Nitya Xeraic
Character
Nitya was awake before dawn, as she often was.
The monastery greeted the morning in quiet layers rather than sudden light. Mist clung low across the terraced gardens, drifting between stone paths and rows of carefully tended herbs whose leaves still held the night's cool breath. Beyond them, the forest of Oralis Prime stirred in slow, ancient rhythms, branches shifting as the first winds of the day threaded through them. Bells beneath the eastern eaves sounded once in the distance, not a summons, but a simple acknowledgment that the world was turning again.
She knelt beside a narrow bed of flowering roots, brushing soil from her fingertips after finishing the last of her early work. Dark trousers and a fitted tunic suited for movement bore faint traces of earth at the knees and cuffs, practical clothes chosen without vanity or thought. Her black hair was tied back loosely, though a few strands had escaped to cling to the damp morning air.
She had felt them long before they reached the grounds.
Her mother's presence was unmistakable, familiar in its depth, layered now with a strain that had grown more pronounced over the years, strength and wear interwoven so tightly they were nearly indistinguishable. Beside it moved another presence, steady but guarded, shaped by a life lived in readiness, by someone who had learned to brace long before they learned to breathe. She did not know his name. But she knew the posture of him in the Force, controlled, coiled, carrying the weight of vigilance like a second spine.
Nitya rose smoothly, dusting her hands together as her gaze lifted toward the path winding through the trees. She did not hurry to meet them. If they were coming here, they would arrive in their own time.
The children would not wake for another hour. The kitchens had only just begun preparing morning tea. The monastery still belonged to silence.
When the two figures finally emerged through the thinning mist, Nitya stood waiting near the garden steps, composed and unforced, as though she had simply happened to be there rather than chosen the exact moment.
Her eyes settled first on Jairdain. Warmth touched her expression, immediate and quiet, the kind reserved for someone whose presence had shaped her life in ways words rarely captured. Then her gaze shifted to the man beside her. He carried himself like someone learning not to brace, as though the instinct to tense had not yet realized it was no longer required. Interesting. "You found the path," she said, her voice calm, carrying easily through the cool air.
Her attention returned briefly to her mother, taking in the details she did not comment on, the fatigue beneath her strength, the tension she carried like a shadow, before shifting back to the stranger. "And you brought company."
She descended the few stone steps toward them at an unhurried pace, stopping within easy speaking distance. "Nitya Xeraic," she said, offering the name plainly before any introduction could be made. "Welcome to my home."
Her gaze moved across the monastery grounds behind her, the gardens, the open halls, the quiet stone structures shaped into the hillside rather than imposed upon it. "It is a place for those willing to lower their voice enough to hear themselves think." A faint pause followed, and the smallest trace of dry humor touched her expression. "So naturally, my mother sends me warriors." Then she looked again at the man beside Jairdain, steady, direct, but not unkind. "You have traveled far," she said, her tone shifting into something both inviting and discerning. "Would you prefer tea first, or honesty first?"
Marrok Vorr
The monastery greeted the morning in quiet layers rather than sudden light. Mist clung low across the terraced gardens, drifting between stone paths and rows of carefully tended herbs whose leaves still held the night's cool breath. Beyond them, the forest of Oralis Prime stirred in slow, ancient rhythms, branches shifting as the first winds of the day threaded through them. Bells beneath the eastern eaves sounded once in the distance, not a summons, but a simple acknowledgment that the world was turning again.
She knelt beside a narrow bed of flowering roots, brushing soil from her fingertips after finishing the last of her early work. Dark trousers and a fitted tunic suited for movement bore faint traces of earth at the knees and cuffs, practical clothes chosen without vanity or thought. Her black hair was tied back loosely, though a few strands had escaped to cling to the damp morning air.
She had felt them long before they reached the grounds.
Her mother's presence was unmistakable, familiar in its depth, layered now with a strain that had grown more pronounced over the years, strength and wear interwoven so tightly they were nearly indistinguishable. Beside it moved another presence, steady but guarded, shaped by a life lived in readiness, by someone who had learned to brace long before they learned to breathe. She did not know his name. But she knew the posture of him in the Force, controlled, coiled, carrying the weight of vigilance like a second spine.
Nitya rose smoothly, dusting her hands together as her gaze lifted toward the path winding through the trees. She did not hurry to meet them. If they were coming here, they would arrive in their own time.
The children would not wake for another hour. The kitchens had only just begun preparing morning tea. The monastery still belonged to silence.
When the two figures finally emerged through the thinning mist, Nitya stood waiting near the garden steps, composed and unforced, as though she had simply happened to be there rather than chosen the exact moment.
Her eyes settled first on Jairdain. Warmth touched her expression, immediate and quiet, the kind reserved for someone whose presence had shaped her life in ways words rarely captured. Then her gaze shifted to the man beside her. He carried himself like someone learning not to brace, as though the instinct to tense had not yet realized it was no longer required. Interesting. "You found the path," she said, her voice calm, carrying easily through the cool air.
Her attention returned briefly to her mother, taking in the details she did not comment on, the fatigue beneath her strength, the tension she carried like a shadow, before shifting back to the stranger. "And you brought company."
She descended the few stone steps toward them at an unhurried pace, stopping within easy speaking distance. "Nitya Xeraic," she said, offering the name plainly before any introduction could be made. "Welcome to my home."
Her gaze moved across the monastery grounds behind her, the gardens, the open halls, the quiet stone structures shaped into the hillside rather than imposed upon it. "It is a place for those willing to lower their voice enough to hear themselves think." A faint pause followed, and the smallest trace of dry humor touched her expression. "So naturally, my mother sends me warriors." Then she looked again at the man beside Jairdain, steady, direct, but not unkind. "You have traveled far," she said, her tone shifting into something both inviting and discerning. "Would you prefer tea first, or honesty first?"