Star Wars Roleplay: Chaos

Register a free account today to become a member! Once signed in, you'll be able to participate on this site by adding your own topics and posts, as well as connect with other members through your own private inbox!

Private What's a Bookworm?


YVn7Tms.png

ORDER OF SHIRAYA TEMPLE, NABOO
Main Hallways → Archives

The stone beneath his boots gleamed like still water.

Every step echoed back at him—quiet, deliberate, a little too loud for his liking. The halls of the Order of Shiraya Temple weren’t cold, exactly, but they had a kind of polished stillness to them. Like the place was holding its breath. Gilded arches stretched overhead, catching the Naboo sun in soft halos of gold, and murals whispered down the corridors in stories he still didn’t know how to read.

Seth kept his hands loosely clasped behind his back, doing his best to look like he belonged. He was getting better at that. At pretending.

The summons hadn’t come with much detail. Just a message delivered with a smile: a Jedi Master had asked to meet with him. In the Archives, of all places. According to the Knight who passed it along, this wasn’t just some casual introduction—this was it. His assignment. His teacher.

Finally.

Not that he blamed them for the delay. Between the chaos of the Planeshift and the scramble to secure what remained of the Southern Systems, the Order had its hands full. Everyone was rebuilding. Reorganizing. Figuring out what the galaxy looked like now—and who they were in it. He couldn’t exactly expect them to prioritize a lone, quiet Padawan with a notable last name and no one left to wear it.

Still, it felt like something was changing.

Maybe it was the way people had started greeting him by name. Maybe it was how the training sessions didn’t end with sideways glances and “we’ll find you a proper assignment soon.” Or maybe it was just that, for the first time in a long time, he didn’t feel like a shadow taking up space in someone else’s home.

The Archive doors opened without resistance. Inside, the light dimmed—filtered through high windows and tall shelves lined with holobooks, scrolls, and ancient cylinders sealed in crystal. The air smelled of old paper and sun-warmed stone. Familiar now.

He moved through the stacks in no particular hurry, scanning titles. The silence here wasn’t empty; it was alive. Living memory, bound and cataloged.

Seth drifted instinctively toward the “D” section. He didn’t expect to find anything. House Denko wasn’t exactly the kind you carved statues for. But maybe a footnote. A record. A mission log from one of his father’s campaigns. A speech from his uncle. A name etched into history, however small.

If it was here, he wanted to see it.

Not to be proud. Not even to remember.

Just to understand.​


 

Ala-project-2.png


The D section of the Archives was quiet. Too quiet, perhaps, for a Jedi Master who had just finished scribbling something wildly unwise in invisible ink.

Ala Quin crouched over an open codex, one knee resting on the edge of the bench, a featherlight stylus still hovering between her fingers. Around her were three half-open scrolls, two sealed holobooks, and a curious collection of crystals she had forgotten the purpose of—though they made a nice paperweight.

She tilted her head, watching the fading shimmer of her handiwork disappear into the page.

“When the twins fall, the golden spark shall shatter the crown of silence.”

At the time, it had sounded delightfully mysterious. A fun little flourish. Something poetic to tuck away where no one would ever find it. Except now she was staring at it with dawning horror.

"Oh no," she whispered, "that sounds... important."

She waved her hand over the parchment, willing it to fade faster. It didn’t. She tried rubbing it with her sleeve. That made it worse. "Why did I make it rhyme? Now it’s going to end up in someone’s thesis. Or a war council. Or—Force forbid—a prophecy vault!"

Frantically, she started flipping through the codex for a solvent-like Force-power, or maybe a way to blame this on someone named D'vorah. That sounded like a name people would believe. She groaned and plopped down onto the floor, legs splayed in dramatic defeat between two archive shelves, the stylus rolling gently from her hand.

It was at that exact moment she noticed someone was watching her.

She blinked.

Grinned sheepishly.

And from her spot on the floor of the dusty, ancient Archive, said with absolute sincerity. "You’re not here to arrest me for accidental literary sabotage, are you?"

0zWxC4R.png


| Tag: Seth Denko Seth Denko |​

 

YVn7Tms.png

NABOO - SHIRAYA ARCHIVES

Seth heard it before he saw it.

A whisper. A groan. Something about rhyming and a crown of silence?

He slowed his pace, boots soft against the stone as he turned the corner toward the source of the chaos—because that was chaos. No way it wasn’t.

What he found was not what he expected.

Scrolls. Crystals. Codices arranged like someone had been in the middle of either enlightenment or a meltdown. And at the center of it all, a woman in Jedi robes, sprawled on the floor like the Force had knocked her over in exasperation.

His brows lifted.

He knew that face. He’d seen her before—fists flashing, posture fluid and light, like every motion was more instinct than thought. She’d moved like poetry mid-battle, right before sparring with Dagos on that last mission. He’d filed the image away under incredible, terrifying, probably a Jedi Master.

And here she was.

Seemingly defeated by books?

He blinked. Once. Twice. Then slowly raised his hand and covered his eyes with a quiet, theatrical flair.

“Don’t worry,” he said, voice dry with just the edge of a smirk. “Legally blind. Saw nothing. Definitely not a literary sabotage. Definitely not a Jedi Master panicking on the floor.”

He peeked between his fingers. Just a little.

“I’m actually looking for a Master Quin. Been assigned as their Padawan, apparently.”

A beat.

“You wouldn’t happen to know where I can find them, would you?”


 

Ala-project-2.png


Ala winced. Not from embarrassment—well, maybe a little—but mostly from the way he delivered that line with such effortless, disarming calm. She gave a small laugh and shook her head, strands of her curly hair bouncing with the motion.

"Okay—yes. That definitely looked worse than it was." She reached over and closed the offending tome with exaggerated care. "Technically, I was meditating. With a stylus. On probability paths. And bad poetry. It’s… a thing."

She squinted down at the book’s ludicrously long-winded title as if noticing it for the first time.

"The Harmonization of Obsolete Hyperspatial Diplomacy Models in Pre-Dawn Interregnums: A Cautionary Codex for Senior Mediators of the Outer Mid Rim."

"This should honestly be recycled into something useful. Like a chair. Or a doorstop."

With all the grace of someone trying to pretend none of this ever happened, she slid the book back into its place on the shelf, then pushed to her feet in one smooth motion. A little ink smudge marked the side of her thumb, but she ignored it.

She turned to him fully, extended a hand, and offered a bright, self-aware smile that didn’t try to be perfect.

"Ala Quin. And yes, I know I don't look particularly teacherly at the moment, but I promise I'm qualified. Probably."

Her handshake was firm, practiced, grounded. Something that told him she'd held far more than just books in her lifetime.

"You must be Seth. I figured you might come poking around the 'D' section eventually. Couldn't let you beat me to it."

She gestured to the chaotic little arrangement she’d left behind, the stylus still perched on the bench like it had regrets.

"Welcome to the Order of Shiraya. I’m your Master now—unless this moment swayed you toward another path. Librarian, maybe?"


 

Users who are viewing this thread

Top Bottom