Xian Xiao
Elementalist
The outpost had no name anymore. Whatever title the Sith once carved into its black stone had long since been stripped away by time and weather, leaving only jagged marks and broken edges. The place sat just beyond the city limits of Ravelin, half-swallowed by creeping moss and ash-gray dust, its shadow stretching across the plains like a forgotten scar.
It should have felt oppressive.
Instead, Xian found it… quiet.
The morning sun pushed through drifting clouds, soft gold spilling over collapsed pillars and the remnants of old statues now reduced to little more than features smoothed by wind. The air was cool, tinged with the scent of old stone and damp earth. Even the breeze moved carefully here, as though mindful of what once stood in this place.
Xian slowly stepped into the courtyard, boots brushing against shards of broken tile. As she inhaled, the breeze shifted—subtle, swirling, familiarly answering her breath. The Force was present here, not as a weight, but as a low, steady hum beneath her feet. Echoes of conflict. Echoes of survival.
A good place for both of them.
She closed her eyes and let her breath move the mist pooling in the low spaces of the ruin. It rippled outward in soft concentric waves, brushing around fallen stones and old scorch marks that no one had bothered to clean. This place had seen pain. But it also knew how to hold it without letting it rule.
Behind her, she felt him before she heard him.
A familiar presence—sharp, controlled, edged like a blade honed too many times. But today, there was something else beneath it: a steadiness she recognized. A warmth that hadn't always been there.
Xian didn't turn right away. She let him approach, let his steps echo through the broken hall. Only when he reached the threshold of the courtyard did she speak.
"Morning," she said softly, her voice carrying lightly across the open air. "You're right on time."
She turned then, and the rising sun caught the red sheen of her hair and the calm set of her expression. Not rigid. Not guarded. Just… present. Her eyes found his, steady and warm in a way that belonged entirely to him.
"You said you wanted to train," she continued, the faintest smile touching her lips. "And I meant it when I said I was holding you to it."
Her gaze drifted briefly to the ruins around them—old walls cracked with age, stone scorched by battles neither of them had seen. "I figured you'd be more comfortable out here," she admitted quietly. "Less noise. Less expectation. More space to breathe."
A breeze swept between them, brushing her cloak, tugging lightly at the hem of his. She let the air settle, then stepped back into the center of the courtyard. Her stance shifted—balanced, rooted, poised.
"This isn't about breaking anything," she said, her tone calm, confident. "It's about control. Yours, mine… both."
She lifted a hand, letting the wind curl around her fingers as though eager to begin.
"So," she said, dark eyes meeting his again with a quiet challenge.
"Let's see what we can learn from each other."
Veyran Solis
It should have felt oppressive.
Instead, Xian found it… quiet.
The morning sun pushed through drifting clouds, soft gold spilling over collapsed pillars and the remnants of old statues now reduced to little more than features smoothed by wind. The air was cool, tinged with the scent of old stone and damp earth. Even the breeze moved carefully here, as though mindful of what once stood in this place.
Xian slowly stepped into the courtyard, boots brushing against shards of broken tile. As she inhaled, the breeze shifted—subtle, swirling, familiarly answering her breath. The Force was present here, not as a weight, but as a low, steady hum beneath her feet. Echoes of conflict. Echoes of survival.
A good place for both of them.
She closed her eyes and let her breath move the mist pooling in the low spaces of the ruin. It rippled outward in soft concentric waves, brushing around fallen stones and old scorch marks that no one had bothered to clean. This place had seen pain. But it also knew how to hold it without letting it rule.
Behind her, she felt him before she heard him.
A familiar presence—sharp, controlled, edged like a blade honed too many times. But today, there was something else beneath it: a steadiness she recognized. A warmth that hadn't always been there.
Xian didn't turn right away. She let him approach, let his steps echo through the broken hall. Only when he reached the threshold of the courtyard did she speak.
"Morning," she said softly, her voice carrying lightly across the open air. "You're right on time."
She turned then, and the rising sun caught the red sheen of her hair and the calm set of her expression. Not rigid. Not guarded. Just… present. Her eyes found his, steady and warm in a way that belonged entirely to him.
"You said you wanted to train," she continued, the faintest smile touching her lips. "And I meant it when I said I was holding you to it."
Her gaze drifted briefly to the ruins around them—old walls cracked with age, stone scorched by battles neither of them had seen. "I figured you'd be more comfortable out here," she admitted quietly. "Less noise. Less expectation. More space to breathe."
A breeze swept between them, brushing her cloak, tugging lightly at the hem of his. She let the air settle, then stepped back into the center of the courtyard. Her stance shifted—balanced, rooted, poised.
"This isn't about breaking anything," she said, her tone calm, confident. "It's about control. Yours, mine… both."
She lifted a hand, letting the wind curl around her fingers as though eager to begin.
"So," she said, dark eyes meeting his again with a quiet challenge.
"Let's see what we can learn from each other."