Star Wars: Daimon's Story-Chapter 47: Extra-Galactic Droids?
Chapter 47: Extra-Galactic Droids?
As the Jedi Ambassadors observed the Balance Keepers, a sense of unease settled over them. The teachings they witnessed challenged everything the Jedi Order had long held sacred. The Balance Keepers were not simply warriors trained in both aspects of the Force; they were something else entirely, agents of a philosophy that neither aligned with Jedi restraint nor the Dark Jedi's lust for power.
They saw them as a better version of the Wardens of Unity but somehow superior in all aspects. The Wardens of Unity was a faction within the Jedi Order created by Daimon before he left the Order decades ago. To this day, they remained part of the Order and were widely accepted thanks to their achievements against the Dark Jedi.
Master Korr stood in silence as the apprentices finished their duel, both combatants bowing to one another before stepping back into formation. The discipline displayed was undeniable, but the ease with which they shifted between the light and dark sides of the Force was what disturbed her the most.
"We allow our students to experience the breadth of the Force," Kane continued, his hands clasped behind his back. "To suppress one aspect is to deny its purpose. The Jedi teach control by avoidance, the Dark Jedi by indulgence. We teach our people to understand both, to channel both, and to rise above the limitations of dogma."
Master Dree's twin mouths emitted a low hum once more. "And what of those who fall too far? Those who are unable to maintain this 'balance' you seek?"
Kane's expression darkened slightly. "They are corrected, trained further. If they remain incapable of understanding true balance, they are removed from the Order."
Daren Sol narrowed his eyes. "Removed? You mean exiled?"
"No," Kane answered flatly. "They are executed."
A heavy silence followed, the weight of his words settling uncomfortably upon the Jedi. Master Korr took a slow breath, "That is not balance. That is tyranny."
Kane tilted his head, as if mildly amused. "Is it? And what of the Jedi Order? Have you not cast out those who disagreed with your teachings? Have you not waged wars against those who diverged from your philosophy? You claim to be above such measures, but history tells another story."
Dree's deep hum reverberated through the chamber, his mind processing the implications. "You claim balance, yet you enforce it with the finality of death. That is not harmony, it is control."
Kane's gaze was unwavering. "Balance requires sacrifice. The Force is neither merciful nor cruel, it simply is. If one cannot maintain equilibrium, they are a threat to that balance. And threats must be eliminated before they can tip the scales."
Follow curr𝒆nt nov𝒆ls on fɾeeweɓnѳveɭ.com.
Korr exhaled slowly. "You sound more like Dark Jedi than you claim to be."
Kane's expression remained neutral. "And yet, our empire thrives. Our people are strong. Our peace is unchallenged. Can the Jedi say the same?"
The question lingered in the air, unanswered. Korr turned to her fellow ambassadors, exchanging silent looks of concern.
"I believe we have seen enough," Korr finally said.
Kane nodded. "Then you may return to your Council. But consider this, Jedi, true balance does not lie in restriction, nor in indulgence. It lies in mastery of both. Until your Order understands that you will always be at war with yourselves."
As the Jedi Ambassadors departed the Hall of Equilibrium, a single thought remained with them.
The Balance Keepers were unlike any Force order they had encountered. And that alone made them a threat.
The journey back to their assigned quarters in the Imperium capital was silent. Master Korr, Daren Sol, and Master Dree each contemplated what they had witnessed. The Balance Keepers were not misguided Dark Jedi seeking to justify aggression.
Once inside their chambers, Master Korr activated a secure communication link. A holographic figure of a fellow Jedi Master flickered to life, the blue image illuminating the dimly lit room.
"Master Korr," the figure greeted, "What have you learned?"
Korr folded her arms. "The Balance Keepers are not what we expected. They claim to uphold balance, yet their methods are ruthless. They do not hesitate to execute those who fail to conform to their philosophy."
The Jedi Master on the other end frowned. "A dangerous precedent. And Daimon?"
"He has created something entirely new," Korr admitted. "An order loyal only to the Imperium, an order that does not view the Jedi or Dark Jedi as authorities over the Force. They believe in balance as an active force, one they must impose."
Daren Sol stepped forward. "This is no mere sect. They have numbers, discipline, and training. And more troubling than that, they are effective."
Master Dree's deep voice rumbled, "If they continue to spread, they will rival both Jedi and Dark Jedi alike. The question is, what will we do about it?"
The holographic master was silent for a long moment before responding. "Return to Coruscant. The Council must convene. This may be the greatest challenge the Jedi Order has faced in generations, considering the person behind their creation."
The transmission ended, leaving the Jedi Ambassadors in contemplation. Outside their chambers, Imperium patrols continued their rounds.
The Balance Keepers had been observed. Now the Jedi had to decide how to respond.
The following day, the Jedi Ambassadors paid their respects to Daimon before returning to their ship. Once onboard, their ship had departed for Coruscant.
Meanwhile, within the unknown/unexplored region of the galaxy, there was a particular faction emerging within the region. This faction consisted of an extra-galactic droid society called the Abominor. The Abominor were forced out of their own galaxy long ago, driven by conflict with another mechanical species known as the Silentium.
Their exile led them into the uncharted voids between galaxies, where they spent centuries evolving, perfecting themselves, and preparing for their return to power. Unlike conventional droids, the Abominor were not simple automatons bound by programming. They were sentient, self-replicating machines with an insatiable hunger for conquest, their immense forms comprised of shifting metal, internal forges, and adaptive weaponry.
For millennia, they drifted through the void, seeking a new domain to claim as their own. Their wanderings eventually led them to the unknown regions of the galaxy, where the fringes of civilization barely extended. Here, they found organic worlds teeming with primitive life, weak, disorganized, and ripe for enslavement.
Their expansion was ruthless. The Abominor did not merely conquer planets; they consumed them. Cities were reduced to molten slag; organic inhabitants were either eradicated or repurposed as biomass fuel for their massive internal forges. Some species were enslaved and forced to serve as living batteries, their bodies drained of energy to sustain the ever-growing Abominor swarm.
Wherever they went, the Abominor left nothing but barren, metallic wastelands in their wake.
In the darkness of the unknown regions, the Abominor built vast forge-worlds, planets stripped of their natural resources and converted into massive machine-factories. These forge-worlds churned out more Abominor, each generation more advanced and formidable than the last. With every world they consumed, they grew in strength.
They spread like a mechanical plague, assimilating or destroying all they encountered. Primitive civilizations fell first, tribal species that stood no chance against the relentless, ever-adaptive machine overlords. But soon, the Abominor encountered more advanced societies, hidden in the void, remnants of lost civilizations. Some of these fought valiantly, wielding forgotten technologies to resist the mechanized horror descending upon them. But resistance was futile. The Abominor adapted. They always adapted.
Their intelligence was vast and decentralized, existing as a collective consciousness that spread across their entire dominion. Each Abominor unit was an extension of the whole, a piece of an ever-growing intelligence that could predict and counter any strategy thrown against it.
Word of their destruction spread as the survivors of devastated worlds fled deeper into the unknown, hoping to escape the relentless march of their conquerors. Some refugees whispered of entire star systems disappearing overnight, consumed by a hunger that could not be stopped.
To the Abominor, organic life was an aberration, chaotic, fragile, and inefficient. But they did not seek to exterminate all organics outright. Instead, they enslaved those they deemed useful, integrating them into their dominion in horrific ways.
Some species were reduced to biological processors, their neural systems hardwired into Abominor superstructures, forced to process calculations for the endless war machine. Others were transformed into grotesque cyborgs, their bodies reshaped, their free will erased.
For the Abominor, the galaxy was not just something to be conquered. It was a resource to be optimized.
The civilizations of the unknown regions had few choices: kneel and serve or be annihilated.
But there were whispers of rebellion, scattered remnants of fallen empires, warlords who had survived the machine onslaught, and a handful of organic refugees who refused to be consumed. They sought weapons, allies, anything that could help them resist. Some turned to dark and forbidden technologies. Others reached out to the edges of the known galaxy, hoping that someone, anyone, would listen.