Lyra Ventor
Character
Diso – Tal'ren's Landing
Lyra hadn't meant to be here.
Diso wasn't on her charts, wasn't on her route plan, and definitely wasn't on the short list of worlds she trusted enough to land on without good reason. But her ship's portside stabilizer had made that decision for her, shrieking loud enough mid-flight that she'd been forced to drop out of hyperspace and reroute to the closest port with a functioning repair bay. Tal'ren's Landing wasn't pretty, but it was practical—and practicality had saved her life more than once.
The moment she stepped off the ramp, she regretted it. The air was heavy with exhaust and heat shimmer, the kind that stuck to skin and made sounds feel too loud. Cargo haulers drifted overhead like slow metal whales, and the constant drone of engines vibrated through the ground beneath her boots. Diso was a city that had grown upward for centuries, stacking metal over stone until history was buried under transit routes and market squares. It felt like a place trying very hard to forget what it used to be.
Lyra leaned against a support pillar outside the repair bay, arms crossed as she watched the mechanic disappear inside with her stabilizer module. He had the gait of someone who didn't know the meaning of urgency. She could be here for hours. Maybe longer. The thought made her jaw tighten. She hated being grounded—hated the feeling of her ship being out of reach, caged and silent.
But even that wasn't what put her on edge.
There was something about Diso that didn't sit right. A pressure she couldn't shake. A quiet prickle beneath her ribs she'd felt only a handful of times in her life, always before something she couldn't explain. She'd once convinced herself it was intuition—just instinct, sharpened by experience, nothing more. Lately, though, she wasn't so sure. Lately, it lingered too long to ignore.
She tried. Stars knew she tried. But the sensation held firm, tightening behind her eyes, pulling her attention away from the port and toward the city beyond. A direction, subtle but insistent, like the faintest tug of gravity toward something she couldn't see.
Finally, she pushed off the pillar with a quiet, annoyed exhale. "Fine," she muttered under her breath. "You win."
She slipped into the flow of foot traffic and let her feet carry her where that strange pressure pulled. The port district gave way to broader streets filled with vendors calling out discount prices, travelers arguing over maps, and droids weaving between the crowds, effortlessly balancing crates in servo-claws. Lyra drifted past it all with practiced ease, her gaze flicking between alleyways and archways as the hum beneath her skin intensified.
The city changed as she walked. Neon and durasteel slowly receded into older construction—stone foundations too ancient for the glittering structures above them, walls etched with worn patterns that didn't match the city's current aesthetic. It was like stepping through layers of time, each block peeling back civilization until only the bones of Diso remained.
Lyra slowed, breathing steadying without her meaning to. Whatever had been pulling her…she was close now. Close enough to feel the air shift, heavy and still, like a place holding its breath.
She turned down a narrow street, half-lit and quiet. The noise of the port seemed to fade behind her, swallowed by thick walls and winding corridors that hadn't seen map updates in decades. At the far end of the street, an archway rose from the stone—old, deliberate, and incongruous with the modern beams that had been built around it, as though the city had tried to grow over something it couldn't erase.
Lyra's eyes traced the seams where ancient masonry met new durasteel. This wasn't just old. This was forgotten on purpose. Her chest tightened. The pull inside her sharpened with a clarity she didn't understand. And then she saw him.
A lone figure stood near the base of the archway—still, deliberate, focused. He didn't move, didn't speak, and Lyra didn't approach. She watched from a distance, her steps slowing to nothing as she took in the scene. He wasn't a dockworker. He wasn't a tourist. And he didn't have the air of someone who had wandered here by accident.
She didn't know who he was. She didn't know what he was doing. She only knew that her instincts—those frustrating, impossible instincts—had led her straight to this spot…and straight to him.
Lyra stayed where she was, tension curling low and steady beneath her ribs, eyes fixed on the archway and the man before it. She didn't call out. Didn't announce herself. Didn't dare break whatever strange, quiet pull had brought her to this forgotten corner of Diso.
For a long breath, she stood there. Watching, listening, and feeling the weight of something old stirring beneath her boots. She hadn't come here for mysteries. But it seemed Diso had one waiting for her anyway.
Syn
Lyra hadn't meant to be here.
Diso wasn't on her charts, wasn't on her route plan, and definitely wasn't on the short list of worlds she trusted enough to land on without good reason. But her ship's portside stabilizer had made that decision for her, shrieking loud enough mid-flight that she'd been forced to drop out of hyperspace and reroute to the closest port with a functioning repair bay. Tal'ren's Landing wasn't pretty, but it was practical—and practicality had saved her life more than once.
The moment she stepped off the ramp, she regretted it. The air was heavy with exhaust and heat shimmer, the kind that stuck to skin and made sounds feel too loud. Cargo haulers drifted overhead like slow metal whales, and the constant drone of engines vibrated through the ground beneath her boots. Diso was a city that had grown upward for centuries, stacking metal over stone until history was buried under transit routes and market squares. It felt like a place trying very hard to forget what it used to be.
Lyra leaned against a support pillar outside the repair bay, arms crossed as she watched the mechanic disappear inside with her stabilizer module. He had the gait of someone who didn't know the meaning of urgency. She could be here for hours. Maybe longer. The thought made her jaw tighten. She hated being grounded—hated the feeling of her ship being out of reach, caged and silent.
But even that wasn't what put her on edge.
There was something about Diso that didn't sit right. A pressure she couldn't shake. A quiet prickle beneath her ribs she'd felt only a handful of times in her life, always before something she couldn't explain. She'd once convinced herself it was intuition—just instinct, sharpened by experience, nothing more. Lately, though, she wasn't so sure. Lately, it lingered too long to ignore.
She tried. Stars knew she tried. But the sensation held firm, tightening behind her eyes, pulling her attention away from the port and toward the city beyond. A direction, subtle but insistent, like the faintest tug of gravity toward something she couldn't see.
Finally, she pushed off the pillar with a quiet, annoyed exhale. "Fine," she muttered under her breath. "You win."
She slipped into the flow of foot traffic and let her feet carry her where that strange pressure pulled. The port district gave way to broader streets filled with vendors calling out discount prices, travelers arguing over maps, and droids weaving between the crowds, effortlessly balancing crates in servo-claws. Lyra drifted past it all with practiced ease, her gaze flicking between alleyways and archways as the hum beneath her skin intensified.
The city changed as she walked. Neon and durasteel slowly receded into older construction—stone foundations too ancient for the glittering structures above them, walls etched with worn patterns that didn't match the city's current aesthetic. It was like stepping through layers of time, each block peeling back civilization until only the bones of Diso remained.
Lyra slowed, breathing steadying without her meaning to. Whatever had been pulling her…she was close now. Close enough to feel the air shift, heavy and still, like a place holding its breath.
She turned down a narrow street, half-lit and quiet. The noise of the port seemed to fade behind her, swallowed by thick walls and winding corridors that hadn't seen map updates in decades. At the far end of the street, an archway rose from the stone—old, deliberate, and incongruous with the modern beams that had been built around it, as though the city had tried to grow over something it couldn't erase.
Lyra's eyes traced the seams where ancient masonry met new durasteel. This wasn't just old. This was forgotten on purpose. Her chest tightened. The pull inside her sharpened with a clarity she didn't understand. And then she saw him.
A lone figure stood near the base of the archway—still, deliberate, focused. He didn't move, didn't speak, and Lyra didn't approach. She watched from a distance, her steps slowing to nothing as she took in the scene. He wasn't a dockworker. He wasn't a tourist. And he didn't have the air of someone who had wandered here by accident.
She didn't know who he was. She didn't know what he was doing. She only knew that her instincts—those frustrating, impossible instincts—had led her straight to this spot…and straight to him.
Lyra stayed where she was, tension curling low and steady beneath her ribs, eyes fixed on the archway and the man before it. She didn't call out. Didn't announce herself. Didn't dare break whatever strange, quiet pull had brought her to this forgotten corner of Diso.
For a long breath, she stood there. Watching, listening, and feeling the weight of something old stirring beneath her boots. She hadn't come here for mysteries. But it seemed Diso had one waiting for her anyway.