The Republic training range carried a different kind of silence than most places, one not defined by the absence of sound but by a profound sense of focus. It was far from quiet, as blaster fire cracked in measured, rhythmic intervals that echoed against the reinforced walls. Targets hummed with mechanical precision as they reset for the next volley, while boots scuffed across the durasteel flooring with a heavy, disciplined cadence. Instructors barked sharp, demanding corrections, yet entirely devoid of panic. It was a working silence that felt structured and purposeful, yet heavy with the scent of ozone and cooling metal.
Shade passed through the security checkpoint without drawing any undue attention to herself because she firmly believed that being off duty did not mean becoming careless. Her credentials were logged into the system, and her sidearms were temporarily registered per the strict range protocol, after which she stepped inside with the unhurried and confident gait of someone who belonged in such a place.
She wore a fitted slate-gray shirt and dark, durable training pants, rolled up several turns at the cuffs to keep them clear of her ankles. The outfit was practical and clean, lacking any insignia beyond the subtle Republic pin at her collar, though her appearance bore the unmistakable marks of her history. The faint sheen of old burn scars from weeks prior was visible against her cobalt skin where the pants ended, yet they did not alter her stride or her posture in the slightest as she moved through the facility.
Instead of a bulky duffel, she carried a small and hard-shell range case containing a selection of throwing knives along with a standard-issue Republic blaster and a compact sidearm she rarely spoke of but never traveled without. This was a day for Republic training rather than an intelligence briefing or a covert operation, so she focused entirely on the essential fundamentals of marksmanship and muscle memory.
As she stepped fully onto the range floor, her gaze moved across the room to take in the environment where recruits were cycling through their drills with varying degrees of success. Troopers were refining their groupings at the mid-range stations while a pair of veterans stood in the corner arguing quietly about the finer points of optics calibration.
Then her eyes found him.
He was masked and armored, profoundly still, as he sat before a table laden with weapons that did not whisper of subtlety. There were throwing lightknives, a lightblaster, a lightcarbine, and an RI-17 rifle with a heavy grenade launcher attachment. It was not the lethal selection that caught her attention so much as the posture itself, for he was not adjusting his gear, checking his sight lines, or cleaning his components. He was meditating in full kit right in the middle of a live training environment.
Her eyes lingered a fraction longer than necessary, though her expression remained one of professional assessment rather than any sort of judgment. She did not know him and had not been briefed on his presence, so he was simply another variable in the space.
Rather than seeking distance, she moved with deliberate intent to the open lane directly beside him. She set her case on the bench with quiet efficiency, but she did not immediately reach for a weapon because she needed to center herself first. She began a routine of stretching to prepare her body for the work ahead, moving through controlled shoulder and wrist rotations. She followed this with a slow and fluid roll through her spine before finishing with a careful extension of her legs, working through the lingering tightness in her scar tissue without favoring the injury. Her breathing was even and focused, anchoring her in the present moment.
Once she was sufficiently warm, she opened the case and selected a steel blade, perfectly balanced. She stepped into her throwing position and let the ambient noise of the range fade into a background hum of pure awareness. The first knife left her hand in a clean and unhurried arc that ended with a heavy thud as it buried itself in center mass. She did not smile, and she did not stop to check the grouping because she already knew exactly where the steel had landed.
As she reached for the second blade, her gaze flicked sideways toward the masked figure seated in meditation right next to her. It was a brief, neutral look, curiosity tempered by discipline, before the second knife flew. After another solid impact, she shifted her stance in the lane to transition from blades to her Republic-issued blaster. She adjusted her weight as if the armored presence beside her was simply another environmental factor she had long since mastered. If he wanted to remain still, she would allow him that peace, but if he chose to move, she would be the first to notice.
Connel Vanagor