Star Wars Roleplay: Chaos

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Tags: Desert Flower Desert Flower
Attire: Link

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Candlelight had long since abandoned the corners of the room. What remained came from thick thick blue wax cylinders finally burned low, each weeping trails of softened wax down their sides. One had toppled entirely, spilling across animal skins, papers, and scattered machine parts before hardening, not fully set in the desert heat, just enough to leave a ruinous mess across the table.

No effort had been made to clean it, in fact the man hunched there seemed content among disorder. Before him lay a feather cut to a sharper edge, two mud-cast cups, one marked with the sun, the other the moon and a shallow bowl that rattled when he shook it before he poured five small animal bones out of it with a clatter to the table.

None of it made any true sense, or to him it did at least..

He clicked his tongue and reached idly for a rich orange-yellow fruit resting nearby, grown by one of the oasis tribes beyond the settlements. His stained, mismatched teeth pierced the skin. Juice burst free and ran over split, weathered lips. He scarcely noticed. His attention remained fixed on the papers before him.

Then he stopped. Not a wondrous pause for amusement; but a true body clenching stop. Juice ran from his chin and struck the cloth below, darkening fabric marked again with the symbol of the sun.

“No.” He muttered, his voice coarse and unused for many a day and night. “No, no, no.” He rose with painful effort, frail with tremendous age, leaning hard upon a carved staff as he crossed to a chest against the far wall. With near ceremonial strain he dragged the lid aside and pulled free another bundle of animal skins.
“It was wrong,” he whispered, half in shock, half in wonder. “It was always wrong...and now it is right.” His crooked teeth bared in sudden joy. “They are all here. All of them.”

He made his way towards his door, animal skin sheets with star charts and planetary maps across them in his arms. “I must tell the chieftains, they must know. They have to know!”
His voice rose into something wild.

“It is time.”


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“Don’t go easy on the boy.” The voice was harsh and thick with the accent of those who breathed the holy sands of Thyrsus every day. It belonged to Kariis Vahel, husband to the chieftain of the Varahari Tribe; a brute of a man whose skin bore the dark mark of Thyrsian blood. “He’s no pup now.”

“Who said anything about going easy on him?”
The woman’s voice was beautiful but with an air of threat. She was Echani, though plainly Varahari now. Blue-set tattoos marked her face and throat. Around her brow rested the great gold-ringed headdress worn by tribal chiefs at the seasonal gathering, amber stones woven through its bands to proclaim rank. “If he wants to play hero, he deserves to be beaten.”

The boy in question was no boy at all.

Tanith stood tall among his people, broad of shoulder, sun-burnished and lean with hard living. Thin white hair, cropped close to the scalp, made his pale blue eyes seem brighter still. Like the rest of the Varahari, he wore festival colours; yellow and green wraps, gold-threaded reds, polished ornaments that caught the light.

Every part of him belonged to the desert tribes.
Every season, when the first waters came down from the far northern mountains, the tribes gathered at Nervahrim Reach. Here they traded. Here they spoke of herd routes, storms, raiders, and old grudges. Here they dressed in riotous colour to honour the gods who kept them alive.

Even the Gorani had arrived on time this year; fire-benders from the volcanic south, seldom punctual and never welcome for long. It promised to be a fine gathering. For Tanith, it had already gone exactly as expected.

Kariis had called them into council shortly after arrival. Word had travelled quickly that Tanith and another young warrior had come to blows during the seven-day journey west. Such disputes were common enough among the tribe. Breaking the other man’s nose had been tolerated. Breaking his jaw had made it memorable.

That might have passed at home. Not here. At the gathering, law stood above pride. Here balance was paid in kind, an eye for an eye.

The chieftain herself: Troni, had insisted on judgement. Any excuse to strike the boy, she had said loudly, to the delight of the others. Tanith knew better. Two nights earlier, Troni had slipped beneath his travel sheets. She was chieftain. Such things were taken, not offered.

He had refused her. So Tanith took the punishment.

Three clean punches.

One to the eye. One to the mouth. The last she drove hard into his groin. He had folded into the dust while the tribe roared with laughter. They understood the game as well as he did.

This was how strength was measured. This was how the desert kept its people hard.

“Silly boy,” Kariis said now, hauling him back upright and giving him an approving once over. He slapped a heavy hand onto Tanith’s shoulder. “You took it well. She’s always had a mean left hook.”

His laughter boomed from deep in his chest.

“The communal feast begins soon. There’s a cave beyond the shanties. Fresh water gathers there. Wash yourself clean and bring enough back to re-wet our souls.”

“Of course, Kariis,”
Tanith said through a jaw that still throbbed like a cracked stone. “I’ll return soon.”

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The caves were sacred to all who knew them. Natural water was rare on Thyrsus. To hear the slow drip of it from stone was enough to draw prayer from even the faithless. Every tribal Echani made pilgrimage to such places at least once in their life.

Tanith lowered himself with a wince onto cool damp rock beside the pool as he bowed his head and gave prayer. “Thyr.” he murmured to the sun.

He dipped his fingers into the water and almost sighed at the shock of the cold. Then he cupped a handful and pressed it gently to the swelling around his eye. Another he poured across his bare collarbone after unclasping the throat fastening of his robe, the water running down his chest like stolen treasure.

For a while he simply breathed.

Then he opened his eyes.

And what he saw would change his fate forever…

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Tags: The Pale Nomad The Pale Nomad
Attire: Link


Her back hurt. It always hurt now. And she refused to permit her daughter to resolve the matter. The self-inflicted punishment for the lifelong lie she had carried was her penance towards the husband she adored so. Though he did not know, nor understand there was any need.

Despite the pain, Zava pulled her obstinate blurrg with a lead, connected to the harness around its rotund form. She had worked all year to produce the tapestries which were now rolled into bundles and piled high upon the aging cargo sled. Last year had not been a good year for sales at the Reach meet. With each step Zava took, she prayed to Thyr that it would be better this year.

Her tapestries depicted ancient Echani and Thyrsian legends. Myths of ancient heroes, monsters and prophecies yet to be fulfilled. They had sold well when she was a child, but were increasingly seen more for their beauty than their cultural and religious value. For more than just the loss of income, did Zava mourn.

"Let me take the lead." It was the gruff, yet soft voice of her beloved husband, Tagh. He had been a good helpmeet these many years. A loyal worker, lover and father to her only child. When seeking a companion for life, Zava could have asked for nothing better than this man that only knew healing, and kindness.

"You have your own mess to pull," she said. Her pure white eyes looked towards him. He was less pure Echani than she, his eyes a dark grey but she still saw their beauty. With her lineage, she could have married further up the tribal hierachy, many still mocked her for settling for a dark eyed healer, who was seen as little more than a servant by many. But she had married for love, and for that which was hidden.

"Xiri pulls it. Here," Tagh moved to take the lead from Zava, who simply swatted his hand.

"Fine. Then I shall provide you with company," he said, after a moment of nursing his hand.

"Thyr bless me, you are too good for me," Zava said. It wasn't true, save for one aspect. At least from the point of view of others. Zava was tall for their tribe, let alone among the women of her tribe. Aside from her daughter, she was the tallest of the Nor. Her long, tightly braided white hair was maintained by the power of Thyrsus' sun, but also darkened by the persistent dust clouds of travel. She was beautiful, even at this age. Strong, angular jawline, and thin nose that seemed to guide the eyes to thin lips. Despite the growing number of wrinkles around her mouth and eyes, Zava was still one of the most beautiful women to attend the Reach meet.

They walked for some time. He clearly had something he wanted to say, but did not know how to broach the matter. Finally, through a sigh, Zava said, "Speak your mind, husband."

"My love...you know that I live daily with gratitude for your hand, and home," he said, cautiously. Zava knew already where this was going.

"I know you want better for her," she said, quietly. They had had this argument several times already. She wanted to keep Xiri within their tribe, unmarried if necessary, but safe. Tagh saw the betrothal offered to Othni, son of the great Chieftain Darya, as a way to provide a better life for Xiri.

"And security for our tribe. We have lost much these last few seasons," he murmured ruefully. Tagh carried great weight on his shoulders. Every life that had been lost in battles with increasingly bold off-world scavengers, and the drying of their tribal well, sat on the healer's heart, weighing his spirit and leading him further into despondency.

"My mind is unsettled on the matter. Let us see how the days ahead unfurl," she said, in that not blunt but final way she had. Tagh did not speak again, not until a hour later when the crossed the rise and looked upon the assembling tribes within the series of chasms named Nervahrim Reach.

Xiri pulled up alongside her parents a moment later. She was very much the image of her mother, only 30 hard years younger, barring the brilliant lavender eyes that seemed to see only good in people. Zava smiled softly, placing her shoulder upon the young woman's shoulder. "I know you worry, Xiri," she said, before leaning her forehead against her daughter's cheek, "but we trust Thyr. The Sun never fails us. It never has, and it never will."

The affection was ended, abruptly, but such was Zava's style. She offered affection, but withdrew quickly for fear of spoiling a young one that must needs survive the harshness of the desert. "Now...run to get some waters from the Caluum. The blurrg's will need to drink well tonight."

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The sound of bare feet against sandstone was all that broke the silence of the cave as Xiri hurried down the worn natural rock stairs. It was a relief to be out of the sun, even as it set there was still much heat in it. And she so loved the Caluum. It was only readily accessible from the top of the ridge their tribe approached from, and as her family was the last to reach the chasm meetings, Xiri was confident that she would be the only person in the darkened room.

Her eyes struggled to adjust. But that was not an issue for very long. Small beads of light, like insects, began to swarm around her. They were not attracted to her, so much as spawning from her.

Her chest, neck and then back began to glow softly, illuminating the dark of the cave and showing her the path towards the water. As she stooped with her canteens, a singular ember drifted down her arm. She lifted the ember, which floated just above her palm, and then twisted her hand gracefully as the ember descended in a spiral towards her lap. More embers lifted, as did her hands.

Her own private miracle. And the freedom to indulge.

A stream of embers drifted upward, and she pulled them into cupped hands. She looked at them. "Why...hello there..." She said, unhindered by fear of keeping quiet. Her voice echoed, once...then twice...

Xiri smiled.

The echo drew her eyes away from the embers.

The smile evaporated. And she stood upright, dropping her canteens to the ground. Frozen, all she could do was stare at him, and wait to see how her life had just changed.



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