San Pavac

San Pavac was a male  who worked as a bounty hunter, mercenary, and assassin. He took occasional contracts for the New Sith Empire and was a major participant in the suppression of the Saleucami Rebellion, during which he committed numerous acts of brutality. During his lifetime, Pavac was one of fewer than ten known Mandalorians who had killed a or  in combat—and Pavac had killed at least one of each. Despite his martial skill, Pavac often clashed with the Guardian Mandalorians or even other Mandalorian mercenaries, many of whom considered him a war criminal without honor. For his part, Pavac believed he remained a true Mandalorian, as he technically followed the.

Pavac was among the bounty hunters who tried the contract the put on Shaelo Rican, and though he would ultimately be the one to cash in on it, it took him ten years. Further, while he killed Rican and his wife Demi in 1,387 BBY, the Ricans' daughter, Narasi, escaped him for another year.

In 1,386 BBY, Pavac attended Runganna the 's new shell party on. There he clashed with Damis Myragon and Arkyr Rentol and was attacked by Narasi, who was present with her master Tirien Kal-Di and who only learned that he had killed her parents when he obliviously told her. Tirien to blur Pavac's recollection of the incident, but Runganna's security system caught it on holo, and Darqyren Valt showed Pavac what had happened before hiring the Mandalorian to fight and kill the winner of Runganna's Koboskya no Jankpa.

Narasi killed Ghrond Farshyk and defeated Zaella Sabir, as Pavac had hoped. He fought and seriously injured her, but Narasi summoned the power of the dark side and defeated Pavac. She held him at lightsaber point, where he admitted her victory and invited her to kill him, but remained unrepentant for his actions, particularly the killings of the Ricans. Narasi refused to kill Pavac and left him, but when he activated a grenade to blow her up, Arkyr, viewing it as an act of cowardice, shot him in the head with a and killed him.

Appearances

 * Sins of the Father