Acier Moonbound
Son of None
S E R E N N O
O U T E R- R I M
O U T E R- R I M

The shuttle had landed hours ago. He hadn't paid for it. That was the first red flag.
Acier stood with his back against an old durasteel railing, chipped with time and rusted at the seams. He watched Serenno's twin moons rise behind the silhouette of broken spires. The planet was richer than the filth he was used to, but it wore its opulence like a tired noble clinging to heirlooms no one remembered.
His breath fogged slightly in the evening chill. One hand rested near the inside pocket of his jacket, thumb brushing the familiar metal curve of the lightsaber he didn't use. Not here. Not yet. This place didn't feel right. Not like Peridea did, with its decay and whispering wind. Not like Bonadan, either. Serenno was… still. Controlled. Even its shadows felt curated.
Whoever sent him here wasn't looking to threaten him. At least not yet. The contact came two days ago. No name. Just a relay message through an encrypted burner node Tessk had set up back when Ace still trusted him. The message was short:
"Opportunity.
You've proven useful.
Serenno. Docks. Old Quarter.
Your talents are required.
Transport paid."
You've proven useful.
Serenno. Docks. Old Quarter.
Your talents are required.
Transport paid."
At first, Ace figured it was Black Sun following up on the Peridea job. Maybe a formal offer. Maybe cleanup. Either way, he'd played with enough syndicate politics to know you don't say no when someone's buying your ticket across the stars. You board. You listen. You keep a hand near your holster. Also, extra credits couldn't hurt when you were funding an expedition into finding out who your folks were.
Still, something about the encryption didn't sit right. It was clean. Too clean. Almost sterile. Black Sun's code was quick and dirty—meant to confuse slicers, not impress them. This was surgical. Precise. And too formal. Something he wasn't used to.
He shifted his weight, eyes scanning the square below. A trickle of pedestrians moved past slowly, faces unreadable in the dying light. One of them was supposed to meet him. No signal. No message. Just a time. A place.
Classic setup. Could this be a hit? Had Tessk found him? No, it couldn't be. Tessk wasn't one for subtlety, if he knew where Ace was he'd have made it known.
He let out a slow exhale, glancing skyward. Freckles dappled his nose, just barely catching the light. He'd grown stronger in the Force, he was still unrefined, he wasn't that arrogant - but he was improving. His sense for when things were off had gotten better to. As of right now, things seemed fine. Maybe this wasn't a set up. Or maybe, he'd come to trust in the Force too much.

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