Council of Captains
The Verge Flotilla

"The Force flows through all living things," Camali's master used to tell her. "Everything is connected. Reach out to that connection, feel the emotions that flow on the current, and you can learn a great deal about a place." It was a simple statement of fact, not of arrogance, to say that she'd always been good at finding that current, reading it just as he had taught her. Here on Erilnar, the young Jedi felt much the same emotions that she'd sensed elsewhere in the Centrality - panic, grief, and desperation. The refugees of two dozen worlds and more had been thrown together in this isolated region of space, and there wasn't enough of anything to go around.
As it usually did, in her experience, that meant that the strong and amoral had taken brutal advantage of the chaos. Crime was rampant, with armed thugs all across the sector taking whatever they wanted by force. The Centran government, largely ineffectual at the best of times, had been totally overwhelmed, doing little to help its own citizens - let alone the unending tide of asylum-seekers from Sith and Bryn'adul space. This was the kind of place that desperately needed a protector, and Camali intended to do her best to provide one. She was only one person, but she'd managed to fight back the criminal element and protect their victims in several major skirmishes already.
She liked to think that Master Vo'dess would be proud of her, if he had lived. She knew that attachment was dangerous, but she missed him all the same.
Brushing a long strand of dark blond hair out of her eyes, the young Jedi took a deep breath and pushed away her impatience. There is no emotion, she reminded herself, there is peace. Her dedication to that first line of the code was being sorely tested as politician after politician made her wait; she had seen half a dozen lavish offices just like the one she was sitting in now over the past week, and none of their occupants had offered any real help to the refugees yet. Still, she knew she had to keep trying. She could fight off swoop gangs and price-gouging black marketeers, but there was no Force ability she knew of that could conjure much-needed food out of thin air.
Smoothing her tunic down, Camali stood from the plush chair in which she had been waiting. She walked past the gleaming protocol droid at the reception desk and stood in front of the huge transparisteel window, staring out over the Government District as it stretched out far below this towering office building. She could feel the negative emotions rising from the tight-packed masses, and her hand dropped involuntarily to the hilt of her lightsaber. She wanted to be out there, fighting, protecting, putting an end to evil. It was what she was good at. There is no passion, there is serenity. This time she couldn't suppress a sigh. How long would they keep her waiting? And would it even help?