The Shadow of Csilla
The hospital room was a cavern of artificial twilight, the lighting kept low for those recovering from the jagged edges of trauma. Shade sat upright, defying the doctors' orders to remain prone. Lying down was a luxury her body couldn't afford; the horizontal position pressed too hard against the site of the incursion—where the steel had slipped beneath her right shoulder blade.
Even with the cooling hum of bacta therapy and the precision of surgical repair, the wound remained a raw, pulsing thing beneath sealed skin. The blade had struck bone, shredding muscle in its wake, but the poison that followed had been the true architect of her current state.
Her right arm was a ghost, secured against her torso in a medical brace that felt more like a cage than a precaution. When she had first drifted into consciousness, she had reached for movement. The response had been a pathetic twitch in her fingers and a sudden, white-hot flare of agony that radiated across her back like a solar storm.
Nerve shock. Poison exposure. Muscle trauma.
She accepted these diagnoses with the same cold pragmatism she applied to gravity—a physical fact of the universe that could not be bargained with. But acceptance did not mean she enjoyed the stillness.
Her crimson eyes drifted to the transparisteel window. Below, the city of Moena was a sprawling tapestry of light and commerce. Ships wove through aerial lanes in a silent, glowing dance, while the ground traffic pulsed through the streets like blood through a vein. The galaxy was moving. Operations were advancing. The board remained in play, even if she had been momentarily sidelined.
Shade looked down at the datapad resting on her lap. Working with only her left hand was an exercise in patience, but a necessary one. Republic Intelligence had been thorough, funneling reports into her encrypted queue: financial trails, movement logs, and the cold data extracted from the assassin's gear.
The man himself had died before he could be broken. That was expected. The Veiled Sight prioritized silence over survival; they were a cult of shadows that viewed compromise as a heresy.
As she scrolled, the data began to take shape. The poison on the blade hadn't been a general-purpose toxin; it was a bespoke creation, designed specifically to destabilize a high-value target without the immediate mess of a corpse. It was an investment. It was an intention.
Among the shifting threads of shell companies and obscured smuggling routes, a single name began to crystallize on the periphery of the network.
Vogga-Besadii.
A person whose reputation was built on the quiet acquisition of influence through deniable intermediaries. There was no smoking gun, no direct link to the Veiled Sight that would hold up in a court of law, but the mathematical symmetry of the patterns was unmistakable.
Infrastructure. Protection. Funding.
Shade's gaze lingered on the name, the red glow of her eyes reflecting off the screen.
So, they had rebuilt.
Organizations like the Veiled Sight were like a persistent infection; they didn't vanish just because a few cells were exposed. They mutated, found new patrons, and reinforced the structure beneath the skin. The knife in her back hadn't just been an assassination attempt—it was a formal announcement. They knew she was hunting, and they wanted her to know they were watching in return.
Shade leaned back, easing her weight away from her injured shoulder with a slow, disciplined exhale. Outside, the lights of the city continued to burn, indifferent to the wars fought in the dark.
Her arm would mend. The poison would eventually flush from her marrow. Recovery was merely a logistical delay.
The Veiled Sight had made a tactical error. In their attempt to warn her off, they had provided her with a thread. And now that she had Vogga-Besadii as a point of origin, it was only a matter of time before she began to pull.
Piece by piece, the shadow would unravel.
Xiaoyu
Even with the cooling hum of bacta therapy and the precision of surgical repair, the wound remained a raw, pulsing thing beneath sealed skin. The blade had struck bone, shredding muscle in its wake, but the poison that followed had been the true architect of her current state.
Her right arm was a ghost, secured against her torso in a medical brace that felt more like a cage than a precaution. When she had first drifted into consciousness, she had reached for movement. The response had been a pathetic twitch in her fingers and a sudden, white-hot flare of agony that radiated across her back like a solar storm.
Nerve shock. Poison exposure. Muscle trauma.
She accepted these diagnoses with the same cold pragmatism she applied to gravity—a physical fact of the universe that could not be bargained with. But acceptance did not mean she enjoyed the stillness.
Her crimson eyes drifted to the transparisteel window. Below, the city of Moena was a sprawling tapestry of light and commerce. Ships wove through aerial lanes in a silent, glowing dance, while the ground traffic pulsed through the streets like blood through a vein. The galaxy was moving. Operations were advancing. The board remained in play, even if she had been momentarily sidelined.
Shade looked down at the datapad resting on her lap. Working with only her left hand was an exercise in patience, but a necessary one. Republic Intelligence had been thorough, funneling reports into her encrypted queue: financial trails, movement logs, and the cold data extracted from the assassin's gear.
The man himself had died before he could be broken. That was expected. The Veiled Sight prioritized silence over survival; they were a cult of shadows that viewed compromise as a heresy.
As she scrolled, the data began to take shape. The poison on the blade hadn't been a general-purpose toxin; it was a bespoke creation, designed specifically to destabilize a high-value target without the immediate mess of a corpse. It was an investment. It was an intention.
Among the shifting threads of shell companies and obscured smuggling routes, a single name began to crystallize on the periphery of the network.
Vogga-Besadii.
A person whose reputation was built on the quiet acquisition of influence through deniable intermediaries. There was no smoking gun, no direct link to the Veiled Sight that would hold up in a court of law, but the mathematical symmetry of the patterns was unmistakable.
Infrastructure. Protection. Funding.
Shade's gaze lingered on the name, the red glow of her eyes reflecting off the screen.
So, they had rebuilt.
Organizations like the Veiled Sight were like a persistent infection; they didn't vanish just because a few cells were exposed. They mutated, found new patrons, and reinforced the structure beneath the skin. The knife in her back hadn't just been an assassination attempt—it was a formal announcement. They knew she was hunting, and they wanted her to know they were watching in return.
Shade leaned back, easing her weight away from her injured shoulder with a slow, disciplined exhale. Outside, the lights of the city continued to burn, indifferent to the wars fought in the dark.
Her arm would mend. The poison would eventually flush from her marrow. Recovery was merely a logistical delay.
The Veiled Sight had made a tactical error. In their attempt to warn her off, they had provided her with a thread. And now that she had Vogga-Besadii as a point of origin, it was only a matter of time before she began to pull.
Piece by piece, the shadow would unravel.