Rassi wasn’t used to asking the Force for anything. All of her training had been focused on the exact opposite of that. When she felt Solna reach out to the Force therefor she had no idea what her best friend might be doing. When she then saw Solna plunge into the pit with the Death Shadow, or whatever it was, she figured out what was going on.
Solna had lost her mind.
Rassi sprinted forward to the edge of the hole, intent on leaping in after Solna but from the depths of the pit, she saw a light rising back up.
“We don’t have long,” Solna said, cradling a luminous ball of deep purple and blue light as wide as her torso in front of her.
“For what?” Rassi said, instinctively shying away from the orb in Solna’s hands.
“To call him back,” Solna said.
“There is no one there,” Ravas said.
“Yes, exactly, and we can fix that,” Solna said, her eyes focused solely on glowing ball as the illumination from it began to writhe and pulse.
“What do you need?” Rassi asked.
The orb was absolutely a corruption of the Xah. It was the definition of awful, an aberration which shouldn’t have ever been allowed to exist. It could and would hurt them, as surely as a plasma flare.
Rassi could only sense peril from it, but she chose to ignore that for one very good reason.
She could feel what Solna was projecting as well.
Comfort, camaraderie, and the promise of an end to its rage.
Rassi had no idea how Solna was going to provide any of those things but that didn’t matter. She know Solna well enough to believe it was possible, and more importantly, she believed in Solna.
No matter what they were doing, Rassi would be at Solna’s side. Being anywhere else simply didn’t make sense.
“We need to listen,” Solna said. “He needs to tell us who he was.”
“This is a bad idea,” Ravas said. “That thing is a hole in the Force. It is a manifestation of the Dark Side even I haven’t run across. All it can do is mislead you.”
“That’s why we must do this,” Solna said, looking up and making eye contact with Rassi. “Please.”
Rassi didn’t answer with words.
She simply stopped breathing.
For her, quieting the Xah within herself so she could perceive the deepest truths of the Xah beyond her was always a battle. Her Xah, the Force within her, was a tempest in its quietest of moments.
Fortunately, she’d had rather a lot of practice winning that battle. Or at least winning it well enough to hear what she needed to.
In the silence, she could feel the joy radiating from Solna quickly retreat into silence as well. That brief glimpse was enough to fill Rassi with confidence in what they were doing while also allowing her to focus on something other than the delightful emotion resonance between the two of them.
“I am no more.”
The words were voiceless, spoken by nothing, and nothing more than the faintest of whispers in the preternatural emptiness in the Force Solna was carrying.
But whispers, no matter how faint, belong to someone.
“Who are you?” Rassi asked, only imagining the barest of touches on the Force to convey the words.
“I am no one.”
“But you were someone once,” Solna said.
“You were Silent,” Rassi said, a fleeting glimpse of a kindred soul passing through her mind.
Rassi wasn’t used to asking the Force for anything, but Solna had and Rassi could feel the Force struggling to aid them. It wanted to know who had been lost.
It wanted them back too.
“Silent?” the voiceless whispers gained volume and the barest hint of depth.
“Like me, like us,” Rassi said. “You were part of the Silent Enclave.”
The heat which greeted Rassi’s words was not a friendly bit of warmth. She could have mistaken it for blinding rage but the undercurrent of loss and sorrow was too great to ignore.
“We were too,” Solna said. “But listen to us speaking. We are Silent no more.”
“Silent no more,” and the voiceless whispers were no longer voiceless.
“Silent never again,” Solna said. “Speak to us and we will speak for you.”
“I am nothing.”
“But you were someone. What you most lack is what they once were,” Solna said, and Rassi could hear depths in the void Solna carried, deeper losses and greater pains.
“If you can’t tell us, may we search for the answers ourselves?” Rassi asked, acutely aware of how intimate the contact she was contemplating would be.
“Yes. Find…find what was lost. Find me.”
With no movement and no greater sign that the shift in her focus, Rassi asked Solna if this was what she had been planning. Solna’s answering nod was motionless but all too clear to Rassi, and so they began.
In the distance, Rassi heard Kelda and Ravas shift, moving to prevent what the Solna had conceived of doing, but seeking down into the void’s deepest places wasn’t a realm either the former Jedi or the former Sith had been trained to explore.
In the first pit, Rassi found herself in a strange inverted world. Into the absent spaces she poured her awareness, her understanding, and the Force which flowed within her.
What formed from the mold was the picture of a man clad in the robes of an Enclave guardian and the moment when his losses began.
Rassi felt the pride the man had carried and understood it well. The Enclave’s guardians were tasked with protecting the Primus whenever he was required to travel outside the Enclave’s boundaries. Earning a position among their number was one of the highest martial honors a member of the Enclave could aspire to.
He had been honored beyond so many and he had failed.
In the tableau which was cast from the mold, Rassi saw a Primus not only slain but Expunged. Struck down by a technique only the Silent Enclave knew.
“You couldn’t protect him,” Solna said and the void resounded with that truth.
Rassi saw something more in the tableau though.
“He hadn’t deserved your protection,” she said.
Revulsion, rejection, and confusion swept the scene away.
“What had he done?” Solna asked, and Rassi sought out another pit within the void.
A new scene took shape.
A trial.
The dead Primus was there in effigy and behind him an impossibly high mountain of bodies rose.
Around the Primus, his guards stood, no longer armed or respected, each chained to their own podium as changes were read out against them.
“They held you responsible for what he’d done,” Rassi said.
“Had you known?” Solna asked.
Shame crushed the scene to dust and a new scene rose from the exposed wound in the void.
The man stood guard at a door. It was a sacred door and what was transpiring beyond it was more profane than words could capture.
But there had been orders.
And without seeing what was happening, it had been easy to believe that no abuse of power was happening. All the guard had needed to do was remain blind and his conscience was clear. Believe in the Primus. Believe because to do otherwise would mean the world was so much worse than he wanted to face.
Because not believing would mean that he was so much worse than he wanted to face.
“Was this your punishment?” Solna asked.
Anger and righteous indignation tore the scene apart and replaced it with another one.
Banishment.
A wife and a child he would never see again.
His position lost, his authority stripped away, his future gone.
Flames of rage crackled in the scene though.
This hadn’t been his punishment.
This was the punishment he was given, and the one he’d accepted. Not immediately, but when he saw what he’d been a part of, he’d known that it was what he’d deserved.
The flames licked at the scene, scorching and burning away the false facade, calling back the moment which had been hidden at the bottom of the pit.
The man who was no longer a guard and no longer Silent was rendered in midstride, leaving the Enclave behind.
The flames swelled, consuming the scene and replacing it with one of the man alone on the road, walking to nowhere, and carrying the burden of the fate he’d accepted.
And then he wasn’t alone.
New guardians struck him down.
And shackled him.
Into the mine they brought him.
Down empty passages.
To a room where his wife and child waited.
His wife a hostage not against his behavior, but as coercion for his child.
Someone was needed to bear the cost of the ritual.
Someone who he would not fight back against.
The scene became hot enough to sear flesh but the worst was still to come.
“Choli,” the voice was the man’s but the name was his child’s
The child who had survived the ritual. Who the man had sacrificed everything to spare.
Who had been killed once the ritual was finished anyways.
“Why?” Solna croaked out and to Rassi the flames that surrounded them didn’t seem nearly hot enough.
There was no answer from the void, but Rassi heard the echoes from an age past in the Force.
“They wanted justice,” she said. “The banishment wasn’t enough for some of them. The people who’d lost their loved ones to the Primus’ Expunging rituals wanted more than blood. They wanted the scales to be balanced.”
“Not like this,” Solna said. “Horror can never balance horror.”
“No. It cannot,” Ravas said.
“Did you see all that?” Rassi asked.
“We saw it through you,” Kelda said.
“Why kill Choli though?” Solna’s voice was tight with the void’s anguish.
“They didn’t want any witnesses,” Ravas said.
“They’d condemned the Primus for what he’d done. They didn’t want anyone to say they were the same as he was,” Kelda said.
“But the power was still too alluring to pass up, especially when they could pretend it served a righteous cause,” Ravas said.
“What are we going to do then?” Rassi asked, feeling entirely unmoored by what she’d seen.
“The Enclave left this world over a hundred years ago,” Kelda said. “Those involved in this are all long dead. There’s nothing that can be done to them.”
“This isn’t about them,” Solna said. “This is about him.”
“He’s gone as well,” Ravas said, her voice heavy with sympathy.
“We can bring him back,” Solna said.
“No. Bringing the dead to life, it’s worse than you can imagine,” Kelda said.
“Not to life,” Rassi said, understanding Solna’s meaning. “We can bring him back to the Force.”
“To Choli,” Solna said.
“How would…?” Ravas started to asked, but neither Solna nor Rassi waited to answer her.
In the silence, they shared their fears with each other.
Neither had ever tried anything like what Solna was suggesting, and both knew it would be considered an unforgivable corruption of the Xah.
The could be costs far beyond anything they were aware of as well.
At best they would simply fail.
At worst they could drop into the void themselves, destroying everything they were in the effort to restore what a total stranger had once been.
And what he had been wasn’t anything wonderful.
He’d been a small and cowardly man, given authority and prestige to lord over others with. He’d been part of a series of atrocities. The people who’d known him and what he’d done hadn’t believed he could ever deserve forgiveness and was it Rassi and Solna’s place to offer the forgiveness he’d been willfully denied?
Rassi didn’t have a elaborate answer to those questions. What she saw before her was not justice though.
And what she and Solna were going to offer was not forgiveness.
The man would not escape the weight of his actions. He would carry them into eternity.
Just like everyone else.
Rassi wasn’t used to asking the Force for anything, and the Force wasn’t used to asking Rassi for what it needed.
The wound before them needed to be healed though, and so Rassi opened her heart, and at last let herself be as loud as she could be as the Force crashed through her like thunder, filling her and filling the void to call back the scattered, forgotten pieces of the man who’d once been.
She only saw his spirit for a moment.
He had no place in the world of the living, and the Force was more than ready to welcome him back.
The Force and two spirits who’d been waiting for him for so very long.