hesitation is defeat
DAUGHTER OF DUTY || THE SCION OF SARDUN
SOMEWHERE IN THE OUTER RIM

Maybe this was partly because she resented becoming a teacher altogether, and in her spare time, she didn’t consider how to better advance her students through heartfelt methods, or genuine understanding and care. Instead, in her spare time, she did what she’d always done since she’d inherited The Silik: Tracked suspicious activity that was potentially related to darksiders. It was still her foremost duty to have them expunged from the galaxy, and she took that far more seriously than the tutelage of a turncoat.
Recently, The Band had been tracking suspicious shipments suddenly coming to a planet that lit up records in Sardun’s archives. She might have deprioritized it, but one of the elder members insisted it was worth her time, and that she should have a sense of urgency about it.
Admittedly, Ishida was all too happy to embrace exigency, and eagerly redirected


Ishida held on to her sense of responsibility like it was a vaccine against something else. And it was. Focusing on duty protected her from the indignity of grief; something she’d still managed not to fully suffer since the death of her late Master.
“Well that half explains the shipments...” Ishida murmured to herself as the automated vessel discreetly lowered itself onto the barely-named planet somewhere in the Outer Rim. The coordinates the ship concealed itself at matched the trajectory of the deliveries.
Coordinates that matched the archives that recorded a dark entity subdied deep within a temple. The imprisonment sounded eternal, and impossible to undo.
Ishida had such faith in her late Master’s ability to see his will irrevocably done that she’d come alone. Driven more by curiosity, and some innate sensation she couldn’t quite put a finger on. Because of this inexplicable sense, she hadn’t invited any of The Brotherhood to join her. She did not ask for help. The last two times she'd asked for help she'd been abandoned, rejected by someone she held close — and the other had sacrificed themselves in death. Help wasn't something she was keen to accept again.
"..but this isn't right.." She said to no one. Because she hadn't invited anyone.
Also according to the ancient documentation in Sardun’s keep, the town should have been abandoned.
It wasn’t.
It was fully populated.
That innate, indescribable sensation prickled along her skin and she frowned deeply. The town was too busy for her to skirt around unnoticed. She felt a stabbing unease at the thought of exposure, and instead ran schematics for a topographic summary that might point her to where — ah, there. The ship’s navicomputer highlighted a foot route through a cave that would point her toward the temple.
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