Star Wars Roleplay: Chaos

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Private The Weight He Carries

Xian felt the shift before she understood it.

It was subtle, not the sharp jolt of danger or the spike of fear she remembered from before, but a change in the air that made her slow without thinking. The Force didn't recoil. It didn't flare. It simply… recognized something ahead of her, old and heavy and unmistakably familiar.

Her steps faltered for half a heartbeat.

Then she saw him. High Commander Laphisto.

The last time she had been in the same space as him, her reaction had been immediate and visceral. Her pulse had raced, her thoughts scattered, anger and fear tangled together in a way she hadn't known how to untie. He had not raised his voice. He had not threatened her. He had simply been himself, and that had been enough to make her feel very small.

That memory still existed. It didn't vanish just because time had passed. But it no longer owned her.

Xian stopped where she was, the encounter clearly unplanned, her body instinctively squaring even as her shoulders remained relaxed. She did not reach for her saber. She did not step back. Her hands stayed visible at her sides, fingers curling once before stilling as she took a measured breath.

She looked up at him. Really looked this time. He was still imposing. Still carried authority the way some people carried gravity. That hadn't changed. What had changed was her ability to stand in it without being crushed.

"High Commander," Xian said, her voice steady and respectful, if a touch guarded. Not cold. Not hostile. Simply careful.

She inclined her head slightly, the acknowledgment deliberate. Not submission, not defiance. Recognition.

For a moment, she said nothing else. She let the silence exist without rushing to fill it, grounding herself as she had been taught, as experience had demanded. Her heart was beating faster than normal, but it wasn't running away with her. Fear stayed contained, useful, no longer driving the moment.

"I didn't expect to see you here," she added after a beat, honest and plain.

There was no accusation in the words. No attempt to frame the encounter as anything more than what it was: unexpected.

Her dark eyes stayed on him, alert, thoughtful, no longer burning with the raw resentment she'd once carried, but not softened into ease either. Whatever he was doing here, whatever had brought their paths together again, she would meet it as she was now, not as the frightened, furious girl she had been then.

She didn't smile.

But she didn't flinch.

Laphisto Laphisto

And for Xian, that alone marked how far she had come.
 

Laphisto

High Commander of the Lilaste Order
Laphisto stood apart from the flow of the corridor, his broad frame angled slightly inward as his attention remained fixed on the datapad in his hand. Lines of tactical readouts and logistical overlays scrolled beneath his gaze, one clawed thumb flicking through them with unhurried precision. To an outside observer, it would have appeared that nothing in his awareness extended beyond the information before him.

If he felt Xian's approach through the Force, he gave no sign of it. There was no pause, no shift in posture, no ripple of reaction that betrayed recognition. The Force around him continued to bleed outward in its usual fashion, an ever-present pressure like mist rolling from a high cliff, subtle but unmistakable to any sensitive nearby. Yet even that presence felt altered. Not diminished, but refined. Where once it had pressed and crowded, now it moved with an almost deliberate restraint, flowing rather than spilling.

It was only when she spoke that the datapad lowered. Slowly. Deliberately. Laphisto's head lifted, and those multicolored eyes settled on her at last. For a brief instant, the Force surged, not violently and not as a threat, but as a reflexive acknowledgment. The familiar teal-blue hue that had once dominated his gaze was gone. In its place burned an ethereal gold, luminous and steady, threaded through with fine veins of crimson that did not clash or churn, but coexisted in precise balance. The energy behind his eyes moved smoothly now, without the tension of opposing currents straining against one another.

The Twin Gods were no longer divided within him. Since Dathomir, since that final reckoning joined by Xuko Pagoi Xuko Pagoi that had forced a quiet yet sublte change within him, Laphisto had done what few ever managed. He had unified them. Not as rival voices, not as separate wills vying for dominance, but as a single, integrated whole bound beneath his own control. The result was evident in the way the Force clung to him, still vast and still heavy, but no longer leaking through cracks in a fractured vessel. It flowed as something intentional, curated, graceful in its weight.

The fog of his presence rolled outward all the same, brushing against the senses of those nearby and subtly reinforcing and empowering Force users caught within its reach. But there was a calm now at its heart, a still center that anchored everything else. Not the calm of passivity, but of mastery.

His gaze held Xian, assessing without hostility, measuring without judgment. Authority still radiated from him as naturally as breath, but it no longer bore the edge of barely restrained pressure. Instead, it settled into the space between them like a mountain at rest, immovable and undeniable, yet no longer looming with the promise of collapse.

The gold and crimson light in Laphisto's eyes dimmed, the ethereal glow fading as the Force withdrew from his gaze. What remained was the familiar multicolored calm, contained once more behind a disciplined stillness. The pressure in the air eased, not vanishing entirely, but settling into something background and distant, as though the space itself had exhaled.

Only then did he speak. "Aye. I do not come down to Bastion often enough," he said, his voice measured and even, absent of ceremony. "But I had spare components to deliver to the Brotherhood. Some Lilaste Order students have taken it upon themselves to modify their sabers. I figured the Brotherhood would appreciate the parts, so I brought them by before heading to a meeting with Diarch Reign Diarch Reign and Diarch Rellik Diarch Rellik regarding some upcoming affairs. about the Position of Iridonia within our territory"

As he finished, his eyes flicked back to Xian, not sharply, but with open curiosity. The assessment carried no weight of command, no pressure to conform or submit. Just interest. Observation.

A low chuckle rumbled briefly in his throat, quiet and unforced. "Never thought I would see the day you spoke to me willingly." There was no accusation in the words. No triumph. If anything, there was a trace of dry amusement, tempered by something closer to acknowledgement. His posture remained relaxed, hands unoccupied, attention resting fully on her now.
 
Xian stopped a few paces away from him, close enough to speak without raising her voice, far enough that she could still breathe.

She felt it immediately, the difference. The pressure was still there, unmistakable, but it no longer crowded her skin the way it once had. It settled instead, heavy and vast but contained, like standing near deep water that was perfectly still. Her shoulders tensed on instinct anyway, fingers curling briefly at her sides before she forced them to relax.

She met his eyes, then almost immediately looked away, not out of disrespect but because holding his gaze still took effort. When she spoke, her voice was steady, even if it was quieter than usual.

"High Commander," she said, the title chosen carefully, deliberately. Not friendly. Not hostile. Correct.

Her chin lifted a fraction, enough to show she was not shrinking back, even if every part of her remembered doing exactly that the last time they had shared space.

"I did not come looking for you," Xian continued honestly. "This was not planned."

She hesitated, just a beat, then added the truth she had come here to test.

"But when I saw you, I realized I wanted to know something."

Her dark eyes returned to him then, cautious but direct, searching his face rather than the Force around him.

"The last time we met, I was afraid of you," she said simply. No accusation. No apology. Just a fact. "And I did not like what that fear turned into."

Her fingers flexed once, grounding herself the way she had been taught, the way she had learned growing up where fear was constant, and choices were limited.

"So I thought… if I am going to keep walking forward, I should see if that is still true," Xian said. "If the fear is still mine. Or if it belonged to who I was then."

She did not smile. She did not soften the words. But there was no challenge in her posture either, only resolve that had been hard-earned.

"I am not here to argue with you," she finished quietly. "And I am not here to be your friend."

A pause.

"I am here because I wanted to face you anyway."

Laphisto Laphisto
 

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