Darth Strelok
Ryloth, sixteen days after hunt for witch began in earnest...
A woman walked in the midday heat, with an exhausted, grim look to her features. The rumor had been ignored by her at first, but eventually her paranoia had won out. The old crusade in her bones not quite dead. The nightmares happened at random now. She wasn't well armed...nothing more than her cortosis weave cane. Everything else had been left on the ship. What little she had, anyway. She had ventured into CIS territory mostly to confirm the story from the one surviving witness that could still form semi coherent sentences. He was here somewhere on Ryloth. His family had wanted her to come to the farm lands. And to come alone. The first real scrap since her pursuit of this beast had resumed. The Mind-Binder tried to lick the inside of her brain, taint it with her venom. Skip. She had found herself in a marketplace. She'd been out of the Force game for a while. There were witches here on Ryloth. She was glad all she had on her was a cane. Drew less attention that way. She made sure to balance on it, to give the impression she needed it. After all, she had once been a hundred years old thirty seconds ago, an ancient Jedi Master reborn again. Wait. That was false. Scrap. Come back to reality.
Was not really looking to stay, she thought. Ryloth had its charm, and certainly hadn't been completely destroyed like she had witnessed a thousand times before in other falsehoods her brain tried to convince her of. The food being sold in the open had a delicious smell. She was happy at the false memory of being a master chef. That was always fun when it played out. Her stomach grumbled. Food. Meat. Spice. Running on automatic, the lithe, tan skinned woman with short brown hair, green eyes and a soft face clad in black biker gear sat down at a cheap, open air restuarant and silently signalled the waiter and ordered a meat wrap and some water from the menu.
That lead had better be worth it. If it was not it might be months before she picked up the trail. Maybe never. She hated the Mind-Binder.
Keep it together, she told herself mentally. Skip. The food had arrived. She was greatful when reality sped things up at times. She silently ate the wrap., watching various people go by, not sure if even a quarter of them were actually present.
A woman walked in the midday heat, with an exhausted, grim look to her features. The rumor had been ignored by her at first, but eventually her paranoia had won out. The old crusade in her bones not quite dead. The nightmares happened at random now. She wasn't well armed...nothing more than her cortosis weave cane. Everything else had been left on the ship. What little she had, anyway. She had ventured into CIS territory mostly to confirm the story from the one surviving witness that could still form semi coherent sentences. He was here somewhere on Ryloth. His family had wanted her to come to the farm lands. And to come alone. The first real scrap since her pursuit of this beast had resumed. The Mind-Binder tried to lick the inside of her brain, taint it with her venom. Skip. She had found herself in a marketplace. She'd been out of the Force game for a while. There were witches here on Ryloth. She was glad all she had on her was a cane. Drew less attention that way. She made sure to balance on it, to give the impression she needed it. After all, she had once been a hundred years old thirty seconds ago, an ancient Jedi Master reborn again. Wait. That was false. Scrap. Come back to reality.
Was not really looking to stay, she thought. Ryloth had its charm, and certainly hadn't been completely destroyed like she had witnessed a thousand times before in other falsehoods her brain tried to convince her of. The food being sold in the open had a delicious smell. She was happy at the false memory of being a master chef. That was always fun when it played out. Her stomach grumbled. Food. Meat. Spice. Running on automatic, the lithe, tan skinned woman with short brown hair, green eyes and a soft face clad in black biker gear sat down at a cheap, open air restuarant and silently signalled the waiter and ordered a meat wrap and some water from the menu.
That lead had better be worth it. If it was not it might be months before she picked up the trail. Maybe never. She hated the Mind-Binder.
Keep it together, she told herself mentally. Skip. The food had arrived. She was greatful when reality sped things up at times. She silently ate the wrap., watching various people go by, not sure if even a quarter of them were actually present.