sharpest teeth
DEEP SPACE LISTENING POST // NEAREST SYSTEM: SELVARIS
ALLIANCE-BROTHERHOOD BORDERSPACE
DISTRESS SIGNAL RECEIVED
you sold your knowledge to sink the silent cries of pain
Zaavik Perl
The rumble of the engines on the x-wing came to an abrupt halt, an eerie silence filling its wake. A glance back to the screen upon the mantle affirmed this was the place. The outward devastation the mirialan expected from a distress signal this close to the border was nowhere to be seen. Instead, there was nothing- no hail when her ship made the jump, no acknowledgment of her docking. The lack of any signs of life was much more unsettling than if the whole post had been lit up. When a threat reveals itself, you can confront it; when it hid, the hunter became the hunted.
"You stay here, bud." She whispered to the bb-unit in the back of her cockpit. "And be quiet! I have a bad feeling this'll be enough trouble without you causing more."
The assault on her senses came on the moment she jumped from the ship. The smell of iron filled her nostrils, so thick it almost caused her to gag. Somewhere beneath it was the smoke of blaster fire. She tensed, looking around the hangar slowly. No signs of life- no boogeymen in the shadows. Still, the hairs on the back of her neck stood straight. Reaching to the force, trails of light extended from herself outward, probing. It didn't take but a few moments for the wall of pain and desperation to reveal itself. A sharp exhale channeled their tension, the Jedi fighting to separate herself from the snaring web of negative emotion.
The kind of fear that made you want to scream and run took root in her bones- instinctual, the innate desire to survive demanding you leave and never return. Determination drove Xashe forward in spite of it. Such darkness was only birthed by death- and whoever these people were, they deserved justice for their anguish. A sure hand slipped the blade of deliverance from her belt, golden light coming to life in her hand. Iva seemed to vibrate at the call. Xashe could feel the crystal's recognition of the darkness, reminded of the corruption once imposed on it. It was compelled by the same duty its wielder was.
The destruction didn't reveal itself until she was firmly within the bowels of the small station. First, a few overturned crates, missed blaster shots gone right through the metal sheets of the wall. Rounding the corner of the hall was like entering a different place. Four corpses, uniformed in the colors of the navy, littered the ground. The blood of one had created a pool throughout the hall. Red footsteps led onward from it. Xashe knelt gently, inspecting their faces. Gingerly, a hand reached for the top of an elder man, pulling the cloth away to reveal a cauterized wound across his belly. The groan almost caused her to jump. Her eyes quickly flickered to the face of the soldier, finding his half-open, swimming with anguish.
"Please... Hel-lp me, J-J-Jed-" A cough interrupted his words, blood spilling from his mouth with it.
Her eyes flickered back to the wound. Grief filled the lines of her face as the man radiated his own. Helplessness overwhelmed her, leading to a stroke of frustration. She couldn't save him; all she could do was ease his passing. A soft blue glow took to his pale skin, her hand growing warm as the light flowing through it. The pink wound seemed to become angrier at her energy, but the man relaxed, his expression fading to peaceful bliss. A few moments later, it slackened, blank. There was no time given to acknowledge the hollowness the encounter had left within. A quiet beep drew her attention. Blue eyes flickered upward, towards the soft glow of screens escaping a cracked door at the end of the hall. Xashe rose, boots leaving their own set of prints as she approached the room.
"You stay here, bud." She whispered to the bb-unit in the back of her cockpit. "And be quiet! I have a bad feeling this'll be enough trouble without you causing more."
The assault on her senses came on the moment she jumped from the ship. The smell of iron filled her nostrils, so thick it almost caused her to gag. Somewhere beneath it was the smoke of blaster fire. She tensed, looking around the hangar slowly. No signs of life- no boogeymen in the shadows. Still, the hairs on the back of her neck stood straight. Reaching to the force, trails of light extended from herself outward, probing. It didn't take but a few moments for the wall of pain and desperation to reveal itself. A sharp exhale channeled their tension, the Jedi fighting to separate herself from the snaring web of negative emotion.
The kind of fear that made you want to scream and run took root in her bones- instinctual, the innate desire to survive demanding you leave and never return. Determination drove Xashe forward in spite of it. Such darkness was only birthed by death- and whoever these people were, they deserved justice for their anguish. A sure hand slipped the blade of deliverance from her belt, golden light coming to life in her hand. Iva seemed to vibrate at the call. Xashe could feel the crystal's recognition of the darkness, reminded of the corruption once imposed on it. It was compelled by the same duty its wielder was.
The destruction didn't reveal itself until she was firmly within the bowels of the small station. First, a few overturned crates, missed blaster shots gone right through the metal sheets of the wall. Rounding the corner of the hall was like entering a different place. Four corpses, uniformed in the colors of the navy, littered the ground. The blood of one had created a pool throughout the hall. Red footsteps led onward from it. Xashe knelt gently, inspecting their faces. Gingerly, a hand reached for the top of an elder man, pulling the cloth away to reveal a cauterized wound across his belly. The groan almost caused her to jump. Her eyes quickly flickered to the face of the soldier, finding his half-open, swimming with anguish.
"Please... Hel-lp me, J-J-Jed-" A cough interrupted his words, blood spilling from his mouth with it.
Her eyes flickered back to the wound. Grief filled the lines of her face as the man radiated his own. Helplessness overwhelmed her, leading to a stroke of frustration. She couldn't save him; all she could do was ease his passing. A soft blue glow took to his pale skin, her hand growing warm as the light flowing through it. The pink wound seemed to become angrier at her energy, but the man relaxed, his expression fading to peaceful bliss. A few moments later, it slackened, blank. There was no time given to acknowledge the hollowness the encounter had left within. A quiet beep drew her attention. Blue eyes flickered upward, towards the soft glow of screens escaping a cracked door at the end of the hall. Xashe rose, boots leaving their own set of prints as she approached the room.