Vargyr Gha'val'ika
E S T A B L I S H
The docks of Fort Hardhome moved without pause, a constant churn of heat, steel, and sound that never quite resolved into rhythm. Engines roared as ships descended in staggered intervals, their exhaust bending the air into wavering distortions while cargo clamps snapped and released in sharp, mechanical cadence. Orders carried across the platforms—short, efficient, but fractured—absorbed into the machinery before they could ever become cohesion.It functioned.
But it did not flow.
At the edge of the platform, Mira stood in stillness that did not belong to the space around her, cloak drawn over one shoulder, its worn edge shifting faintly in the wake of passing ships. She did not watch the vessels themselves, nor the crews that moved with practiced efficiency—her attention settled instead on the space between moments, where timing faltered and intention broke just enough to be felt.
A freighter descended too early, forcing another into delay, and she watched the imbalance ripple outward as crews adjusted, corrected, compensated. The disruption was minor, fleeting, but it repeated in different forms across the docks, never quite resolving, never quite aligning. It was not failure.
It was absence.
The Force pressed quietly against her awareness, threading through every movement and hesitation without effort. She felt the strain beneath discipline, the impatience beneath order, the subtle friction of a place still becoming something it had not yet decided to be. The structure rose, the machines turned, but there was no center—no will guiding it beyond necessity.
It reacted.
It did not command.
Another ship cut through atmosphere at a flawed angle, its descent just slightly too aggressive, its landing heavier than it should have been. The impact carried through the platform beneath her boots, a dull reverberation that lingered for half a second too long, and once again the crews adapted around it, correcting what should never have needed correction at all.
Mira's gaze lingered—not on the mistake, but on the pattern.
Always adjusting.
Never dictating.
Beside her, Fiore's presence existed without intrusion, steady and familiar in a way nothing else here was. Mira did not turn, but the awareness of her settled into the quiet tension beneath her composure, grounding without disrupting. Months had passed since her awakening, and still the world felt… misaligned, as though time itself had shifted just beyond her reach.
Thirty years gone.
Everything changed.
Nothing forgiven.
Her fingers flexed once, controlled, the faint echo of something deeper beneath her skin reminding her of what had not left with her recovery. The Vong poison lingered—not as weakness, but as something coiled and patient, a presence she carried rather than fought.
Her thoughts drifted—not away, but through.
Dathomir rose in her mind with a clarity that surpassed the docks before her, not as memory, but as intent. The Sanctuary was not being rebuilt as it had been. It would not return as something vulnerable, or hidden, or waiting to be broken again. Stone would rise with purpose. Defenses would layer with precision. It would stand as something undeniable—something that did not yield, did not fracture, did not fall silent when challenged.
A place that endured.
The docks beneath her felt temporary in comparison—necessary, but incomplete, lacking the permanence that true strength required.
Her attention returned fully to the present as another ship began its descent.
This time, she moved.
A single step forward—measured, deliberate.
The shift was subtle, but it carried through the space around her like a quiet pressure, something unspoken that settled into those moving below. Nothing stopped, nothing broke—but movements tightened, timing sharpened, hesitation thinned.
The incoming ship adjusted.
Slightly.
Enough.
Its descent steadied, its landing clean, and for the first time since her arrival, the rhythm held without disruption as cargo teams moved in sync rather than reaction.
Better.
Still not enough.
Mira's gaze swept the docks once more, not searching, not questioning—measuring. Every flaw, every inefficiency, every absence laid itself bare before her, not as problems, but as inevitabilities waiting to be corrected.
This place would become something stronger.
But not like this.
Her attention shifted briefly to Fiore—a single glance, quiet, deliberate—before returning forward.
No words passed between them.
None were needed.
Then she stepped forward again, no longer content to observe the shape of what was forming.
But to begin defining it.