Star Wars: Legacy of the Force – Ch 20

Dropping out of hyperspace to find an armada waiting with weapon systems powering up wasn’t as alarming as it should have been. In part that was because Ayli could feel the Force guiding her and knew that she wasn’t about to be reduced to space dust in the next few moments. More than that however was the fact that the make and model of the armada’s warship woke her slumbering rage.

“Got multiple targeting locks from, well it looks like everyone over there,” Nix said.

Evasive maneuvers were called for, but Ayli kept their shuttle flying straight and true towards the fleeing Enclave racing yacht.

“Comm alert coming in too,” Nix said. “Do you want to take it or shall I?”

“Go ahead.” Ayli was too focused on closing the distance with the much faster yacht and staying alert for the targeting locks turning into confirmed attacks to feel like dealing with the people she knew were on the ships in front of her.

“Zardewill Consortium shuttle, you have violated an Imperial control sphere. Power down your weapon systems and prepare to be boarded.” The speaker’s crisp core world accent left Ayli reaching for the Force to strangle him at range.

That wasn’t going to solve their problems though. Killing one Ex-Imperial Officer was good but killing an entire armada of them was always better.

“I’m going to need to see some Imperial Security codes. We’ve run across a lot of pirates claiming Imperial navy privileges.” Nix wasn’t speaking the lingo a professional navigator would have used but it didn’t matter. Pushing back against the authority they’d never deserved to have and was entirely illusionary was an effective tactic for inciting anger no matter what words were used.

“You will stand down now,” the faux-Imperial officer commanded. “Any attempt to flee the system will result in your immediate destruction.”

Ayli brought the hyperdrive up to full power for an instantaneous jump and held it there for a moment, giving the armada a chance to fully lock onto them and make the decision to blow them out of the sky before they got away.

In the instant that the lead ship fired, she threw the shuttle into hyperspace and brought it right back out.

Nix wasn’t going to be happy with that move. Rapid jumps into hyperspace were an astrogation nightmare and, worse, played havoc on the hyperdrive. Even with the inhumanely smooth skip the Force had let her pull off, the drive was going to need replacement parts soon, and would start behaving unpredictably after a few more jumps, which was never ideal.

“I’m sorry, where you threatening us instead of providing legitimate credentials?” Nix’s communique was not designed to deescalate the situation, which was probably further proof she wasn’t a Jedi, and it made Ayli love her all the more for it.

“Zardewill Shuttle, you will stand down this instant!”

“Random pirate armada, you are harboring a group of elite criminals,” Nix said. “They just docked with your flagship in a Incomm Starburst class racing yacht. If you’d care to send them back out so that we can return them to the justice they fled from, we…well I guess we won’t be leaving you alone even if you do that.” Nix looked over al Ayli who nodded in response.

She’d spent so many horrible years, all of her childhood really, fighting Imperial Forces. Leaving this remnant of the Imperial navy to regroup, rebuild, and become a new menace to the galaxy was simply not going to happen.

“Yeah, you should probably surrender now,” Nix said. “You won’t like what happens if you test us.”

The targeting systems on most of the armada had locked onto their shuttle again, but the lightspeed skip had given them enough distance that a fair portion of the armada’s weaponry was ineffective. The ones which could reach them were still a problem, but not one that Ayli was overly concerned with.

At least not until the Force went abruptly silent around her.

“Oh. That was a mistake.” Nix had closed her eyes. Nix was not referring to what she’d said. Nix was concentrating. And whispering to the Force.

Ayli was only somewhat aware of that however. Facing an armada of ships firing at her, if even from their maximum range still demanded more or less the entirety of her natural piloting talent, hard won experience, and battle honed attention.

“Ah. There we go,” Nix said, her tone perfectly calm. “Imperial pretenders, check your sensor. Your new guests are disembarking now in your main dock. There are eleven of them. Watch the one in the lead. See how he’s suffering from fairly severe burns? I did that to him. Because he displeased me. He has now displeased me for a second time.”

Nix tightened her hand into a fist and gave a small snarl.

“In case your curious where he just went, the flight path should be obvious from the third starboard camera in your docking bay, but I would recommend turning on your external sensors. He’ll be out of tractor beam range shortly and if you wait a moment you might even catch the moment when he pops like a blood balloon.”

People exposed to hard vacuum did not, in fact, pop like balloons of any sort, but a remarkable number of people were unaware of that fact and it made for a satisfying visual image in the case of Primus Dolon.

An easily circumvented outburst of revenge aside, Nix’s assault also had the benefit of casting the Enclave’s Elders into chaos, which shredded the field of silence they’d wrapped Ayli’s shuttle in.

“Jedi scum!” The wanna-be Imperial’s voice held as much disgust as fear but Ayli could tell that fear was easily winning the contest between the two. “You may have escaped the Emperor’s justice so far, but we will destroy you in his name!”

Nix looked over at Ayli is disbelief.

“I just threw someone out of a docking bay and slapped the hell out of a bunch of old people? In what galaxy is that something a Jedi would do?” 

“I don’t think they’re up on the fine points of religious doctrine among the different Force traditions,” Ayli said, diving into the path of a turbo laser battery a fraction of a second before the plasma bolts could reach them.

Closing the distance with the armada was neither a safe, nor a smart play, but it did ensure that the Imperials…

Ayli had to stop that thought.

These weren’t Imperials.

Not anymore, if they ever really had been.

What was more likely was that they were the newest generation of pathetic losers to be recruited by the fading remains of an Imperial navy task group which the Alliance hadn’t been able to track down. There might be a few of the senior staff who’d once served as actual Imperial officers, but the rank and file were usually drawn from the sort of people who’d gleeful serve a fascist regime if only they could find one to join which would justify their hatred and small mindedness.

That the galaxy had no shortage of such people during the Emperor’s reign, and was still abundant with them was balanced in Ayli’s heart only by all the people she’d known who were so much better than that.

Giving up on the galaxy was easy, and she suspected that a lot of ‘Imperial soldiers’ in the armada’s ships had done just that. She couldn’t though. Not when there were so many people in it still worth fighting for.

As she piloted the shuttle into a deadly hail of fire therefor, she banished the idea that she was still fighting Imperials. The people in front of her weren’t the boogeymen of her childhood. They didn’t hold unconquerable power and control over everything in the galaxy.

Not that the Imperials ever had either, but as a child up against a machine which had seized control over ever facet of life she could see, it had been hard to imagine what path could possibly lead them to victory.

As an adult, starting down an enemy that was, in an immediate and personal sense, every bit as overwhelming as the Galactic Empire had been, she still couldn’t see a path to victory.

But she saw more than ever the need to fight for one.

“You seem to be having some problems with destroying us. It’s probably because Imperial maintenance standards sucked,” Nix said. “I mean, you know that the galaxy moved away from them like almost immediately after you all lost to the Alliance right? The last Imperial shipyard was even decommissioned two standards ago. And it wasn’t that people minded that it had been churning out stuff for the losing side. Business’s just want to make money and your stuff? It sucked. Gotta swap out all the Imperial trash that people loaded their ships up with because it was cheap, when you think they’d realize that the Empire never gave a flying bantha poodu about quality or safety. Just look at the Tie Fighter design, right? Worst safety record of any single man fighter in galactic history. Oh, you’ve got some! That’s nice.”

Ayli was not at all surprised to see a flight of Tie’s launch from one of the nearest ships. Capital ship weapons were great in a space battle but demonstrably terrible at dealing with small ships.

Tie-Fighters, on the other hand were excellent in dogfights. Potentially deathtraps for their pilots, as Nix had pointed out, since they lacked the shielding of a better built fighter like an X-Wing, but nimble and deadly nonetheless.

Which made it all the more amusing when they started plowing into one another in the tight formation they were flying in.

Ayli glanced over to see Nix deep in concentration again.

Most shuttles were not armed. Corporate shuttles in particular often flew to destinations where combat vessels were not allowed to land out of safety concerns.

Since they’d borrowed the ship from Sali though, armaments were not a concern. There might be a pirate out there who would fly around in an unarmed shuttle, but if so, Sali had probably already shot them down.

Which meant Ayli got to dogfight.

With a twenty to one advantage, it should have been a short and unpleasant experience.

With the Force directing her where to go and when to shoot though, the odds were not at all what they appeared to be.

Especially since the pilots who were most in position to cause they problem found control switches and triggers flipping or freezing up exactly when they didn’t want them too.

“Well that was fun,” Nix said as the last two Tie-Fighters plowed into each other leaving the galaxy none the worse for their loss. “Do you have anymore toys we can break?”

Angry static answered her question and from the flagship, Ayli could feel plumes of unbridled rage rising.

 “Ah, you only had a few of those. That’s a shame. Probably hard to keep your gear in working order when it was so badly made in the first place,” Nix said. “So are you going to  return our prisoners to us then?” Nix asked, the hint of amusement in her voice calculated to even further enrage everyone who could hear it aside from Ayli who found it delightful.

“You failed to kill me, you witch!” Primus Dolon said, cutting into the line.

“I didn’t fail at anything,” Nix said. “You’re alive because I want you alive. For now.”

“Lies. You will die and you will never see who killed you,” Dolon said.

“Pretty sure I will,” Nix said, and focused again.

On the open comm, Ayli heard a scream of pain and surprise, though oddly not Dolon’s.

“I’m guessing you were thinking to send Elder Korgruv as your first assassin?” Nix asked. “You might want to get him to a bacta tank, like right now. That broken plasma conduit he was standing near didn’t really make him any uglier but there’s probably time to save his eyes if he gets treatment right away.”

“Nix, I think you broke them,” Ayli said. “The armada’s powering up their hyperdrives to jump out of here.”

“Oh. That’s not going to be a problem,” Nix said as a second armada slammed out of hyperspace and a gravity well enveloped a fair portion of the solar system.

“Did someone order an interdictor?” Sali asked, joining the comms.

Star Wars: Legacy of the Force – Ch 19

Solna expected to find many things when they landed on Selvus. A hostile welcoming committee seemed the most likely. The condemnation of her teachers and caretakers was all but a certainty. It had crossed her mind that an Expunging Rite in progress was not entirely out of the question either.

Instead what she found, what they all found, was chaos.

Goldie had touched down briefly at a starport named Dolos Station. Those who were intending to go ashore were promptly swept out of the ship, while those who chose to remain with Goldie as she rocketed off to pursue her parents remained clustered on the bridge.

Those who disembarked included Rassi and Solna, Tovos and his crew, and the Horizon Knight Monfi. Ravas and Kelda had expressed a desire to come with the shore party but given the cloaking field Tovos’ crew was still employing their ability to serve as messengers would have been severely limited.

“If you need us, you need only call,” Kelda said.

“Though you’ll want to make it a loud one,” Ravas added.

Everyone could sense that Nix and Ayli were in pursuit of the Enclave’s leadership and that a struggle awaited them. Kelda and Ravas would be the first line of support for that battle, followed as quickly as possible by Lasha, Nulo, Moffvok, Bopo, and, of course, Goldie.

Sali had opted to join the shore party since a battle with the elder Force Users didn’t seem like a good time to her.

Also there was the fact that Zin had contacted them as soon as they entered the planetary landing grid.

“Well my plan backfired,” Zin had said. “I specifically followed them in case they needed backup, but they never even made planetfall here.”

“What happened?” Goldie had asked.

“Apparently a ship broke the lockdown one of my Sisters had put on the port and Nix and Ayli followed them into hyperspace.”

Which was ridiculous. Everyone agreed it couldn’t have worked since you can’t simply jump after someone who goes to lightspeed. Without know they jump calculations, the chance that you’d even wind up in the same solar system were microscopic. 

“If Ayli did it, she had way to make it work,” Goldie said. “We just need to figure out where they went.”

“That won’t be a problem,” Kelda said. “Ravas and I can simply ask them.”

“Let’s do that then. Now,” Goldie said.

“We’ll need to drop our guests off on the planet first,” Kelda said.

“They’re getting a free ride. We can drop them off after we have Nix and Ayli back,” Goldie had countered.

“Except we won’t be able to come back here while their projecting their cloak,” Kelda said.

“And if they stop projecting their cloak, the Death Shadows will flock down on them and  us.” Ravas said.

Goldie sighed, which certainly wasn’t something she’d been programmed to do.

“Fine. Aunt Zin can you get us landing clearance asap?” Goldie asked.

“Already on it my dear,” Zin said. “You’re cleared for a landing on Pad C11 in ten minutes.”

Which was ten minutes longer than Goldie had wanted to wait, but it gave the shore team enough time to gather their stuff and collect what information Zin had to offer on the current state of the Silent Enclave.

Ten minutes and about fifteen seconds later though and the shore team was all on their own, with Goldie once more lifting off for orbit at maximum speed.

“We should go see how this Enclave of yours is doing,” Monfi said, hailing an auto-mover down that had enough space for them all.

“Sister Wenley is watching them still,” Zin said. “If anyone else had tried to leave she would have alerted us.”

“The others won’t be leaving,” Tovos said. “The Elder’s would have commanded them to stay behind when they left.”

“How long will those orders hold in the Elders’ absence?” Monfi asked.

“Until the Elders return or until someone in the Enclave grows old and skilled enough to be named a new Elder.” Tovos wasn’t saying anything Solna hadn’t expected to hear. The idea that the Elders were to be followed unquestioningly had been stamped in her since she was a able to understand words. Her current perspective on the Silent Enclave brought with it a new emotion in place of the desperate devotion she’d once felt.

Rage.

Beside her, Rassi blinked and pulled Solna in for a quick side-hug before offering her hand for Solna to hold.

Which was the right gesture. Holding Rassi’s hand was always comforting, and Solna knew that greeting the situation which lay before them with anger wasn’t going to lead to a good outcome for anyone.

“Let’s get you all back home then,” Sali said as she inspected the most obvious of the blasters she was carrying. Solna couldn’t quite sense where the other ones were, which was a feat in its own right, but the Force was quite clear that Sali, even after passing through the starport’s security was still bristling with more armaments than most New Republic fortresses possessed.

“I gather there will be some danger involved but this is an event which I need to record for the Order’s records,” Zin said.

“Which is why I’ll be right there with you,” Sali said. “Us pirates thrive on danger after all.”

Which wasn’t exactly true. Solna could sense that Sali was more unconcerned with the danger before her than thriving on it. She’d seemed reasonably happy to come along and corral Zin but beyond that a life of relative safety and ease seem to suit the pirate queen quite well.

That thought led to Solna ponder what it was she desired in her life.

Safety and ease always held their fascinations, but Solna wasn’t sure she was ready for either one. Not until she’d sorted out the Silent Enclave, or at least done her part to try.

What “that part” might be still escaped Solna. Even as angry as she was, the prospect of taking on the entire Enclave was daunting. For several reasons, not the least of which being that she could see how the Elders had done what they had, could see the techniques they’d used to manipulate the Enclave and if the Enclave fought back against her hard enough, she wasn’t entirely sure she could resist using those techniques too.

“The local security force should have the rest of the Enclave under house arrest by now,” Zin said. “After their ship blasted out of the port, the rest of them are being investigated for being part of a criminal conspiracy with a high flight risk level.”

“Security won’t find them,” Tovos said. It should have worried Solna that he was doing a field rebuild of his blaster rifle. That was standard procedure at the start of a combat mission, but they weren’t going into combat with the rest of the Enclave and Tovos knew that.

He believed it too which Solna found deeply at odds with the Tovos she’d known.

The Tovos she’d left behind at the Enclave was a bully and was among the least flexible of people when it came to the Enclave’s doctrine she knew. The young man who sat across from her in the auto-cab had found something important but at an unbearably high cost. What peace he’d been able to make with the loss of not only his crew member but the person he’d believed himself to be seemed to be based on anger at those who’d abused them as much as a love for his teammates he’d never let himself acknowledge before.

That Solna could reach all that from his stray thoughts was the most shocking thing of all though and the most absolute proof of how much he’d been changed.

Rassi squeezed her hand again, calling her attention away from concerns of the future to the reality which was rapidly approaching them.

“This is supposed to be the Enclave’s temporary berths?” Zin said as the auto-cab circled over an empty field where a few security enforcers remained milling about.

“Looks like they’re smart enough to falsify their landing coordinates,” Sali said. “Which means we do not want to go down there.”

“The auto-cab’s destination is already locked in,” Zin said.

“And you already have its controls hacked. So have it take us to the empty berths on the other side of the main terminal.”

“You have such faith in me,” Zin said as the auto-cab gently banked away towards another unused landing field at the outskirts of the starport.

No one asked why they weren’t going to land and talk to the security enforcers. Showing up at a mysteriously empty crime scene was a sure ticket to have all the blame for what happened pinned on you and while Zin’s contact could probably deal with the legal troubles for them, Security Enforcers were just as likely to shoot first and file charges against the corpses later since it cut down on the chance that their version of events would be challenged.

“We can find where they are,” Rassi said.

“They’ll be under a stronger cloak than we have,” Osdo said.

“And they have a lot more emotions to hide,” Rassi said. “Solna and I can find them, if we work together.”

“Should someone better with the Xah help her?” Felgo asked, not intending it to be a rude question, but simply still trapped in the impression he had of Rassi for the last decade or more.

“She’s much stronger than any of us,” Tovos said.

“I know Solna is. Everyone knows that, but Rassi…” Felgo said but Tovos cut him off.

“Rassi is who I’m talking about. Do you know why she was ‘always tripping up’? It’s because she’s so much closer to the Xah that it can’t help but resonate with her emotions. We were idiots not to see it.”

“And she wasn’t ‘always tripping up,” Osdo said. “She beat me at the last City Walk test we did. She was…she is pretty talented. But they never let us see that.”

“We never tried to see it.” Tovos had paused in the rebuild of the blaster with his head hung low.

“We could help them now though right?” Felgo asked.

“Why would they want us to?” Tovos asked. “Do you think they could trust us? Do you think they don’t hate us? We won’t do anything but disrupt their connection to the Xah.”

Solna had a free hand.

So she took one of Tovos’ hands from his blaster rifle.

“We don’t hate you,” she said.

Tovos shook his head and looked to Rassi, who had a far greater right to hold onto the animosity they’d both felt for him.

“I did,” Rassi said. “But I don’t want to anymore. You didn’t have to do the things you did to me. Or to Solna. Some of that wasn’t you. The Elders made us who we are, and so a lot of that is on them.”

“But some of it is on us,” Tovos said. “And we can’t ask you to forget that.”

“I’m not going to,” Rassi said. “But if you really are sorry for what you did, then I make out a lot better if I give you a chance to prove that.”

With her free hand, she took Felgo’s hand in her own to begin the circle which the children of the Silence Enclave formed with no more words.

Solna glanced over at Monfi who could have joined them as another Force user, but he shook his head with a smile. This was something he was an outsider to, and he clearly did not want to intrude.

Which was probably for the best. As the circle sank down into the silence of the Xah they swiftly passed the point where other Force Users could have easily quieted themselves. Unlike during a Silent Dance though, the ritual Rassi was leading them through was one predicated on supporting each other as they stilled the Force within them and cast their awareness outwards.

Solna had expected she and Rassi could cover the starport without endangering themselves. Together with Tovos, Felgo, Osdo, Polu, and Yanni though, they covered the planet.

Which was how they found the Silent Enclave.

And how they discovered the host of Death Shadows that were descending upon them.

Star Wars: Legacy of the Force – Ch 18

Nix couldn’t feel anyone waiting for them on Selvus. The Force wasn’t indicating that anything important was there, or that there was any reason she should be heading towards the 52nd largest city on the planet as opposed to any other location there or in the wider galaxy.

In part that was because the Force couldn’t read.

Zin’s informant had been good about giving not only the exact location of the Enclave’s temporary berth but also the transponder codes of the various ships in their tiny armada.

“Dolos Station is asking for landing permits,” Ayli said.

“They’re just coming in from Zin’s guy on the ground,” Nix said, giving the documentation a quick review before transmitting it to Dolos Station’s air control.

The documents had their ship’s actual transponder could, which Nix hadn’t bothered to spoof to another one, but the rest of the information was pure fancy. It would have been nice if she and Ayli were beverage procurement agents for the Zardewill Consortium, and were on a fact finding trip of the local distilleries, but Nix wasn’t even sure if the Zardewill Consortium was a real entity at all much less whether they employed beverage procurement agents. With the galaxy being as large as it was though, no one was going to bother trying to drive off potential business unless she or Ayli tried to lean on their “connections” for favors.

“Permits accepted. Excellent,” Ayli said. “They are warning us of a judicial lockdown on ships leaving the port though. Apparently its in force for another twelve hours.”

“Wow. Zin’s guy really came through there!” Nix hadn’t expected Zin’s informant to be able to provide much of a delay against the Enclave leaving. From the reports it seemed like any items they’d been looking for that had a longer procurement window than a few hours had been ones they’d canceled their orders for.

“That might be slightly inconvenient for us if things go sideways with the Enclave,” Ayli said. “I usually hope the judicial lockdown for my crimes gets put in place well after I’m out of the system.”

“That just means we’ll need to hide the bodies pretty well,” Nix said, mostly, but only mostly joking.

“Have I mentioned how happy I am you came for me?” Ayli said.

“I’m happy you weren’t stuck with the Lich for even a minute longer,” Nix said.

“That too, but I was thinking back to Canto Blight,” Ayli said. “If you hadn’t been there, if you hadn’t answered a call I didn’t even know I was making? I’m glad that wasn’t how things went.”

Nix spun around in her chair and placed a kiss on the top of Ayli’s head, and then trailed a handful more down her lekku.

“Me too.”

“You know,” Ayli said. “They’re locked in for at least twelve more hours. We don’t have to rush to catch them once we land?”

Nix found that to be an appealing idea. A rather appealing one in fact.

Which was, of course, the moment the klaxons started sounding.

“Are they shooting at us?” she asked, spinning back to her own console.

“Nope,” Ayli said, banking hard to the right. “But they are shooting.”

“At who?” Nix asked, perplexed for all of two whole seconds.

And then she sighed.

“Let me guess,” she said, the weight of dejection settle on her like a planetary mass.

“A ship broke the judicial lockdown,” Ayli said. “All other vessels are being instructed to clear the airspace.”

“And that’s what we’re doing?” Nix asked, noting the continued evasive maneuvering Ayli was doing.

“Nope.”

“Because it’s the Enclave’s ships that are breaking containment?” Nix asked.

“Just one of them,” Ayli said. “Power up the hyperdrive would you?”

“We’re still in the atmosphere,” Nix warned her, knowing the warning was both unnecessary and useless. If Ayli was planning to jump to lightspeed into the planet’s gravity well, then Ayli would be jumping to lightspeed, regardless of the inevitable damage it did to the ship.

She would also, very likely, have a good reason for doing so.

“Only one ship? Did they cram everyone onboard it?” Nix asked.

“Don’t think so,” Ayli said. “This one’s a not their flagship. It’s a racing yacht.”

“What the hell is the Silent Enclave doing with a racing yacht?”

“Currently? Evading all the anti-aircraft fire like a demon,” Ayli said as she, herself, also evaded said fire like a demon. Or an angel possibly, though if so, she was certainly one that it was worth being afraid of.

“Zardewill Shuttle, clear the interdicted airspace immediately,” the comms from the air controller announced.

“Looks like you’ve got an escaping criminal,” Ayli commed back to them.

“Yes. Do not impede retrieval efforts or you will be charged as well.”

“Not going to impede anything Dolos Control,” Ayli said. “Thought we’d give you a hand with bringing them down.”

“Civilian assistance has not been requested at this time.” The air controller wasn’t a droid but he did a remarkable impersonation of one.

“Acknowledged Dolos Control. Also please record a formal release of Dolos Defense Forces from all safety obligations for Zardewill Shuttle. Captain’s mark transmitting now.”

“Transmission received. A violation of airspace control has also been recorded.”

“If we bring your perps back can we exchange that for clemency?” Ayli asked, carrying on the conversation effortlessly as the incoming hail of defensive fire increased.

“Judicial negotiations are the purview of Dolor Air Control,” the controller said, before adding, “I will however personally testify on your behalf. That is some mighty fine flying there Zardewill Shuttle!”

“You should see what I can do in something other than this barge,” Ayli said. “We’ll bring your perps back, or at least whatever identifying pieces of that ship are left.”

“Not sure you’ve got enough time to do that,” the air controller said. “They’re going to breech atmosphere in fifteen seconds.”

“Not going to be a problem,” Ayli said with a smile of wolfish delight on her face which suggested she was recovering from the fight her Dark Side had lost to the Lich.

“Their hyperdrive is coming on line,” the air controller said, as though that was going to be the end of the encounter.

“Not going to be a problem,” Ayli said and threw their shuttle into hyperspace a fraction of a second after the Enclave’s yacht jumped.

“Where are we going?” Nix asked, sensing, as usual, nothing special about the yacht which was a light year ahead of them but whose path Ayli was somehow following nonetheless.

“No idea. Probably into a trap.”

“Any thoughts on why only one of their ships broke containment?” Nix asked.

“It’s the leaders, their Elders,” Ayli said. “They’re cloaked in the Force but organizations like that? Where they leaders are used to being in complete control? They tend to value their own survival a lot more than the people under them.”

“You don’t think any of them stayed behind?” Nix couldn’t feel anything special about the ship they were following. In hyperspace the sensors couldn’t even pick it up. She was starting to feel a pull from the Force though in the direction they were travelings. Some tiny bit of destiny was awaiting them there.

“Maybe some did. Those aren’t the ones we need to worry about though.” Ayli was making constant minuet adjustments to their course to keep them behind the Enclave’s ship. In the process she was also steering them towards one of the minor hyperspace routes which led away from Selvus.

“Why’s that? They were still part of the control structure of the Enclave and they almost certainly know the Expunging ritual.”

“If they stayed behind that means they care more about their people than they do about escaping the Death Shadows that are coming for them,” Ayli said. “It also means they’re going to be the less vindictive ones of the bunch. When the group we’re pursuing gets done fleeing, they’re going to spend a bunch of time shoring up their defenses until they feel safe and then they will start coming after anyone at all that they can blame for what happened. Or even just anyone who made them feel weak.”

“Which would make me target number one, at least if Dolon’s still alive,” Nix said.

“You know he is. Even if we can’t sense him, you know he’s still out there and if there’s one thing I’ve learned it’s that you don’t give people who are going to come gunning for you time to setup the perfect plan.”

“I doubt Dolon’s capable of even coming up with a competent plan,” Nix said. “But I’d rather not let him take the initiative with an incompetent plan.”

“I know I’m still a little off because I’d usually be feeling a bit of bloodlust in a situation like this,” Ayli said. “This time it’s like I know killing them would be the cleanest, most permanent solution available, but I don’t feel terribly drawn to that option.”

“That might just be a sign that we have better options available to us.” Nix wasn’t sure what those options might be, but the general shape of something besides murder was skirting around the edges of her awareness.

“If we do, I don’t know if I can promise to take them,” Ayli said. “Depending on how Dolon and the others respond. If they threaten you again for example…”

“Or you. And it’s credible threat. I expect a lot of blustering, but a real threat? I don’t need my life to have people like that in it.”

“Let me do it if it comes to that,” Ayli said. “It wouldn’t be the first time for me.”

“Me either,” Nix said, recalling how easy it was to press one button to close an airlock and another open the door to space. She’d expected to have nightmares about that, but all it had taken was one smile of gratitude from one of her fellow mechanics and she’d slept as soundly as a baby afterwards.

“With you it would be personal though,” Ayli said. “It would change how you approach the Force. I’ve already gone as overboard as I can. I know I can make it back if I need to.”

“There’s no ‘making it back’,” Nix said. “You weren’t lost when you lost control, or when your eyes were changed. The Dark Side isn’t something that’s apart from us. It’s always our choice whether we want to be calm and in balance, or to lash out.”

“Once you choose to ‘lash out’ with the Force though, it’s hard to stop. I’ve been trying to maintain my balance for a year now and even like this, even with Dark Side all beat up and unconscious, I can still feel the temptation to just give in.”

“That’s still part of you, and me,” Nix said. “Neither of us will ever be ‘free of our Dark Sides for good.’ The choice to diminish the light we have as luminous beings is part of what makes us who we are. Being out of balanced sucks, but we can’t be balanced without the ability to change, and that includes being able to change ‘too far’ in response to situations which have gone too far.”

“Are you arguing in favor of using the Dark Side?” Ayli asked, sounding genuinely curious.

“Not at all,” Nix said, trying to find the right words to net the idea she was constructing as they spoke. “I think my point is that your not broken for having given into the Dark Side, and that your not ‘less worthy’ than me because you’ve had to kill people before. You were placed in an unbearable situation and you made it through. If there were better choices you could have made the answer isn’t to think less of yourself, it’s to learn from them and make better choices going forward.”

“What if those better choices involve protecting the woman I love?” Ayli asked.

“Then know that woman wants you to protect yourself too, and that she can handle more than you might think.”

The lights of hyperspace slammed back into the starry void of real space.

“I guess we’ll be putting that to the test then,” Ayli said as the sky filled with an armada of warships in front of them.

Star Wars: Legacy of the Force – Ch 17

Rassi wasn’t surprised that they arrived at Kardebron late. Disappointed, but not surprised. Though Goldie really had made the best possible time to reach the pirate fortress turned pirate resort, Rassi had been able to sense that their destinies did not include a reunion with Nix. At least not within either of their immediate futures.

“How long ago did they leave Aunt Sali?” Goldie asked, having established communications with her ‘favorite aunt’ the moment they dropped out of hyperspace.

“About two days ago,” the Pirate Queen Saliandrus said. “Took my Zin with them too!”

From the slight slurring in her tone, it was just possible that ‘Aunt Sali’ had imbibed a bit too much of something.

“Give me the coordinates and I’ll go bring them back,” Goldie said.

“On one condition,” Sali said.

“Mom’s still not letting me take part in any space battles,” Goldie said.

“Oh, don’t worry about that. I’ll have you pillaging ships ten times your size this standard,” Sali said. “That’s not what I need at the moment though.”

“I hope so. What’s your condition though if not pillaging?” Goldie asked in a tone that left Rassi wondering if the talk of piracy was a long running joke, or something the two were seriously considering.

“I’ve got a handful of people here who stayed behind to practice their Force stuff,” Sali said. “They’ve practiced enough though, and each one is mopier than the last. I’ll tell you where your Mom’s went if you give this Lost lot a trip back home.”

“Is that Tovos and the other who started this by kidnapping Nix and Ayli?” Goldie asked.

“Yep. Or most of them I gather,” Sali said.

“If you put them in a shuttle, I’d be happy to test out the weapon systems you got for me!” Goldie said. She didn’t sound remorseless at the idea like a machine would. Somehow Goldie’s gleeful malice had an entirely human quality to it.

“I’d be happy to, but Nix seems to have taken them under her wing,” Sali said. “Called them her wards, so I’m guessing she’d be a little put out if I let you blow them to space dust.”

“Nix…Mom did what?” Goldie asked. “Wards?”

“Yeah. Means she’s responsible for them.” Sali wasn’t as incredulous as Goldie was but she didn’t sound like she could understand Nix’s reasoning either.

“I know that, but why?”

“Have you met your mother?” Sali asked, her grin audible from a few planetary diameters away.

Rassi reached out with the Force, which felt funny to do. She was so used to shying away from it that actively engaging felt clumsy and awkward. Like making conversation with a girl who you thought was awesome but who you’d never talked to because she was best and you were just the worse. Much like how Rassi did eventually manage to bring herself to talk with Solna though, her conversation with the Force was met with equal eagerness on both sides.

Together with her oldest friend, they felt across the void, through the atmosphere and down into Sali’s fortress to find the barest of whispers to indicate that Tovos and several others from the Enclave where there.

Her mind shied away from focusing on them any further. She’d had too many bad experiences with them to feel anything close to neutral to the idea of them joining Goldie’s crew, even if it was for a brief one way trip back to the Enclave.

As she withdrew her focus though, Rassi was struck by the fact that she’d been able to detect them at all.

It was true that she had a greater connection to them than to most of the rest of the galaxy, but none of them were living up the silence the Enclave demanded. Sure they were far quieter than anyone outside the Enclave could claim to be, but even though their thoughts were little more than whispers, they were whispers Rassi could still hear.

Which meant something was either very wrong with them, or they had changed far more than Rassi could ever imagine them changing.

Or both.

“We should see what’s happened to them,” Rassi said.

“Yeah, we need to know why they stayed behind,” Solna added, her thoughts running along similar paths to Rassi’s from the look in her eyes.

 “Fine, we can take them along,” Goldie said.

“And me,” Sali added. “I had some things I had to attend to when they left. Since I have drunk those things under the bar however, I am free to take a leave of absence.”

“You get vacation time?” Goldie asked.

“In this job you don’t get vacation time. You make it,” Sali said. “I’ll make sure people here know what a bad idea it would be if I come back and everything’s fallen to poodu. Which means I get to enjoy my vacation and look forward to breaking some heads when I get back. So it’s win-win really.”

“We’ll be on your landing pad in ten minutes,” Goldie said. “Think you can be ready to leave then?”

“Kid, I’ve been ready to leave for the last two days,” Sali said.

—-

It wasn’t ten minutes before they landed. It was six. Six minutes of atmospheric reentry that Rassi was sure had to have burned a few layers off Goldie’s hull, but which no one was willing to argue with her about.

As promised, Sali, Tovos and the others were there waiting for them.

“Should we help them get loaded in?” Monfi asked.

“No need,” Goldie said. “I’ve got the waldos ready to drag any slowpokes in. We’re lifting off in ten.”

“Ten minutes?” Lasha asked.

“Nine. Eight. Seven,” Goldie said, which Rassi wasn’t certain was enough time for people to actually get on board, but at zero on Goldie’s countdown they did indeed lift off the platform and begin thrusting for space.

“Wow. Nix is in trouble, isn’t she?” Sali asked a few moments later when she arrived in the somewhat crowded bridge.

“No. Of course not,” Goldie said. “Out of curiosity though do they make droid restraining bolts that work on humans?”

“Believe it or not…” Sali began to say and then spied Rassi and Solna who, despite all they’d been through, she obviously mistook for being children still. “Believe it or not that’s something pirates would love to have but alas no one had perfected such a thing yet.”

Which was a lie. Not that Rassi was familiar with any tech like that, but Sali was not exactly a subtle presence in the Force.

“We need to go talk to Tovos,” Solna said, rising and wiggling past Sali to head to the cargo bay where Tovos and the others from the Enclave were still gathered.

Rassi rose to join her but was presented with the problem that Solna was able to squeeze through much tighter spaces than Rassi was.

Sali saw the problem and stepped out of the bridge to make room for Rassi to pass, nodding in solidarity from one large girl to another. They were so very different, but the small moment of understanding left Rassi pondering what her life might have been like if she’d been taken in by pirates rather than having been raised in the Enclave. 

It led her imagination to intriguing places, which kept her distracted up until she got to the cargo bay and found Tovos, Felgo, and Osdo waiting for them. Behind them Yanni and Polu where sitting with their heads pressed together and the Force swirling around them in a manner that would have led to their execution in the Enclave.

“You’re not Silent?” Rassi asked, surprised on about a dozen different levels, including the one that had noticed that Tovos’ team was still projected an Enclave silence field over them all.

“You’re not either,” Tovos said, discomfort radiating off him for only a moment before he squelched it down.

But a moment was far longer than anyone in the Enclave would have allowed themselves to disrupt the Xah.

“The Enclave never wanted us,” Solna said, shifting to stand a little closer to Rassi.

“The Elders loved you,” Tovos said. “It was her,” indicating Rassi with a twitch of his head, “that they always had problems with.”

Rassi was going to contest that, but Felgo, of all people, got to it first.

“Do you think what the Elders did was love?” he asked. “Sure, they singled Solna out as being the best in her class, but they didn’t make that a good thing did they?”

 He looked at Solna who could hide her surprise at his words.

The Felgo they knew never would have questioned the Elders. 

And never would have cut one of his juniors a break.

“We owe them an apology,” Osdo said, despite being the one who had offered Solna and Rassi the fewest hassles out of anyone in his class.

“We owe them more than apology,” Tovos said, which suggested that someone had hollowed out Tovos’ body and possessed what what left.

A better somebody than the body’s original owner apparently, and Rassi was not inclined to complain, despite how deeply weird it was to hear Tovos saying the words he was.

“What are you talking about?” she asked, trying to get a handle on the bizarre alternate universe she had apparently fallen into.

“Nix showed us everything. Everything she saw herself and everything that the Xah showed her about what the Elders had done. To us. To the people who defied them. To…” Tovos’ voice caught and Rassi felt the genuine pain and anger the flashed out from him, “To my brother. And all the others like him.”

“And you believed her?” Solna asked, as shocked by the idea as Rassi was.

“The danced a Silent Dance,” Felgo said.

“To her death,” Osdo added.

“Or close to it,” Tovos explained. “She held nothing back and ran out every bit of strength she had, so the visions she shared, they weren’t just of what the Elders had done with the Expunging Rite. We saw how they shaped and controlled us. We saw what it was like for the victims of the Expunging, and how the Elders ensured they survived the rite.”

“And we saw what idiots we’d been,” Felgo added when Tovos fell silent.

“We’ve spent the last couple of days training and planning,” Osdo said. “We couldn’t go back to the Enclave while the Elders could still control us. So we’ve been learning and practicing.”

“Nix showed us how to defend ourselves, sort of,” Felgo said.

“Sort of?” Solna asked.

“We kind of had to figure it out on our own, but she gave us tips of what to look for and how we could start trying to resist an Elder reaching out an commanding us with the Xah,” Osdo said. “She wanted us to train ourselves though so we wouldn’t lose what we have now.”

Solna shook her head. “She said pretty much the same thing to me.”

“And you learned how to shield yourself from her?” Tovos asked.

“No, from a ghost,” Solna said without offering any additional information.

Since she was no longer suppressing the Force within her though, her sincerity was easy for all present to feel.

Tovos was quiet for a moment, digesting that and searching for words if Rassi was reading him right, before he spoke.

“I’m glad you found a better teacher than the ones we had in the Enclave.” It wasn’t an apology, but it was sincere where an apology would have been a bit too hard to swallow. Only actions and time could prove that he regretted what he had done.

For the moment though, they had a larger, shared problem to resolve.

“What plan did you come up with?” Rassi asked, rather than simply saying ‘why are you here?’

“We know we’re too late to catch up to Nix and Ayli,” Tovos said. “We’d wanted to help them but we can feel that’s not where the Xah is leading us. So we’re going to go home, and put an end to the Silent Enclave.”

Star Wars: Legacy of the Force – Ch 16

Ayli enjoyed being on starships, but watching a double sunset on a veranda that overlooked a sparkling silver-blue sea while a warm breeze tickled her lekku was scoring points for planetside living too.

“You know, I never planned on taking apprentices, even as a ship’s mechanic,” Nix said, plopping down into a chair beside Ayli’s. “I always figured getting people to actually do the work would be a nightmare. Now I’ve got five Force apprentices and they just won’t stop!”

Sali’s deepthroated laugh was one of evil delight.

“Is it wrong that I want to wish five more of them on her?” she asked, sipping from a surprisingly non-alcoholic mixed fruit beverage.

“Then we’d never get to enjoy her company at all,” Zindiana said, looking up from the datapad she was reading.

The ‘pirate haven’ Nix had navigated them to was quite a bit nicer than Ayli had expected it to be largely thanks to the two women they were sharing an early dinner with. 

Ayli knew Sali had setup a new empire for herself from the remains of the Klex Cartel’s holdings. What she’d expected (a lawless outpost of the sort of criminal scum Ayli felt the most at home with) was not at all the sort of fortress Sali had put together though.

The Klex ‘treasure hoard’ had been largely invested in legitimate ventures throughout the galaxy. That had kept it safe from pillaging as the Cartel fell, or at least safe from pillaging by people who were not Nuns of questionable repute and considerable skill.

Part of accessing the wealth of the Klex had required presenting a legitimate front to the concerns it was invested with, hence the Pirate Queen Saliandrus’s adoption of a more formal and less ‘murdery’ persona. 

Sali’s home was still a fortress – one the New Republic would have found challenging to assault even with a full battle group – but that security was all part of the offerings the ‘elite resort for cultured clientele’ promised.

As it turned out, a neutral location where no pirate had to worry about another pirate’s fleet blasting them to space dust was an appealing vacation destination for quite a few of the galaxy’s ruthlessly wealthy individuals. 

That Sali was making them significantly less wealthy with every service offered was a mark of prestige for the elites. That Zin was marking each and every one of them with trackers was not a service which was advertised, but rather offered gratis and without notice. The data taps into their comm channels and bank accounts were also unobtrusive and largely unused as well. 

As Sali described it, “the best space battle is the one the other side can’t afford to send any ships to,” and Ayli couldn’t find a fault with that.

“I think you were nicer as a Pirate Queen,” Nix grumbled, chomping into the plate of smoked meats and sugared berries Ayli had put together for her.

“Oh, I was,” Sali said. “See what you’ve unleashed on the galaxy when you kidnapped me away from all that?”

“Better a happy pirate than a cranky one,” Ayli said, closing her eyes to enjoy the play the breeze around her lekku. How other species ever enjoyed life with their unfeeling ‘hair’ completely escaped her at times like these.

“I was never cranky,” Sali said. “I was fearsome.”

“Fearsome and cranky,” Zin said. “They’re both good looks on you.”

“Cranky is a good look?” Nix asked between bites.

“When it’s focused on someone awful? Delightfully so,” Zin said, which struck Ayli as an odd attitude for a Nun to have, but Zin had always been an odd sort of Nun.

“So what are the gaggle of kids you brought with you doing now?” Sali asked. Sali who was older than Nix and Ayli by no more than half a decade and had only marginally more room to consider Tovos’s crew as children than Ayli did.

“Stabbing each other with their minds,” Nix said. “I was going to ask for a pallet of cerebro-stims for each of them for the headaches they’re going to have tomorrow, but it’s probably better for them to feel exactly what the cost is for overdoing it like they are.”

“As their instructor couldn’t you just tell them to stop?” Zin asked.

“And what do you mean ‘stabbing each other with their minds’? I thought your Force stuff didn’t do attacks like that?”

“It doesn’t, and I could,” Nix said. “I this case where they’re doing is listening for surface level thoughts. Sometimes people broadcast what they’re thinking, sometimes you can kind of poke past their barriers with the Force and get a sense what they’re thinking about. With these kids, it’s shockingly easy to poke through their defenses, largely because they never learned to raise the sort of mental barriers that even the most Force insensitive do.”

“So you’re having them poke each other’s thoughts to work up to being able to read more well defended people?” Zin asked.

“Not at all,” Nix said. “They don’t believe in using the Force for anything active, and certainly nothing that impacts someone else. What they’re trying to work out is how to create some defenses so that they won’t be as vulnerable to other Force users.”

“What other Force users do they have to worry about? You were saying you took care of that Lich guy right?” Sali asked, tearing a hunk of meat off the bone it was still connected to in a suitably pirate fashion. 

“We mostly just distracted him,” Nix said. “It was our friends who really destroyed him. He wasn’t the only horrible thing out there in the galaxy though.”

“You mentioned running into a group of ‘Death Shadows’ was it?” Zin asked. “I should probably get some interview notes from you on those. I don’t know that my order has encountered them before.”

“I suspect they’re a particular problem for the Silent Enclave,” Ayli said.

“Who I should also interview you on,” Zin said. “It seems unlikely that they’ve existed as long as they have without being catalogued but anything is possible.”

“More than possible in this case,” Nix said. “Given how well they can hide themselves, it’s highly likely I would say.”

“Especially since they’re quite willing to kill to maintain their anonymity,” Ayli said.

“Really?” Sali said and Ayli could hear the smile spreading across her face. “Did you bring me a troupe of hyper-elusive spies who lack any moral compunctions about eliminating their assigned targets?”

“Yes,” Nix said. “But bear in mind they’re MY hyper-elusive killer spies.”

“We have a group of killers now?” Ayli asked.

“Of course,” Nix said. “One’s I will never ask to kill anyone – in fact I plan to discourage that rather thoroughly before we find the Enclave – but it’s good to keep in mind what people are capable of and anyone who can pass as unnoticed as they can would make almost perfect assassins. Isn’t that right Polu?”

“What? How did you sense me!” the youngest of member of Tovos’ crew complained.

Ayli congratulated herself on not reaching for either her blaster (because of course she had a blaster on her, some habits she refused to let die after how many times it had saved her life) or a shower of Force Lightning (which situationally might be more useful than a blaster, but only if she felt like destroying her soul as much as her target’s body – and there was a wonderfully warm body sitting beside her who did a fantastic job at dispelling Ayli’s accumulated urges towards self-destruction).

Sali and Zin were not quite as controlled as Ayli was, but to their credit neither one pulled the triggers on the blasters which appeared in their hands.

“Please don’t shoot my ward,” Nix said with the clear knowledge that no one was actually planning to do anything of the sort.

Polu had frozen and, to his credit, was broadcasting the entirely reasonable shock of fear he was experiencing at being on the wrong end of several blaster barrels.

“That was good,” Ayli said, offering Polu the equivalent of a Force fist bump for not suppressing his emotions like he’d been taught to all his life.

“Not good enough,” Polu grumbled. “Nix still noticed me.”

Nix laughed at that.

“Polu, we just spent five hours together, practicing touching each other’s minds,” Nix said. “We’re so close in the Force at the moment I can feel the beats of your heart. If you’d waited another hour or two, I would have had a much harder time noticing you, I promise.”

“Oh. Well that makes sense.” Polu was only mollified for a moment though. “Wait, ‘harder’ just means you still could though right?”

“Yes. You’re my responsibility now, so I’ll always have a connection to you in the Force,” Nix said. “It would fade away to nothingness if I ignored you for long enough, but since I don’t plan on doing that, I’m afraid you’re stuck with me.”

“I see, I see,” Polu said. “So that’s what they meant by Jedi trickery.”

Ayli suppressed a chuckle at Nix’s frown. Which Nix then let blossom into a toothy grin.

“Did I ever say the Jedi were only ones who were tricky?” she asked innocently.

“You said we could trust you,” Polu said, with more teasing than accusation in his voice.

“Oh you can definitely trust her,” Sali said. “To do what’s right for you, whether you like it or not, ask me how I know!”

“I’m sure Polu has better things to do than listen to old pirate tales,” Nix said, paling a bit.

“Nope. Don’t think I do,” Polu said. “We never got to hear those in the Enclave. I’ve been so very sheltered. I definitely need to learn what the galaxy is really like.”

“Stars, you’ve already corrupted my daughter, is everyone I bring near you going to turn into a pirate?” Nix asked Sali.

“I didn’t turn into a pirate,” Zin said.

“Really? Are you sure about that?” Nix said, gesturing to the pirate resort which Zin was co-owner of.

“Perhaps that’s what the Force wants of you,” Ayli said to Nix. “Maybe the galaxy needs more pirates and the Force is using you to make sure it gets good ones.”

“I’m one of the ‘good ones’? That sounds insulting somehow,” Sali said.

“Of course it does,” Nix said. “Everyone knows you’re the best one.”

Sali fought a smile off with a frown and was at best partially successful at it.

“See,” Sali said, turning to Polu, “This is what you’ve got yourself tangled up with. If you ask me, working for me would be a lot easier and simpler.”

“I will keep that offer in mind!” Polu said, over Nix’s grumble. “I do have a question from the others though; were you able to send out the people you had in mind to look for the Enclave’s new location?”

One of the first things Ayli and Nix had done on landing at Sali and Zin’s Fortress/Resort was to bring them up to speed on their current adventure and Nix’s idea of using Sali’s ‘extra-legal’ contacts to track down the Enclave.

Nix’s argument had been that while the Enclave was incredibly well hidden from remote sensing via the Force, they were still a large and insular group of people with fairly specialized needs who were, notably, not self sufficient and therefor would need things like food, sanitation, and housing setup quickly, which would attract the sort of mundane, boring notice that bounty hunters and the like used to track their prey all the time.

The Enclave was worried about things like the Jedi and Death Shadows tracking them, but the Jedi had done their own investigations and, from what Ayli had read, relied rather strongly on the Force, while the Death Shadows weren’t exactly the sort of creatures who could hire a bounty hunter since, among other things, they lacked credits, voices, and the ability to form complex plans.

“No, we haven’t,” Zin said. “It turns out we didn’t need to. I’m reading through the reports now to confirm it, but one of our contacts on Selvus alerted us yesterday to a new group of travelers who showed up outside of their town and match the description of your Enclave almost perfectly.

“They setup camp on Selvus?” Polu asked.

“No. That’s what I’m looking for now,” Zin said. “From what our contact could discover they were there to purchase construction supplies and a bacta-tank. His report says they didn’t look like they were going to be staying long.”

Ayli rose from her chair in unison with Nix.

“Thank you for your hospitality as always,” she said to Sali and Zin.

“But we need to leave now,” Nix said, reaching out with the Force to Tovos and the others to hurry them towards the rapidly narrowing window available to them.

Star Wars: Legacy of the Force – Ch 15

The calm of hyperspace washed over Solna’s senses like an endless ocean to sink her worries into.

Which was good because she had a lot of them.

She was in so much trouble. She could never be forgiven. She had corrupted the Xah on a fundamental level.

And she was certain she would do it again.

Certain she had been right to do it.

Somehow though, despite the fact that she’d rejected the Silent Enclave and burned at thinking about what they’d done to her and Rassi, somehow she was still terrified of them finding out what she had done.

It wasn’t rational. She knew it wasn’t rational. No one needed to tell her that.

And so Rassi hadn’t said a word.

Solna could feel Rassi struggling with her own memories of the experience, though Rassi’s struggles felt markedly different from the ones within Solna’s heart.

They would compare notes. Someday. When the memories were more distant and Solna had some kind of handle on them.

Until then, Solna sat at the foot of Rassi’s bed and let Rassi work on braiding her hair.

The simple physical contact and the relative quiet of hyperspace made things bearable enough and part of Solna could feel her emotions following suite with each light year that passed.

“Can I come in?” Nulo asked from outside the door to their small room.

Rassi glanced down at Solna who nodded quickly. Nulo wasn’t silent in the Force, but she wonderfully calm most of the time which was also nice to be around.

“Sure thing,” Rassi said. “What’s up?”

Nulo floated through the door on her grav plate and settled it onto the floor to put herself at Solna’s level.

“I just wanted to see how you were doing,” Nulo said. “There’s a tradition among Horizon Knight apprentices that after each mission an apprentice goes on, the other apprentices are supposed listen to whatever stories they have to tell. I know it’s probably different for you, but you two filled us on on what the raid against the Lich was like so I thought you might have a tale to tell about this one too.”

“This one was rough,” Rassi said. “We found one of the Death Shadows.”

“Ravas said you killed it or something like that?” Nulo asked.

“He was already dead,” Solna said. She hadn’t expected to be able to find her voice but the words came easily anyways. “What we did was closer to…” 

She wanted to say ‘granting him peaceful silence, but that was an Enclave phrase, and not at all what they’d really done.

“He’d been killed by the Silent Enclave,” Rassi said. “We were able to call back the pieces of his spirit and let the Force take them.”

“Is that what happened to all the Shadows?” Nulo asked.

“We don’t know, but probably,” Solna said.

“Which is a problem since it means they’re drawn to the Silent Enclave by their basic natures, not any technique we can replicate,” Rassi said, gathering up another bunch of Solna’s hair for another braid.

Nulo gave a low throated chortle which felt something like a rueful chuckle in the Force and said, “So, they’re literally a dead end.”

“Somewhat worse than death,” Rassi said. 

“And there are a lot of them,” Solna said, painfully aware of what that said about the Silent Enclave.

“We’re not totally out of luck,” Nulo said. “Monfi managed to find some old records about a property transfer. He thinks it might be from where the Enclave was setup before the mining colony.”

“I’m not sure how that’s going to help us at this point,” Rassi said. “Even if we find the first place the Death Shadows attacked, all we’re going to discover is the first place the Expunging Ritual was used, and that could have been thousands of years ago.”

“I know the Enclave is really good at hiding in the Force, but part of what we Horizon Knights do is look for things that hide themselves in the Force,” Nulo said. “I don’t think any of us ever needed to try to find the Enclave – you’re not monsters.”

“That’s debatable,” Rassi said.

“Okay, well they’re not the kind of monsters we usually look for,” Nulo said. “That could be good though. If we can find enough sites the Enclave was at Monfi and Lasha might be able to pick up on commonalities they can use to find where they are now. The Enclave is used to hiding from the Jedi, so hopefully they don’t know the kind of things we can do.”

“If we can find them…” Solna started to say and stopped. 

What if they could find the Enclave again? Could she stand against the Elders?

Or more importantly could she stand against them without killing every last one of them.

They weren’t weak of course, but knowing what they had done could she really leave any of them alive? The Expunging Ritual needed to die and the people who’d used it need to die right along with it.

That did not feel good in the Force though and she was keenly aware where those homicidal impulses would lead her.

But the Elders did need to be stopped.

“If we can find them, we can expose them,” Rassi said. “The Silent Enclave was a mistake. They claim that they’re hiding away from the galaxy to be safe from the Jedi but it was never about safety or the freedom to live in harmony with the Force. It’s always been about control. It’s what they did to us and it’s what they’ve killed for, over and over and over again.”

“If we expose them though, won’t they just disappear again?” Nulo asked.

Which was the obvious problem. Even the youngest member of the Enclave could cloak themselves and pass unseen by non-Force users and those with even a bit of training we able to evade anyone who lacked exceptional sensitivity to the Force.

“It depends who, or what, we expose them to,” Rassi said

Which was a chilling though.

Rassi’s struggles with what they’d done were very different than Solna’s were.

The image of what unleashing the Death Shadows on the Enclave and ensuring that the Enclave couldn’t escape them this time was terrible.

And terribly appealing.

“We need a better answer than that,” Solna said, casting the idea out into the galaxy despite the fact that her imagination couldn’t grasp what that solution could possibly be.

“Crew to the cockpit,” Goldie said over the intercom. “There was a message payload waiting for us on the holonet when we dropped out of hyperspace and you’ll all want to hear this.”

Solna looked at Nulo to see if the Hutt had any idea what the message might be, but Nulo gave a wiggle that was the Hutt equivalent of a shrug and keyed her grav plate to lift off from the deck.

In the cockpit they found the other Horizon Knights, Lasha, Monfi and Moffvok waiting along with Archivist Bopo who was at the comm station, apparently decrypting the message.

“Is it really from them?” Goldie asked.

“The key’s one Ayli has used before, so I’d wager good money this is legit,” Bopo said. “Unless you Force users has secret message encryption powers?”

“We use pretty much the same encryption tech you do,” Monfi said.

“Though I suspect ours in a little older,” Lasha said. “We don’t have the time or credits to stay as update as a proper archivist would.”

“You would be amazed at how little time or few credits they make archivists get by on,” Bopo said. “Ayli has, or at least had, better access to encryption tech than I ever did. I only saw her use that a few times though. This message is more her typical style.”

“That’s nice and all but what does it say?” Goldie asked, her mechanical patience wearing thin about as quickly as a flesh and blood daughter’s would have.

“Let’s find out,” Bopo said and clicked a final few keys on the terminal in front of her.

From a project at the front of the cockpit the image of Ayli in translucent blue hologram light sprang to life.

“Hi folks. Hopefully you didn’t have to wait to long to get this message. Check the timestamp on it to confirm, but Nix thinks it’ll be no more than a day from now that you’ll pass through the Hydraken System. We don’t know where you’ll be heading – probably looking for us is our guess. We can save you some time if so – Goldie, we’ll be staying with your aunt’s for a few days.”

The lights in the cockpit flashed in a sequence that Solna could only read as delight.

“If we’re not with them when you get there it means we either found a trail to follow sooner than we expected, or we needed to get back into hiding as quick as possible.” 

Nix and Ayli could have been hiding from any number of things, but of course it was the worst possible option.

“We’ve got Tovos and his crew with us, and there are some things that are hunting members of the Silent Enclave. From what we can tell, they don’t seem to be hunting you girls, Rassi and Solna, and we’re not sure why. You’re either good enough to hide from them on your own, or you’ve broken away from the Enclave enough that they don’t consider you a part of it anymore.”

“Or we’re carrying an army of angry dead souls who whupped them so bad the jumped to lightspeed on their own last time we met them,” Rassi said.

“However you’re staying safe from them, keep doing it,” Ayli folded her hands together in a show of how serious she hoped her words would be taken. “We don’t know what the Death Shadows are, or what they ultimately want, but we’ve seen what they can do to someone who can’t defend themselves.”

One of Tovos crew had died. Solna didn’t need to hear Ayli say the words. The Force confirmed what her own intuition was telling her.

Part of Solna wasn’t unhappy about that.

Tovos had always been a jerk and had tormented Rassi on more occasions than Solna could count. 

Also, he’d been the one to kidnap Nix and Ayli.

So he’d gotten what he deserved.

Except it hadn’t been him the Death Shadows had targeted. 

Or maybe he’d been better defended.

Which raised the question of how Nix and Ayli had dealt with the attack? The Death Shadows weren’t terribly discriminant when it came to attacking people near an Enclave. 

“We’re going to find the Enclave. Tovos says they’ll be under the deepest cloak they can weave, but Nix is pretty sure Goldie’s aunts will have some options for finding people that the Enclave isn’t familiar with.”

“Who are your Aunts?” Rassi asked.

“A pirate and a nun,” Goldie said.

“An odd pair of aunts,” Monfi said. “I take it we’ll be visiting one and then the other?”

“Only if Aunt Zin is on the road,” Goldie said. “Otherwise they’ll both be at Aunt Sally’s fortress.”

“You have an Aunt who owns a fortress?” Nulo asked and Moffvok added a wuff. “And is a pirate.”

“Technically she’s a Pirate Queen, but she says that ‘Planetary Administrator’ is getting to be more accurate every day.”

“You’ve already laid in a course to them, haven’t you?” Lasha asked.

“Yeah. We’ll be coming up on the hyperspace lane we need in about a half hour,” Goldie said. “I could do a lightspeed skip to get us there quicker, but Mom will not like what it does to my drives and I’d rather be the one to scold her than the other way round.”

Solna could picture the moment Goldie had in mind. She could picture turning the whole problem of the Silent Enclave over to Nix and Ayli and any other adult who could be trusted to deal with it.

She could picture all of that, even though the Force was telling her clearly that none of it was going to happen.

Star Wars: Legacy of the Force – Ch 14

There had been shouting. There had been harsh words. There had even been some violence. Nix had been surprised that none of it had been direct at her or Ayli.

Ayli had apparently been ready for that though and had pulled Nix quietly to the side of the cargo room and sat them near a stack of supply crates which were too heavy to be casually knocked over as Tovos and his crew fell into the sort of screaming that inevitably came when a crew was pushed past their breaking point.

Happily, said screaming was not punctuated by blaster fire despite the fact that everyone on the ship except for her and Ayli were armed.

“You can’t believe them. It can’t be true. There must be some other reason. There must be some lie there. Jedi lies. The Jedi always lie!” Polu, one of the two youngest crew members yelled through tears which Nix was sure he would deny shedding later.

“They’re not Jedi.” That it was Tovos making the assertion was surprising only in that he beat Osdo to it, since Osdo had already backed up Nix and Ayli up on that three time so far in the argument.

“But we are Silent!” Yanni’s statement held enough desperation to border on being a question. “The Elder’s speak with the Xah. The Primus…”

“There have been false Primuses before,” Tovos said. “Buchadi.”

The name meant nothing whatsoever to Nix, nor to Ayli it seemed, who shrugged when Nix glanced at her to check.

“That was different,” Yanni said. “He was corrupt from birth, and he corrupted Elder Miknel and Elder Chini before becoming Primus.”

“They are all corrupt,” Tovos said. “They use the Xah as a weapon, and they use it against us.”

Nix wondered if she should step in. The anger driving Tovos and the fear driving the others was being fed by their failure of their mission and their despair at the lives they thought they’d lost. Though they weren’t that much younger than Nix, they’d been so sheltered and fed so many falsehoods about the galaxy and their place in it that Nix couldn’t help but feeling like she’d become the den mother for a group of particularly Dark Side vulnerable and well-armed toddlers.

She started to rise to inject some sanity into their discussion but Ayli grabbed her arm and silently shook her head, indicating for Nix to watch a bit longer.

“Which of them are corrupt doesn’t really matter, does it?” Felgo said. “We’re never going to see them again, we are alone in our silence.”

“Can we let a corruption in the Xah like that remain though?” Polu asked.

“We let the Jedi exist,” Osdo said.

“The Silent do not seek out conflict. We allow the Xah to bring to us the same conflicts it brings to all,” Tovos said, speaking by rote a maxim Nix could feel he didn’t fully believe in anymore.

It was odd being able to sense his emotional state so easily. He was still little more than a whisper in the Force, but the whisper was clearly there and only as quiet as it was out of a lifetime of habit.

“Maybe we should be seeking conflict,” Felgo said. “I mean, they taught us to close our eyes to what they were doing right? Isn’t that what Nix showed us? That we’ve been trained to be damned sheep? That all of this, everything we’re supposed to be, it’s all so they can can control us better? Why should we be silent about that?”

Nix definitely wanted to join the discussion there. She clearly remembered where that sort of explosive anger had led her and she was not about to let the little band in front of her go down that particular path to the Dark Side.

Once more though, Ayli wordlessly held her back, nodding towards Tovos for Nix to focus on what was really happening.

“We could do that,” Tovos said. “We could throw off our Silence. Take the Xah in our hands and use it to make things how we want them to be. I’m sure it would feel right. Like something we had to do.”

The words he didn’t speak were the ones the rest of his crew heard the most loudly.

“Oh, oh that’s what they did, wasn’t it?” Polu said.

“When they overthrew Primus Buchadi. They Expunged him as the rightful punishment for his crimes.” Yanni had a look of fresh dawning horror on her face as the Force confirmed each word she spoke.

“Which involved Expunging people in the Enclave who spoke against him,” Polu said, sharing the same horror as Yanni.

“Which they then continued to do themselves against everyone who spoke against them,” Osdo said.

“Or who tried to leave,” Felgo added.

“My older brother…” Tovos’s voice cutoff and all of the others nodded as a fresh wave of horror swept over them.

Tovos’s brother hadn’t been trying to leave the Enclave. He’d been used to stop someone from leaving the Enclave. A sacrifice to the Expunging ritual against someone who’d tried, as feebly as they were able to, to fight back.

Ayli ran a calming stroke down Nix’s arm which had gone tense as steel at the fresh evidence of what the Elders of the Enclave felt they were allowed to do.

“We’re not going to become them,” Tovos said, the fire of certainty fully returned to his voice. “We cannot find them to bring them justice, and we will not corrupt the Xah in an attempt to do so.”

“How will we even know what will corrupt the Xah though?” Polu asked. “The Elders were always the ones to guide us. If they were corrupt, then how can we know if anything they told us was or was not a corruption of the Xah?”

“You listen to it,” Nix said, after glancing at Ayli who nodded in agreement.

“We’ve always listened to the Xah though,” Polu said. “And we never heard any of this.”

“You did,” Ayli said. “You just weren’t allowed to notice it or remember it.”

“That’s not possible, is it?” Yanni asked.

“It’s difficult to do on most people, but definitely possible, and I’m sad to say, easier on you because they never taught you how to protect yourselves,” Nix said.

“Can you teach us?” Polu asked.

“Yes, but I don’t know if I should,” Nix said. “Don’t misunderstand me, I want you to be protected. The idea of you wandering the galaxy like you are seems like a horrible punishment for a crime you didn’t commit.”

“Why not teach us then?” Yanni asked.

“A few reasons,” Nix said. “First, how we approach the Xah and the Force is different. I know you can learn how I do things because Solna was able to pick up some simple shielding techniques in and five seconds of Ravas showing her what to do.”

“Solna is a prodigy. You’re concerned what she can do will be beyond us?” Tovos asked.

“Not at all. I mean, yes, she’s exceptional, but in my view, you all are,” Nix said. “No, what I’m concerned about there, is that I don’t want to change your relationship with the Xah to be like mine, since the relationship you have is special and let’s you do amazing things that I either can’t or would have a staggeringly hard time replicating.”

“Okay?” Yanni said, clearly uncertain of whether Nix’s appraisal was correct or not. “And the other reason?”

“The other reason is that you’ve been taught since birth not to trust people like me, other Force users, and I think part of proving I can be trusted, is to respect the boundaries you’ve set. I don’t want you to wake up tomorrow and feel like I tricked you into anything,” Nix said, which also didn’t seem to convince Tovos’ crew, so she added the most important idea she had. “And, I don’t think you need me to teach you how I do it. Your Elders shield themselves just as strongly as I do. I think protecting yourselves is something you can learn to do, your way. All it takes is practice and someone to work with, and that, that I am more than willing to do.”

“So you won’t turn us into Jedi, but you’ll help us turn ourselves into Jedi?” Tovos asked, an odd little quirk at the edges of his lips.

“They’re not Jedi,” Osdo and Felgo said in unison, which brought a much needed laugh to everyone in the cargo room, even Tovos.

“I was thinking more that you could turn yourselves in Elders. Elders as you’ve imagined them to be. Leaders and councilors,” Nix said. “Which, I suppose is what the Jedi made of themselves, but you’d be smarter than them.”

“We would be?” Tovos asked, amused incredulity rising over the fatigued anger and despair.

“Yeah. The Elders can get married right? The Jedi wouldn’t let their members do that. Kinda surprised it took them so long to fall if they believed in that kind of nonsense, but the galaxy is a weird place with plenty of room for weirdness,” Nix said.

“Wait, hey, that’s right, why didn’t we notice that before?” Yanni asked. “These two can’t be Jedi, they’re already married!”

“To be fair,” Ayli said. “We know a Jedi and a former Sith who are basically married too, so that particular Jedi tradition is a little flexible I would say, but yes, we are definitely married.”

“Even if we don’t exactly remember all of it,” Nix said.

“How do you not remember getting married?” Polu asked Nix. “Especially to her?”

Nix had to smile at that. Ayli was indeed an astounding catch.

“Copious amounts of Silur Brandy,” Ayli said. “Or was it Rasdan Schnapps?”

“Both. And, uh, I think we went for a round of Rembral ‘32?” Nix poked at the memories but even with the Force’s aid they were little more than a happy haze.

“It was a good night,” Ayli said.

“It was a good beginning,” Nix said.

“Maybe this is a beginning for us too then,” Osdo said. “Without the intoxicants.”

“It will have to to be,” Tovos said.

“Should we let our Cloak drop?” Polu asked. “We don’t need to keep it up against anyone anymore right?”

Nix felt the silence which surrounded them start to peel away but it was Ayli who stepped forward first.

“No!” she said. “Keep the cloak up! It’s all that’s protecting us at the moment.”

“Protecting us from what?” Felgo asked.

“We’re light years away from where we encountered the Death Shadows in this world, but they can move through the paths outside this world and are so much closer to us in the Force than they should be.”

“But you defeated them, didn’t you?” Yanni asked.

“I…it wasn’t exactly a defeat?” Ayli said. “I gave it to the Force. The Death Shadows are something like voids where a person should be. There are echoes in them, I think of what or who they once were and the echoes in that one called out for rest. Giving it to the Force sort of filled the void in and unmade the Shadow, but I don’t know if I can do that with all of them. The ones who come for us next will be the ones with less loss and more anger remaining in them I think.”

“So we’re going to be hunted by them for the rest of our lives?” Osdo asked.

“Not necessarily,” Nix said. “The Silent Enclave knows other means to keep them away. Means I probably disrupted when I broiled Dolon. If we can find them, I think I can convince them to share those secrets with us and the rest of the Enclave.”

“I thought you didn’t believe in using the Xah to compel people to do your will?” Felgo said.

“I don’t, and I won’t. I don’t like what it does to the Force, or what it does to me,” Nix said. “There’s lots of other methods of persuading people to do things though.”

“We will not find them using the Xah, not unless we truly corrupt it, and we will not do that,” Tovos said.

“What if I told you we didn’t need the Xah at all to find your people,” Nix said. “All we need is a quick stop at one of my favorite pirate havens.”

Star Wars: Legacy of the Force – Ch 13

Rassi wasn’t used to asking the Force for anything. All of her training had been focused on the exact opposite of that. When she felt Solna reach out to the Force therefor she had no idea what her best friend might be doing. When she then saw Solna plunge into the pit with the Death Shadow, or whatever it was, she figured out what was going on.

Solna had lost her mind.

Rassi sprinted forward to the edge of the hole, intent on leaping in after Solna but from the depths of the pit, she saw a light rising back up.

“We don’t have long,” Solna said, cradling a luminous ball of deep purple and blue light as wide as her torso in front of her.

“For what?” Rassi said, instinctively shying away from the orb in Solna’s hands.

“To call him back,” Solna said.

“There is no one there,” Ravas said.

“Yes, exactly, and we can fix that,” Solna said, her eyes focused solely on glowing ball as the illumination from it began to writhe and pulse.

“What do you need?” Rassi asked.

The orb was absolutely a corruption of the Xah. It was the definition of awful, an aberration which shouldn’t have ever been allowed to exist. It could and would hurt them, as surely as a plasma flare.

Rassi could only sense peril from it, but she chose to ignore that for one very good reason. 

She could feel what Solna was projecting as well.

Comfort, camaraderie, and the promise of an end to its rage.

Rassi had no idea how Solna was going to provide any of those things but that didn’t matter. She know Solna well enough to believe it was possible, and more importantly, she believed in Solna. 

No matter what they were doing, Rassi would be at Solna’s side. Being anywhere else simply didn’t make sense.

“We need to listen,” Solna said. “He needs to tell us who he was.”

“This is a bad idea,” Ravas said. “That thing is a hole in the Force. It is a manifestation of the Dark Side even I haven’t run across. All it can do is mislead you.”

“That’s why we must do this,” Solna said, looking up and making eye contact with Rassi. “Please.”

Rassi didn’t answer with words.

She simply stopped breathing.

For her, quieting the Xah within herself so she could perceive the deepest truths of the Xah beyond her was always a battle. Her Xah, the Force within her, was a tempest in its quietest of moments. 

Fortunately, she’d had rather a lot of practice winning that battle. Or at least winning it well enough to hear what she needed to.

In the silence, she could feel the joy radiating from Solna quickly retreat into silence as well. That brief glimpse was enough to fill Rassi with confidence in what they were doing while also allowing her to focus on something other than the delightful emotion resonance between the two of them.

“I am no more.” 

The words were voiceless, spoken by nothing, and nothing more than the faintest of whispers in the preternatural emptiness in the Force Solna was carrying.

But whispers, no matter how faint, belong to someone.

“Who are you?” Rassi asked, only imagining the barest of touches on the Force to convey the words.

“I am no one.”

“But you were someone once,” Solna said.

“You were Silent,” Rassi said, a fleeting glimpse of a kindred soul passing through her mind.

Rassi wasn’t used to asking the Force for anything, but Solna had and Rassi could feel the Force struggling to aid them. It wanted to know who had been lost.

It wanted them back too.

“Silent?” the voiceless whispers gained volume and the barest hint of depth.

“Like me, like us,” Rassi said. “You were part of the Silent Enclave.”

The heat which greeted Rassi’s words was not a friendly bit of warmth. She could have mistaken it for blinding rage but the undercurrent of loss and sorrow was too great to ignore.

“We were too,” Solna said. “But listen to us speaking. We are Silent no more.”

“Silent no more,” and the voiceless whispers were no longer voiceless.

“Silent never again,” Solna said. “Speak to us and we will speak for you.”

“I am nothing.”

“But you were someone. What you most lack is what they once were,” Solna said, and Rassi could hear depths in the void Solna carried, deeper losses and greater pains.

“If you can’t tell us, may we search for the answers ourselves?” Rassi asked, acutely aware of how intimate the contact she was contemplating would be.

“Yes. Find…find what was lost. Find me.”

With no movement and no greater sign that the shift in her focus, Rassi asked Solna if this was what she had been planning. Solna’s answering nod was motionless but all too clear to Rassi, and so they began.

In the distance, Rassi heard Kelda and Ravas shift, moving to prevent what the Solna had conceived of doing, but seeking down into the void’s deepest places wasn’t a realm either the former Jedi or the former Sith had been trained to explore.

In the first pit, Rassi found herself in a strange inverted world. Into the absent spaces she poured her awareness, her understanding, and the Force which flowed within her.

What formed from the mold was the picture of a man clad in the robes of an Enclave guardian and the moment when his losses began.

Rassi felt the pride the man had carried and understood it well. The Enclave’s guardians were tasked with protecting the Primus whenever he was required to travel outside the Enclave’s boundaries. Earning a position among their number was one of the highest martial honors a member of the Enclave could aspire to.

He had been honored beyond so many and he had failed.

In the tableau which was cast from the mold, Rassi saw a Primus not only slain but Expunged. Struck down by a technique only the Silent Enclave knew. 

“You couldn’t protect him,” Solna said and the void resounded with that truth.

Rassi saw something more in the tableau though.

“He hadn’t deserved your protection,” she said.

Revulsion, rejection, and confusion swept the scene away.

“What had he done?” Solna asked, and Rassi sought out another pit within the void.

A new scene took shape.

A trial. 

The dead Primus was there in effigy and behind him an impossibly high mountain of bodies rose.

Around the Primus, his guards stood, no longer armed or respected, each chained to their own podium as changes were read out against them.

“They held you responsible for what he’d done,” Rassi said.

“Had you known?” Solna asked.

Shame crushed the scene to dust and a new scene rose from the exposed wound in the void.

The man stood guard at a door. It was a sacred door and what was transpiring beyond it was more profane than words could capture.

But there had been orders.

And without seeing what was happening, it had been easy to believe that no abuse of power was happening. All the guard had needed to do was remain blind and his conscience was clear. Believe in the Primus. Believe because to do otherwise would mean the world was so much worse than he wanted to face.

Because not believing would mean that he was so much worse than he wanted to face.

“Was this your punishment?” Solna asked.

Anger and righteous indignation tore the scene apart and replaced it with another one.

Banishment.

A wife and a child he would never see again.

His position lost, his authority stripped away, his future gone.

Flames of rage crackled in the scene though.

This hadn’t been his punishment.

This was the punishment he was given, and the one he’d accepted. Not immediately, but when he saw what he’d been a part of, he’d known that it was what he’d deserved.

The flames licked at the scene, scorching and burning away the false facade, calling back the moment which had been hidden at the bottom of the pit.

The man who was no longer a guard and no longer Silent was rendered in midstride, leaving the Enclave behind. 

The flames swelled, consuming the scene and replacing it with one of the man alone on the road, walking to nowhere, and carrying the burden of the fate he’d accepted. 

And then he wasn’t alone.

New guardians struck him down.

And shackled him.

Into the mine they brought him.

Down empty passages.

To a room where his wife and child waited.

His wife a hostage not against his behavior, but as coercion for his child.

Someone was needed to bear the cost of the ritual.

Someone who he would not fight back against.

The scene became hot enough to sear flesh but the worst was still to come.

“Choli,” the voice was the man’s but the name was his child’s

The child who had survived the ritual. Who the man had sacrificed everything to spare. 

Who had been killed once the ritual was finished anyways.

“Why?” Solna croaked out and to Rassi the flames that surrounded them didn’t seem nearly hot enough.

There was no answer from the void, but Rassi heard the echoes from an age past in the Force.

“They wanted justice,” she said. “The banishment wasn’t enough for some of them. The people who’d lost their loved ones to the Primus’ Expunging rituals wanted more than blood. They wanted the scales to be balanced.”

“Not like this,” Solna said. “Horror can never balance horror.”

“No. It cannot,” Ravas said.

“Did you see all that?” Rassi asked.

“We saw it through you,” Kelda said.

“Why kill Choli though?” Solna’s voice was tight with the void’s anguish.

“They didn’t want any witnesses,” Ravas said. 

“They’d condemned the Primus for what he’d done. They didn’t want anyone to say they were the same as he was,” Kelda said.

“But the power was still too alluring to pass up, especially when they could pretend it served a righteous cause,” Ravas said.

“What are we going to do then?” Rassi asked, feeling entirely unmoored by what she’d seen.

“The Enclave left this world over a hundred years ago,” Kelda said. “Those involved in this are all long dead. There’s nothing that can be done to them.”

“This isn’t about them,” Solna said. “This is about him.”

“He’s gone as well,” Ravas said, her voice heavy with sympathy.

“We can bring him back,” Solna said. 

“No. Bringing the dead to life, it’s worse than you can imagine,” Kelda said.

“Not to life,” Rassi said, understanding Solna’s meaning. “We can bring him back to the Force.”

“To Choli,” Solna said.

“How would…?” Ravas started to asked, but neither Solna nor Rassi waited to answer her.

In the silence, they shared their fears with each other.

Neither had ever tried anything like what Solna was suggesting, and both knew it would be considered an unforgivable corruption of the Xah. 

The could be costs far beyond anything they were aware of as well. 

At best they would simply fail.

At worst they could drop into the void themselves, destroying everything they were in the effort to restore what a total stranger had once been.

And what he had been wasn’t anything wonderful.

He’d been a small and cowardly man, given authority and prestige to lord over others with. He’d been part of a series of atrocities. The people who’d known him and what he’d done hadn’t believed he could ever deserve forgiveness and was it Rassi and Solna’s place to offer the forgiveness he’d been willfully denied?

Rassi didn’t have a elaborate answer to those questions. What she saw before her was not justice though. 

And what she and Solna were going to offer was not forgiveness. 

The man would not escape the weight of his actions. He would carry them into eternity. 

Just like everyone else. 

Rassi wasn’t used to asking the Force for anything, and the Force wasn’t used to asking Rassi for what it needed. 

The wound before them needed to be healed though, and so Rassi opened her heart, and at last let herself be as loud as she could be as the Force crashed through her like thunder, filling her and filling the void to call back the scattered, forgotten pieces of the man who’d once been.

She only saw his spirit for a moment.

He had no place in the world of the living, and the Force was more than ready to welcome him back.

The Force and two spirits who’d been waiting for him for so very long.

Star Wars: Legacy of the Force – Ch 12

Ayli was surprised when Nix returned to their “cell” both by the smile hiding on Nix’s lips and the company she was dragging with her.

“Got a moment?” Nix asked with Tovos and Felgo both in tow.

Ayli glanced over to Osdo who was studiously hiding his face from Tovos, despite that fact that both his expression and his presence in the force were entirely guilt-free/

“I have quite a few moments,” Ayli said. “Did you all want to join me in meditating?”

“Not exactly,” Nix said. “I need you to demonstrate something, and perhaps dance with me.”

Ayli quirked her head to the side, but listening to the Force told her that Nix was oddly serious on both counts.

“What are we demonstrating?” Ayli asked, intrigued more by the chance to get to dance with Nix, but willing to take things in the order presented. However Nix planned to win over Tovos’ crew probably involved one or more dangerous uses of the Force – it was Nix after all.

“Tovos says that the Xah doesn’ talk to them,” Nix said.

“Uh, I thought it was a point of pride that you can listen to the Xah better than anyone?” Ayli said, glancing from Tovos and Felgo to Osdo for confirmation.

“We listening but the Xah does not speak,” Osdo said. “Not to us.”

“What do you hear then?” Ayli suspected that the language limitations of Galactic Basic might be tripping them up, but working around those was often challenging. What a word like “speak” meant in one language might take a doctoral dissertation to explain to someone who spoke a different language. That everyone crammed their native languages down into the homogenized stew that was Galactic Basic was responsible for maybe a third of the conflict in the galaxy in Ayli’s estimation (with the other two thirds being split between willful stupidity, greed, and people simply being awful.)

“The Xah is the wind, it is a river, it is the beat of blood inside it,” Tovos said. “It brings us information, but it does not speak.”

“I notice you’re saying ‘it does not speak’, not ‘it cannot speak’?” Nix waited for confirmation from Tovos but Ayli could feel Nix’s attention drifting over the other members of the crew, both the ones present and the ones working elsewhere on the ship.

“It…” Osdo started to say, but Tovos cut him off.

“The Elders can hear the Xah speaking to them,” Tovos said. “It is what marks them as an Elder, and why they speak with one voice.”

“But they don’t?” Nix said, sounding as confused as Tovos was.

“Yes they do,” Osdo said. “The guidance of the Elders is always clear because they can hear the guidance of the Xah.”

“I had a few scant minutes of interacting with them and in that short time Honored Jolu and your Primus definitely disagreed about things,” Nix said.

“Then the Xah was conflicted,” Tovos said. “That is what you bring to us.”

“The Xah was fine,” Nix said. “Remember, I put up no resistance. When I saw how much a small leap had disturbed you, I made sure I didn’t ask the Force for anything. Think back, after I, somewhat rudely it seems, landed near you, did you sense anything out of the ordinary from me. It wasn’t until later that I got…I suppose loud is underselling it.”

“You destroyed a building,” Felgo said.

“I did. I really did,” Nix said sounding much too fondly proud of the accomplishment. “To be fair though, that was after Dolon tried to kill me like an idiot. And he was the only one in the building. I think I set him on fire too, didn’t it? I bet that was nasty. Generator fires can burn super hot, though the model you had was pretty middling. If it had been one of the good ones, I                                                                                         probably could have vaporized him. A good CrashTech 8100 or a 9200 even? That would have been a sight to see. Might have taken out some other buildings too though, which was not the intent. Of course if it had been a serious one like a PlasDrive 220A? One of those things could have cratered the whole tradeport. That’s why you only find them on the combat class capital ships. Sorry, where was I?”

Ayli chuckled at the looks on their “captors” faces. That particular mix of awe, revulsion, curiosity, and sheer confusion was one which only her wife could produce.

“That cannot be true,” Tovos said, shaking his head and rallying. “You attacked Primus Dolon unprovoked. He told us that himself.”

“He lied,” Nix said. “He does that. A lot, from what Rassi and Solna have said.”

“Jedi lie. The Elders cannot lie. Lies disturb the Xah!” Felgo’s declaration had all the rote certainty which was missing in Tovos’ silence.

“They do,” Nix said with a nod. “But if you tell the lie through the Force, the one you tell it too will have a much harder time discerning that. The Jedi used that to resolve conflicts peacefully, but it is still a violation of the people who are ‘mind tricked’ and the Force itself.”

“That is the Jedi,” Felgo said.

“And your Primus,” Nix said.

Felgo’s hand went to his blaster, but Tovos was oddly still.

“The Jedi lie and you cannot prove what you say.” That small traces of conflict showed on his face struck Ayli at last. Neither of the other Enclave members were displaying anything except blank, calm emotions. That Tovos wasn’t suppressing his, or wasn’t suppressing them fully was either the sign of extreme turmoil inside him or something even more serious.

“Yeah.” Nix sighed. “The Force said we’d get to this point. It’s great like that. Pointing out the incredibly obvious, even when I’d really don’t want it to be right. Stupid Force.”

“You hate your Force?” Osdo asked.

“No. I love my connection to it,” Nix said. “I’ve relief on it my whole life, way before I knew what it was. The Force is wonderful. And awful. And terrifying. And occasionally incredibly freaking smug!” She shook a fist as though something beyond the room’s ceiling was looking down on her.

“Smug?” Osdo asked.

“Smug.” Nix confirmed and brief in a deep breath. “There is something we can do that will prove what I’m saying.”

Ayli took a breath too and felt how disgruntled Nix was at what she was going to suggest next.

Then Ayli saw why.

“It’s okay. We’ll be okay,” she said, earning her a a nod of gratitude from Nix and looks of further confusion from the others.

“Your Jedi mind tricks won’t work on us,” Tovos said, a weariness in his voice.

“Sadly they would. None of you were ever allowed to develop the natural resistances to mental manipulation which most Force users possess,” Nix said. “But that’s not how we can convince you. Or its not how I’m willing to convince you. Subverting your will to my own? You would never trust me again, and if I did that I’d be proving that you never should.”

“Then what are you going to do?” Tovos asked.

“Dance. Ayli and I are going to dance.”

“And how would a dance prove anything?” Tovos was shading into irritation, a cycle he seemed to have run through repeatedly.

“You tell me,” Nix said. “If Ayli and I were to dance a Silent Dance, would we be able to have the strength to craft lies in the Xah? Or would what I showed you have to be what I’d witnessed myself?”

“You cannot silence yourself enough for it to matter,” Tovos said.

“But you would know that too,” Ayli said, knowing the answer before she asked the question.

“Your failure will prove nothing.” There was an air of uncertainty which was breathtaking given the repression the three Enclave members were capable of.

“Which is why we’re not going to fail,” Nix said.

“Dying will not change anything for us,” Tovos said.

“Which is why we’re not going to die,” Ayli said.

Tovos looked like he wanted to argue, and Ayli saw that he probably should. Her and Nix successfully conveying what Nix had experienced was going to shatter them. 

But sometimes, people need to break.

She certainly had.

Over and over again.

Each time losing bits of herself.

Or that’s what she’d thought. For the first time she began to wonder if what she’d managed to recover from those losses wasn’t every bit as valuable as what she’d left behind.

Seeking destruction, or worse, seeking to inflict it on others, wasn’t a path to growth, but neither was shrinking from the fear of loss.

Failure had to be more than option, it had to be a reality. If she’d never pushed herself far enough to fail, she wouldn’t be half the person she was.

And so, when everyone gathered in the small cargo hold, she danced.

Nix had been right to grumble at the Force’s suggestion that a Silent Dance would convince Tovos and his crew of Nix’s words. 

Not because it wouldn’t. 

Even as they started, Ayli could feel that it would work. 

But that didn’t make the dance itself even vaguely pleasant.

She followed Nix’s lead, quieting her breath, calming her blood, and eventually, stilling her heart. 

In the Rebellion, Ayli had heard countless remarks about ‘dancing with death’. More than once, she’d been the one to make them and had been perfectly accurate in her claims. Those had always been frantic, adrenaline fueled bursts of chaos and madness, where death had roared like blaster bolt and a plasma bomb and a scream to end all tomorrows.

The Silent Dance was none of those things.

Her heart’s final beat was long past and she was still stepping onwards, following, following, and ever following Nix down into a darkness so still that the call of the Force beyond it was almost undeniable.

Answering the call was her destiny. And the destiny of all others. It was the one mercy and kindness absolutely guaranteed to all who lived, that at the end there would be peace, and serenity, and a place in eternity with all who’d passed before.

But her soul wasn’t bound for eternity. She was set on something much more important.

With her last step, she followed Nix a pace further, rising back towards life even though she had left it so far behind. 

Too far for her life to be stretched.

Too far for her to return.

But not to far for the Force to carry her.

“Was…did we do it?” she asked, blearing and not quite able to see at first.

“She’s alive!” It sounded like Osdo said that but Ayli had a more pressing concern.

Where was Nix?

Opening her eyes and bringing blood back to everywhere that needed it, she got her answer. Nix was right beside her.

Laying on the ground.

Still and unbreathing.

“Away,” Ayli said, not that anyone had dared get close to either of them.

Though her ability to feel fear was muted still, the site of Nix unresponsive and not breathing did a fantastic job of lighting up Ayli’s limbic system.

“Breathe,” she whispered, lowering her head to Nix’s to begin rescue breathing. At her touch though, she felt the faintest echo the Force stirring in Nix and changed her plans. “Bring her back to me. There’s more for us to do.”

There was always more for those who passed on to do, which made that a less than compelling argument, but Ayli wasn’t arguing, and the Force agreed. It didn’t understand why Nix had pushed it away beyond a general sense of the need which had driven Nix’s actions, but it was more than happy to flow into her and Ayli was more than happy to help.

A moment later, Nix coughed weakly, twitched, and at last opened an eye.

“Ugh, yeah, that was just as bad as I thought it was going to be,” she said. 

“Lies,” Tovos said, anguish writ on his face and through his presence in the Force. “Everything we were taught has been lies.”