grief is the great giver
"Much has changed," Efret commented to Casimir as they wondered through a neighborhood of wooden houses and storefronts. Visually, the Near-Surface Quarter of Deep Well appeared the exact same as Efret remembered it. She and Cora had explored very little of it on foot, but they had seen much of its expanse from above when they had entered the main cavern, rappelling down one of the ventilation wells.
Efret's features contorted in confusion rather than sorrow, a subtle distinction but one almost certainly not lost on the Echani. Due to both of the Sith's backgrounds in different and similar kinds of kinetic communication, they were beginning to understand one another on a subverbal level. Consequently, he didn't have to speak much to communicate with her. She did, however, still have to rely on her vocoder to relay her more complex thoughts auditorily.
"These people used to be friendly."
Though her visit here with Cora had been years ago, when Fondor had been tucked away safely in the cloud of Galactic Alliance territory and Efret had likewise been insulated by the waning Light, she still remembered the Luddite woman who had invited them into her house after they had happened to land in her garden. The quaint kitchen, the bread soup, the gaggle of children who may or may not have all been birthed by her.
But no children ran laughing and playing in the streets now. No adult passerby or shopkeeper tending a stall smiled, neither at each other nor the overworlders. The latter had once been welcomed by this culture of underground dwellers, even revered. Efret had read about the custom before experiencing it. Anyone brave enough to enter Deep Well from the surface was a a reminder of their estranged sun god Osdes-Zalir just as the daylight that was brought from the surface down into this cavern and the one below by a system of mirrors. To reject such reminders was not only disrespectful, it was deadly.
"Now they're terrified."
She could feel it. She could see it.
". . .I fear a groundquake is coming, one that will not move the earth but will move its people."
The words of the sufi that she and Cora had met that day came back to her as she and Cas walked on. At the time, she had thought the metaphorical groundquake to be the GA's mounting hostile policies against non-Sith Dark siders. Though the Deep Wellers themselves hadn't embodied any Dark side values or had any Dark side traditions, the history of their city was rooted in fear—a Dark side emotion, most Jedi would agree. And there was of course the optics of a civilization quite literally hiding from the light. Over the course of Fondor's pre-GA history, many of the ecumenopolitans had fought to protect the desert above Deep Well from development. In time, both the desert and the city had been designated heritage sites.
Efret had been concerned as a Jedi that that could have changed as quickly as overnight if the GA gave into its own fear of cultures they didn't understand—especially the ones begotten of the Dark, or so associated.
But now? The Master Sufi's concerns might have been much further-reaching than Efret or Cora could have predicted. He might have been speaking of an aboveground power transition, from GA to Sith Covenant control.
And though the former had respected the traditional autonomy of Deep Well's Satrap Dyad, Efret had a hard time believing that every Sith in the Covenant would be so respectful. Some well might, while others would likely leave the city alone simply out of not seeing any value here, but certainly at least one knight or lord—or even a particularly ambitious acolyte—would have been drawn to these caverns. The pacifist Deep Wellers likely wouldn't have put up much or any resistance, making their city an easy target for a Sith claiming space on the Covenant's patchwork of internal power.
"Go in peace. Try not to come back, but do if you must."
When Nazar the sufi had told her that on the Jedi's departure from his home, she hadn't paid much mind to the last part of his statement. In fact, his ward had held, even did still, and in such she hadn't had reason to return to Deep Well before now. A general sense of malaise in the Force had instead pulled her back. Efret was still as much a bleeding heart a Sith as she was when a Jedi, though the reasons she bleed had changed like the ambience around her. The abbreviated personal history she had with this place drove her to care now, rather than her sense of shared sentience with Deep Well's citizenry.
Selfish, not selfless anymore.
She tugged the hood of her dark robes further over her head, but not such to obscure her face from Casimir.
Last edited: