Figlia d' 'a Tempesta
This was a good thing, Cora reasoned; while she believed that Jedi shouldn’t cloister themselves away in abbeys, away from the people they were supposed to protect and understand, Dawn was meant to provide guidance for the wayward, the questioning, and the penitent.
Naturally, the temple sometimes housed Darksiders. Only those who’d come of their own free will would find admittance, after intense scrutiny and sometimes the administration of Force suppression technology. Not out of cruelty, but of necessity. Redemption was almost never out of reach, but that didn't mean eschewing caution.
Cora had come not as a curator, neither as a warden, nor a jailor. She’d come for herself. Her center had shifted, and perhaps she’d find it somewhere in the crisp air or the snow-worn stone of the Dawn Temple.
The fur lining of her heavy cloak shifted as she extended a hand. A pebble fell from her fingers as they uncurled. She watched as the small stone slipped beneath the surface of the pond, still and unmoving like a sheet of liquid glass.
No ripples. No disturbance. It was like nothing had happened, but the stone was still in the pond.
“Huh,” she said, breath clouding in the frigid cold.