Shiraya's Odyssey
A year had passed since the planetshift event erased entire worlds from the Republic’s astrogation maps and hyperlane charts. Hurled into the vast corners of unknown space, even the most exhaustive surveys had failed to locate them. All their cities, histories, and vast populations, simply… gone. As though they’d never existed at all.
Other worlds, they’d found, were uncomfortably close. Close enough that, Briana occasionally wondered whether the High Republic had forgotten about their people trapped behind the Sith’s Blackwall, or if they’d been written off as an acceptable loss after other efforts to recover them fell through. It wasn’t a charitable thought, and it never lingered longer than a parsec before logic and reason dispelled the notion.
The truth of the matter was that there was already far too much effort spent, and lives lost. Indifference wasn't the explanation and assigning blame unnecessarily wouldn't help anyone. No, the problem was a lack of capability. In the early days of the Blackwalls inception, multiple teams had been sent into hell, time and time again, to probe the wall’s limits and try to find a way through. Most of those men and women never made it back, and the ones who did... well, what she saw from their files was near unmentionable. Afterwards, future attempts to interact with the wall directly were put on the back burner, until a more viable solution was found.
Eventually, they’d managed a small work around through Hoth’s hypergate, establishing Outpost Andor beneath the surface of the Icefall Plains. It’d been useful for reconnaissance missions, helping them understand the grander scope of what they were facing, and limited extraction operations under the cover of night, but it’d never been designed to evacuate the millions still trapped behind enemy lines. Attempting to do so would have been reckless, if not entirely suicidal, both for the people they needed to help and the ones trying to help them.
And it was precisely why Briana had come, and why she'd asked
If their people were ever going to be brought home, threading needles and exploiting gaps would never be enough. They needed to take immediate action. The wall needed to come down in its entirety, to stop the Sith from trapping their citizens behind it like penned in cattle.
Over time, an idea had overtaken her. One that demanded patience, a good deal of preparation, and the willingness to commit long before any results could be seen or enacted... and in her satchel, Briana carried a powerfully charged crystal attuned to the Force.
Briana, Kyric, and Pari had landed on Quesaya an hour earlier, one of several border worlds that had been reinforced with neutral exclusion zones, creating a perimeter that made the wall otherwise inaccessible to the average civilian without proper authorization. It’d taken an additional half an hour of bureaucracy at work, checking and rechecking that they had the correct permits and codes, before Briana and her team were finally ushered through.
The ride to the wall was mostly quiet, with the view from their transport passing a succession of empty ground and dormant structures, all what remained of the original encampment that'd been established too close to the wall's most volatile edge. They'd had to abandon it months ago when the risk calculations finally outweighed whatever strategic value it once carried.
A sudden jolt, and the world slowing down, signaled that they'd come to a full stop, the engines of the T2-B Repulsor tank easing down.
The uniformed officer that'd been assigned to escort them, rose from the forward seat and opened up the door where they were sitting, thumbing behind him. “This is your drop point,” he grunted, unapologetically. “The wall isn't too much further, but from here on, the exclusion zone protocols apply. We don’t cross them, so you’ll have to continue on foot. Extraction window remains open for six hours, but after that, you’re on your own.”
Briana simply nodded. They'd been briefed before they ever set out, but a reminder was always welcome. "Well. Let's not waste our time, then."
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