Star Wars: Legacy of the Force – Ch 11

It didn’t surprise Solna that though the mine she and Rassi were descending into had been closed for over a hundred years, the tech within it was still in perfect working order. She knew that the Silent Enclave wouldn’t have accepted subpar materials for any of their ventures. Everything she’d ever seen them use was old and durable, meant to work for lifetimes so that as little contact with the outside world as possible was required. Despite that however, in every pebble and shadowed corner, she could feel the mine collapsing on her.

She could have spoken to Rassi about her premonition, but when you were in danger, speech was forbidden. The Enclave’s rules held far less sway over her than they had a few days earlier (How had her world changed so much so quickly? How had she?), but some of their strictures were ones she wasn’t sure she really wanted to abandon.

Plus Rassi already knew what she was thinking.

They could both feel how the Xah was moving. It had been hurt. There was agony embedded in the stones and it had nothing to do with the mining process. Stone’s didn’t care if they were split apart or hauled away. They were stones. Agony was the province of those who could be aware of it.

Below us. Rassi didn’t need words to indicate that. The focus of her gaze, the set of her jaw, the solidity of her grip on Solna’s hand. There were channels of communication open to them which needed no words to break the silence they held. It’s strongest below us. 

It knows we’re here. Solna couldn’t be sure of that, the sense of being watched could have been nothing more than her own fears feeding back on her. Giving the unnatural depth of the shadows though Solna was inclined to pay attention to her fears.

It’s not attacking yet.

It could be waiting for us to come too close to escape.

Then it won’t be able to escape either. Rassi’s touch was firm and reassuring on that point.

Solna felt a grin crinkle the corner of her eyes. Rassi’s new found confidence was an overdue delight. There’d been so many years when, no matter how well she did, or how hard she worked, Rassi hadn’t been able to believe any compliment Solna ever paid her because the voices of the rest of the Enclave rang too loudly in her ears. 

Solna suspected Rassi’s confidence was at least partially a front put on to keep them moving forward, but even that felt like a massive step in the right direction.

Ahead of them, across a wide cavern that was littered with the detritus of a once active work site, a second set of lifts stood, function indicators lit once more after Solna had enabled the main power circuits to the mine. The haphazardly parked grav lifters and the piles of ore still awaiting sorting and processing provided clear testimony that whatever event had finally forced the Enclave to abandon the mines had to have happened suddenly and without warning.

That one? Solna asked indicating the lift that dropped to the lowest posted level. 

According to the map there were three significant deposits which were being excavated, each at progressively deeper depths than the previous one. The lifts were high speed transports to bring the ores to the central sorting and staging room which made up the top level of the mine where Rassi and Solna had arrived.. 

Rassi shook her head at the deep lift and indicated the overseers office which overlooked the plasma carved cave from high up the wall, above the elevators on the far side of room.

Solna raised an eyebrow at that. Whatever awaited them was below, and felt like it had sunk to the lowest depths it could fine.

Rassi gave a confirming nod, so Solna tagged along willingly. Was there something in the Xah leading Rassi there? Or was it some new Force skill she was developing? How quickly would their relationship with the Xah change? 

Or did it even have to change?

Solna’s mistrust of the lies she’d been taught had grown over the years with the last few days turning it into a violent revulsion against the Silent Enclave, but somehow that didn’t entirely carry over to her understanding of the Xah. 

She’d always been talented with it, controlling herself far better than any other child her age and better in a number of cases, she felt, than the adults who were supposed to be teaching and correcting her.

That’s they’d been teaching her to be a malleable, controllable, puppet of a person filled Solna with the sort of rage that she’d spent her lifetime learning to hide. 

The Xah though? The Xah had always been a source of comfort for her. She loved existing in harmony with it. Clumsy members of the Enclave, when they were trying very hard to be ‘silent’, inevitably left glaringly obvious voids in the Xah. Spots where everything was preternaturally still.

When Solna was pushed herself to utter silence, the Xah remained as it was because she offered it no resistance. As it flowed, so did she. Every movement and every moment was no different than if she hadn’t ever existed. That’s how in tune she was with the Xah.

Rassi, by contrast, had a curiously more active relationship with the Xah, at least from what Solna could see. The sort of silence which the Enclave valued so highly, and which came so peacefully to Solna, was always a struggle for Rassi, but a struggle that she somehow won, time and again.

Though their teachers would never admit it or ever off Rassi praise for it, there’d been more than one test where it had been Rassi, not Solna, who’d been the least perceptible, the most silent.

So which one of them was the prodigy? Which one of them was special? Nix had beaten them both and she’d apparently only been studying the Force for a little over a year, so did it matter how much the Enclave had managed to teach them at so young an age? Or what about Kelda and Ravas? They had literally centuries of experience with their abilities. They were avatars of the living Force, the Xah taking the form of the living and speaking to her directly, and yet neither of them were capable of fixing all the problems before them. So did all those years of experience make them more special than the rest?

Or had the Enclave been wrong about that too.

Could people be special in innumerably different ways?

By the time they’d navigated small mag lift up to the overseer’s office, Solna’s thoughts were spinning about as much as her world was, but as Rassi keyed open the door using one of the Enclave’s standard access codes, she understood what had drawn them here.

A fourth elevator, smaller than the others, was powered and waiting for them. Inside it were buttons for four destinations. One for each of the active excavation levels and one which required a special key to unlock.

The lock turned as the Force twisted around it and the elevator doors slid closed.

We’ve been invited. Solna meant it as a warning, but Rassi just smiled.

Because she’d been the one to knock on the creature’s door.

With as hidden as they’d been, nothing should have sensed them entering the elevator, and nothing would have, if Rassi hadn’t tapped a little beat into the Force.

Do we need stay silent? Solna asked.

Better to surprise whatever’s down there, than be surprised by it.

Which, as arguments went, was persuasive enough in Solna’s book to justify allowing her to continue doing what felt right and natural.

Descending down to the hidden depths of the mine however felt less and less right with each moment that passed.

This is definitely a trap. She didn’t need to warn Rassi, but it was almost impossible to not communicate that.

A trap for the Enclave. I don’t think whatever’s down there can sense what we are.

But it can tell that we’re using the Enclave’s techniques.

And yet it doesn’t know how to penetrate them.

Did they capture one of the Death Shadows?

That’s what I’m wondering. Maybe that was why they left here?

The elevator arrived at the lowest level and Solna felt their answers awaiting them in the darkness beyond the elevator’s door.

Before she could step out into the small area which the elevator’s lights were illuminating though, a wave of hunger hit Solna that was nearly strong enough to knock her out of the silence she was taking refuge in.

It doesn’t understand why we’re not here. Rassi had her eyes closed, searching for the presence which Solna could pinpoint all too easily.

Its there. Solna pointed into the darkness, indicating a pit with a grating over it. Though it was hidden by the lack of illumination, Solna could feel the precise geometry of the room from the waves of disgust which washed up from the pit.

Pit? Rassi asked.

At the bottom of the pit, but it’s in this room too, and now the elevator.

It’s the mist on the floor?

The mist is its hatred. It feels familiar.

Something from the Lich’s tomb?

No. Something from me. This things hates the Enclave.

I think it is a Death Shadow. Something in the pit must be trapping it.

I don’t know, maybe not? An idea was coalescing in Solna’s mind, but she was agonizingly aware of what a bad idea it might be.

What are you doing? Rassi asked, as Solna stepped forward out of the elevator and bent down to run her hands through the mist that was covering the floor.

The rage which suffused the mist wasn’t at all foreign to her. Whatever was in the pit didn’t hate the Enclave because it had been crafted with hate, or summoned for vengeance. The pit creatures…no, the pit persons hatred came from the same place hers did.

The person in the pit had lived with the Enclave.

They’d been Silent, like Solna had.

And the Enclave had destroyed them.

Solna’s breath caught.

They were a Death Shadow.

Or they could become one.

Just like she could.

“We need to free him,” she said aloud, dropping all the silence she’d attained.

The person in the pit recoiled, but from the unexpected arrival of a presence and the weight of the sentiment behind Solna’s words.

“Kelda, Ravas! We need you!” Rassi said aloud, and Solna could feel the worry that had swallowed Rassi’s heart.

“I’m okay,” Solna said. “He’s not though. We need to free him.”

“That’s not a person down there,” Rassi said. “Listen to the Xah, or ask the Force. What’s down there, there’s no life in it.”

“She’s right,” Ravas said. “I don’t know what it is, but that’s not something that was ever a part of the Force.”

“The Enclave hurt them. Whatever they are now, however impossible that is, I know that’s true.” Solna spoke the words as much for the person in the pit as for her companions and from the proto-Death Shadow, she felt an invitation to join it in its hate.

“Be careful,” Ravas said. “It’s hungry and it will do anything to get out of there.”

“We can’t leave it here,” Solna said. It wasn’t the Force which was telling her that. Not exactly. Her heart was clear on that point though.

“If we release this thing, it will become a roaming blight like the other Death Shadows we’ve encountered,” Kelda said. “Unless you have some other idea?”

“I think I do,” Solna said and for the first time in her life, she consciously asked the Force to help her.

In front of her, the grating on the pit lifted away and without waiting for the others, Solna stepped over the edge and dropped down into the darkness below.

Star Wars: Legacy of the Force – Ch 10

Nix hadn’t expected to be able to win over Tovos and so was neither disappointed nor surprised by his stubbornness.

“We are Lost but we are still Silent,” he said as though that pronouncement was the summation of what the rest of his life would be.

“Hey, lost things can be found again,” Why that wasn’t obvious escaped Nix but she felt it was worth pointing out anyways. “But that’s not what you mean is it? Well, maybe this will help; you haven’t failed this mission, or your crew yet. That only happens when you give up. You can still bring Ayli and I back to your Elders, and you can be part of the Enclave, if that’s what you want.”

“You know nothing about us. We will never find the Enclave again, must less be a part of it.” He seemed so certain of that, especially his second claim, that Nix had the inkling she was faced with more than the practical issue of finding a group of Force users who made hiding their sole focus.

“I think it you bring Ayli and I in, and you can explain to the Enclave how you found them so they can guard against it in the future, they’ll be more than willing to take you back in.” It was how anyone who was even vaguely reasonable would act, which left Nix only about half certain of her words.

“They cannot be found, and we cannot be forgiven,” Tovos said. They were alone in the freighter’s cabin, with Tovos in the pilot’s chair gazing out at the star filled void in front of them, so Nix wasn’t sure if he meant that his crew couldn’t be forgiven or if he’d direct that remark at her specifically.

“I plan to have a little discussion with Primus Dolon,” Nix said. “He will be in a very forgiving mood when we’re done.”

“That won’t bring Yoldo back.” Tovos’ words held no outward recrimination or anger. They were pale and numb. “There is no forgiveness for that.”

“Of course there is,” Nix said. “They didn’t tell you that a leader never loses anyone did they?”

Tovos was silent in reply which more or less confirmed that whether the Elders had spoken those words or not, Tovos had been raised to believe that was the standard he had to meet.

“You weren’t supposed to have to fight the Death Shadows,” Nix said. “There was warning they were near, but how they attacked Yoldo was something you couldn’t have prepared for.”

“You were,” Tovos said. “And your wife. Her Xah corruption dispersed one.”

“Our skills are different than yours. Some scenarios we’ll have the answers for that you don’t. That’s true no matter who we are or what we can do,” Nix said, hearing flickers of anger starting to surface in Tovos’ voice and taking that for a good sign.

“We are Silent. We will not be corrupted,” Tovos said, retreating to the platitude to shut out the words which had to seem like devil whispers.

“Another’s actions can’t corrupt you,” Nix said. “You are responsible only for your own decisions.”

She reached out with the Force, trying to sense if her words were having any impact on him, but it was like listening to a brick with his skill at hiding himself.

“What do you want?” Tovos asked, irritation in his tone if not in his presence in the Force.

“To bring you, all of you, back to the Silent Enclave,” Nix said, which had the benefit of being the plain truth. She also wanted to have a ‘conversation’ with Primus Dolon, but that had become a secondary concern.

“Why? Why would you want that? Are you stupid? They are going to kill you! Why didn’t you fight us?” Tovos’ spun the command chair to face Nix and she saw he face was completely devoid of the anger that surged through his words.

The Force which had been artificially placid and serene around him had gone almost perfectly, and unnaturally, silent. 

“Tovos. Dolon already tried to kill me. I don’t know what he told you, but he gathered up some of the children and tried to rush through the Expunging ritual.”

“That’s not…children are not part of the ritual!” Tovos shook his head to deny the truth the Force was trying to tell him. “And it’s never rushed. The Council must approve it and it’s only used on the most corrupt of souls.”

“It’s used on anyone who defies the Elders or the Primus,” Nix said. “And children are very much a part of it. You were never called because you have always been valued and trusted. Rassi and Solna weren’t called because they weren’t trusted. The children between those extremes though? Dolon calls them to ‘special duty’ when he needs to expunge someone.”

“That’s no possible. If he had Expunged you, you would be dead. You’re lying!”

Nix drew in a deep centering breath and opened herself in the Force for Tovos to see. He was resolutely closing himself off from what the Force was trying to tell him, but the truth was still Nix’s best tool for prying his eyes open.

“The ritual is meant to be used on Enclave members. You are amazing at hiding yourselves, and amazing at controlling the Xah within you, but you have almost no defenses against someone who has a connection to you twisting the Xah until it destroys you. That’s not your fault. You’ve never been taught how to resist manipulations like that.”

“Lies. The Jedi always lie.” Tovos hand went to his blaster but he wasn’t quite foolish enough to draw it on her.

“I know you’re tired of hearing this, but I’m not a Jedi,” Nix said. “I’m not saying I don’t lie. And I’m not saying I haven’t trained with a Jedi, or that I don’t know some of their arts, but I was not raised in temple. I grew up on starships. This bucket of bolts? I can probably tell you the part numbers on every piece of equipment and every panel in this thing.”

“You carried a Lightsaber, and you move through the Xah like a Jedi would,” Tovos said.

“The Lightsaber was a gift from the Jedi I trained with. She didn’t need it anymore on account of having been dead for about a thousand years,” Nix said. “And what you sense of me in the Xah is what you would sense of anyone who has a strong and open connection to it. I can introduce you to some Padal Horizon Knights and I bet you’d find them pretty similar to me.”

“Jedi Knight, Horizon Knight, there’s no difference. You are all corrupt. You all abuse the Xah for power,” Tovos said.

“Am I abusing you now?” Nix asked.

“What?” Tovos frowned, his perfectly neutral expression cracking from confusion at the turn in the conversation.

“Am I abusing you? Not in general, not with the Xah, just here and now, by talking to you?” Nix asked. Tovos wasn’t stupid, but he was being willfully blind, just as he’d been taught to be. Nix didn’t have much hope of overcoming a lifetime of indoctrination and cultural programming. That was something only Tovos would be able to do. The most Nix could manage would be to plant some seeds and help him see the lies he’d been trapped in when he was ready to accept the ugly falsehoods others had built his life on.

“I am Silent. You cannot harm me,” Tovos said, missing the glaring irony of the statement.

“This where I’m supposed to cackle maniacally and say something like ‘my Jedi techniques can destroy you’, or something idiotic like that right?”

“No. Wait. What are you talking about?” 

“Let me try asking again; is this conversation damaging you, or corrupting you?”

“No. I cannot be corrupted so simply,” Tovos said, eyes narrowed as he searched for some hint of where Nix’s question was leading.

“This is all that I do with the Xah,” Nix said. “What you’ve been taught is manipulation and abuse, is, for me at least, nothing more than a conversation.”

“Yes. Lies to the Xah, and yourself,” Tovos said.

“That can work, sort of,” Nix said. “Lying to yourself can get you pretty twisted up, and lying to the Xah is certainly a path to the Dark Side, or what you would call a corruption of the Xah. But that’s not the only way to have a conversation. Can I show you something?”

“I won’t be corrupted.” Tovos announced it like a warning, so Nix nodded in agreement.

“I know you and the other Silent ones enjoy exceptional senses. I think by being so silent in the Xah you learn to pick up on much smaller ripples in it than most are able to. All I’m asking is that you watch and listen for a moment.”

Tovos’ frown deepened but he didn’t refuse, so after a moment, Nix still her thoughts and reached out with the Force.

There was a switch on the console at the co-pilot’s station that would be nice to have flipped on. She wasn’t nearby it, but she knew the Force was. Would it be okay with tapping the switch to the other setting?

A reading light blinked on over the co-pilot’s seat.

The Force almost laughed at her for making such a big deal over so little of a thing, but then everything was little from its perspective. Nix acknowledged the silliness of the over formality with a slight grin. Normally, she and the Force worked together with a much more natural give and take, the Force providing direction and Nix providing execution, or vice versa as the situation warranted. 

Nix knew she wasn’t abusing the Force, largely because she’d learned at an early age what twisting the Force into something it didn’t want to be felt like.

That had been a terribly tempting hole to fall down for a while, and it had taken her a while to repair the relationship she had with the Force, longer because she hadn’t been consciously aware that was what she was doing. Each time she backslid into flirting with the Dark Side though, she’d felt the same hurt sickness and little by little, by listening to her ‘better self’ (as she’d thought of Force), she’d learned to find the harmony that didn’t leave her soul feeling ravaged. 

That sense had led her across the galaxy, to lonely moments and ones of boisterous merriment, but weathering the bad moments and not being overly captivated by the good ones had been so much easier so long as she held onto the peace within her that honest communion with the Force brought.

“You corrupted the Xah,” Tovos said.

“Did I?” Nix asked. “Did you feel any discomfort or violation there? Is the Xah disturbed or in pain?”

“No, but that was very small.”

“To the Xah, everything is small,” Nix said, gesturing to the starry sky outside the viewport. “When we speak with the Xah, we’re not talking to some small part of ourselves. We’re talking to that. To everything. Size doesn’t matter because nothing we interact with will ever be even a tiny fraction of the galaxy we’re a part of.”

“The Xah is greater than we are, but it can still be twisted, still be torn and rent asunder. What you do can damage the Xah even when you do not wish it to,” Tovos said.

“Yes. Exactly. Just wishing isn’t enough. We have to listen. We have to understand. We can hurt each other so, so easily if we don’t pay attention, or even if we do and we take a chance on something that doesn’t work out,” Nix was pleased to see Tovos nodding along with her. “But we can also make amends for the harm we do. We can heal, and we can help each other grow. That’s true between all of us sapients, and between us and the Xah. When I ask the Xah to do something, it’s not a demand. I’m not putting a blaster to the Xah’s head, or whipping it into doing what I want. And it’s the same when the Xah asks me to do something. We don’t punish each other, because that’s not what friends do.”

“Wait, the Xah speaks to you?” Tovos asked, confusion and shock plain on his face.

Star Wars: Legacy of the Force – Ch 9

Rassi could hear the faintest murmurs of history in the silent city she and Solna walked through.

The tradeport and the home Rassi had known were light years behind them. From the empty remains of the Enclave they’d taken what few items they could that still resonated with connection and meaning.  All together, the tiny statues and rings and old faded paintings had held just enough memories of the the Silent Enclave’s history to lead Goldie’s crew to the refuge the Enclave had sheltered in a century before they moved to Rassi’s former home.

“What do you think happened here?” Solna asked, gazing as the empty buildings which were weathered and overgrown by the jungle which had spent the century reclaiming the broad streets and open plazas of the fallen city.

“I don’t know,” Rassi said, listening to the Force as closely as she could. “I don’t think it was the Death Shadows though.”

“I think you’re right.” Solna was concentrating as much as Rassi was. “I can hear cries lingering but they it doesn’t feel like the people we victims of a threat like the shadow.”

“I’ve tapped into the planetary holonet,” Goldie said over the comm box Rassi was carrying.. “According to local history, this whole area was lost during their last civil war. One side was using Surroxon gas and they managed to seed a lethal number of dispersal tablets into the everything on this continent. No one’s moved back because they’d need to remediate the soil to be able to do any farming or mining here and their population hasn’t bounced back enough yet to need the room.”

“That must be why the chose to settle next to a tradeport for our home,” Solna said. “It  obviously let them evacuate as fast as possible.

“That and they were able to get in good with the Port Administrator. I bet they never wanted to be caught in the middle of a war like that again,” Rassi said, the memories the land held rising to reflect her words.

The Encampment had been bigger then. It had been a prosperous time with the existing members flourishing and new ones being allowed to join after they’d passed the trials and bound themselves to someone in the Enclave. 

In the empty streets, Rassi and Solna walked with the colorful shadows of their ancestors. People who was lost to history, but who were achingly familiar, not at all different from the Enclave members Rassi had known.

“Are you finding anything there?” Goldie asked.

“Yes,” Rassi said, keeping her focus on the drifting and dreamy after images of souls who had long since rejoined the Xah, who’d become one with the Force.

“And no,” Solna said. “This was an Enclave base, but it’s not one which can tell us where the Shadows came from.”

“How about where the Enclave was before this place?” Goldie asked, sounding far more concerned than a droid should have been. 

Of course it took around ten seconds in her company to notice that Goldie was something quite different than a droid. Calling her a ‘machine intelligence’ didn’t seem a large enough term to cover it either, so Rassi simply thought of her as a person.

A person who was worried she was never going to see her mothers again.

Rassi felt an echoing pit of dread in sympathy at that notion.

“I think the Enclave was here for a long time,” Rassi said. “Have the others found anything yet?”

“Not yet. They’re still spreading around the city. Kelda says its going to take a while with all the ground you have to cover. Only Bopo seems to be having much luck.”

“Bopo found something?” Rassi asked.

“She’s been on the holonet with me,” Goldie said. “She was able to dig up some old land ownership records. She hasn’t found any land ownership records in the city for the Enclave but she thinks they did acquire a small mining concern just south of the polar ice caps.”

Rassi felt a gentle tug towards the north when she heard that.

“Could you get us there?” she asked.

“If it’ll help you find Nix and Ayli, I’ll hyperjump you there,” Goldie said, fire filling her artificial voice.

“I don’t think we need that,” Solna said. “Rassi’s right that something might be there, but if it it, it’s been there for a long time now. Also, we probably don’t want to attract too much attention. A lot of people trampling all over the place would just make everything harder to sense there.”

“Come on back to the ship then,” Goldie said. “I’ll have a runabout prepped and waiting for you.”

—-

Rassi had never flown a runabout, which turned out to be a compact little four seat shuttle which was cleverly camouflaged as part of Goldie’s exterior paneling. 

Solna had offered to try flying it, but Goldie had assured them that wasn’t necessary.

“I can pilot it for you,” she said. “It’s meant for exploring planetary systems, just sending you to another spot on this planet is like swatting a bug with a thermal detonator.”

“Should we look for something else there?” Rassi asked.

“What? Oh, no – not at all. In this case a thermal detonator is more than called for.”

The thermal detonator in question seemed to be lodged in the runabouts engine since Goldie blasted them off at something which felt like it had at least a passing resemblance to light speed. In terms of not attracting attention, Rassi wasn’t sure how successful they were, but in terms of getting them to the mining station quickly, the trip was a resounding success.

From the moment Rassi’s feet touched down on a long abandoned ground, she was sure it was a success of another sort as well.

A success she had been dreading they would find.

“There was an attack here,” Solna said. “I can hear the screams.”

“Do I need to get you out there?” Goldie asked, flaring the runabout’s engines to life.

“No. This happened a long time ago,” Rassi said.

“But it was bad. I think…” Solna began to say but couldn’t finish her sentence.

“That someone was Expunged here,” Rassi said.

“More than someone,” Solna said. “There are a lot of screams from in there.”

“Should we call for the others?” Rassi asked.

“You don’t need to call, we are always here for you,” Ravas said.

“Not that we’re always listening, it’s your feelings which call to us,” Kelda said.

“So long as we’re not covered by an Enclave hunting song, right?” Solna asked.

Rassi had been raised to be proud of the techniques the Silent Enclave had developed and to believe in their supreme efficacy. While the Enclave had spent most of her life proving that most of its claims were either outright lies or gross distortions of the truth, they seemed to be annoyingly accurate about just how good they were at hiding. Kelda and Solna could feel that Nix and Ayli were still alive, as well as their general emotional state, but despite the two women being the primary anchors to the living world, locating either or both was beyond the two ghosts.

“It’s terrifying to think what I could have done with that sort of technique while I was alive,” Ravas said. “Though I suspect it is one which someone as lost to the Dark Side as I was would not have been able to replicate.”

“Even at the height of my strength, I’m certain I couldn’t either,” Kelda said. “Unless I miss my guess, the silence they can evoke is derived from a lifetime of suppressing their interactions with the Force. I think for any Jedi or Sith to replicate that would require abandoning all of the other powers we developed and living without them for a very long time.”

Ravas narrowed her eyes.

“Why did I never appreciate what a scholar you were?” she asked.

“What do you mean? You cheated off me on tests all the time?”

“Yes, but that was only because I wanted to be in the same section as you.”

“The lesson to take from this girls is that five minutes of honesty can save you several hundred years of headaches,” Kelda said.

“Though the question of lessons is an interesting one, isn’t it?” Ravas said, the slightly smitten expression she often wore around Kelda fading to curious calculation as she regarded Rassi and Solna.

“That occurred to me as well,” Kelda said. “And I believe Nix may have observed that before either of us.”

“Observed what?” Solna asked.

“The abilities you possess now would likely fade if we began to train you in the Jedi arts,” Kelda said. “You would be opening yourself to the Force and communing with it, which would mean becoming much less ‘silent’ in the process. Nix didn’t press you to learn how we interact with the Force for a number of reasons, but one was probably so you wouldn’t lose the unique talents you’ve spent so long developing.”

“Would that be so bad?” Rassi asked, not feeling especially fond of the isolation the Enclave’s doctrines had imposed on her.

“That’s for you to decide,” Kelda said. “But it’s a decision to make when you’re fully aware of the consequences of all the options.”

“For now our current abilities are probably ones we want to hang onto,” Solna said. “I don’t know if we’d be able to hear what happened here so clearly if we lost them.”

“I hear distant echoes of pain, and a terrible wound in the Force,” Ravas said. 

“The mine ahead, strong remnants of the Dark Side remain within it,” Kelda said, her eyes closed and one hand raised in the direction of the central opening to the mine complex.

“Another Dark Side Nexus?” Ravas asked.

“Not quite,” Kelda said. “If it once was then time had brought some measure of healing.”

“Or there is a smaller, more focused nexus within which the remnants gather around.”

“I think we need to go in there,” Rassi said.

“Something’s waiting there.” Solna’s eyes were closed too as she listened intently for the faded whispers.

“Then we should be the ones to face it,” Ravas said, her outfit shifting from the robes she usually appeared to be wearing to heavy fabric with solid plates affixed to it.

“Can you hear its call?” Solna asked.

“I only hear the echoes of pain which remain here,” Ravas said.

“I think it will only meet with us,” Rassi said. “I think it recognizes us.”

“This is very likely a trap,” Kelda said. She remained in her robes but the thin illumination which usually surrounded her was stronger and more solidified.

“Could it be another Death Shadow?” Ravas asked. “Without being able to sense it directly, I can’t tell from here.”

“Maybe,” Solna said, “but it doesn’t feel like the others.

“It could be using a different hunting strategy,” Ravas said.

“We’ll go together,” Rassi said, taking Solna’s hand. “If it is a trap we’ll hold out until you can get to us.”

Ravas and Kelda shared a glance and then a sigh.

“Trust in each other,” Kelda said. “We are with you.”

“But we will keep our distance until you call,” Ravas assured them.

Rassi checked with Solna who nodded in agreement.

The mines held more than they’d expected. There was an answer in there. Once which their people could have found with ease.

One which the Elders already knew?

Rassi didn’t like that idea, but the more she turned it over in her head the more correct it seemed.

What had happened here was not a mystery to the Enclave’s leaders. They knew what they’d done and they knew the result. They kept that knowledge from the rest of the Enclave but that was hardly surprising – the Elder’s power lay in the belief that they were supreme due to their devotion to the Enclave’s teachings. No one who could feel what the mine had become would believe for an instant in the Elder’s possessing any devotion to the ideals they spouted.

As they passed into the darkness, Rassi found herself wondering the Elders had been wrong or whether the ideals themselves were?

She suspected both were as flawed and corrupted as they claimed the rest of the galaxy was, but that left her with a deeper question; if she no longer believe in the Enclave’s ideals, then what did she believe in?

The answer, of course, was walking at her side and holding her hand in a warm, soft grip.

Star Wars: Legacy of the Force – Ch 8

Ayli didn’t know how Nix was going to find the Silent Enclave, she was fairly certain Nix didn’t know either, but she found that she could trust that Nix would make it happen. That trust hadn’t come easily, a lifetime of experience had taught Ayli that problems only tended to get worse and that the ones you ignored were the ones that shot you in the head with a blaster at point blank range. With Nix though?

Part of Ayli said that love makes you stupid. She’d seen that too. More than once, both within the Rebellion and in her academic career. Opening yourself to someone else, letting them matter more that you did? Those were recipes for disaster.

But Nix had come for her.

Everytime.

Ayli had fallen in love with Nix far too quickly, but it hadn’t been senseless need overwhelming either of them. From their first night together, drunken and poorly remembered as it might have been, they’d fit together, and together they’d done incredible things.

So Ayli was able to sit in quiet serenity as Nix went off to court disaster, knowing that some disasters are the doors to a better future.

Quiet serenity proved to be its own sort of disaster though as Ayli quieted her thoughts like Kelda had taught her.

All around them, throughout the ship, there was a surreal calm in the Force. It was like a blanket muffling the normal perturbations of life. Intellectually she knew how many people were on the ship, but to her senses, natural and otherwise, there seemed to be far fewer crew members than there were. And none of them were important. They were background extras, the cast members of a series who were never credited and weren’t worth paying attention too.

The Silent Enclave cloaking technique wasn’t harmful or predatory, but around the edges Ayli could sense tinges of the Dark Side.

Far from the “we shall not corrupt the Xah” mindset the Enclave espoused, their cloaking skill was very clearly a manipulation of the Force. One driven as much by fear and the desire to remain disconnected from others as a desire to protect those shielded by it.

But there was a protective element to it. And it was a shared skill, one Tovos’ entire team were equal partners in maintaining, which helped it retain a measure of balance too. Disconnected from others, but connected to each other. Avoiding conflict but embracing their duty. The duality of the technique fascinated Ayli and she followed it down into the subtle ebb and flow of the Force which remained.

“Oh, no, sorry, she’s still here,” Osdo said. He’d opened the door to the “prison cell”/storage room Nix and Ayli were sharing, seemingly expecting it to be empty.

“Can I help you with anything?” Ayli asked without opening her eyes. Osdo’s presence in the Force was so muted Ayli would have said it felt like she was speaking to a ghost but she’d spoken to ghosts for the last year and they had far more substantial Force presences.

“What were you doing?” Osdo asked. 

His blaster registered easily enough in Ayli’s senses, but since he wasn’t pointing it at her she tried to put it out of her mind.

“It’s very quiet here,” Ayli said. “I was admiring the work you’ve put into the cloak which is shielding us from detection.”

“You won’t learn our secrets Jedi,” Osdo said.

“Would it be terrible if I did?” Ayli asked. “It might help keep us all safe if I could help with the cloak. Or at least be less of a disruption to it. I have to imagine covering Nix and I with it when we’re so loud naturally isn’t easy.”

“You could never master our techniques. The Jedi are corrupt and all they do is corrupt the Xah,” Osdo said.

“The Jedi are dead,” Nix said. “I don’t know how much you know about galactic politics but they were killed at the end of the Galactic Civil War. Executed by the Emperor to complete his rise to power.”

“Some of them clearly survived. You survived,” Osdo said. He was as silent in the Force as ever but Nix could hear the conflict in his voice. He wanted to leave, he was terrified of “being corrupted by her”, but he had to “win” too, had to have the last word and be “right”.

Underneath it all though, she could hear a call for help.

He’d lost one of his best friends. Brutally lost them.

He was far from a home he was certain he was never going to see again.

He didn’t know what to do or what was going to happen. The grand adventure he’d thought he was on had turned to horror and he wanted more than anything to feel the safety again that he’d known his whole life.

Ayli remembered a little Twi’lek girl who’d thought she was going to save the galaxy. Remembered the rush of being on her first real Rebel mission. All she had to be was clever and quick. Place a thermal detonator in the foot linkage of an unguarded AT-ST. Easy. A minutes work. Anyone small and unnoticeable could do it and get away before the evil Imperials noticed. 

Anyone but her.

The storm trooper wasn’t supposed to be repairing the AT-ST’s controls. He wasn’t supposed to hear the clunk of the detonator being dropped into the gap in the foot armature. And he definitely wasn’t supposed to raise the alarm.

Even with that though, she’d been fast and clever and quick. She’d made it back to her leader. And they’d made it to their sewer escape entrance.

Or she had.

She still didn’t know if he’d meant to distract the troopers by dropping the sewer grate and turning to face them or if he’d just been surprised. The blaster bolts that had burned through his chest and forehead had made sure she’d never get the answer to that question.

His sacrifice had saved her life but had shattered the idea that she was a grand hero of any sort. She’d been alone and terrified and had survived largely because there had been others who understood what she was going through.

They hadn’t asked her to continue believing that she was a great hero, or that she would be safe. They’d simply showed her that even in an unsafe world, you could still carry on.

“I did survive,” Ayli said. “But not as a Jedi. I grew up as a fighter. We were just trying to protect the people we knew and we didn’t have anything like the skills you do.”

“But you are a Jedi,” Osdo said. “We saw what you did.”

“I know some of the Jedi arts,” Ayli said. “Last year I was possessed by the ghost of a Sith. It…I was was marked by that. I’ve been working since then to learn a better way, learning how to deal with my own Dark Side. And it’s been the ghost of a Jedi who’s been teaching me. That’s why you see a Jedi in me.”

“The ghost is an abomination. It had corrupted you,” Osdo said.

“She is a woman who loved so deeply that she safeguarded someone’s soul for a thousand years,” Ayli said. “It’s thanks to her that a planet which was lost to the Dark Side is awakening to a brighter future. And she’s taught me that the rage I’ve felt all my life isn’t something I need to fear, and is something I can move past.”

“But any ghost is a corruption of the Xah,” Osdo said. “They are unnatural.”

“Corruption may not be what you’ve been taught it is,” Ayli said. “If she’d been with us, she would have stood against the Death Shadows. Her and Ravas both would have and Ravas used to be a Sith.”

“The Sith are the Jedi that admit what they are?” Osdo asked, trying not to reveal his ignorance.

“A Sith might say that, but they’d likely be lying. Sith tend to do that, a lot,” Ayli said.

“As do the Jedi,” Osdo said, sounding certain of the assertion.

“I suppose that’s true,” Ayli said. “Though from what Kelda’s said, the Jedi tend to think they’re helping when they lie, whereas the Sith tend to lie to destroy their opponents or for personal gain.”

“Lies are lies.” Osdo made the statement as though it were unassailable fact.

“Good or bad, they do carry similar costs,” Ayli said. “It takes a bravery to speak the truth, and a lot more to listen to it.”

“That is what Silence teaches us,” Osdo said. “We know the truth, because we know how to listen.”

“What have you heard listening to me then?” Ayli asked.

“I…I don’t know,” Osdo said. 

“If it sounds like I’m telling the truth, that would be because I am,” Ayli said. “I could lie. I could tell you know I’ve never met a Jedi and that the techniques I know come from a whole different Force Tradition native to my people.”

“I wouldn’t believe you,” Osdo said.

“I know. That’s why I’m not hiding anything,” Ayli said. “You don’t need that kind of hassle. Not with all that’s happened.”

Osdo was silent in response to that, so Ayli gave him a moment collect his thoughts before she spoke again.

“I’m going to guess that I’m the first Force user outside of the Enclave that you’ve ever met, right?” Ayli asked. Osdo remained silent, offering no confirmation aside from his body language which screamed that her assessment was correct. “You were concerned I was trying to steal the secret of your cloaking technique, or break it right? Hopefully you can sense that wasn’t my intent. I really was just observing the work, it’s incredible when you see it from the inside.”

“Thank you,” Osdo said as though someone was forcing the words from him with a hot poker.

“I know you’ve got to have other questions than that though,” Ayli said. “I certainly do. Asking you to answer my questions though is unfair. I do not want to leave you wondering if I’ve tricked any information out of you. So let me answer your questions. You can listen to my answers and listen to the Force to hear that they’re truthful.”

“We’re not supposed to talk to either of you,” Osdo said.

“You don’t need to be afraid of Nix or me,” Ayli said. “None of you do. Well none of you here. Or in the Enclave in general. Primus Dolon though? Yeah, he’s got plenty of reason to be scared of Nix given that he tried to Expunge her. I don’t think she’s planning to kill him, but depending on how repentant he is, I’m not making any promises there.”

“You’re going to kill the Primus?” Osdo’s hand went to his blaster but he refrained from pulling it on her.

“He tried to kill the woman I love,” Ayli said. “I’m not able to feel much anger at the moment but on a purely intellectual level I am more than willing to defend her in a lethal and permanent fashion if he tries that again.”

Osdo stood conflicted for a moment, before sagging in despair.

“It doesn’t matter,” he said. “We’re never going to see them again.”

“Let’s say that’s true, I’m not sure that it is, Nix might be able to figure something out, but if you really are ‘Lost’, you’ll need allies,” Ayli said. “It’s how we survived in the Rebellion, and it’s how we won since none of us stood a chance alone.”

“You will betray us though,” Osdo said.

“That’s the scary part,” Ayli said. “It’s never safe to trust someone else. We can always hurt each other, even when we don’t want to. But we’re so much stronger together.”

“So what are we supposed to do that?” Osdo asked.

“Learn about each other,” Ayli said. “Trust doesn’t have to be unfounded. If we talk to each other, and then judge our actions against the claims we’ve made, we can build our trust on something solid.”

“But why would you ever trust us?” Osdo asked.

“Because I know what it’s like to not be able to go home,” Ayli said.

Star Wars: Legacy of the Force – Ch 7

Solna focused on the fragment of the beacon stone and let herself grow dangerously quiet to inspect it. No breath. No beat of her heart. No flow of blood. No noise in the Xah at all as she searched for some final, faint trace of the link to the beacon’s mate.

But there was nothing.

“It’s just a rock now,” she said, opening her eyes to find an audience of the living and the dead awaiting her. “It definitely was part of the beacon stone, but someone who knew what they were doing destroyed it.”

“Tovos,” Rassi said. “They would have sent Tovos and his team after Nix.”

“Really? He seemed immature and unseasoned,” Ravas said.

“No one’s done a mission like that since I’ve been alive, but Tovos dreamed of it,” Rassi said. “If they didn’t send him, he probably would have gone on his own.”

“The Elders definitely sent him though,” Solna said. “They cleaned the encampment out too well and too thoroughly to not have known things were going to happen.”

“I’m unclear on why they would have wanted to kidnap Nix if they also planned to disappear?” Kelda asked. “If they’d simply moved with all of the Enclave members, they wouldn’t have had to leave behind a beacon stone and Nix and Ayli wouldn’t have been able to find them at all. And that’s assuming that either of them even gave the Silent Enclave another thought.”

“I believe you said Nix did some damage to the High Elder, this Donol person?” Monfi asked, looking at Rassi who nodded in confirmation. “In which case I suspect he, and possibly the other Elders, felt they had to apprehend her. If their authority is never meant to be challenged then suffering a defeat like that and making no reply leaves them looking weak, and tyrants who appear weak do not retain their power very long.”

“Which would be why they wanted her brought back alive,” Ravas said. “Ruling through fear requires that the masses be keenly aware of what awaits them if they step out of line. Her corpse could have been the result of anything. A public execution on the other hand is very definitely the will of the rulers being brought to bear on those they dislike.”

“That sounds like the voice of experience talking,” Hendel said as he escorted a returning trio of Praxis Mar ghosts back into one of the carrying crystals they were using to venture the stars.

“It is. Both theoretical and practical,” Ravas said. “The only reason those ghosts aren’t haunting me here and now is that the Force is merciful and has given them the rest they deserve.”

“That seems to largely be the case with those who were slain at the tradeport as well,” Lasha said. “The ravages of the Death Shadows have left scars on this place and holes in the community, but there is no supernatural element to the sorrow and grief they left behind.”

“If there had been, could we have used that to track where they went?” Nulo asked.

“Tracking the Shadows wouldn’t be that helpful,” Ravas said. “Kelda or I could do that now, but the Shadows are searching as well. It feels like they found a trap or a misdirection and hunting once more.”

“Following them might lead us to the Enclave, if they can find it though, no?” Monfi asked.

“They’ve supposedly been searching for the Enclave for a thousand years and only found us a handful of times,” Rassi said. “So it could be a long wait if we tag along after them.”

“Maybe forever if no one else calls them,” Solna said.

“What do you mean?” Kelda asked.

“It might be our fault that the Death Shadow’s found the Enclave,” Rassi said.

“My fault,” Solna said.

“Our fault, or maybe even just mine,” Rassi said.

“And you would this why?” Ravas asked.

“I didn’t know that I was calling Nix to us, but it seems like that’s exactly what I did,” Solna said. “If I could call her, then  what’s the chance that I didn’t also call the Death Shadows here?”

“Or me,” Rassi said. “Solna wanted to help me, but I had a lot more reason to want to hurt Primus Dolon.”

“And did you?” Ravas asked. “Hurt Dolon? If the desire was there, you are certainly strong enough with the Force to lash out with it. Windpipes in humanoids are frighteningly easy to crush, but often anger can be turned to bloodier ends. Force Lightning is a bit beyond you yet, but I imagine you could have broken a rib into his heart if you were properly motivated.”

“What? No! I never did anything like that.”

“I expected not,” Ravas said, not looking disappointed, but still disturbingly calm about the mayhem she was describing.

“While it is always good to be mindful of our thoughts and feelings, thoughts and feelings alone carry no weight of virtue or guilt,” Kelda said. “A rage you feel and put aside before acting on it will not lead you to the Dark Side.”

“But if we can corrupt…I mean if we can use the Force without intending to, how can we know if we’re hurting people with it?” Solna asked.

“The Force arises from life,” Monfi said. “Killing, or even harming, things with it is an act against it’s fundamental nature. It’s not easy to do by mistake and there’s a resistance which is quite noticeable.”

“Noticeable if you’re not engulfed in rage,” Ravas said.

“Or drowning in sorrow, or otherwise deeply unbalanced,” Lasha said. “It’s not impossible to do as you fear, and its why those who are talented with the Force should be trained, but it is not trivial to make a mistake like that either. If you had sat brooding and silently raging for years focusing only on destroying the Primus, then you could have called something like the Death Shadows to him, but you would not be unsure of your role in their summoning once it was done.”

“There is also the small point to consider that there were other notable events which played out within the Enclave recently,” Kelda said, gently pointing out the glaringly obvious element Solna hadn’t considered. “Nix mentioned that the Primus tried to ‘Expunge’ her, correct? That sort of action is an abomination in the Force and if anything was going to attract the attention of the Death Shadows, it would most certainly have been that.”

“But they’ve expunged people before,” Solna said, her guilt at the destruction of her former home not quite willing to give up the fight just yet. “If the Shadows could sense that they’d have come years ago.”

“Do they ever Expunge people publicly? In the Enclave?” Monfi asked.

“No. It’s usually people who are trying to get away,” Rassi said.

“And they let them get far enough away that tracking back from where they are to the Enclave is difficult to impossible I would imagine?” Monfi said.

“I don’t know, maybe?” Rassi said.

“They didn’t wait for that with Nix,” Ravas said. “But she did make him a little desperate.”

“And they left this location immediately afterwards,” Kelda said. “Which suggests Monfi is correct. They knew what they did would call the Death Shadows, they were just used to calling them to the isolated locations where their victims were.”

“I like these people less with everything I hear about them,” Lasha said.

“I though they told you that the Death Shadows were some kind of rival organization though?” Nulo asked. “What we saw were people. They were something else.”

“The wraiths we saw were supposed to be the weapon the Death Shadows used. At least in the stories they told us,” Rassi said.

“But they didn’t feel like weapons,” Solna said, thinking back to the raw screaming frenzy in the Force she’d heard from the Death Shadows.

“It’s possible they’re both,” Ravas said. “There are many things the Dark Side can be used for, and raising spirit vessels of pain and torment is certainly on the list. In this case however, I don’t think that’s what we’re seeing.”

“The Shadows weren’t summoned,” Monfi said. “Part of our training as Horizon Knights is to listen for the connections between servitors and masters. It doesn’t do much good to hunt down an abomination of the Force only for the one who created it to simply call forth another one.”

“Then what we were told was a lie,” Solna said. “Which is not exactly surprising at this point.”

“What if it wasn’t though?” Rassi asked, her gaze going distant and unfocused.

“What do you mean?” Monfi asked, his voice soft to not disturb Rassi’s focus.

“There are echoes here,” Rassi said. “Both from the Shadows and the Enclave. The animosity goes back to a long, long time ago, and it doesn’t feel like the Death Shadows started it. They’re unnatural, even as bits of the Dark Side. Aren’t they?”

Solna listened and could hear the echoes of conflict and battle that Rassi was referring too. There were layers to them, with the loudest being the most recent assault, but underlaying though were centuries of hostility in ever quieter ripples from an event too far back for her to hear.

“They are,” Ravas said. “I can’t sense a connection to a summoner anymore than Monfi can, but the Shadows did not arise on their own.”

“What if that’s because their summoners are all long dead?” Rassi asked. “Would the Shadows have to fade away with them?”

“Generally summoned spirits depart the moment those who call them return to the Force,” Kelda said.

“But there are exceptions,” Hendel said, being one such exception not exactly in the flesh, since he was still entirely skeletal, but exemplary of the idea nonetheless.

“Special cases abound,” Kelda said. “Your situation, and that of the other ghosts of Praxis Mar is likely quite different from the Death Shadows though. They seem to be intent on a singular purpose and bound only by that.”

“Whereas we were just bound by how much Praxis Mar sucked,” Hendel said.

Solna had only experienced Praxis Mar in its “recovering” state and even that confirmed Hendels words. It had a density of misery to rival a black hole and Solna had breathed a sigh of relief the moment Goldie managed to escape the atmosphere and return to space.

“Sadly, however they came into being, it doesn’t seem that the dead can lead us to the living who we seek,” Lasha said.

Moffvok whuffed and Nulo translated for him, “How do the Death Shadows track the Enclave at all?”

“They would need to have some connection to it, a personal relationship would be the easiest to exploit, but unlikely given the Enclave’s refusal to use the Force,” Ravas said. “It’s also possible that the process which created them also forged the link to the Silent Enclave as a whole.”

“Why destroy the tradeport too then?” Monfi wondered aloud.

“Because they can’t sense us,” Solna said. “Or at least not that well. Whether they were built with it, or just learned over the years, they have to know that we can hide ourselves really well. If they showed up here after the Expunging, expecting to find the Enclave and the place was empty, their only choice would be to lash out at everything and hope to catch someone in the blast.”

“So they can sense the Enclave, but not us individually?” Rassi asked.

The Force pinged in Solna’s awareness.

“Oh! Yes. That’ exactly it!” she said, carried along on the rush of intuitive understanding. “The Shadows can see the Enclave because it’s still what it was. All the old traditions, all the old techniques and skills and everything. Everything except us. We’re not the people who were in the Enclave when the Shadows were created. We have a connection to those people but after so many generations its weak. We’re still part of the Silent Enclave, but we’re not the people they’re looking for. Not exactly.”

“Tell men,” Ravas said. “Is there a story of the first attack the Death Shadows made on the Silent Enclave.”

“Yes,” Solna said. “They killed half the Enclave before the rest vanished and fled to the stars.”

“And how long was it before they attacked again.”

“Two hundred years,” Rassi said. “The Enclave held tight for two hundreds until the Nameless led the Shadows back because they refused to listen to the Elders.”

“Which means they never caught the ones they were created to search for,” Ravas said.

“And they are using only the most tenuous of connections to find the Enclave now,” Kelda said.

“We need to find how they were made,” Solna said. “If we can learn how a link was formed between them and the Enclave, we can make it work for us since we do know the people of the Enclave.”

“We’ll need to backtrack the Enclave across all the systems they’ve lived in until we find the one where the first attack happened,” Rassi said.

“And then we can backtrack the Shadows to find out who made them,” Solna said, already heading back to Goldie. 

Star Wars: Legacy of the Force – Ch 6

The mood in the rickety Enclave freighter was morose. 

Or rather the mood among the Enclave’s hunting team was morose. Which made sense. They were all young, and they’d lost one of the own. There was grief for Yoldo and hiding under it was grief for themselves. For their dreams of being mighty hunters which Yoldo’s death had shattered and for the perceived loss of their place within the Enclave.

“There is no more voice to guide us,” Tovos had said, intoning the words as a pledge from scripture.

“No.” Osdo’s presence in the Force felt as though he were completely at peace, but Nix could heart the pleading heartbreak in that one word echo as clearly as a blaster shot.

“There is no more voice, but we remain Silent,” Felgo had said, apparently completing the scriptural quote.

And with that they had departed.

Lacking a ship, or any sense what planet they were on, Nix and Ayli had tagged along with their former captors, who didn’t seem to quite know what to do with them.

“Are they powering up the hyperdrive engines?” Ayli asked a moment before the familiar lurch answered her question.

“Think we should ask if they know where they’re going?” Nix suspected she knew the answer and that it was less a matter of ‘going to’ someplace and more simply getting away from the site of their failure.

The Enclave team had reacted to Tovos’ words like they’d all been gut shot, the fight going out of them to where even Poroto, who’d been willing to continue fighting with his broken hand had slumped into defeat.

The impending return of the Death Shadows had been the only thing which seemed to motivate them, and so they’d gathered what supplies they could and abandoned what should have been their home. Tovos’ last act before leaving had been to say some sort of prayer in one of the pre-Basic languages over Yoldo’s remains and then place a thermite charge on the corpse.

They’d been boarding the ship when the charge went off, the fireball large and bright enough to scour the partial camp clean and reduce everything near the detonation point to ash.

No one was going to find useful evidence about the Silent Enclave from what was left behind.

“They’re all hurting,” Ayli said. “This had to be their first mission so far away from the Enclave, and it was definitely the first they lost someone on.”

“You can sense that? They’re so quiet in the Force,” Nix said.

Ayli shook her head though.

“Not a Force thing. I’ve just seen this before. Human body language is a bit more limited, so I had to watch it pretty closely when I was kid. This team has their emotions almost completely disconnected from the Force, but their expression, and their postures? They’re wrecked.”

“And an experienced team wouldn’t be, would they?”

“Not if it was a Rebel team,” Ayli said. “Losing people didn’t happen all the time, but everyone knew someone who hadn’t made it, and the threat of it always seemed real. This team though? They didn’t think anything could touch them. And they couldn’t imagine losing like they have.”

“They need someone to talk to,” Nix said. 

“Sadly that can’t be us. Even apart from the fact that they think everything we say is sin and heresy, we’re not part of their group and its ingrained in them not to trust any outsiders.”

“That sounds like you’re also speaking from experience.”

“There wasn’t exactly a lack of people who were interested in making a quick cred by selling Rebels out to the Imperials,” Ayli said. “That’s why I like archeology. Dead people are real good at keeping their lips shut.”

She said the last with a smile, but Nix could feel the cutting truth behind the words. Ayli trusted her because Nix was ‘part of her group’, other people though, even people she wanted to be close to, were always held at a distance, if even unintentionally. 

Nix wanted to reassure her, but reflecting on her own life, she found a similar division in play. She hadn’t been a Rebel. Hadn’t fought and killed and watched people die in the dark, but she’d held herself apart from most of the crew’s she’d been a part of. 

Oh, she’d had friends, certainly, but as she drifted from ship to ship those friendships had drifted away too. There were the odd cases like Saliandrus where the bond persisted, but then Sali was an odd case all on her own, as Pirate Queens are won’t to be.

That things felt different for her since meeting Ayli was something Nix hadn’t consciously noticed, but came into clear focus seeing the Enclave team struggling to find the connections they needed.

Nix had followed the flow of the Force all her life, without any clear awareness of what she was doing. Meeting Ayli though had changed that, had finally made her consider the idea of there being a ‘forever’ with someone, even if their forever had started under fairly questionable circumstances. 

Once there was one forever in her life though, Nix had started to feel the hunger for more. She hadn’t had a family, and had thought, given how successful she’d been at surviving on her own, that she didn’t have an interest in one. 

Except it turned out that ignoring her own needs was, in fact, a skill she was a grandmaster of. 

She knew it wasn’t all self delusion. She had no interest in generating a child of her own. But a family? That was a lot broad of an idea than simple biological links. Kelda and Ravas? They were the Elders she’d always wished she could turn to for answers. Or rebel against. Or seek consolation from. Ayli? Even though they were together, Nix hungered for her wife, not simply to touch and hold but to be with. To share time and tasks and interests. To talk about nothing and to share everything. 

And then there was Rassi and Solna.

What would they be? Would they stay to be part of the family Nix was building? Intellectually she knew, and was determined to make sure, that it was their choice. In her heart though, if she was being honest with herself, she wanted them to be a part of her new family too. Daughters? Younger sisters? Cousins of an aunt’s second sister’s nephew’s grand niece? The name for the relationship was an affectation at best. All that mattered was the bond they could share, and they place they would have in each other’s hearts.

“And these idiots need to be there too,” Nix said with a sigh.

“What’s that?” Ayli asked, not being psychic in the literal ‘read minds all the time’ sense.

“This is going to be a disaster,” Nix said, knowing Ayli would understand.

Which she did.

“You’re going to talk to Tovos anyways aren’t you?” she asked, out of idle, unconcerned curiosity.

“I was thinking Felgo,” Nix said. “He seems to have a bigger problem with me.”

“You’re right, it will be a disaster.”

“Any thoughts on how to mitigate the disaster part?”

“Nope. We could avoid it, but if we’re not doing that, then embracing it is the next best thing,” Ayli said. “Or maybe I’m sort of drunk on being off balance with the Force. Seems fine to me though. You’ll make it work. Somehow.”

“Did you want to come with me?” Nix asked, wondering if Ayli had gained a new depth of insight with the Force or if her lack of fear was more of a disability than some new power.

“Probably better not to gang up on them,” Ayli said. “Plus if I’m not there, I can come and bail you out when they start reaching for their blasters.”

“When?”

“Maybe when. They are just devilishly hard to see in the Force.”

“Can you imagine what they must have been put through to wind up like that? You’d think this was an corp office building not a ship full of grieving teenagers.”

“Teenagers with blasters and a lifetime of brainwashing against you specifically.”

“Gotta start undoing that somewhere.” Nix shrugged. Disaster it was and disaster it would be.

She found Felgo in the engine room and cleared her throat to begin the carnage.

“Go away,” Felgo said, his voice too tired and his gaze held steady on the powerline he was adjusting.

“That needs to be replaced,” Nix said, largely because power transfer modules were not meant to be that particular shade of burnt plastic, but also because ship repairs were the definition of her comfort zone.

“Does it look like we’ve got replacements?” Felgo said, annoyance rising in his voice.

“Yep. Right there, near your left foot,” Nix said. She’d been inside the guts of so many freighters she felt like she’d wandered home when she wasn’t looking.

Which, in a sense was true. Ayli was there after all, so the ship was as good as anywhere else to call home.

“Can’t use that. Don’t know where it goes.” Felgo’s fatigue only wanted her to go away. He had reached the limit of problems he could handle and was probably going to explode on her no matter what she said next.

“You’ve had a miserable day,” Nix said asking the Force to guide her words into gentler waters. “And I’m not helping that.”

“Then why are you here?” Irritation colored Felgo’s words but that was better than the explosive rage that lurked within him.

“You need someone to be mad at, and I do know where that powerline goes,” Nix said.

Felgo finally turned to look at her, brows creased in confusion and frustration.

“Why do you want me to be mad at you?” That he grew more angry and suspicious with each word in the question was a good thing. Or so Nix tried to tell herself. “This is some Jedi trick isn’t it?”

“Not a Jedi,” Nix said. “It is a trick though. It’s the get a crew member to blow off steam before they blow us all up trick. Had to use it a bunch of times now when repairs just go to hell and no one’s having a good day.”

“I don’t…I’m not interested in your Jedi tricks. And I’m not going to blow us up.”

“Not working on the powerline you’re not. But you all have had about the worst days in your lives right? I don’t know what Tovos meant when he said you were Lost but that sounded like more than you just didn’t know where to go.”

Felgo went to speak but clamped his jaw shut and glared at her. Nix guessed he could hear Tovos telling him to shut up and had finally taken that command to heart.

“I’ve had bad days, believe it ir not,” Nix said. “The galaxy just loves to drop all the bantha puddu it can on us sometimes.”

Felgo remained silent and glaring.

“And you have zero reason to trust me. Maybe less than zero in fact,” Nix said. “But that doesn’t change the fact that you don’t deserve what’s happened. Life is just unfair like that sometimes.”

Felgo was growing even more suspicious of her the more Nix spoke. She could see it in his eyes and was starting to feel it in this Force.

Which was not a good sign.

“Here’s the thing though,” she said sensing the need to get to a point Felgo could wrestle with. “The galaxy isn’t what’s fair. We are. We’re supposed to be the answer to the things that go wrong. You and I aren’t on the same side, right? You’re Silent and I’m a loud, corrupt Xah abuser? Except we’re not.”

“Shut up,” Felgo growled, just about to break. “I will always be Silent, whether I am Lost or not.”

“Yeah, obviously,” Nix said. “But being Silent isn’t all that you are. You’re also a young human. You’re also a hunter. You’re also Tovos’ best friend. We are all so much more than any one label we carry. Maybe you’re ‘Lost’ now but lost things can be found. That’s my wife’s entire career now.”

“We will never be found,” Felgo said. “It’s impossible.”

“Want to bet on that?” Nix asked. “I found your Enclave once and I didn’t even know what I was looking for. I’m not a Jedi, and I’m not a corrupter of the Xah, but I can still do things you can’t even imagine.”

Star Wars: Legacy of the Force – Ch 5

Rassi hadn’t know how to make Solna believe that the Death Shadow attack wasn’t her fault. All the words and convincing arguments that should have been there were missing, and Solna knew why.

Because Rassi couldn’t be sure.

Oh, Rassi knew for certain that Solna wouldn’t have specifically called the Death Shadows down on the Silent Enclave. Even when Solna was busy denying the rage that had been building in her for years, she had a core of kindness that would have balked at the kind of collateral damage which had occurred.

And, for as much as they were both coming to understand and hate how they had been treated and how the Silent Enclave treated others, Rassi knew neither of them were so deep in their hate to willing murder anyone.

They’d seen what that level of corruption looked like.

What the Dark Side allowed and required. 

But Solna was right. The Force could be moved by unspoken desires, even ones the conscious mind turned away from.

Had she and Solna been angry and wished ruin upon Primus Dolon and the whole structure of the Enclave’s society? Yes. Definitely. Rassi couldn’t even claim that had changed, or that she didn’t wish it even more strongly than she had before.

That in turn left open the question of whether that unvoiced rage had been what had called to the Death Shadows. 

And whether they could indeed call them again.

“I don’t think we should tell anyone about this,” Solna said.

“You think they’ll blame us?” Rassi asked.

“The Horizon Knights have a mandate to hunt down people like the Death Shadows, and Force users who work with them,” Solna said. “I think they’d at least have to lock me up. Or worse.”

Rassi caught a flash of the future Solna was envisioning. A future marked by blood and pain.

But it wasn’t a real future. If was wrapped in shadows. A lie born of fear.

“They won’t,” Rassi said. “If this is something they’re familiar with, they can probably tell us whether it’s possible that we did this or not, and if we did, I know they’ll be able to teach us how not to do it again.”

“But will they trust us with that?” Solna was quiet, her awareness turned inwards, searching for some confirmation of what she feared she’d done.

“If we go to them? I think so,” Rassi said. “Think about Nulo and Muffvok. Lasha has been raising them since they were little and they’re not fanatics like we were.”

“I don’t know if we can judge that all that well,” Solna said. “I think they look more reasonable because they agree with the things we’ve been learning. We haven’t tried to go against their wishes at all so far.”

“They trusted us to call us in against the Lich,” Rassi said.

“Okay, yeah, that’s true,” Solna said. “But it still scares me.”

“Me too,” Rassi said. “How much of that is just inside us though? I mean, this was our home. We knew this place and it’s gone now. And we have broken all kinds of rules so far. Maybe this whole idea is just guilt over that?”

Solna closed her eyes and breathed in and out, slowly and regularly. Rassi kept her eyes open but made a similar effort at centering herself. 

“Maybe this is just guilt over leaving the Enclave,” Solna said at last. “I can’t feel where that guilt ends and the guilt over summoning the Death Shadows begins.”

“We’re too close to it,” Rassi said. “The Enclave was wrong about a lot of things, but some of their stuff just makes sense – I think it had to or nothing would work. When Honored Jolu taught us about getting an external perspective on feelings that seemed too big to manage, that’s probably a good idea.”

“Okay,” Solna released more than just the breath she’d drawn in. “But we need to make something clear if we’re going to let anyone know about this idea.”

“What’s that?” 

“I’m the one who might have done this. Not you.” Solna’s expression had gone adamantine in its resolve.

Rassi pulled her in to close hug.

“We absolutely do not know that,” Rassi said. “If this is something we did without knowing it, then I’m much more likely than you to have been responsible.”

“Why? And how? I’m already responsible for Nix finding us, that make me the most likely to have been bending the Xah for other things.”

“I don’t think so,” Rassi said. “You called to Nix because you wanted us to be rescued, to find a way out of the Enclave. I was the one who wanted it all to burn down.”

“I’m also the prodigy though right?” Solna said, clearly not believing the claim but still more than willing to use it to win the argument.

“And I’m the one who can copy the prodigy,” Rassi said. “Maybe while you were calling to Nix, my fear and anger were calling to the Death Shadows?”

“I do not want them to blame you for this,” Solna said. “I can’t let that happen.”

“This isn’t going to be about blame,” Rassi said. “It’s about understanding, whether either of us could have done this and, if so, what we need to do to make sure we never do it again.”

Solna leaned into the hug, which felt so good Rassi considered tossing away all other cares and simply staying like they were, hidden in one of the still standing buildings, away from everyone’s eyes.

“I hope you’re right,” Solna said. “I don’t think I would have gotten through this without you.”

“I think we belong together,” Rassi said, which wasn’t a particularly daring thing to say, they’d talked about presenting a united front to the world a lot of times. In this case though, Rassi felt like she was asking for something more than that. Something that maybe they already had but hadn’t ever named? 

“We do,” Solna said before drawing in a fortifying breath and pulling away from the hug at last. “And you’re right. This is something we should talk to people about. Hiding it would just be stupid and make everything worse.”

“We don’t have to rush though,” Rassi said, missing the closeness of the hug already.

“I don’t want to risk losing my nerve,” Solna said and took Rassi’s hand.

It wasn’t a hug, but it was still good.

They found Nulo first, following the sound of young Hutt’s hover platform to find her surrounded by ghosts.

They weren’t exactly friendly ghosts, but they were friendly enough under the circumstances.

“Oh hey,” Hendel the skeleton said. “We can’t find anymore of the Shadows lingering around here, so we’re thinking we’ve chased them off and people are safe now?”

“I don’t sense them either, but I wanted to find you and see what you thought,” Nulo said.

“They can probably hide better from us than from anyone,” Solna said.

“Yeah, if they’re used to hunting people from the Enclave, then they’d have to know how to hide from us,” Rassi said, considering for a moment just how terrifying the attack on the Enclave must have been.

They’d been told that the Death Shadows were a group of corrupted Xah users – frightening but still tangible and mortal. From what the ghosts of Praxis Mar had reported though the creatures they fought were very definitely not living beings.

“I was thinking about that,” Nulo said. “We haven’t found bodies in the Enclave, but we did find them in a tradeport. That means the Enclave members had to have evacuated before the Shadows got here, right? Which means the Enclave must have known they were coming, somehow, so maybe the Shadows aren’t ambush predators. They may be more like pack hunters, with only enough stealth to get in close to their prey.”

“Except in this case, the prey was able to spot them. That does seem to make sense,” Solna said.

“And if you’re right that they evacuated then there should be a beacon stone somewhere around here.” Rassi cast out her sense, both searching for any lingering traces of the Death Shadows and to see if she could find the beacon Honored Jolu had told them should be there.

“Beacon stone?” Nulo asked. 

“The Silent Enclave has survived as long as it has through anonymity and mobility,” Solna said, reciting one the lessons all children in the Enclave were taught. “We lived in tents and impermanent dwellings so that we could flee on a moment’s notice, and take as much with us as there were time for.”

“Which could be nothing,” Rassi added, since that point had always been stressed.

“The one thing the Enclave would not leave behind though was its own members,” Solna said. “Whenever the Enclave has to relocate, they’re supposed to find an unremarkable pair of stones and quiet the Xah in them both.”

“They showed us how to do it and it makes the stones almost unnoticeable,” Rassi said. It had been one of the rare assignments she’d done well with and had enjoyed. The other children had ruined it for her, but by that point it had hardly been a surprise.

“One stone is left behind and the other is taken and dropped on the planet the Enclave moves to,” Solna said. “By holding one, you can sense where the other is, supposedly even across the stars.”

“Wouldn’t that let whoever was following you just find you again though?” Hendel asked.

“There are traps setup around where the stone that’s taken along with the Enclave is hidden,” Solna said. “Anyone who follows the stone’s guidance must pass through the traps to find the Enclave. If you’re a member, they’ll know you when you show up and let you through. If not…”

“Then they kill you?” Nulo guessed.

“Or send you back believing that the stones led to a dead end,” Rassi said. “Dissuading people from finding the Enclave was supposed to be the Great Will of the Xah and anything and everything that supported that was automatically judged to be free of corruption.”

“So how do you find this stone if it’s unnoticeable?” Hendel asked.

“We were supposed to take three days centering ourselves, listening to the silences around us for the one which was too quiet,” Solna said.

“What if you were being pursued too though?” Nulo asked.

“In that case you’re not supposed to look for the Enclave,” Rassi said.

“The duty of anyone outside the Enclave when it moves is to be certain they are not followed back to it,” Solna said. “If that meant spending a week hiding out, you did it. If it meant spending a year hiding, you did it. If you had to die to be sure no one could follow you back, them you died. The safety of all was supposed to matter more than any personal safety.”

“That’s a fairly common stricture to find in hidden cults,” Kelda said, appearing beside Nulo.

“It sounds noble, and it enwraps the members into a community where intense devotion is expected to be the norm,” Ravas said, appearing on Nulo’s other side.

“That’s the Enclave,” Rassi said.

“The people in the tradeport are putting in a call for Republic assistance,” Kelda said. “They seem to be out of danger for now and they’re going to need help rebuilding this place.”

“And they would all feel more comfortable if we stayed around to make sure the Shadows don’t come back after nightfall or something,” Ravas said. “So you should have plenty of time to look for this beacon stone.”

“I don’t think they’ll need that much time,” Monfi said. “Unless I miss my guess, this was the beacon stone that you were talking about?”

In his hand, Monfi held the shattered pieces of a stone which had no noteworthy features.

Rassi could feel the chaotic scramble of the energy in the stone. It wasn’t alive, and had never been alive, so it shouldn’t have been part of the Force, but all matter resonates with the Force and the stone was no different.

If it had ever been connected to another stone however, that was completely lost, and with it any trace of where the stone’s twin might have been taken.

Star Wars: Legacy of the Force – Ch 4

The worst thing to do when presented with a mysterious and unexpected scene which showed significant signs of having been a massacre was to leave the safety of the perfectly serviceable spaceship one had arrived in and venture out into said massacre scene to ‘find out what had happened’.

“You know we’re being watched, right?” Ayli asked. Tovos had decided that while investigating the partially constructed encampment was for some reason necessary, neither he nor his team needed to be the ones at the forefront of said investigation. That they’d snapped dura-steel shackles on Ayli and Nix’s wrists before forcing them out of the craft was so sadly predictable that Ayli hadn’t even bothered to complain. 

It helped that the shackles were the cheap store bought variety that Ayli had learned to escape before she knew how to read, but with her Dark Side still curled up and recovering from the thrashing Paralus had given it, she found she simply wasn’t as afraid of things as she probably should have been.

“Of course we are,” Tovos said. “The monsters scream in the Xah. They will not surprise us.”

“I wouldn’t be so sure of that,” Nix said. “Predators are usually pretty good at distracting their prey. They don’t tend to last long as predators otherwise.”

Nix didn’t sound terribly concerned about their predicament either. Ayli attribute that to the subtle nudges the Force was giving them. It was oddly easy to remain peaceful despite their captivity, unless one took in account the sense each of them possessed that the will of the galaxy was in the corner, rooting for them. The Force was neither all knowing, nor all powerful, and could certainly be bent to evil ends, but its natural state was one of balance and after the time they’d spent on Praxis Mar, it was staggeringly refreshing to be able to feel just how powerful that was.

“Of course she knows about these monsters,” Felgo said. “She probably called them here with Jedi magic.”

“Not a Jedi,” Nix said. It had become an almost autonomic response. “And you would have felt any manipulations I did with the Xah, right?”

Ayli smiled. Playing their pride against their paranoia wasn’t a sound long term strategy, but the grumble of discontent it brought from Felgo was amusing nonetheless.

“Out of curiosity, since you know they can see us, why are you bothering with the cloaking technique?” Ayli asked.

“And isn’t that manipulating the Xah?” Nix asked. “It’s not supposed to be this quiet here.”

It seemed like a valid question to Ayli, even if she knew that Tovos dropping the cloaking effect which was hiding them from general detection would result in the immediate appearance of Nix and Ayli’s allies. That was, from Tovos point of view, an excellent reason to stay cloaked for the rest of his life, except he didn’t know that.

“There is no corruption in silence,” Felgo said. “We are a hunting party and the hunt must remain silent.”

“Don’t explain to them,” Tovos said. “That one came to steal our secrets.”

“Asking nicely and letting you drug me is stealing?” Nix asked.

“You took our children,” Felgo said. “Just like a Jedi.”

“Stop talking!” Tovos said. 

Ayli suppressed a chuckle. Tovos was too young to lead a team like that. True, he was clearly a young adult human, but he didn’t understand anything any the situation they were in or how to manage those under his command.

That was made abundantly clear in less than a second when Nix tackled him to the ground.

Which was quite nice of her.

The Death Shadow she’d saved Tovos from disagreed with that assessment however. With appendages that looked like arms broken in three extra places, it reached down for Tovos who was scrambling away from it on his hands and butt. 

Felgo and Osdo tried to shoot the Death Shadow with the blasters they were carrying but Felgo’s shots went wide in his panic and Osdo’s bolts passed right through the Death Shadow. 

That wasn’t the real problem they had though.

The real problem was that with the trap sprung, the rest of the Death Shadows were abandoning their hidden refuges and descending on the small party en masse.

One of the younger members of the hunting party, Ayli thought his name was Yoldo, tried to hold off a Death Shadow by using his rifle as a staff.

That did not work.

The Shadow passed through the rifle and grasped Yoldo by the throat before pouring itself down Yoldo’s throat and into his eyes.

Ayli threw off her shackles and stepped forward to help Yoldo, but was confronted by two of the Death Shadows.

“Nope,” Nix said and dragged both of the Shadows back with the Force, flinging them into each other, which seemed to stun the two.

In the moment’s delay that took however, Ayli saw Yoldo’s body twitch, spasm, and then shatter. What hit the group was already a corpse as the Death Shadow that had killed him came pouring back out of its victim.

“Run!” Tovos said, understanding at last what a tremendously bad idea investigating the partially constructed camp had been.

“No!” Nix called, calling up a swirl of debris to form a shield around them.

It wasn’t a shield to keep out the intangible Death Shadows though. It was a shield to keep the Enclave hunting party from scattering (and then dying individually Ayli foresaw).

“We have to stand together,” Nix commanded. “I can’t protect you otherwise.”

“Your corruption will not save us!” Felgo said.

Ayli yanked him back specifically, since he seemed determined to plow through the whirling barrier that Nix had called forth.

“Of course not,” Ayli said. “Mine will.”

The Death Shadows were a terrifying and utterly deadly threat. They were not, however, a planet sized Dark Side nexus, or a centuries old Lich capable of lifting mountains. Ayli hadn’t really defeated either the planet or the Lich, but they had adjusted her sense of scale and without the crushing pressure the Dark Side cutting her off from the Force, she was able to recognize a familiar element to the Death Shadows.

When the first one broken through Nix’s barrier, Ayli was ready to meet it.

It tried to grasp her and she let it.

Which let her grasp it as well.

When it tried to pour itself within her, she held it away and waggled a forefinger at it. It writhed and shrieked and strained against her grip, but she wasn’t holding it with only her hand.

“We are one with the Force,” she said, opening herself to the Force and sharing it with the Death Shadow. There was a commotion behind her but Ayli ignored it. What she was offering was a gift which to both the Force and the Death Shadow, and she was not accepting returns.

The Death Shadow gave one final shriek as something else swallowed it.

There was silence as the shriek faded away.

And then the Shadows were gone.

Ayli could feel them fleeing faster than thought, driven away by a horror which was wholly new to them.

And she regretted that.

They were monsters. That much was unquestionable. Why they were monsters however was a mystery, and one Ayli had the sense she wasn’t going to enjoy finding the answer to.

“There, now we can leave,” Nix said, allowing the ring of spinning debris to settle to the ground.

“Yoldo!” One of the other Enclave hunters, Poroto, screamed and collapsed when he saw what was left of his friend.

“What have you done?” Tovos had the barrel of his rifle directly under Ayli’s chin, which wasn’t a position she was overly found of, but which she trusted would work out okay.

She just had to keep Nix from breaking the poor boys hands.

“She sent the wraith back to its proper rest,” Nix said. “And you will want to put that down.”

“Your Jedi tricks don’t work on me,” Tovos snarled as he looked over towards her.

“That’s true. They do however work on the trigger of you blaster,” Nix said.

Whether that was true or not, Ayli still had all of her self defense training hard wired into her nerves.

She had the rifle out of Tovos’s hands, Tovos on the ground, and the barrel pressed to the Felgo’s forehead before she was even aware she’d decided to act.

“This is where we become very polite with each other,” she said. “And also where I point out that the wraiths are perfectly capable of returning once their rage overcomes the surprise that shocked them.”

“She’s right,” Nix said. “Listen for them. They’re regathering already.”

“We..You don’t order us,” Tovos said, choking from one of the blows Ayli had hit him with. 

First rule of combat, protect your vital parts and he’d failed even that.

Ayli frowned, if she was really going to start making up a numbered list, the first rule of combat should be ‘avoid it like the plague’. That should also be the second, third, fourth, and so on rules out to a million or so, just to make sure people really understood it.

“That’s good,” Nix said. “Because we’re not giving orders. We are however also no longer taking them.”

“You…you won’t corrupt us!” Osdo’s voice quavered with uncertainty as fear poured off him and his presence in the Force became a veritable roar compared to the previous whisper he had been.

“Osdo!” Tovos’ voice was sharp and stern. “Be silent.”

“Osdo’s correct,” Ayli said, in gentle and calm tones, offering Tovos her hand to help him rise. “We won’t corrupt you. We won’t ask for your secrets, and we won’t teach you any of the arts we’ve learned.”

“And we’re not going to mind trick you,” Nix said. “If you don’t believe that, then consider whether your literal lifetime of learning to listen to the Xah would somehow not be enough for at least one of you to notice if either Ayli or I tried to bend it to influence you. You all just felt what it’s like when I use Force. I’m sure that seemed like a corruption to you, but listen to each other, and listen to the Xah. I’m sure you can hear ripples in it, but are any of you corrupt now?”

“You killed Yoldo,” Poroto said, an all too familiar, irrational anger rising in him.

“We did,” Nix said. “By letting you take us into this obvious trap, our negligence resulted in his death. We should have refused your order to come here, overpowered you, and flown us all away.”

“The Death Shadows killed Yoldo,” Tovos said, not exactly falling on Nix and Ayli’s side. His aim was clearly to cut short the discussion of blame, since a fair portion of it rested on his shoulders.

“You know what the wraiths are?” Ayli asked, offering Tovos his blaster back.

Which allowed Poroto to shoot her.

Or at least try to.

“Wow do you need a timeout,” Nix said, struggling with the words as she held the blaster bolt in place. Ayli stepped lightly to the side allowing Nix to release the bolt which promptly blew a fist-sized hole threw one of the dura-crete walls which had been erected.

Poroto went to fire again, but this time Nix yanked the blaster out of his hands.

Ayli sense an index finger snap and Poroto dropped to his knees cradling his hand.

“One more attempt, just one more, and we’re going to find your people on our own,” Nix said.

“They are gone,” Tovos said. “They are gone and they cannot be found. There was no time to set up a relay.”

“No. We can’t be Lost. They wouldn’t leave us for Lost,” Osdo said. 

“The Death Shadows found them after they fled once,” Tovos said. “There will be no finding them a second time. We are still Silent, but we are now Lost.”

Star Wars: Legacy of the Force – Ch 3

Standing in the empty shell that had once been her house, Solna felt like a vast gulf of time had passed, rather than just a few days.

“It was always this empty, wasn’t it?” Rassi asked, coming up to stand beside Solna in a manner that was somehow more comforting than any physical affection would have been.

“I hated it here,” Solna said. “I should have told you that. I don’t even know why I hid it.”

“Can you imagine what Honored Jolu would have done if she’d overheard you?” Rassi asked.

Solna had to laugh. Jolu had played the role of boogeyman for a lot of the children in the Enclave, but had taken a special interest in Rassi, and by extension Solna. Avoiding her attention had been one of the soft boundaries they’d been hemmed in by from the time they were old enough to understand that rules existed.

Despite her exalted position in their lives though, Jolu hadn’t been the true nightmare which plagued them. Her attention, if often sharp and biting, was always coupled with lessons and a chance for Rassi and Solna to redeem the mistakes they’d made.

The true boogeymen were the children that no adult saw fit to hold back from heaping abuse on Rassi and, far less often in Solna’s view, Solna too. The children weren’t alone though. There were plenty of adults who openly spoke of their eagerness for the day when Rassi would face the Trials of Silence, fail them, and cease to be a problem for the Enclave.

No one bothered to suggest that Solna would fail her trials. She was considered properly silent, noticeably more so than many of her age mates. Her defenses of Rassi was imagined to either be an eccentricity she would grow out of, or a sign of character defect so deep that she would be drawn down into the whirlpool of failure that would drown Rassi.

In theory Josta and Krelvarth should have been concerned about that. In other families, the caregivers would rise to defend their children, and would instruct them in private on how to be proper members of the Enclave. 

Josta and Krelvarth weren’t Solna’s mother and father though. They were family in that most people in the Enclave were related in some manner. The two of them had drawn the short straw for raising Solna after her mother abandoned her and ran off with a boy from a transport who might or might not have been Solna’s father. Solna didn’t think Josta would have accepted the responsibility if not for the support stipend that came with it. Krelvarth didn’t even care about that. His best quality was that as far as he was concerned Solna didn’t exist.

Solna wished more people were like Krelvarth.

“I keep expecting someone to catch us,” Solna said.

Rassi scuffed her foot on the floor. “I think they’re afraid of the reverse.”

“What do you mean?” Solna turned to study Rassi’s expression.

“Imagine if we did to them what we did to the Lich?” Rassi said, looking up to meet Solna’ gaze.

“We couldn’t though,” Solna said, puzzled at what Rassi was imagining. “They’d hear us coming the moment we landed.”

“Would they?” Rassi asked. “I know I’m loud. I can’t control myself like I should. Together though? When I’ve got you for balance?”

“That wouldn’t help?” Solna could see what would happen so clearly because there’d been so many times they’d tried to sneak off to catch a moment’s peace and so many times they’d been caught. How could Rassi think a silent assault on the Enclave would be anything but an unmitigated disaster?

“I lost track of you,” Rassi said simply.

“You what?”

“When we were sneaking past the Lich’s defenses? I couldn’t sense you. Not the whole time. And when I could, you were like the memory of a whisper.”

“So you were having problems sensing things?” Solna couldn’t make sense of what Rassi was saying. No matter how well they’d practiced their studies, neither one was ever unsure where the other was or how they were feeling.

“Not in the slightest,” Rassi said, shaking her head. “I could feel everything around us. All of the traps the Lich left. Ravas and Kelda. I could even tell where Goldie was!”

“But not me?” Solna felt an ache thud in her chest. “Did I do something wrong?”

The idea of losing her connection with Rassi was unthinkable. For as much as Solna had needed to protect Rassi over the years, there wasn’t anyone who Solna felt anywhere near as safe with.

No one else who she…

“No silly!” Rassi said, rolling her eyes and cutting off Solna’s train of thought. “You were perfect. You snuck past about a billion physical sensors and twice that many Xah constructs! And you made it look easy!”

“But you got by all of those things too?”

“I was with you.”

“But I wasn’t doing anything to cloak you. That would have been…”

It would have been a manipulation of the Xah.

The Force.

Whatever.

Solna had thought she was past that, but it turned out that a lifetime of indoctrination didn’t simply wash away cleanly in a few days.

“A corruption?” Rassi asked, a teasing tone in her voice. “Well no worries there Enclave girl. I did that all on my own.”

“What though? I mean how? You?” It would have been mean to call out Rassi like that after all of the trouble she’d had staying quiet in the Enclave, but Rassi was right. Solna hadn’t been doing anything to silence Rassi and somehow Rassi had slipped past the same traps Solna had.

“Yeah. Me,” Rassi said, one of the first prideful smiles that Solna had ever seen on her lighting up her face. “I was with you, so I could feel what you were doing.”

“You’re always with me though!”

Except she wasn’t.

The other kids tended to attack Rassi when she was alone. 

“I know, but I was always so afraid of disturbing the Xah that I was constantly fighting to be perfect. With you though, I didn’t have to be. I mean, yeah, we couldn’t really afford to mess things up, but the traps and stuff, they were fair. I was afraid of them but that was okay, so were you.”

Solna blinked. Had she been radiating fear? No. The traps would have definitely picked up on that. 

But she had been afraid.

“I could feel how you were letting your fear go, it didn’t ripple out into the Force, it just kind of blew through you like a gentle breeze.”

Was that what she’d been doing? Solna wasn’t sure, she hadn’t really been paying attention, just doing what she always did and letting…

She hadn’t been using the Force. She’d been letting it use her!

“Oh.”

“Yeah. The Enclave doesn’t know how to do that,” Rassi said. “That was all you. You invented that on the fly.”

“No. No I didn’t,” Solna said, understanding reverberating through her as memories came together and shattered more than a few long held beliefs. “It wasn’t on the fly.”

“Uh, when did you figure it out then?” Rassi asked, it being her turn to be perplexed.

“I’ve always known,” Solna said, tiptoeing through her memories. “Or I worked out how to work with the Force without being noticed long enough ago that no one questioned it.”

“Are you sure? You always passed the tests the Honored’s gave us, and they were definitely watching for things like that.”

“I passed because I was cheating!” Solna said, chuckling at the idea.

And at the idea of who she’d been. 

Or who she’d thought she’d been.

“I was never a prodigy,” she said. “I just figured out how to trick everyone in thinking I was one.”

Rassi stared at her for a good long moment.

Then she took Solna by the shoulders and looked her directly in the eyes.

“Repeat what you just said,” Rassi instructed her.

“I’m not a prodigy. I cheated.” It was an oddly freeing concept.

“So. Let me get this straight. You think that figuring out a technique as, let’s say you were five standards at the time, figuring out a technique that fooled literally everyone in the entire Silent Enclave, include Honored Jolu and Primus May His Breath Be Damned DOLON. You think figuring out a technique like that somehow indicates that you are not absurdly amazing? Is that really the line of reasoning you’re going with.”

“Yes?” Solna had to admit that Rassi’s phrasing did highlight a few weak points in Solna’s argument.

“I see. So you’re a prodigy and a tremendous idiot. Gotcha. Just wanted to make sure.”

“Shut up! And wait, what about you? Miss Woe-Is-Me-I’m-So-Bad-With-the-Xah? You just watched me and figured out how to do the same thing that I probably spent a decade working on?”

“Well, yeah, cause I was thinking about. You did it all on reflex.”

“That doesn’t make it better!” Solna wasn’t even sure which side she was arguing for anymore.

“It totally does though!” Rassi said, gripping Solna’s shoulder tighter.

Though not tight enough to hurt.

Never tight enough to hurt.

“Listen, my point isn’t that you’re amazing. That’s just a fact,” Rassi relaxed a bit as she spoke. “My point is that we’re both a lot stronger than we imagined. A lot stronger than the Enclave would ever let us imagine ourselves to be.”

“Okay, sure, I can see that,” Solna said. It was a weird idea, much too far outside the bulk of her previous experiences, but those were all suspect given the things she’d learned about herself and about the Enclave.

“I don’t think we’re alone in that though,” Rassi said. “I think what we’ve learned is what anyone who leave the Enclave can learn. I think that’s why they left. They’re afraid of us.”

Solna laughed. Rassi was being serious but she was also out of her mind if she thought that Honored Jolu was ever going to be afraid of them.

“If you look out that empty space right there where a window used to be, you might notice that what’s left of the camp has been pretty thoroughly destroyed, right? I’m going to go out on a limb and guess that the Death Shadows who did all of that might, just might, have been a slightly bigger worry than the two of us.”

Rassi smiled.

It was a smile Solna had seen before. One that said Rassi had noticed something that Solna should have too.

“Yeah. About that. You know what’s kind of funny about that? When was the last time the Enclave even caught wind of the Death Shadows being on the same planet they were on? How about the last time there was an actual attack?”

“Do we even know if there ever was an attack?” Solna said, seeing where Rassi’s argument was leading.

“Nope. I mean, let’s give Jolu at least the benefit of the doubt and say there was. Even if so though, it has been a long time since the Death Shadows found where the Enclave was staying.”

“And a day after we left, they suddenly attack in full force. Yeah. Okay that is pretty weird.”

“Not weird. Terrifying. At least to Primus Donol, and probably every other Elder. And you know what they would have to be asking themselves?”

“Whether we called in the Death Shadows before we left.”

“And if we can do it again,” Rassi said, completing her thesis.

“Did we?” Solna asked, a sick bile rising in her stomach.

“What? No. Of course not,” Rassi said. “But they can’t know that.”

“We can’t either,” Solna said. “I hated it here right? I was the one who bent the Xah so that Nix found us and flew us away. How do we know I didn’t also call down the Shadows as retribution?”

Star Wars: Legacy of the Force – Ch 2

Nix awoke in Ayli’s arms. 

Which was a rather nice change of pace from the last however long it had been.

The splitting headache however suggested that things hadn’t gone quite how she’d hoped they would on their reunion.

“We’re being held captive, aren’t we?” she asked without opening her eyes.

Ayli ran her fingers through Nix’s hair.

“Yep.”

“And they stunned us.”

“Yep.”

“Even though we went along willingly.”

“Yep.”

Nix sighed.

“I remember seeing it coming and thinking ‘oh well, this’ll be less hassle than the alternative’. That wasn’t a good thought was it?” Nix also remembered angling to take a bit more of the stun blast than Ayli, which explained why Ayli had woken up before her.

Or Ayli was simply used to getting stunned. Some of the stories of her childhood that Ayli had shared with her had rather horrific elements to them and building up resistance to stun blasts, either voluntarily or involuntarily seemed like it would fit right in.

“It was the right play,” Ayli said. “Trying to shield me was kind of silly, though I do appreciate it.”

“Where are we now?” Nix asked, opening her eyes to take in their surroundings.

Or that had been the plan.

Tearing her eyes off of Ayli after they’d been apart was more challenging than Nix had anticipated.

“We’re in ‘the Brig’, or in other words an unused storeroom on the rust bucket transport they picked us up in.” Ayli continued to stroke her fingers through Nix’s hair, the gentle smile on her face almost enough to make Nix miss the silver hue Ayli’s eyes had taken on.

“How are you feeling?” Nix asked, both in terms of the residual effect from the stun blast as well as her new ocular condition.

“Like I’m right where I want to be most of all in all the galaxy,” Ayli said.

Her touch had washed away the pain from the stun-induced headache without Nix even noticing it.

“Think they’re monitoring us?” Nix asked, sneaking a kiss onto Ayli’s forearm.

“Not with cameras or sound recorders,” Ayli said. “I don’t think they need to though. They are very skilled in using the Force.”

“They call it ‘the Xah’,” Nix said. “And they’re very specialized in how they interact with it.”

She filled Ayli in on what she’d learned about the Silent Enclave from Rassi and Solna, bringing Ayli up to speed on the two new additions to their life and how things had gone so far with the two girls.

“I spoke with Solna,” Ayli said. “Briefly. She seems to have formed a bond with you pretty quickly.”

“They’re alone in the galaxy now,” Nix said.

“My, I wonder how that feels,” Ayli said with more than a trace of self-deprecation.

She and Nix had both been left to fend for themselves at too young of an age, and they were of one mind about not allowing that to happen to anyone else on their watch.

“Also I sort of danced them into accepting that they’re worthy of being cared for,” Nix said, and explained the trial that Rassi and Solna had attempted and how she’d felt it was necessary to step in.

“I’m surprised you beat them at their own game. That sounds incredibly dangerous,” Ayli said. There wasn’t accusation in her tone. She understood why Nix had done what she had, she was simply impressed it had worked.

“I wanted the win more than they did,” Nix said. “Plus I figured Goldie would get me on med-gurney and bring me back if I went too far.”

“And then you left them with Monfi to go invade a Lich’s tomb?” Ayli asked, moving on to the teasing portion of their reunion.

“That was definitely not the plan,” Nix said. “My thought process was…”

“Pretty plain to see,” Ayli said. “You wanted Goldie, Rassi, and Solna as far from Praxis Mar as possible. In case you’re wondering that was absolutely the right decision to make.”

“It seems like it paid off in the end too,” Nix said. “I could feel the moment Paralus’s phylactery was destroyed and it felt a whole lot like Rassi and Solna were the ones who did it.”

“I’m only surprised it wasn’t Ravas who got there first,” Ayli said.

“She had to have been blocked away from it. Kelda too,” Nix said. “There’s no chance they would have let the girls get anywhere near the planet, much less the tomb if they hadn’t been out of other options.”

“I’m hoping they’re not still trapped,” Ayli said. “I’ve been expecting them to drop in and check on us any time now.”

“They probably can’t find us,” Nix said, noticing the unnatural serenity in the Force around them.

“This is what happened to you when you were in the Enclave’s encampment then, isn’t it?” Ayli asked. “I was wondering about that, but it feels so benign.”

“It largely is,” Nix said. “Apart from their leadership, I think the Enclave is largely non-hostile.”

“That doesn’t seem to be the experience our two new girls had,” Ayli said.

“Social violence and neglect can be inflicted very peacefully,” Nix said. “Some of that is due to the leadership of the Enclave, and some of it is just people being horrible like people will. Rassi didn’t fit in there and her parents had ‘caused trouble’ in the past so she was forever going to be the one they dumped their frustrations and anger onto. The effects meant to be shared by all of them though? Those wouldn’t be outlets for their darker emotions.”

“I seem to be missing mine, as a note,” Ayli said.

“Your darker emotions?” Nix asked.

“My Dark Side in general,” Ayli said. “She fought Paralus for us. Let Monfi and Bopo escape.  But she lost.”

“What does that mean for you, do you think?” Nix asked. “You still feel like you’re fully you, from what I can sense.”

“Oh, I am,” Ayli said. “And I don’t think you can kill a Dark Side like that. I don’t even know what would happen if you did? I’m guessing you’d just die? In this case though it feels more like my anger, and fear, and despair, are just taking a bit of a nap. When I think about what happened to Rassi and Solna for example, I know there should be anger there, but all I feel is a bit tired and distant.”

“How about when you think about the girls themselves?” Nix asked.

“That’s much easier, and its mostly delight and anticipation,” Ayli said. “They sound so brave. I can’t wait to meet them properly.”

“Once we get this wrapped up, that’ll be our first order of business,” Nix said, imagining a dozen different scenarios for how that might play out, all with the same lingering question behind them.

“So does this mean we’re starting a family then?” Ayli asked, thinking along similar tracks to Nix.

“I…we’ve never talked about that have we?” Nix asked, self-conscious that she’d never thought about it enough to even know what her desires were up until then.

“We haven’t, largely because I don’t think it occurred to either of us that it might be something that would ever come up.”

“And, so of course, it has,” Nix said, shaking her head at how the Force seemed to be extremely adept at placing her in situations where she did not know the right answer.

Mechanics joked about wanting to have the Parts Manual for life, and Nix’s answer had always been that you wrote your own Life Parts Manual, but that answer was not exactly comforting when faced with the truly serious decisions life threw at her.

“And so it has,” Ayli said. “So are you going to ask me about it?”

“I’m trying to figure out how to phrase things so that you’re free to answer how you truly feel,” Nix said.

“I suggest using words, any of them will probably do, and then trusting that I will be honest about my feelings with you,” Ayli said, planting a quick kiss on the tip of Nix’s nose.

“You’ve already thought about this, haven’t you?” Nix asked, suspicion over how much longer Ayli had been awake forming in her mind.

“I have,” Ayli said. “But that’s not asking me about it.”

“No, no it’s not,” Nix said, a slow smile spreading across her face as an opportunity she’d been almost too slow to grasp occurred to her.

Reluctantly, she shifted out of Ayli’s arms. 

“Let’s do this properly then,” she said, rising enough to be kneeling across from where Ayli was sitting.

“Captain Ayli’wensha, would you like to make a family with me,” Nix asked.

A bright spark of joy lit up in Ayli’s eyes but before she could answer the storeroom door was thrown open and Tovos, backed by four other members of the Silent Enclave, stared at them from behind raised blasters.

Nix groaned, but Ayli just rolled her eyes.

“The time has come,” Tovos said. “We will be landing in five minutes. You will be taken to face judgment as soon as have joined the others.”

“Good, good,” Nix said, with a distinct lack of patience or kindness in her voice. “I think I’m in the mood for a bit of judgment at the moment.”

“Don’t make us stun you again,” Tovos said, shifting his grip on his blaster rifle.

“We didn’t make you stun us before,” Nix said.

“You were attempting to corrupt the Xah,” one of the other guards, Felgo, said.

“Oh? Is that the argument we’re going to have?” Nix asked.

“These probably aren’t the people we need to speak with about that,” Ayli said, laying a restraining hand on Nix’s arm.

Nix didn’t have a lightsaber. And she wasn’t going to use the Force to attack any of the people before her. Not with Force Lightning, or even with the milder Force Push. It was still good however that Ayli had reminded Nix to hold back. One does not work as a ship’s mechanic without learning how to brawl a bit after all and the sprocket heads in front of her seemed to be dearly in need of some ‘percussive maintenance’.

“You’re going to come with us,” Tovos said.

“That does seem to be the general plan,” Nix said, feeling a trifle bad for the boy.

By age, Tovos was theoretically an adult, but from a life lived inside the confines of a recluse cult, he hadn’t yet managed to develop any of the maturity that was supposed to come with adulthood. That he was in over his head was clear and Nix guessed it wasn’t a question of ‘was’ that going to drive him to bad decisions but rather ‘how many’ bad decisions he would make and ‘would Nix be able to mitigate the fallout well enough’.

That thought helped her relax a bit.

She’d been in stressful situations, and been over her head drowning in unfamiliar responsibilities before and the last thing she, or Tovos, needed was someone goading them into worse mistakes than the ones they’d make naturally.

Nix held to that thought as the junker freighter descended through an unfamiliar sky, rumbling with the thirty seven different critical repairs it needed (Nix counted) but landing safely nonetheless.

Unfortunately that was where their safety ended.

“This isn’t good,” Felgo said. “I’m not getting a beacon reading.”

“Is the new encampment set up?” Tovos asked.

“No…wait, yes, partially,” Felgo said.

“And the ships? Where are they?” Tovos asked.

“I’m not seeing anything on telemetry,” Felgo said.

“That’s because they’re not here,” another Enclave member, Bortos, said. “They cleared a landing area, but it’s empty.”

Nix looked out the viewport and saw exactly what Bortos was talking about.

It wasn’t the encampment she’d visited, but she recognized a few of the tents which had been erected. The rest of the encampment was simply missing though, and the large open area where ships could land was devoid of machinery entirely.

What lay before them weren’t ruins.

And they weren’t empty.