, he was respected enough that the local ruffians usually gave him a wide berth. He usually made a place for himself just outside the palace at the bazaar, should anyone seek to hire him.
He had also been, like Linh, an operative of Imperial Intelligence, and a subject of the Sith Empire.
And now he was dead, with multiple blaster wounds having caught him in the chest. Ā
Linh also spotted a trio of slain Rodians lying nearby. She recalled them having visited the palace earlier that day, planning some scheme or another. Apparently when they had fled the carnage, they had decided that their best bet was to kill the lone, human gunman, take his weapons, and then to decide what to do next to get away from the carnage.
Lycus Mattle may have been old for being a supposed merc. (Truth, he was older still for being a field operative of Imperial Intelligence.) But he had taken all three of his attackers with him.
Linh found herself taking some small satisfaction from that fact. Over these last two years, the older agent had become a partner to her; part mentor, part confidante and part protector should anyone on Hutta ever give her too much trouble. She was glad heād given better than he got.
But that didnāt change the reality that her only real ally ā and her best chance of getting off Hutta alive ā was now gone. Linh knew how to use her holdout blaster, and sheād received basic self-defense training. But she had no illusions as to how long sheād last in a deteriorating hellhole like Jiguuna, much less if she ran into that Houk.
She processed all of that as her fingertips gently lowered Lycusā eyelids.Ā
āYou were a good partner, Lycus.ā She whispered to herself, unexpectedly finding herself wiping a tear from her eye. āThe best.ā
āLycusā hadnāt been his real name, of course, any more than āLinhā had been hers. But in the two years sheād been on Hutta, it had been the only name sheād ever known him by. She didnāt know his real name and it was unlikely she ever would. āLycusā would have to do.
Now he was rotting in a trench on Hutta, and she didnāt even have the time to bury him properly.
Fortunately for her, she didnāt need Lycus to be alive to help her out of this predicament.
Linh looked around the plaza again to make sure the coast was clear.
She neednāt have worried about being observed. The whole area seemed completely abandoned. People had either fled for cover or had decided now was as good a time as any to engage in violence elsewhere in the town. Nemāro may have been a ruthless crime lord, but as had been the case in the palace, his authority had also been the only thing holding some people back.
And that was gone now. She continued to hear the sounds of unrest in the distance. People were dying. But she didnāt have time to think about that.
Residing in the palace as she normally did, Linh could have been searched by Nemāroās security at any time. (Indeed, more than one visitor to the palace had found themselves wearing a slave collar for carrying around unauthorized contraband.) So it made sense for Lycus to keep their āsensitive equipmentā.
Taking a deep breath, Linh carefully detached Lycusā weapons harness and utility belt from his body and reached into his vest. A moment later, now holding his pass-key, Linh inserted it into her deceased partnerās holo-transmitter.
By itself, the equipment was mundane. Only a thorough inspection by a skilled engineer would have uncovered any anomalies in its manufacture.
Linh took off her necklace from inside her blouse and carefully snapped the pendant in two. She then held the now-exposed circuits against the power cell compartment of the holo-transmitter until they seamlessly slid into place, completing the circuit. After a few moments diode on the advice turned red.
Excellent. Linh smiled. The direct line was secure and would be all but untraceable.
āThis is Infiltrator Ninety-nine.ā Linhās voice had changed, but she kept her voice low as she spoke into the transmitter. āRequesting immediate extraction. Confirmation Code Delta-Beta-Nine-Four. Please respond.ā
With that, she exhaled. It was the first time in years that sheād used her own voice. An Imperial voice. It felt liberating, really.
A moment later, the holo display started to flicker.
She had expected a junior Watcher to pick up her communications signal at headquarters in Kaas City. Or perhaps ā if the Watchers were hard-pressed with the war effort at the moment ā a Minder or at least a Fixer. Following protocol, they would direct an Intelligence Asset Recovery Team to her aid, and get her off this cesspit of a world.
Instead, she saw only a rotating Imperial Insignia appear in the holo display, as an automated voice spoke. Ā
āAttention all personnel: By the order of the Dark Council, Imperial Intelligence has been dissolved. Any and all ongoing operations are hereby terminated. You are ordered to immediately report to Dromund Kaas for reassignment to the Imperial Military. Long live the Emperor.ā Ā
The holo-display went dead.
Linhās jaw dropped in shock.
No. she silently whispered to herself. Impossible. It couldnāt be true.
She attempted to toggle the call button again for a few futile moments.
Nothing.
Her free hand the nearby tent pole for support. If she hadnāt been crouched down, sheād probably have fallen over.
The implications of this announcement were staggering.
The Sith Empire was over a thousand years old. And Imperial Intelligence had been a part of it since the beginning, cleaning up the messes of the Sith and the Imperial military.
Oh, there had been purges of the service throughout that history. Usually due to some perceived operational failure or another. Occasionally a Minister of Intelligence would be āretiredā and the powers that be would insist on āchanges in personnelā to make way for the new regime.
But for the Empire to dissolve the service now at the peak of its war with the Galactic Republicā¦
Madness. She thought to herself. Without Imperial Intelligence, there would be chaos. Not just for the Empire, but with respect to her immediate situation.
Linh needed assistance just safely getting off Hutta, much less getting back to Dromund Kaas.
Sheād been Informer-99 for the last three years. She had hoped to be promoted to āMinderā someday, perhaps eventually serve as a station chief on some planet with a more enjoyable climate. (After spending so long on Hutta, Alderaan sounded positively divine.)Ā
All her career goals were gone now. Dead as Lycus.
Dead as Imperial Intelligence. She thought to herself.
She felt her breathing start to become more rapid as she continued to process.
And what sort of future could she expect if she even made it back to the Imperial capital?
A career in the Imperial Military would be a dead end for her, and a waste of her talents. At best, sheād be stranded in some subordinate clerical position in the Ministry of Logistics, running statistical reports and fetching caff for her superiors.
At worse, sheād be pressed into an auxiliary combat battalion where all her intelligence would be wasted, and sheād be killed off in some useless battle or another.
No. She stopped herself. At worse, Iāll be indentured directly to one of the Sith.
She shivered at the thought, remembering all the stories sheād heard at the academy.
Nothing could be worse than that.
Linh felt her grip on the comm device tighten further.
The Empire had abandoned her. It was no longer home.
She felt a sense of panic start to grow. And then the anger of the injustice of it all.
No. She stopped herself again. That was what her instructors at the academy had trained her not to do.
Unlike Sith, operatives did not have the luxury of giving into their anger. Angry agents made mistakes, as did agents in a state of despair.
If she was to survive, she had to think clearly. She had to remain calm.
She had to remember her training.
After a moment, she felt her breathing relax and her brain started to work again.
First things first. Linh decided to herself, following her training.
Dealing with the immediate situation had to be her priority.
She dropped the holo-communicator on the ground and rose to her feet. Pulling out her holdout blaster, she pointed it at the discarded device.
Then she fired twice.
In a flash, the only physical evidence connecting her to Imperial Intelligence on Hutta had been destroyed in a smoking wreck.
Linh exhaled a breath she didnāt know sheād been keeping.
It feels cathartic. She allowed herself a grim smirk.
Next order of business.
I canāt stay on Hutta. Linh concluded. Sheād seen enough conflict among the Hutts to know that sooner or later, and probably sooner, the Cartel would move in to fill the gap left by Nemāroās sudden āabsenceā. Once that happened, anyone still around who had even been in the palace at the time of the attack would either be shot on sight or theyād find themselves indentured and sent to the gas mines.
The Hutts did not take betrayal well. By their logic, every resident of Jiguuna should have sacrificed themselves to save Nemāro. To show clemency to Nemāroās surviving supporters would only encourage dissent and disloyalty in other Hutt courts and territories. Ā
She had to get away from the Houk, the Hutt Cartel and the Empire. If she were lucky, she and Lycus would be presumed dead in the paperwork. If not, sheād be a wanted renegade.
But first, she had to get off Hutta.
She had identified the problem. Now she needed to find a solution.
What are my assets? She continued following the steps of her training.
She regarded her holdout blaster.
Honestly, it had been no more than a deterrent in the Palace. Virtually anyone on Hutta would have outgunned her in a shootout, and if she did run into that Houk, it would count for nothing.
She had a few credits on her, but if people were already fleeing to the spaceport in a panic, she doubted those would be enough to get her anywhere.
Nothing drove up inflation like a life-or-death situation.
Thinking to herself, she dug through her hidden pockets and pulled out a thin piece of plastic. Ā Carefully unpeeling a label, she regarding the revealed card.
Her backup identity. Not her identity as āLinhā, small-time criminal on Hutta. Nor her āreal nameā sheād been born with in the Empire. But a new one entirely.
Jheeg ā the local Arcona fixer who Intelligence had once worked with ā had been killed after several security failures involving that business with the agent impersonating the Red Blade. (Linh had privately suspected that Lycus himself had done the job on Jheeg, though she could never prove it and she knew better than to ask.) Jheeg had once provided her and Lycus with backup cover identities if they ever needed to suddenly flee the planet. (Lycus had insisted on the precaution; he never really talked about what heād done for Imperial Intelligence before this assignment, but it was now clear to her that he had been jaded by his career and was aware of the possibility of a situation such as this arising.)
The identity was still valid; or at least itād be valid enough in a pinch. It wouldnāt have fooled a review by Imperial Intelligence, she was sure. But if Intelligence no longer existed, it just might fool the Empire.
Regardless, she could build a new life for herself.
But all that would have to start with getting off Hutta.
Her training kicked in again:
Who are my allies?
Rex Geer might have been persuaded to help her. Heād bought her a drink or two at the cantina, and sheād considered taking things further to cement a potentially valuable contact. But Nemāroās top street lieutenant ā who had led the defense against Faāathraās incursion during their conflict ā had been one of those killed during the unrest from Nemāroās illness a few weeks past.
Stabbed in the back in a back-alley. Linh recalled to herself, with regret. Like as not, his own men had killed him just for the prospect of a promotion.
Oren Ward would have been another potential ally. The bounty hunter had fostered a āschool-boy crushā on her, Linh knew. But he and Burnok had departed Hutta months ago for greener pastures after Oren had recovered from his carbonite imprisonment at Faāathraās palace.
She tried to think of another protector-type who might still be alive and willing to help her. She came up empty.
It doesnāt look good. Linh admitted to herself, as she tried to reconsider the situation.
In truth, obtaining the services of a āhero gunmanā to defend her was a secondary concern, even if having such a champion would have been reassuring. By now, she was convinced that the Houk could have torn through anyone she could think of if he spotted her, possibly even a Sith or a Jedi.
What she really needed was someone with the credits and the connections to get her through the spaceport and off-planet. If it was already locked down by the Cartelās people, sheād need someone with Nemāroās security codes to get off-planet.
She smiled grimly to herself as a stroke of inspiration came to her mind. Ā Ā
Fortunately, Linh had realized that she knew of just the right person who could provide both.
Surprisingly, getting back into the palace had been a simple affair. Evidently, nearly everyone still capable of walking had already fled by now.
Linh knew she was taking a huge risk just coming back here, but she saw no other options. If her quarry was still alive, theyād be inside. As she made her way through the cantina, she tried not to pay any mind to the corpses she was stepping over. Sheād known many of these people for the past two years, and while she personally found most of them unpleasant, she also knew that looking at their dead faces now could easily plunge her into a pit of despair. Ā
None of that would help her.
She made her way down the corridor, holdout blaster drawn and at the ready.
Remember your training. Linh reminded herself for what felt like the tenth time. She was no true field operative. Sheād known from the start at the Academy that she never be a Cipher agent. But she knew how to navigate a dangerous building. Certainly, one that sheād lived at for two years.
She carefully snuck past the receiving chamber to the throne room. She could hear sounds from within that didnāt sound remotely human or sentient, for that matter. Not āfightingā sounds exactly, butā¦
No. she continued on. I wonāt think about that.
As she finally approached her destination, hoping against hope that her target was still inside, she nearly tripped over some wreckage on the floor. Looking down, she recognized it as the remains of P8-47, the astromech droid that frequently acted as one of Nemāroās messengers.
The droid had been sweet to her on occasion, and sheād once considered recruiting him as a source. Sheād discarded the idea, however; heād been frightfully loyal to Nemāro.
Pity. Linh steeled herself from the discovery as she continued down the hall into the next chamber, peeking around the corner.
Two Twiāleks were standing within, with the larger male gripping the younger femaleās wrist violently.
āThe credits, girl!ā Toth'lazhen hissed, slapping the beleaguered woman across the cheek as she cried out.
One of Nemāroās senior lieutenants, Toth'lazhen had risen to pre-eminence after the death of Karrels Javis. His reputation for brutality had endeared himself to the Hutt.
Linh had been carefully studying Toth'lazhen for some time now as part of her duties to Imperial Intelligence. The Twiālek lieutenant normally spoke in the perfect Huttese of his boss.
The fact that he was now speaking his native Twi'leki was telling. If nothing else, based on that fact alone, sheād know that Nemāro was finished.
Linh had always assessed him as something of a fool and a brute. Today, she was seeing evidence to support that opinion.
Unfortunately, his present victim was the one sheād been seeking.
Juda was a young but highly intelligent green-skinned Twiālek, unusually amiable for a resident of Nemāroās palace. For the past two years or so, sheād served as Nemāroās paymaster, taking over when his old accountant, an old human cyborg named Yalt, had made the mistake of going over to Faāathraās side.
(She did not want to think about the price Yalt had paid for that mistake. Juda had proven more reliable.)
Today, Linh had decided that Juda was her best chance of getting off Hutta.
Apparently, Toth'lazhen had decided the same thing. Ā
āPlease.ā Juda cried out, struggling against his grasp. āLet me go! Iām just trying to get out of here.ā
Toth'lazhen slapped the girl again as she cried out. Linh noted a bruise forming beneath Judaās eye.
āYou can run once I have Nemāroās money.ā He snarled.
Part of Linhās mind, trained for ruthless pragmatism, related to Toth'lazhenās position. He was self-interested individually willing to do whatever it took to get off Hutta alive.
The same applies to me. Linh admitted.
On the other hand, he had turned his back to the doorway. And something about the way he was abusing Juda did not sit well with the suddenly unemployed Imperial operative.
His mistake.
Linh scowled, as the major domo raised his hand to strike the weeping girl again. Any thought of negotiating with Toth'lazhen had fled her mind. Ā
The holdout blaster ā set for silent mode ā was relatively low-power. But she was less than five meters from the attacking Twiālek, with more than enough time to put three rounds through his back.
If Toth'lazhen tried to scream out in pain, that scream was cutoff with the second round. The third was only for certaintyās sake. Ā
Juda blinked in surprise as her attacker fell dead to the floor, looking up at her erstwhile rescuer.
The two womenās eyes met. Much to Linhās surprise, as she gazed into the Twiālekās violet irises, she felt herself gulp.
Was it the adrenaline? The fact that Toth'lazhen was the first person sheād ever killed with her own hand? The look of gratitude in Judaās pretty, violet eyes? Ā
āThank you.ā The young Twiālek whispered, falling back into her desk chair in relief. She held herself gingerly, slowly rocking back and forth.
Linh silently nodded, swallowing and lowering her blaster. Her throat felt dry. Whatever guilt she felt for killing the Twiālek was being suppressed by the adrenaline still pumping through her veins. Ā
āToth'lazhen would have killed me.ā Juda said quietly continued, swallowing. āOr worse, he would have sold me off to slavers. Before he even got off planet. The moment he had as much of Nemāroās money as he could get his hands on. When he didnāt need me anymore. Thatās why I didnāt give into him.ā
She looked away, sniffing.
āIād have been a loose end.ā
Loose end. Linh thought to herself. She herself was now a loose end to the Empire, her years of training and service amounting to nothing. She was on her way down; she had to find a way up. Who better toā¦
Out of the corner of her consciousness, she spotted Juda eyeballing the still-drawn blaster.
Jarred back to the present, Linh put away her weapon, calmly.
āIām not Toth'lazhen.ā She offered reassuringly, glancing down at the dead lieutenant. āIf you can help me get off planet, maybe I can help you, too.ā
Juda nodded, glancing over at a satchel on her desk.
āI can do that. I was right about to run for it myself when Toth found me.ā
Linh tried processing the young womanās reaction. With the immediate threat removed, her practical intelligence seemed to shine though. She found it refreshing. Inspiring, even.
āYou donāt have anyone else here on Hutta?ā Linh asked.
That question seemed to strike a nerve. The Twiālek flinched, closing her eyes in pain as her body rocked back and forth again.
āMy mother⦠passed away a couple of months ago.ā Judaās lip trembled. āNemāro didnāt even give me the day off to go to her funeral.ā
Linh recalled that she hadnāt seen a family member in years. She had no way of knowing if her parents or brothers were even still alive by now. Nevertheless, she felt a wellspring of sympathy bubbling within her for the young Twiālek.
āIām sorry.ā She murmured awkwardly. She quickly decided to change the subject. āSo. You had a plan to get out? Or just sneak past the Houk?ā
Juda took a breath as she gathered herself, gazing down at Toth'lazhenās corpse absent-mindedly.
āThereās an underground tunnel.ā She explained. āIt runs along the old gas pipes beneath the town. The entrance is hidden behind the bar in the corner.ā
Juda pointed. Linh recalled there was hardly a room in the palace that didnāt have its own bar.
āIt comes out west of the palace, near the spaceport. Nemāro never thought heād need a way out of his own palace, but Karrels knew he might.ā
The Twiālek smirked.
āHe had me budget the construction as āpalace defensesā. Poor guy just never had the chance to make it out when his time came.ā
Linh smiled appreciatively.
āSo. That tunnel gets us to the port. Any ideas about what happens next?ā
Juda returned the smile, clearly emboldened by the praise. The attractive Twiālek had drawn plenty of looks since sheād started working at the palace. It was a good bet that up until today, few had been foolish enough to make a move on Nemāroās paymaster, especially not after what happened to his previous accountant.
Neither of us work here anymore. Linh thought to herself.
āI know Mekks, the communications officer at the spaceport.ā Juda assured her. āHe knows how the Cartel operates, and how to make it look like someone shot their way out of there without getting anyone killed⦠in return for a sizable bribe, of course.ā
āOf course.ā Linh found herself smiling sincerely for the first time in what felt like days. Fear and bribery were the only things that turned the gears on Hutta. āThen we just need to find a ride off-world.ā
Judaās smile widened, as she reached in and pulled a datapad out of her satchel. Linh could see a stack of pads along with credit sticks and a few strips of flimsi. Clearly, the Twiālek had been preparing for this trip well. Ā Ā
āNemāro took possession of a small freighter last week.ā Juda informed her. āSome smuggler who ditched his cargo from the Imperials.ā
She bit her lip as she looked down at the records.
āI still have the access codes. And the license. By the time anyone checks, itāll be legally ours.ā
Linh let out an impressed whistle. This was more than she could have hoped for. Ā
āSounds like a plan.ā The former Imperial operative felt everything start to fall into place. She smiled again to Juda but found the Twiālekās smile had suddenly grown cautious.
āAnd after that?ā Juda asked, uncertainly.
Linh paused, remembering her earlier considerations concerning her own future. Assess potential resources. Her instructors had taught her.
To Nemāro, Juda had been a competent, unambitious underling who always did what she was told.
To Toth'lazhen, Juda had been nothing but a source of quick credits, to be used and disposed of.
But to Linh, she could be much more.
āYou know.ā She began. āBetween my connections, your financial skills, and Nemāroās credits⦠I think we have enough to start our own āconsultingā business. Look around the galaxy. Lots of people are going to need āspecial assistanceā setting up new operations for themselves with all this fallout. Conflict brings chaos. Weāve both seen that here today. But it also brings opportunity to people who know how to seize it.ā Ā
Even as she spoke, Linh felt herself gaining confidence in this plan of action. Sheād need time to work out the details of course, but at least now she had a direction. Later, they could take on some hired muscle for security. Linh knew what to look for in a dependable mercenary so that she and Juda could avoid emergencies like this one in the future.
Linh finally extended an open hand towards the Twiālek.
āPartners?ā she asked.
Juda chewed her lip for a minute, regarding Linh and the offered hand.
The Twiālek suddenly grasped Linh by the shoulders fiercely and leaned in. Judaās lips met those of the former Informer of Imperial Intelligence, kissing her passionately. Linh felt her entire body go rigid with shock at the gesture.
It had been more than a year since sheād taken actual comfort in the touch of another, and Juda was certainly attractive. A warm feeling started to grow in the pit of her stomach.
She felt her lips and then her hands start to respond on impulse, surrendering herself to the sensation.
Juda suddenly pulled away as the stricken Imperial tried to regain her breath.
āFor luck.ā She offered by way of explanation, giving Linh a dazzling smile. She finally took Linhās hand, giving it a friendly shake.
āPartners.ā She declared.
Linh could only catch herself against the desk as she regained her footing and blink.
Definitely more than just a source of quick credits. She confirmed to herself.
Juda, meanwhile, had ducked behind the bar with her satchel over her shoulder. Pushing a crate and a rug out of the way, the woman opened the hidden trap door down to the tunnel, then looked back over at Linh.
āCome on.ā The Twiālek smiled. āThat Houk might come poking around any minute.ā
Linh swallowed and moved to comply.
As she followed Juda through the trap door and down into the escape tunnel, she felt confident she was taking the first step towards her future.
Time to climb the ladder.
THE END?
Authorās Notes: There are any number of corrupt and even āevilā powers within the SWTOR story. As much as we might loathe them, itās fascinating for me to think that if any of them suddenly werenāt there, the vacuum would make room for something even worse.
Those of you who have played the Bounty Hunter class story too many times will know from the Companion cut-scene dialogue that Skadge killed Nemāro the Hutt off-screen, a revenge killing for an earlier betrayal that landed Skadge on Belsavis in the first place. The idea of Skadge successfully rampaging his way through Nemāroās palace, where we spend so much time as an Imperial Agent / Bounty Hunter at the start of the story, was fascinating to me. (How many of the NPCās we interacted with earlier actually survived???) Skadge is probably my least favorite character in SWTOR, but the idea of him being the star boogey-man of a grisly horror film, slaughtering dozens of people, that concept intrigues me.
Each class has an NPC on their starting planet that provides a mission directing the player-character to the trainer on-planet. Linh is the NPC on Hutta that directs Imperial Agents to the on-planet trainer, Lycus Mattle. With the many changes in the game over the years, those missions are largely redundant, worth only a smidgen of XP. But some of those cutscene interactions were memorable to me, including Linhās. I decided I had to do something with her at some point.
This story was the result.
Juda is another fun character from the Bounty Hunter story. Sheās Nemāroās paymaster on Hutta, and later unwittingly engages in some minor skullduggery during the Great Hunt. Fortunately, my own bounty hunter, Xadya, chose not to hold her indiscretions against her. (Mako would not have approved if Xadya had taken Juda out!)
As always, I love the idea that our characters leave a deep mark on the places they visit, for good and for ill. Gahraath Vaiken, my Cipher Nine in the Halcyon Legacy, was rather vicious when he started out as an Imperial Agent on Hutta, a bit too eager to demonstrate his own ruthlessness. Heād eventually mellow a good deal, but at the time, Linh was both physically attracted to him while simultaneously left with the impression of a cold-blooded killer who would easily dispose of her if it suited his mission.
(Which he absolutely was. But like I said, heās softened a good bit by the end of the class story.)
Virtually every name I dropped within this story is an actual NPC from the missions on Hutta. (And some of you may also have picked up on an appearance by a certain unnamed mustached field medic companion from another of the class stories. š¤)
The āInformersā title is, in fact, a specific canon designation within the old Imperial Intelligence organization, much like Ciphers, Watchers, Minders and Fixers. They arenāt mentioned in the game itself; they do come up in The Old Republic: Fatal Alliance novel where Ula Vii is presented as an example. Something we donāt talk about enough is the impact the dissolution of Imperial Intelligence would have on the Empire and the greater galaxy, especially at the peak of the war. Youāre literally talking about hundreds or thousands of agents and operatives either completely cutoff from the Empire without recourse or suddenly pressed into the service of the Sith or to an Imperial Military that treats them like cannon-fodder. (Remember how Cipher Nine was treated on Corellia?) The fallout from that sudden absence would be profound for the Empire, as well. Imperial Intelligence literally existed for centuries, and nature abhors a vacuum.
No wonder Marr had to establish Sith Intelligence a few years later. Their entire system would have been in a perpetual state of collapse without it.
I tweaked the layout of the palace a little bit for narrative reasons. Itās significantly larger here, which makes sense given how many people seem to live there. Ā
The Informer-Ninety-Nine moniker is an Easter Egg reference to āGet Smartā. (A show waaaay before my time. Iām old, but not that old.) It just tickled me, so I tossed that in.
Ā The āFor luckā kiss is an obvious homage to the scene from Episode IV: A New Hope. (Donāt worry ā Juda and Linh arenāt related. š ) Further, Judaās line about a smugglerās freighter was a Han Solo & Jabba reference. Ā
Tagging @oolathurman , as they once mentioned she loved the character of Juda.
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pov: you're a sith lord early into the Great War months after the Treaty ended, and you have successfuly transferred a former Intelligence's Cipher into your service. But then you get to actually meet the "most lethal, obedient tool of the Empire" in person and realise that this man can kill you, your family and your closest allies, make it seem like suicide/tragic incident/enemy sabotage with no one noticing anything amiss, AND he only respects one person, and you just boasted about how the former Minister is all but dead.
The latest version of Cipher Nineās Intelligence profile, before he was killed while on a mission on Nar Shaddaa, thirteen years after the Treaty of Coruscant (13ATC).
His last mission on file was a deep-cover infiltration on Coruscant, investigating a possible mole in Imperial Intelligence and their connections in the SIS.
Cipher Nine was called to Nar Shaddaa only because a high profile target reappeared after years of being thought dead. His death was caught by a holocam at the site, where he was confronted by two bounty hunters and, after holding his own admirably, was thrown off the building. It had been a setup. The target never showed.
Horn fragments, blood, scraps of clothing, and Cipher Nineās beloved long knife were found at the site. The body was never recovered, but local authorities reported an apparent suicide close enough to the scene that Intelligence concluded that that had been the end of the illustrious Cipher Nine.
His handler, Watcher Seven, was put on probation for his death, given that if heād had all the information, Cipher Nine likely would have survived. Watcher Seven never forgot, and they never forgave.
As per Intelligence protocol, Cipher Nineās main file was deleted from the databanks, his codename assigned to a new agent. The only record of Howl Kitvez ever existing sits deep in the Intelligence archives, accessible only by those with the highest authority.
āāā
This is it! Howl ref sheet, and a good deal of lore. Sorry for the blocks of text. And, before this gets brought up, my Cipher Nine is NOT the same Cipher Nine as the one in SWTOR. If you want to tie him into the canon, heās the predecessor to the gameās Nine. The unfortunate fact is that if I were picking a number between 1 and 10, I would have picked 9 every time. Yeah. I just couldnāt see him as any other number.