Ashin Varanin
Professional Enabler
[member="Dak Canton"] [member="Anaya Fen"] [member="Sarge Potteiger"] [member="Uriel"] [member="Jared Ovmar"]
Processing.
The word held a depth of dispassionate inhumanity, a blandness without ambiguity. The Protectorate selected its coldest, most inhospitable worlds for its prison camps. Ashin had no desire to be processed.
That Sarge had found her and her associates so quickly meant -- had to mean -- that one of her people had made a mistake. Though she believed the Force had a will, she found it difficult to imagine that will finding a mortal avatar in a killing machine. She'd forged his halberd on Korriban, and in the process she'd gotten the measure of a man in transition. But a matter of a few degrees could separate final destinations by parsecs. Sarge appeared to have taken his final form, and parsecs seemed to fit the bill. He could have become something admirable.
Then again, for all his occasional gruff friendliness, even the old Sarge had been a soulless killer, in his way. Now he'd just traded inertia for impetus.
Cloaked by the White Current, Ovmar, Fen and Canton disappeared from sight, sound, sensor, infrared -- from the universe. As her compatriots vanished -- perhaps to a spot back up the trail; perhaps to the snow-filled canyon below; perhaps to the hovering cloaked transport, its new snowdrifts obscured by the blizzard -- Ashin stepped forward to the edge of the trail and peered up through the closing gap in the blizzard. From here she could just barely make out the shapes of the two walkers, above the far edge of the canyon. Maybe twenty metres vertical distance, forty horizontal. She continued walking down the trail along the canyon wall.
"I didn't come here to get processed, Sarge," she said, and her voice carried through the storm, an old Jedi trick. "I came here because this is the next stop on my tour -- solving problems the locals have missed or ignored." He'd heard, perhaps, of her stunts at Odacer-Faustin and Shri-Tal.
Processing.
The word held a depth of dispassionate inhumanity, a blandness without ambiguity. The Protectorate selected its coldest, most inhospitable worlds for its prison camps. Ashin had no desire to be processed.
That Sarge had found her and her associates so quickly meant -- had to mean -- that one of her people had made a mistake. Though she believed the Force had a will, she found it difficult to imagine that will finding a mortal avatar in a killing machine. She'd forged his halberd on Korriban, and in the process she'd gotten the measure of a man in transition. But a matter of a few degrees could separate final destinations by parsecs. Sarge appeared to have taken his final form, and parsecs seemed to fit the bill. He could have become something admirable.
Then again, for all his occasional gruff friendliness, even the old Sarge had been a soulless killer, in his way. Now he'd just traded inertia for impetus.
Cloaked by the White Current, Ovmar, Fen and Canton disappeared from sight, sound, sensor, infrared -- from the universe. As her compatriots vanished -- perhaps to a spot back up the trail; perhaps to the snow-filled canyon below; perhaps to the hovering cloaked transport, its new snowdrifts obscured by the blizzard -- Ashin stepped forward to the edge of the trail and peered up through the closing gap in the blizzard. From here she could just barely make out the shapes of the two walkers, above the far edge of the canyon. Maybe twenty metres vertical distance, forty horizontal. She continued walking down the trail along the canyon wall.
"I didn't come here to get processed, Sarge," she said, and her voice carried through the storm, an old Jedi trick. "I came here because this is the next stop on my tour -- solving problems the locals have missed or ignored." He'd heard, perhaps, of her stunts at Odacer-Faustin and Shri-Tal.