Chapter 479: The Rules
Venda would likely have been more amazed by the Jendari ship if she hadn’t been so surrounded by new sights already. To her, it was simply a different kind of ship, which was made of metal, of a kind at least, rather than being alive like the Alraxian ships seemed to be. The Jendari ship seemed more similar to a Mon Calamari cruiser with its white corridors, but it was much more large and open with viewports everywhere they cold be placed to provide a view of space. It was obviously designed with its avian creators in mind, meaning that the stark white and somewhat rounded edges were the only similarities to the Mon Calamari ships.
Loki had docked with the ship upon arrival, and now, only a few minutes later, another, similar looking ship was landing in the large bay next to Loki. When the Alraxian Knights formed up next to the hatch, Venda didn’t need to be told the occupant. With the Knights, was the older Alraxian, Navik Keros, holding the Empress’ son, Venda and the Redstar, and a large group of the interesting looking, bird-like Jendari.
When the hatch opened up in that odd motion that Venda had never seen anywhere but on these Alraxian ships, the entire hangar suddenly echoed with a pang of shock through the Force. Two of the nearest Knights even started to dive forward towards the hatch, while the Redstar and most of the Jendari took very large steps back.
What emerged from the hatch was Marix. She was breathing heavily, had a good amount of blue and red liquid, which was likely blood, across her, and was holding up her daughter against her left shoulder. None of that was the origin of the surprise. It was what she was dragging along the deck at her feet.
It actually took Venda a moment to identify the...thing. And what alerted her to its identity was the blue-black suit it wore. One of the Mrrakesh...or at least, it had been. It had no arms, both of which looked to have been removed at the shoulder. The mask across its face was sliced, with a long scar that looked to be still bleeding going from its muzzle, across its left eye, and then to a spot where its left ear should have been...but was suspiciously missing. Its right leg also looked to be bent at a very unhealthy angle.
When she stepped onto the deckplates of the Jendari, Marix tossed the Mrrakesh face first to the ground, and Venda could see claw marks along the back of its neck. It also wasn’t that hard to see Marix’s hand was looking very claw-like for a few short seconds afterwards. The Empress then turned to one of the nearby Knights and said a few words in Alraxian. In a moment, the Knights were picking up the Mrrakesh and were being led off by a pair of Jendari.
“You have such a way with people,” Navik Keros commented after the Mrrakesh was gone. In his arms, Saaran, was oblivious to anything but his mother and his sister, grinning and reaching for them. In Marix’s arms, Andrea seemed to be in the same situation, and the feelings of happiness were surprisingly strong in the Force.
“My lady...” it was one of the Jendari, who was dressed differently and stood a bit taller. He was also, like Navik, speaking Trade, “Are you alright?”
“Of course,” there was a hint of annoyance through the Force, but Marix’s voice held none of it, “Unless he bleeds to death, the Mrrakesh will live.”
“How did...why...” it was the Redstar, a shocked look on her face that was the only sign of emotion beyond calm that Venda had seen on her, “Why didn’t he simply remorph his wounds?”
So Mrrakesh could heal like that, too...
“He did,” Marix’s words were flat, “Three times.”
“You want him interrogated,” the Jendari said, a three-clawed hand making an interesting motion in the air as he spoke. The words were also fast enough to feel like they were cutting Marix’s train of thought off to send them in another direction.
Marix shook her head as she shifted Andrea into her right arm, “I will interrogate him.”
There were a few seconds of uneasy silence, then the Jendari spoke up again, “My lady, I do not believe that would be appropriate. It would be best if you were not directly involved.”
Eyes narrowing, Marix looked straight to the Jendari, “You think I’ll kill him.”
“No,” the answer was swift, and perfectly spoken to show that there was no lie there, “I know you will, and you are well within your rights to. However, you left him alive for a reason and it would be a waste to kill him before we can learn everything we can about who sent him...also, your son has been here only a matter of minutes and I have heard nothing from him but asking for you.”
It was the last sentence that really sealed it. Venda could feel Marix’s emotions shift considerably at the mention of her son. There was a slow softening from the Alraxian Empress and her silvery-violet eyes redirected from the Jendari to Saaran.
Taking a step towards Navik, Marix extended her free arm to take Saaran from him, “Come here, Saaran-jai.”
The little black-furred, blue striped child didn’t hesitate, and immediate let go of Navik to be grabbed by his mother. As she pulled him close and rubbed her cheek against him gently, Marix said to the Jendari, “Do you have any quarters free?”
“Of course, my lady. Right this way,” the Jendari said with an odd expression on his avian features that was probably some form of smile.
As they all began to fall into step behind the Jendari, Venda couldn’t help but feel a bit more useless than before. But the Redstar was next to her, radiating a calm through the Force that was disturbingly intoxicating. Leading the way, Marix was discussing something with the Jendari, but Venda found that she couldn’t really hear. She was far enough behind, with Knights and a pair of other Jendari in between, that she couldn’t hear clearly and decided not to eavesdrop, instead simply taking in the unique ship around her.
Eventually, the large, open corridors began to narrow, and the Redstar nodded politely to Venda before stepping in front of her and around the others. The two Knights, Marix, and the Redstar walked into a room, leaving the others in what Venda felt to be even more awkward silence.
But Navik Keros stepped over to her and bowed, saying softly in perfect Basic, “I did not have the chance to thank you for what you did.”
“You didn’t need to,” Venda said with a smile, then motioned towards the closed door, “Besides, the Redstar has flattered me enough for one day.”
Navik laughed quietly and nodded, “Neasa has always been rather fascinated with Jedi.”
Venda caught something in that and a questioning look formed on her face, “You aren’t, are you?”
Reaching down, he placed a rather large hand on her shoulder, “My dear, I am very grateful of your actions today in protecting my family. But I believe I am the only Alraxian alive today to have known three Jedi in my lifetime. I know by now that the old stories are much more than just tales we tell our children.”
At that, Venda couldn’t help but smile. Of course, it did raise another question, “To have known three Jedi you would have to be much older than you look.”
Navik’s laugh this time was much louder, and the three Jendari standing with them all turned to look. They obviously hadn’t been paying attention, “I am not immune to flattery, but I am also not a very old man, either. Just a lucky one. My wife...Jyren’s mother was a Jedi. She escaped murder at the hands of Sith by trying to hide in what she thought were uninhabited areas of space...”
And a few more pieces fell into place for Venda. Interesting. While she had been fairly sure that Navik was Jyren’s father, there was still the chance that he was Marix’s. Or something else entirely and the culture was just completely different in family structure. Jyren’s mother a Jedi survivor of the purge, though...that was interesting. Venda felt compelled to ask Navik more about her, a curiosity about the Jedi-of-old suddenly appearing.
But the door opened again, and Marix stepped out along with one of the Knights. Marix gave a cursory glance to Venda, and while she said nothing, there was an unsaid gratefulness through the Force. But it lasted only a half second, and then Venda could feel nothing from the Alraxian. Some words in a language she didn’t understand were exchanged, and they were walking again, the Knight staying behind, guarding the outside of the door. Venda assumed that the other was in side...every precaution, apparently.
In a short few moments, they all entered another room. At first, Venda thought it was the bridge. The room was huge, circular, with a viewport stretching nearly the entire wall, excluding the walls just adjacent to the door. Very interesting looking, triangular-shaped terminals were all around, and while she could see many Jendari, there weren’t nearly enough to run a ship that size.
As Venda was wondering about the room’s purpose, they reached a large, circular table with no chairs in the center of the room. There looked to be a holographic display of a section of the galaxy embedded...underneath the surface of the table. Odd...it was definitely a three dimensional image, but Venda had never seen one projected under a surface rather than up.
Wasting no time, Marix looked straight across from her to where the Jendari that had done all the speaking stood, “How long until you interrogate the Mrrakesh?”
“He is already secured and we simply are awaiting him to regain consciousness,” the Jendari nodded its head at an angle, sending a few feathers off to the side before he reached up and brushed them back, “My lady, we will not execute him.”
Marix’s eyes narrowed for a few short moments, but then she leaned back slightly and said simply, “Learn what you can and alert one of the Knights when you are finished.”
An uneasy silence followed.
It was Navik who decided to brave this and speak what was on all of their minds, “Marix, you need to be calm before you make these kind of decisions.”
“I am calm,” the words cut through the air like ice, freezing everything they came into contact with. Marix locked eyes with Navik, who didn’t flinch at all, “And I am not your son, Navik. I know full well what I am doing. If you do not approve, I do not care. Leave.”
Another silence.
Navik didn’t leave, though.
Marix then turned to the Jendari, who was suddenly much more drawn in and harder to read through the Force, “Take us back to Alraxia immediately. Send a message before we leave that Faban Sunrunner is to be brought aboard the moment we arrive.”
“Yes, my lady,” the Jendari then reached down and touched a point on the surface of the table. His claw-like finger sunk into the material slightly before a soft glow emitted from the star he touched. As more of the Jendari around them began to move around quickly, Venda decided that they were, in fact, on the bridge. But then the Jendari looked up to Marix and posed a question, “What do you intend to do with Faban?”
“I am going to kill him,” the words were short, simple, and definitely the truth. The entire area seemed to stop at those words. This was something none of them were used to. Marix wasn’t oblivious to this, but kept her focus solely on the Jendari across from her, “You don’t approve. I don’t care. It doesn’t matter. The only reason the Mrrakesh have not launched a true attack on the Empire since the Darkwing Wars is because they know that your ships, combined with Alraxian survivability is something they cannot defeat. Now they’ve decided otherwise. They’ve seen we will just sit back and let them take our planets. We showed weakness and now they aren’t afraid anymore. For the second time in our lifetime, Mrrakesh have set foot on a planet that was a secret from them until Faban Sunrunner betrayed us for his own selfish reasons.”
Marix stopped for a moment and Venda noticed that she was digging claws into the table and leaning forward, “But we tolerated that. Hoped that it was just a rogue faction. And now they’ve come back and they tried to kill my children. They attacked at a time when I was gone, and Faban knew it! Faban tried to kill my children. He told the Mrrakesh where we live, when to strike, and how to. And I am done ignoring it.”
A few short moments passed, and then the many Jendari around them were back to doing whatever it was they were doing. The others were left to simply look to Marix or to the image below them. But Navik’s focus was one that remained on Marix, and he began to speak more analytically, “It doesn’t matter if it’s a rogue faction amongst the Mrrakesh responsible for this. All of them will support the attack. And if you are correct and this was intended to occur while you were away, then they would do more than just assassinate the children.”
“A full scale attack,” Venda finally spoke up. She wasn’t an expert on politics anywhere in the galaxy, but she could understand basic tactics.
Marix was nodding, and when she spoke her voice was still that low, worrying calm, “There are more of these warships than the ones guarding the border, correct?”
A slight humming noise was what passed for a sigh from the Jendari, but he nodded, “You are correct. You are taking us into a dangerous place, Marix.”
“Faban took us to that place, not me,” she then looked down to the image beneath and reached down to gently touch another star, though it didn’t glow at her touch, “Send three ships here. Destroy every single city on that planet and then return to our territory.”
“Marix...” Navik obviously didn’t know where else to go, as he didn’t say anything else.
“That will guarantee a war, my lady,” the Jendari was more diplomatic.
Marix turned to glare at the Jendari again, “The Mrrakesh believe in strength and nothing else. They think we are weak. The rules are different now. They will stop whatever attack they have planned when they hear we’ve destroyed everything on a planet that deep within their own space. In that time, we will be have the knowledge from our prisoner and from Faban and we will be ready.”