Veyla Krinn
Character
Concordia's cantinas were never loud in the way outsiders expected. The moon didn't do excess very well. Sound here stayed low, pressed into stone and metal the same way everything else was, shaped by a culture that valued listening more than boasting.
Veyla Krinn stepped inside without ceremony, the door sealing behind her with a muted hiss. Cold clung to her armor from the walk-in, a thin layer of frost melting slowly along the edges of her boots. She paused just long enough to let her eyes adjust, to take in the room without drawing attention to herself.
Low light. Recycled warmth. The smell of oil, strong liquor, and iron dust that never quite left Concordia, no matter how many times it was scrubbed down. A few locals occupied the outer tables, helmets close at hand, conversations carried in half-murmurs and nods rather than laughter. No one looked twice at her. Exactly as she preferred.
She moved toward the bar and rested one forearm against its scarred surface, ordering something strong and unremarkable. This was a stop for information, not indulgence. A place to listen, to think, to let the day settle before moving on.
It was only when she shifted her stance slightly, angling to give herself a better view of the room, that she felt it.
Not the Force. Not danger.
Recognition.
Her gaze slid to the side, slow and controlled, landing on another woman seated a short distance away. Armor that was worn differently from most. Not careless. Not ceremonial. Lived-in, adjusted for movement rather than display. The posture was what caught her first. Relaxed, but not loose. The kind of stillness that came from someone who knew exactly how fast they could stand if they needed to.
Veyla did not stare. She never did.
But something about the woman's presence tugged at old instincts, the kind honed in corridors and on drop ramps, in places where Mandalorians crossed paths without meaning to, and history had a habit of intruding.
Her drink arrived. Veyla took it, nodded once to the bartender, then waited a beat longer than necessary.
Unexpected meetings were rarely accidents on Concordia.
She turned slightly on the stool, enough to bring the other woman into her peripheral vision without forcing the moment.
"If this is your idea of keeping a low profile," Veyla said evenly, voice pitched just loud enough to carry across the space between them, "you picked the right moon and the wrong cantina."
She lifted her glass in a small, acknowledging gesture. Not a challenge. Not an invitation.
"Mind if I ask what brings you here?"
The question hung there, calm and open, the way things did when neither party was in a hurry to decide whether this meeting would end in conversation or silence.
Korra Kast
Veyla Krinn stepped inside without ceremony, the door sealing behind her with a muted hiss. Cold clung to her armor from the walk-in, a thin layer of frost melting slowly along the edges of her boots. She paused just long enough to let her eyes adjust, to take in the room without drawing attention to herself.
Low light. Recycled warmth. The smell of oil, strong liquor, and iron dust that never quite left Concordia, no matter how many times it was scrubbed down. A few locals occupied the outer tables, helmets close at hand, conversations carried in half-murmurs and nods rather than laughter. No one looked twice at her. Exactly as she preferred.
She moved toward the bar and rested one forearm against its scarred surface, ordering something strong and unremarkable. This was a stop for information, not indulgence. A place to listen, to think, to let the day settle before moving on.
It was only when she shifted her stance slightly, angling to give herself a better view of the room, that she felt it.
Not the Force. Not danger.
Recognition.
Her gaze slid to the side, slow and controlled, landing on another woman seated a short distance away. Armor that was worn differently from most. Not careless. Not ceremonial. Lived-in, adjusted for movement rather than display. The posture was what caught her first. Relaxed, but not loose. The kind of stillness that came from someone who knew exactly how fast they could stand if they needed to.
Veyla did not stare. She never did.
But something about the woman's presence tugged at old instincts, the kind honed in corridors and on drop ramps, in places where Mandalorians crossed paths without meaning to, and history had a habit of intruding.
Her drink arrived. Veyla took it, nodded once to the bartender, then waited a beat longer than necessary.
Unexpected meetings were rarely accidents on Concordia.
She turned slightly on the stool, enough to bring the other woman into her peripheral vision without forcing the moment.
"If this is your idea of keeping a low profile," Veyla said evenly, voice pitched just loud enough to carry across the space between them, "you picked the right moon and the wrong cantina."
She lifted her glass in a small, acknowledging gesture. Not a challenge. Not an invitation.
"Mind if I ask what brings you here?"
The question hung there, calm and open, the way things did when neither party was in a hurry to decide whether this meeting would end in conversation or silence.