Kalja Tal'Vera
D E L I B E R A T E
Coruscant
Kalja stepped off the transit platform into a corridor that hadn't fully woken yet. The lighting overhead flickered in soft intervals, not broken, just inconsistent enough to leave parts of the passage in a muted haze. The air was thinner here, tinged with recycled ozone and the faint metallic aftertaste of a system that had been running too long without care. Beneath it, almost out of place, something warmer drifted down from higher levels—sweet, subtle, and fleeting.
She didn't move right away.
The corridor carried sound strangely. A distant footstep echoed longer than it should have, stretching across the walls before fading into the hum of machinery buried somewhere behind the structure. It wasn't empty, not entirely, but it was quiet in a way that suggested intention rather than absence. The few who moved through it did so with purpose, their pace steady, their attention forward. No one lingered. No one wandered.
Kalja let her gaze settle without turning her head, tracking movement through reflection more than direct focus. A pair passed toward a lift further down, speaking in low tones that didn't carry. Another figure moved alone, hands tucked into worn fabric, disappearing through a side corridor without hesitation. There was no randomness to it. Everyone here knew where they were going—or at least wanted it to appear that way.
She stepped forward then, her pace aligning with the rhythm of the space without effort. There was nothing in her movement that called attention—no hesitation, no urgency. Her clothing helped with that. A simple tunic, fitted enough to sit cleanly against her frame without standing out, paired with durable pants and worn boots that made little sound against the floor. The belt at her waist carried weight, but it didn't shift or draw the eye. Everything about her settled into the corridor like it belonged there.
The way down wasn't hidden.
A lift stood recessed into the wall ahead, its doors half-open as if it had been called and forgotten. Two others approached it from different directions, neither acknowledging the other as they stepped inside. Kalja followed without breaking stride, slipping into the remaining space as the doors closed with a soft, final sound.
The descent was smooth, almost too smooth. No jolt, no mechanical complaint—just a steady drop that pressed lightly against her balance. She didn't look at the others. Instead, her attention shifted to the reflective surface of the interior paneling, catching fragments of movement without turning her head. One of them adjusted their stance, shifting weight from one foot to the other. The other remained still, eyes forward, unreadable.
No one spoke.
The air changed before the lift finished its descent.
It thickened, warmer, carrying more than just the sterile scent of upper levels. There was oil here, and heat, and something else layered beneath it—voices, faint at first, then more defined as the doors parted. Not loud, not chaotic, but present. Alive.
Kalja stepped out into it without pause.
The corridor below was narrower, the lighting dimmer, the hum of the structure replaced by something more organic. Movement increased, but only slightly. Enough to suggest activity, not enough to expose it. People moved in small clusters or alone, their paths intersecting without acknowledgment. There was a direction to it now, subtle but consistent—a slow pull deeper into the level.
Something in the space shifted.
It wasn't visible, not directly. More a pressure than a presence, like the air itself had weight to it. Kalja didn't react outwardly. Her pace remained the same, her posture unchanged, but the awareness settled in quietly, acknowledged and filed without disruption. Whatever this place was, it held more than just trade.
It wasn't marked—but it didn't need to be.
The bazaar revealed itself in fragments first. A break in the corridor where the walls widened just enough to allow for gathering. Light spilled unevenly from within—warmer tones, flickering sources, illumination that came from stalls rather than fixtures. Voices layered over one another, low and measured, never rising high enough to carry beyond the space.
Kalja slowed a fraction before the threshold, not stopping, just enough to let the movement inside come into focus.
No one announced themselves. No one called out wares. Transactions happened in close proximity, words exchanged in tones meant only for those involved. Objects rested on tables or within cases, some covered, others deliberately visible. There was no uniformity to it—only intention. Each piece placed, each interaction controlled.
Her attention moved across the space without lingering. A figure leaning too casually against a stall, watching rather than engaging. Another examining something small, their posture too rigid for simple curiosity. A pair speaking closely, their focus entirely inward, cutting themselves off from the rest of the room.
Nothing loud. Nothing obvious.
But nothing accidental.
The scent from above drifted down again, faint but distinct—warm batter, crisp edges, something sweet carried through vents that didn't quite seal the levels apart. It didn't belong here. It cut through the density of oil and metal, a reminder of something simpler, something untouched by whatever this place traded in.
Kalja let it pass without reacting.
She settled into the edge of the space, not entering fully, not holding back. Just enough to be part of the movement without becoming a point within it. Her posture remained easy, her expression neutral, her presence unremarkable to anyone not looking for it.
She wasn't here to announce herself.
She was here to see what revealed itself first.
Then she moved.