Talia Larkin Swift
Character
The morning air carried the crisp scent of pine and mountain water, cool enough that each breath felt fresh without biting. Talia had wandered away from the guest lodge shortly after sunrise with little more than her satchel, notebook, and an almost inexhaustible curiosity. Caelora had a quiet rhythm unlike any world she had visited before. It lacked the hurried pace of Coruscant, the solemn grandeur of Ossus, and the endless reminders of conflict that seemed woven into so much of the galaxy. Here, people simply... lived.
She paused beside a stone bridge spanning a narrow stream, kneeling to study the craftsmanship rather than crossing it immediately. The bridge itself was nothing extraordinary at first glance, yet the more she looked, the more deliberate it became. Every stone had been fitted without mortar, each chosen to complement the natural curve of the creek instead of forcing the water into a straighter path. Moss had claimed portions of the lower courses, not because the builders had neglected them, but because they had left room for nature to reclaim what it wished. Talia sketched the arch carefully into her notebook, adding notes in the margin about the tool marks, the weathering, and the subtle asymmetry that suggested the bridge had been repaired several times over the years rather than replaced.
A few pages earlier, she had already filled observations on the town itself. There were no imposing monuments celebrating famous leaders, no statues demanding admiration. Instead, she found herself recording things most historians might overlook: benches positioned beneath old trees where neighbors naturally gathered, rain channels carved into streets that doubled as flower beds, workshops built with wide windows so passersby could see artisans at work. Every small decision revealed something about the people who had made it. Civilizations, she had come to realize, were rarely defined by their grandest achievements. They were defined by the choices they repeated every single day.
The realization made her smile as she rested the notebook against one knee. It wasn't often an archaeologist had the privilege of studying a civilization before it became history. Usually, she arrived centuries too late, left to infer lives from broken pottery and weathered foundations. Here, she could simply ask why a bridge had been built a certain way, or why a public square faced the morning sun instead of the afternoon. The answers were still alive, carried by the people themselves rather than buried beneath layers of sediment.
She had just begun measuring the width of one of the hand-carved stones with a small folding ruler when the sound of approaching footsteps reached her from the path behind. Without looking up immediately, she shifted slightly to make room on the bridge, assuming another early riser was simply out enjoying the morning. Only after jotting down one final measurement did she glance over her shoulder, offering the newcomer an easy, welcoming smile.
"Good morning," she said, tucking a loose strand of blue hair behind one ear. "I promise I'm not blocking the whole bridge."
Nolan ork
She paused beside a stone bridge spanning a narrow stream, kneeling to study the craftsmanship rather than crossing it immediately. The bridge itself was nothing extraordinary at first glance, yet the more she looked, the more deliberate it became. Every stone had been fitted without mortar, each chosen to complement the natural curve of the creek instead of forcing the water into a straighter path. Moss had claimed portions of the lower courses, not because the builders had neglected them, but because they had left room for nature to reclaim what it wished. Talia sketched the arch carefully into her notebook, adding notes in the margin about the tool marks, the weathering, and the subtle asymmetry that suggested the bridge had been repaired several times over the years rather than replaced.
A few pages earlier, she had already filled observations on the town itself. There were no imposing monuments celebrating famous leaders, no statues demanding admiration. Instead, she found herself recording things most historians might overlook: benches positioned beneath old trees where neighbors naturally gathered, rain channels carved into streets that doubled as flower beds, workshops built with wide windows so passersby could see artisans at work. Every small decision revealed something about the people who had made it. Civilizations, she had come to realize, were rarely defined by their grandest achievements. They were defined by the choices they repeated every single day.
The realization made her smile as she rested the notebook against one knee. It wasn't often an archaeologist had the privilege of studying a civilization before it became history. Usually, she arrived centuries too late, left to infer lives from broken pottery and weathered foundations. Here, she could simply ask why a bridge had been built a certain way, or why a public square faced the morning sun instead of the afternoon. The answers were still alive, carried by the people themselves rather than buried beneath layers of sediment.
She had just begun measuring the width of one of the hand-carved stones with a small folding ruler when the sound of approaching footsteps reached her from the path behind. Without looking up immediately, she shifted slightly to make room on the bridge, assuming another early riser was simply out enjoying the morning. Only after jotting down one final measurement did she glance over her shoulder, offering the newcomer an easy, welcoming smile.
"Good morning," she said, tucking a loose strand of blue hair behind one ear. "I promise I'm not blocking the whole bridge."