Jara D’Ao
Exotic Face of the Jedi
The night was cold, the air much colder than she remembered.
Or maybe it was that she had gotten so used to the jungle and its humidity, and the way the sun bore down on you to remind you that it was in control, not you.
Everything on Coruscant, by contrast - it was controlled. Carefully planned. Artificial. It was elegant but it was detached, and now - in the absence of the Jedi, in the absence of a home - it felt a little…foreign.
Master Jara bundled her cloak tighter around herself as she stepped down from the transport. Something shifted on the back of her trousers - carefully hidden from view by the curve of her cape. The lightsaber. It seemed to vibrate on its own accord, to remind her of the Jedi brothers or sisters who had been slain, refusing to budge from a home they were foolish to think would be theirs forever.
Nothing is forever, not even the Sith.
But the time to attack was not now. Tonight was a night for gentle surveillance, to see what had become of the places Jara had once loved.
Would the food still taste the same? Were the parks still somewhere you could lay about? Were the people here still kind - or had they become more jaded, more frightened since the Covenant had hammered their way in?
She kept her head slightly bowed and the edges of her hood obscuring the glow of her eyes as she found stone walkways and followed them in the general direction of the once-great Temple. Or, rather now, the Academy.
Perhaps it was insanity - it was reckless, at least - to show up here, among so many trained or un-trained acolytes of the dark arts - but who did she now know? Who else would prepare to stop them?
Who but the High Republic, so far away in their perches on Naboo!
She had to find contacts. Perhaps there were Senators or legislators - sympathetic aristocrats - whom she could call upon. The friends of the Jedi were not gone, even though now surely they hosted dinner parties with the very Sith who led this academy.
But there were others - she needed only to find them, to trust in the Force as it guided her feet.
But first - she must see it. She must return to the place where it ended.
Lysander von Ascania
Or maybe it was that she had gotten so used to the jungle and its humidity, and the way the sun bore down on you to remind you that it was in control, not you.
Everything on Coruscant, by contrast - it was controlled. Carefully planned. Artificial. It was elegant but it was detached, and now - in the absence of the Jedi, in the absence of a home - it felt a little…foreign.
Master Jara bundled her cloak tighter around herself as she stepped down from the transport. Something shifted on the back of her trousers - carefully hidden from view by the curve of her cape. The lightsaber. It seemed to vibrate on its own accord, to remind her of the Jedi brothers or sisters who had been slain, refusing to budge from a home they were foolish to think would be theirs forever.
Nothing is forever, not even the Sith.
But the time to attack was not now. Tonight was a night for gentle surveillance, to see what had become of the places Jara had once loved.
Would the food still taste the same? Were the parks still somewhere you could lay about? Were the people here still kind - or had they become more jaded, more frightened since the Covenant had hammered their way in?
She kept her head slightly bowed and the edges of her hood obscuring the glow of her eyes as she found stone walkways and followed them in the general direction of the once-great Temple. Or, rather now, the Academy.
Perhaps it was insanity - it was reckless, at least - to show up here, among so many trained or un-trained acolytes of the dark arts - but who did she now know? Who else would prepare to stop them?
Who but the High Republic, so far away in their perches on Naboo!
She had to find contacts. Perhaps there were Senators or legislators - sympathetic aristocrats - whom she could call upon. The friends of the Jedi were not gone, even though now surely they hosted dinner parties with the very Sith who led this academy.
But there were others - she needed only to find them, to trust in the Force as it guided her feet.
But first - she must see it. She must return to the place where it ended.