Matsu Xiangu
The Haruspex

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l2m9lQgsDN4
[SIZE=16pt]Outer Rim[/SIZE][SIZE=16pt]Unmapped Coordinates[/SIZE]
[SIZE=16pt]Abandoned Space Station[/SIZE]
She turned the flattened piece of metal over and over between her fingers, a force of habit since she’d plucked it from around the neck of some faceless soldier on a planet they’d passed through. It clicked against her sharp nails when she pinched it – a dog tag with no identification, a scrap attached to a skull that’d been blown apart. That was how she thought of him: rosebloom, carnivorous, forbidden reds. She couldn’t get something so beautiful out of her mind. She’d taken the necklace as a keepsake.
It hadn’t been her doing, no. Krius had seen the holoreports and taken her there. It had been a lesson in waste.
“See how they devour each other? And for what purpose? They are so small.”
In so many ways – in all the ways that counted – she’d veered from his all-consuming philosophy. But on that they had agreed. There was so much more than the war for supremacy between the light and the dark.
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The dogtag rolled between her knuckles, a movement accompanied by the ticking of its metal against her phrik-laced fingers. She didn’t have to look down from the stars she was gazing at. The movement was as easy as it had been back then – even more practiced considering she had over a decade of habit. 1, 2, 3 ,4. Roll right. 1, 2, 3, 4. Roll left. 1, 2, 3, 4. Roll right. It was her metronome, a soundtrack to her contemplation sitting cross-legged on a railway overhanging some part of what used to produce energy in this abandoned station. There hadn’t been electricity coursing through its veins in a long, long time. The only illumination came from the stars outside filtering light from lightyears away in to a hallway that hadn’t known footsteps in centuries before she’d come along.Face tilted up, she looked out at the moon the station had fallen in to orbit with. White-faced, it matched her as its light bloomed across her high cheekbones, a burst before the shadow of a railway fell across her features as the station slowly turned, slowly turned, slowly turned.
Silence.
She could close her eyes and forget anything else in the metronomic melody of expansion, stars devouring their cores in the centuries-long race to eventuality. She was alone in a way that had no resolution, sitting cross-legged on the other side of a gulf created not by her power or position but by a fundamental differing of biology and time. (Breathe in. Breathe out. Breathe in. Breathe out. Don’t forget. Blink. Tilt the corners of your mouth up to smile when they smile. Blink. Don’t forget to blink.)
It was a thing she couldn’t even explain to herself, but she felt caged by a million lightyears of galaxy to roam. Not enough.
She felt his presence in the Force just as a small fighter dropped out of hyperspace, looping around the white moon’s face towards the hangar bay. The tick-tick-tick of the dogtag did not change as nothing but her eyes slid to watch its advance. She would wait for him in the dark.
[member="Connor Harrison"]