Star Wars Roleplay: Chaos

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Private To Know Better


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Coruscant no longer burned.

Not physically, anyway.

The minds of the Coruscanti were another matter, one Efret couldn't help with if she tried. Those flames had gotten to her too, the moment she had landed. From the same moment, the Sith Temple had drawn her to it like a moth. Now, the pad of her index finger passed over a minute disturbance in the smooth surface. Its jagged halo barely raised into the ridges of her fingerprint. Psychometry climbed invisibly up her arm like an infection. She braced for it, her eyelids scrunching slightly closed.

One hand held a nail, the other a hammer. The latter drew back and returned forward, driving the bit of metal into the ancient stone and pinning Bernard of Arca's edict in place.
Two other sets of hands flashed to mind, one her own.
<Door-#frame not bulletin-board. He fix that, future?>
<You miss purpose, Master-Farr.>

Ah yes, the Lightsworn's purpose. It had seemed so malicious then, back before the Dark Empire hid struck at Coruscant, before the Galactic Alliance had begun to unravel. Her mind's eye ran down the document that had coiled down and across the floor. The names and crimes that it listed were malformed and partially illegible, stretched by ever-expanding space-time. It had been years since she had stood before the scroll. If another such document was posted at the Shirayans' threshold in time, her name might just appear on it.

Efret opened her eyes and looked at her hand, mottled in tan monochrome of Force Sight and the real color of her splotchy natural field of vision. Neither gave her much detail, but she tried to somehow look past it. Though lines testifying how much she had aged were written over her skin too, they were much more subtle than the red-brown electro-tattoos overlaying them. She had had them done sometime after that invasion in the style of her people—not the Jedi but the Lorrdians from the Province Bepru. It was an update to the system that allowed her to communicate with non-Signers, which happened to be most of the galactic population, an update she felt necessitated by war.

She had physical scars too, of course, from the battles but this design was uniquely visible to her. Every day. All day. She used her hands for everything that a Hearing person did, plus more. This reminder; which traced each tendon through her fingers, across her hand, and up her wrist; would never let her forget that the war had changed her.

That, with age, wisdom had gone, not come.

Her fingers withdrew on her next inhale.

On her exhale, she turned to venture into the Grand Temple that was Jedi no more.

She traced her way through the familiar hallways of the ground floor. Among the hireath, an emotional thread, small and thin as it was, claimed topographic relief and the notice that came with it. It led into the Archive. She just knew, then she remembered that she'd have to pass by her museum to get there.

Fingers tugged her hood down further over her head as she trudged onward despite mounting distress. Into the Archives she went, thinking only briefly of Ran Serys Ran Serys . The thought tumbled from her mind when she followed the sense that had brough her here into a nearby study room, and to a bookshelf opposite the door.

There, her sigh rearranged the air silently. Scent of dust and musky leather burrowed deeper into her lungs. She passed a hand over the aligned tomes' spines. The truth she sought, but also dreaded finding, stirred under her Force touch and radiated heat back with flickering candle flames.

What history was written here? What words could be so volatile?

 

Obsession was a grand motivator; it allowed Anet Raine to devote reckless hours, sacrificing meals and rest in search of anything that might help her learn more of Tira. Of course, a lost jewel was not her only fixation of late...

A quivering smirk resided at the corner of her mouth.

"Don't think I haven't noticed yours," she made eye contact. There was a pause. "You inspired me, Kirie."

Icy-pale eyes hung over dark circles, glancing down at the aggregate of old records crawling across her viewscreen in a quiet corner of the archives... everything she had compiled on the lost, legendary world. But for once, in a rare appeal of her own spirit, she welcomed the distraction of happy thoughts.

She opened her eyes, shining with gold, and looked up at Anet.​

Gentle fingertips traced the outline of her cheekbone, reanimating the ghost of Kirie's touch.

More breath than whisper, "I am your weapon..."

"...and you are my savior..."

Her hand fell over her chest, pressing against the darkness that shielded her heart. Without it attired to her face, she was without power and appeared ordinary in the Force. A droplet, a grain; a betrayal of her own presentation, drabbed in acolyte's robes and a bled blade unignited at her hip, but no presence save for the corruption emanating from the mask buried within folds of expensive fabric.

So drunk on the memory was she that Anet scowled when a figure appeared in her periphery.

"What is it?!" She snapped quietly.

But when she scrutinized the woman further, she suspected this wasn't another initiate come to pester her for directions or advice. Her expression softened, if only a little, but judgmental eyes lingered.

"Oh..." Her hand fell from her chest to her side. "I haven't seen you before."

 

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The woman's gaze turned to the room's far wall, where a flicker of light had outlined Anet's silhouette over the stone. A moment later, she turned to the acolyte.

Her hands rose to speak. A monotonous and feminine voice like a protocol droid's, generated from a vocoder hidden in the choker's pendant at her neck, filtered into the air.

"I didn't hear you." She didn't say that she was Deaf, or Blind, trusting that her use of GBSL was evidence enough for the former.

Regardless, she didn't linger.

"I haven't been here in some time," she replied. In many ways, she didn't feel different than the Jedi she had been, not at her core. Honestly flowed naturally, not coaxed out of her by fear, though she was afraid. That feeling hadn't left her since coming to this Core with Mercy.

"I was drawn to these records." A small pause. "Would you like to be in here alone? I can leave."

Lysander had corrected much about Efret's supposed understanding of the Sith during their encounter of Fondor. For his guidance, she was eternally grateful, but she was under no illusion that she had no more to learn on the matter. In fact, she felt the remaining Sith stereotypes the Jedi had taught her still shambling after her like shadows. It would be a long and arduous journey to cast them off further, but she doubted that she would be able to sever them completely. Though she suspected that she'd carry a shard of the Jedi's most central prejudice forever, they, as were all shadows, were byproducts of the light.

They were sure to fade enough away as the Dark continued to take her over.

For now, though, they haunted her like ghosts she knew floated right behind her but tried to ignore.

She drew on her past ethnographic experiences. Of course, none fit this situation—interrupting a Sith's solitary study in their temple—but still she racked her memory, trying to generate an etiquette that seemed right.

The rank of this Sith eluded her; she wouldn't even dare to guess, so she instead resorted to subservience.

"May I borrow a volume or two?"

But she forgot that this place was hers too: Efret Farr was one of the Covenant now.

 

Anet's eyes fell immediately to her hands. A familiar habit reinforced by her time with Kirie.

Anet had experienced her fair share of kinetic languages - most often of the Lorrdian variety. Although the Outer Rim dialect was not her strongest, she at least managed to gather the gist of words and phrases signed her way.

Galactic Basic Sign Language, thankfully, was even more familiar to her.

Perhaps it was that familiarity, or a reminder of her devotions, that softened the half-pantoran's demeanor on the spot. When the woman asked whether Anet wanted her to leave, she signed as she spoke. "No. That is okay."

She wasn't sure if the stranger was merely mute, like Kirie, or possibly deaf. The fact that she may've been blind hadn't crossed her mind at all.

There was a pause when the woman asked if she could borrow the volumes. Anet smiled, stumped more than amused, and gestured at the shelves filled with digitized and physical records alike. "I am not the librarian..." She chuckled dryly, smile lingering. "Besides. I believe this information is ours."

She paused a moment. At first impression, the dark-haired woman didn't strike her as another acolyte. But she didn't carry herself as a Sith Lord, neither... then again, not all moved so openly. She, for one, hid her presence in the Force in the form of her mask. Was this a test, then? Anet wondered.

"You are new here," she stated. Her voice was flat, and her signing curt. "Have you a name?"

 

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