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Star Wars: Heroes of Another Kind

Yay! Tobias finally grows some balls! Let's hope he doesn't go Dark... :\

It seems foolish not to use every available advantage one has against an opponent. I understand his desire to be human, or to be at least be able to proficient when operating as a human, but his actions up until now have been damn near moronic.
 

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Chapter 522: Rational Thoughts

“If I don’t deal with them right this moment they’ll kill me!” Marix snarled at the vaguely transparent image of the long-dead Titus Voort. Why she was explaining this to a dead man, she didn’t know, but the rational part of Marix’s mind was currently a small voice that wasn’t being listened to.

But Voort simply tilted his head slightly and continued to stare blankly at her, “There is no turning back from pointless slaughter, Marix. Killing is one thing, but you very well know these Mrrakesh are out of the fight.”

A loud thud from behind caused Marix to look over her shoulder. Thankfully, the bulkhead had only buckled inwards slightly, and not completely broken open. The Mrrakesh would be through it soon, though. She didn’t have time for this...

“No, you don’t have time for this at all,” Voort said in that infuriatingly calm voice.

“Stop! Stop...doing that!” Marix yelled at him, spinning back to deliver a glare that, quite literally, went right through him.

In a move that was odd for someone that was dead, not real, and definitely a sign that Marix was losing her mind, Voort shifted his weight and crossed his arms across his chest, “This is your choice to make, Marix, I cannot stop you from making it. But I can ask you to consider what you’re deciding. For the sake of yourself and for Jyren...can you truly begin on a path of genocide?”

Marix stared at him. At least four different answers formed in her mouth while another thousand were being worked out in her mind. But then, almost suddenly like a targeting computer locking on, her mind focused to a single word, “Jyren?! How the hells do you know that was his name? You were dead already!”

Somehow, it made matters worse that Voort simply shrugged and said, “You trust the Force, Marix. Trust what its trying to tell you, and please listen to me. This is not a path you want to follow, nor is it a path we can watch you go down...not after all you have been through already. But, Marix, I cannot make you act on anything. I can only try to help you realize the severity of this moment. And remind you that there are people that still need you.”

[Marix!] Loki’s voice cut into her mind at such a high pitch that she was forced to grit her teeth.

Through the Force, she could feel her old friend flying in close. Immediately the importance of the fact that she was stuck on the bridge with the only exit blocked by a great deal of Mrrakesh in a very small area came to mind. That would be pushing her luck to go through it. And they would be in soon...but she had to get off the ship. Simply cutting off the life support to the rest of the ship wouldn’t solve that problem. It was unlikely she could survive long enough to get to the docking tube, and besides there were likely backup systems in place to prevent just such an action.

Rational thought was working at lightning speed now, but while it did, her focus shifted in front of her again. And Marix saw nothing.

Well, no, Marix saw two consoles and the viewport, with space and a corner of Alraxia beyond. She did not see, however, the image of Titus Voort. She didn’t feel it either. Typical. Damn him! Damn...whatever that actually was!

But then, in staring out of the viewport, an idea came to mind.

It was crazy.

No, it was absolutely and utterly insane.

It was so completely insane that it was the kind of idea that would work, too. At least, that’s what Jyren would have told her.

[Loki!] Marix finally responded, though she quickly realized that it had only been a few short seconds since the ship had found her again. [Can you see the bridge of this ship?]

[Uhh...yes. Why?] for good reason, Loki was confused. But despite the confusion, in a matter of moments, Marix saw his distinct form out of the viewport a few kilometers out.

For some reason, she pointed at him. He couldn’t see it, but she did it anyway. [Just stay right there. Get a good lock on me and don’t lose that.]

There wasn’t so much a pause as a long, uneasy sound from Loki that echoed in her mind. After it had settled as a sort of white noise, Loki decided to actually use words. [Should I be worried?]

[Not if you do exactly what I just told you.] Marix sent back to him, turning to look at the bulkhead again. It was still holding, but buckled inwards at such an angle that the Mrrakesh had to have been hitting it with something extremely forcefully. If it didn’t hold now, it wasn’t her fault.

A short dash across the bridge took her to the fallen Mrrakesh commander. Marix dropped to one knee beside him, ignore the hair that got in her face, and rummaged through his armour as quickly as she could. Almost immediately she found what she was looking for, or at least something that was close enough to work.

Retrieving five of the small, square explosive charges from a section of his bandoleer, which seemed to have an unnecessary amount of ammunition and other weapons attached to it, Marix got to her feet again and darted to the viewport. The large, rectangular viewport was about five meters wide, and maybe six or seven high. Technically it was small, but that was because most of the flying and shooting was done completely be computers and direct visuals weren’t really needed.

As quickly as she could, knowing that the Mrrakesh would break through soon and make this a whole lot more difficult, Marix attached the charges as evenly across the viewport as she could. If the material the Mrrakesh used was anything like the glassteel that the rest of the galaxy used, it would take all five charges just to weaken the thing. But that was fine. All she needed to do was weaken it. Marix knew that she could do the rest herself.

The last charge set in place, Marix found the operating mechanism and, after reminding herself how to read the Mrrakesh numerical system, set it to a ten second timer. The explosion would hopefully be enough to detonate all four others...without being so huge as to kill Marix in the process. Ten seconds was enough.

Then, with a very gentle touch for some reason, Marix hit the button to arm the weapon and start the timer. Her finger was yanked away from the charge by her body sprinting the other direction. Mid-sprint, her body also began to change its form. By the time she’d reached the opposite bulkhead at the other end of the bridge, Marix’s entire body was metal again.

And then the charge detonated.

Intelligently, she had turned away. Shrapnel likely wouldn’t kill her, if there was any, but it was always a good idea to be ready...metal or not. Marix’s hearing was drowned out by the four other charges going off at nearly the same time, causing the entire bridge to shake with enough violence to drop her to her knees.

When the sounds of the explosions faded, she heard two others. One was a constant, high-pitched scream of the alarms the explosion had set off. That was expected, but not what she wanted. It was the second sound, the loud, hard clamping of metal slamming into metal, that would have made Marix smile had she not been metal.

Looking up to the bridge’s entrance just to her side, Marix could see emergency blast doors had closed over it. Perfect! She turned to look at the viewport, and could see it was cracked, dented, and darkened from the explosions. It was definitely weak. And...and there was a sound. It was soft, almost inaudible, but just enough to be heard under the alarms: hissing of air. Oxygen was leaking out of the bridge.

Perfect!

It had worked. By the Force, it had worked!

Again, the rational, still-sane part of Marix took control and reminder her that she was now in a bridge, completely sealed in with the oxygen leaking out. The rest of her looked at the rational side, nodded politely, and told it to please get the hell out because things were fine and it was worrying too much.

At about that moment, Marix stood up completely, looked to the damaged viewport, and charged at it full speed.
 

Chapter 523: Of Flash

To most of the galaxy, thinking of a lightsaber brought about images of Jedi Knights and similar, related things. The Force, the ideals of the Order, and the fluid, elegant, and definitely flashy style of combat the weapons always seemed to be involved in. It was the last of which that was likely the most common. When someone thought of a lightsaber, when they thought of the Jedi wielding it in combat, it was a graceful and a very unique sight.

Of course, most of these people were also thinking about fully trained Jedi Knights fighting against other, similarly trained, opponents. In those cases, yes, a lightsaber duel was a flashy, amazing, and graceful dance of sorts. It was exactly what little children dreaming to be Jedi one day would see in their minds eye. And it was reality for a great many Jedi.

For a month-long-trained apprentice and a barely-trained dropout from the Academy, this was in no way, shape, or form, the case. Well, except for the flashiness, but it was a different kind of flashy. Where a duel with trained combatants was flashy, this was due to the use of the Force to perform amazing acrobatic feats and last-second parries to turn a fight around.

But for Tobias and Tokarr, flashy could only be used because it was night, they were outside, and the lightsaber blades were the only sources of light beyond the few stars above them. It was not a word relating to style, but to the light, itself. This was because neither Tobias nor Tokarr had any real training in lightsaber technique. It was one thing to hold a weapon and swing it, it was another to actually know what to do with the weapon when confronted with an opponent.

A flash of blue across his face was enough of a warning for Tobias that he didn’t need the Force yelling at him to move, even though it was. He twisted his body awkwardly to the side, letting the reckless, poorly aimed downward swing simply cut straight through air he very-nearly occupied, then tried to do what Jyren had taught him in the few lessons Tobias had received: use a missed attack to force the opponent onto the defensive.

It was a sound theory, but putting it to work ran into a complication he had no expected. Namely, his sidestep to get out of the way caused his legs to cross so that when Tobias began to pull his arms around to swing his own lightsaber, he completely lost his footing thanks to an odd stance, and momentum took him down onto the grass below him.

A sharp, almost blinding pain arced up through his body as he landed on his tail, and Tobias found himself cursing being Alraxian. A second later, though, when his ears caught a sound and the Force began screaming, Tobias was thanking his fast reflexes and strong senses when he rolled out of the way of another swing and was able to bound up onto his feet in one quickly motion. The fact that he landed on unsteady feet was a minor difficulty he chose to ignore for the moment.

Sadly, the importance of strong footwork was not exactly something most young apprentices even considered when lightsabers came to mind.

The Miraluka shifted his weight slightly, as the strike at the ground had nearly thrown him down face first, then charged at Tobias again, a determined expression on his eyeless face. Tobias’ eyes watched his opponent’s blade, seeing the blue weapon coming in low and towards his left side. Trying his best, Tobias swung his own blue-green lightsaber in a downward arc and, to his surprise and happiness, actually batted the attack away.

The joy ended, though, when Tokarr slammed into him head on. For once, however, Tobias didn’t find himself landing on his backside...or tail. Despite still being quite young, he was still stronger and a bit large of build than his attacker, and was able to stay upright, if a bit unstable, rather than fall to the ground. Tokarr, however, was essentially a human with an altered physiology, and so was a great deal less...solid than Tobias.

There was a loud thud, a pair of grunts, and then a third grunt as Tokarr hit the ground...and then the fizzling of a lightsaber. Despite the impact, Tobias had managed to follow his opponents lightsaber; not through sight, as his vision had gone slightly blurry, but through sound. It had gone far more to the left than it would have if Tokarr was still holding it...and the sound was definitely from the weapon deactivating due to its safety mechanism. Which meant...

Tobias’ vision came back into focus in time to see Tokarr still on the ground, preparing to scramble for the lightsaber hilt that could be seen, just slightly, a couple of meters away. Quickly, Tobias brought his own lightsaber down so that the point of it was very, very close to Tokarr’s face.

“Don’t,” Tobias said, almost pleading. There was no way to read the look in Tokarr’s eyes, as he had none, but he wasn’t exactly hiding his feelings through the Force. All of the Miraluka resonated with fierce anger and determination.

But despite having no eyes, Tokarr had a way of focusing his Force-vision so that it really felt like he was looking at...no, right into Tobias. The intensity caused Tobias to feel uneasy again, the cold determination that Marix had always told him was necessary fading away into a more normal reaction for someone his age...fear.

And Tokarr felt it.

“Do it.”

Two words, but Tokarr spoke them in just the right way. He wasn’t begging, he wasn’t pleading, he was ordering. Maybe the Force was laced through the words, but that was doubtful. Tokarr wasn’t skilled enough for that...or shouldn’t have been. But somehow, the tone was just the right way to cause Tobias to act before his brain could get a word in.

He pulled the weapon back, then reversed the motion to take Tokarr’s head off.

At that exact moment, Tobias’ brain caught up, screaming and waving at the rest of him to get the attention it swore it deserved.

The jerk of Tobias’ hands could very well have been enough to continue the weapon through its intended target, but it didn’t. Somehow, some part of Tobias managed to hold his arms just steady enough when they were forced to a sudden stop just centimeters from Tokarr’s neck.

For a long few seconds, Tobias stared down at the scene below him, eyes wide with shock.

He’d nearly just killed this Miraluka.

He was still so very close to finishing it.

But...

“No.”

...but no matter what Marix taught him, tried to grind into him, Tobias was too much like Jyren.

Tobias shook his head, the blue stripe in his jet-black hair getting lost and becoming more a mess than a stripe, then pulled his weapon away and let it simply hang with his arm at his left side. In a voice that was gaining a bit more confidence, he said, “I won’t kill you. Its not the right thing to do.”

Jyren would have been proud of him.

Marix would have been strangling him.

But Tobias had done what, in the end, both of his parents, and Master Ral, had taught him to do: trust his feelings. And they told him that no matter what this Miraluka had done, it wasn’t right to kill him. No matter the lives Tokarr Anansin took, Tobias was not his executioner. To make that choice would make Tobias no better than Tokarr.

Sadly, this kind of idealism was something that rarely worked out as planned. And while Jyren had lived with it for years, even coming to expect things to go wrong despite his choice, this was all still very new to Tobias. He really only had stories and his own personal feelings to work from. By those logics, it was over, and Tokarr would agree to what had been said and surrender.

Tobias’ first real, true wake up call to the way the galaxy worked hit in that moment, when Tokarr’s leg swiped both of Tobias’ out from under him. The young Alraxian hit the ground on his side, surprise at the sudden attack gripping him and causing his body to freeze for a half second. When he got control again and turned to the sound of rapid footsteps, Tobias saw the Miraluka sprinting through the darkness straight for his lightsaber.

And then, just as suddenly as Tokarr’s attack, three bright red blaster bolts cut through the air. The first went right over Tokarr’s head, but the second hit him in his left shoulder, spinning him around so that the third bolt struck him square in the chest and dropped him to the dirt one final time.

Before Tobias could figure out what was really going on, his ears detected two sets of rapid footsteps growing closer, and so he shifted around again to see two figures quickly approaching, both with blasters raised and obviously ready to fire. Even with his Alraxian eyes that worked quite well in the dark, he couldn’t seem to make them out...then...

“Tobias?!”

The voice he knew. The voice was one of the last ones he’d expected to have heard. When the Twi’lek pilot, Rea, came into view, Tobias was still on the ground, just staring in shock and not at all sure what was going on anymore. When he saw the Duros, Rulae something or other, a moment later, that didn’t help. Tobias opened his mouth multiple times as the two blue-skinned humanoids moved towards him at a much slower pace, but could never really find words to speak.

Adrenaline was fading, and slowly things began to catch up to him. As the two starfighter pilots asked him questions he didn’t really hear while helping him to his feet, Tobias finally formed a coherent sentence, “Venda...did you find her? Did you find her body? Is she really...she really...is she...dead...?”



Apologies for the lack of updates at all for the past week or so. Its been crazy. Here's hoping I can work into a schedule of sorts again. Ugh to studio work.
 

Chapter 524: Word Choice

[That was extremely stupid.]

Marix, who was currently standing in one of the many courtyards that littered the flower-like Palace on Alraxia, glanced over her shoulder to where Loki had set down. It was, technically, a landing pad, but most of the galaxy would have just seen a patch of grass. Of course, it was a patch of grass. In fact, all of the courtyard was. There was no duracrete or even stone, just a healthy looking layer of dark green, Alraxian grass.

Even though Loki had no eyes or ears or a mouth or anything similar, she stared at him as if he did, holding a gaze for a moment that wasn’t really even there. After it faded, Marix turned to look down across the other sections of the Palace below and the many Alraxians that were moving about all over.

[I know.]

Her response was a bit off, her distraction not too hard to read in her voice. Of course, there was also a great deal of annoyance. Marix damn well knew how stupid that had been. It was exactly like something Jyren would have done...and then, when she found him after, she’d strangle him. Except there wasn’t anyone to strangle her or even really yell at her. Loki wouldn’t do anything more than he had already.

Truthfully, most of what had happened had become a blur of movement. Charging the already damaged viewport had the desired effect, opening up the entire bridge to the vacuum of space and literally sending her flying out. Apparently, Loki caught her, as he was getting good at catching floating people now, but Marix didn’t really remember it. She hadn’t lost consciousness, but even in her metal body, the vacuum of space was dampening and dangerous...not to mention the fact that she was spinning and twirling and flying in such a random way that she couldn’t have seen anything anyway.

But it had worked.

Marix knew it would. It was just a short, survivable amount of time exposed to the dangerous nothing of space, with her unique body able to keep the vacuum out for just long enough.

But still...

Loki did what he was best at and quickly cut back into her thoughts. [Why did you do that, anyway?]

She’d spouted orders at him to relay to the Jendari the second she was able to speak again, but there hadn’t been time for questions like the ones he was asking now. Marix had been too busy trying to figure out what to do, while receiving information about the other battles from Mrrakesh that had pushed through the border.

Thankfully, the Jendari ships had proved to be the deterrent that was needed. All of the Mrrakesh ships were either destroyed or pushed back. Even the humans near the border put up a strong fight until the Jendari arrived to help turn the tide. It was what Marix expected would happen, of course, but it wasn’t the immediate success that was the real concern. The concern was what would happen next, especially now that the Jendari had shown at least a part of their hand.

“I really don’t know,” Marix said quietly, finally answering Loki’s question. A few more moments passed, then she realized he hadn’t heard her because he was twenty meters behind her and not at all within hearing range.

So, she tried again, this time using a way that he would be able to hear, and Marix explained to him as clearly as she could. Saying it all made her feel even more crazy.

Voort had been dead for well over a decade, why appear now? Why say things like he did? And how in the name of the Force did he know Jyren’s real name?! He’d been dead before that had happened! At least...two months dead!

[Marix...] Loki had obviously noticed her drifting off after she’d explained what had happened. [Are you absolutely sure Voort said ‘we’?]

That stopped her. Immediately, she ran the events that had barely occurred an hour ago through her head. Yes. He had said ‘we’. Actually, why was that important? If he was dead, of course he’d say ‘we’. It wasn’t like Voort was the only one ever to die. So, for the sake of argument, if one person could exist in an afterlife, whatever form it took, of course others would.

But...

“For the sake of yourself and for Jyren...” Marix repeated the words very slowly and quietly, trying not to look crazy to the Knights around her or the various other Alraxians trying to clean things up. Something about that sentence felt odd. Maybe it was because of the ‘we’ using constantly before. But if...

There was a flash of something through the Force, a familiar feeling of someone nearby. Hope crept into Marix’s mind and she spun around, half-expecting to see Jyren smiling like an idiot at her. Instead, though, she saw the Redstar, Neasa Blackflame, approaching. As always, the Alraxian woman had a calm air about her, belying any worries that might be hidden beneath.

Upon reaching Marix, the Redstar bowed respectfully. But as she stood up, instead of saying whatever it is she was going to say, Marix lashed out and grabbed the woman by the right arm very forcefully. It surprised the smaller Alraxian woman, but worry then took over when Marix looked her in the eyes and asked forcefully, “Did we ever search the Gateway after the battle there?!”

One thing that Marix had always like about this woman from Jyren’s clan was that she was able to keep a cool exterior under pressure. It was impossible to tell when she was shaken up. True to her usual form, Neasa managed to keep a calm look on her face while she tried to work out just where that question had come from. Once the dots were put together, although vaguely, the Redstar ventured a careful attempt at a response, “I believe so, my lady.”

“Don’t start with the formal titles,” Marix grumbled, releasing the other woman’s arm as suddenly as she’d grabbed it and turning around to look out over the horizon again. Over her shoulder, she mumbled, “How well did we check it?”

“I am unsure,” she was careful not to use any formalities now, though a pause in the Redstar’s speech pattern hinted at where one would have gone, “At the time I was with your brother on the Jendari homeworld.”

More to herself than anyone around her, Marix nodded. Yes, but...who would know? Who would know the search? They did one! They found nothing in the wreckage. No sign of anything. Just lots of nothing. The New Republic had, too. They’d found some pilots still alive, some other survivors from that doomed ship, but not Jyren. No one had found anything. And yet...

“Why didn’t he just say me?” still talking to herself, trying to figure it all out, Marix didn’t seem to notice that she was being carefully watch by, of all people, a well trained doctor. This realization began to dawn and quickly, Marix put on her old neutral exterior, forcing the questions away as there was obviously something important.

Turning around to face Neasa again, Marix was suddenly a completely different woman, even her voice sounding more formal and stronger than it had just moments earlier, “You needed something?”

“Ah...yes, my lady,” ever the intelligent woman, Neasa had changed her own tone again to adapt to this change before her, “The Jendari send word that the system is clear and we are safe. They would like to speak with you. All they would tell me is that they have important information to share.”

They always had important information. It was the sharing part that was hard to get going. The Jendari would only do something like that if there was a problem, or was soon going to be one.

With an inner sigh that was not even hinted at by her exterior self, Marix nodded and then headed for Loki without another word. Business now. There were important things to deal with. She would have to worry about...about other things later. Later when there was time. Later if there was time.
 

Chapter 525: One Last Goodbye

Marix stood there, in the large, open chamber that was technically a sort of throne room within the Palace, but a place she’d only entered once or twice since becoming Empress. In fact, while she may have walked through it here and there to get someplace quick. The last time she was really in the room, for anything official like it was meant to be used for, was back when her parents were still alive. It was the day that she and, at the time, Akan had been called there by her mother with something important. That something important had been Jyren’s father, standing to the side of the throne, almost exactly where Marix stood now.

She couldn’t bring herself to sit in that chair.

Standing just a few meters away were five Jendari, two of them captains of the ships that had arrived during the battle, with three others who looked to be other officer types from the similar uniforms they wore. Of the five, one stood up front, speaking for them all as the Jendari usually did in groups. This Jendari was female, with a slight build like most of her kind, and very interesting looking almost-feathers that trailed down from the top of her head down her spine before being covered by the uniform she wore. A pair of bright green eyes watched Marix, with a surprisingly sad look in them for a usually neutral species.

But Marix knew why all of them Jendari held the same look.

When she had called them down to meet with them, they’d suggested this very room. Now, they’d stood in relative silence after greetings and a short report of the situation in orbit. It was obvious the Jendari were waiting for something. The very fact that they might have known what was on the tip of her tongue bothered Marix a great deal, because it was something she didn’t want to ask them. At the same time, the more she thought about it, the more it seemed to be absolutely necessary.

“The Empire is safe, my lady,” suddenly, the wispy voice of the female Jendari, Liratt, cut through the silence like a cool knife, “The ship you disabled is being taken back to Mrrakesh space, just as you ordered. Others were not so lucky to survive, but we are all safe again.”

It was the way Liratt spoke those last words. They were almost formed like a question. At that point, Marix was sure they knew what she was close to asking. They were trying to draw it out of her. They wanted her to ask it...but could she live with herself if she did?

That was a stupid question.

Of course she could. But it wasn’t herself that Marix was concerned about. No, no it was about more than just her. That was the problem with being the Empress, and she was getting a sinking feeling that was why the Jendari suggested this room. It was impossible to forget she was the Empress in here, with the huge rows of columns leading to the single throne and barely anything else beyond large windows on the left wall and some very fine rugs spread out across the floor. This wasn’t a decision about Marix. She would be fine.

But would the Empire?

If she asked the Jendari to do what she was beginning to feel had to be done, it could easily be seen as turning her back on her own people. For thousands of years, the Alraxian Empire had existed without war. They were a defensive race, protecting themselves if necessary, but never expanding outwards in attack. The important thing to was to keep the people of the Empire safe, be they Alraxian, Jendari, Human, or any other of the dozen or so races that lived within the large pocket of space at the edge of the galaxy.

Her silvery-violet eyes flashing a slightly stronger silver colour for a moment, Marix looked to Liratt, “Would you do it?”

For a short moment, the Jendari woman studied Marix even more closely. Then, a few of her ‘feathers’ ruffled very slightly and she inclined her head, “You are the Empress, my lady.”

“Should we?”

The second question was still an attempt to avoid it, Marix knowing full well that the Jendari knew what she was talking about. The very idea of stating it directly bothered her so very much that she didn’t want to have to do it. It was one of those times where she wished her mother was alive still, because Marix knew that she would have made the right decision. She always seemed to.

“We have enough information to support that it would be...successful,” Liratt chose the last word very carefully. She then tilted her head to the left, eyes shifting to look at the other captain with her.

Marix didn’t know his name, but he was just a hair shorter than Liratt, with a matching uniform but darker skin and ‘feathers’ that were almost a greyish colour. Upon seeing that Liratt was looking to him, the other Jendari captain looked straight to Marix and spoke in a more solid voice that seemed normal for any military commander, “It would, of course depend on the accuracy of our other reports, my lady. If those are correct, however, then Sa’Liratt is also correct. They would be divided enough that our smaller numbers would mean success.”

Those two didn’t answer the question Marix had asked. They’d answered the other one she could have asked, but it was information she already knew. Of course it would succeed. Marix wouldn’t have continued considering it for more than a minute if it wasn’t doable. Doable wasn’t the problem. Success wasn’t the problem.

Right and wrong were.

Success didn’t matter if it took the Empire, her people, down a road to destruction of their way of life. A way of life that had served them for thousands of years and really didn’t need to be changed. It was different, yes, but that was what made them Alraxians. It was what made them better than the Mrrakesh. Even if they succeeded, would it make them like their enemies?

“Why won’t you answer my question?” Marix asked, finally, her mind still working it all out, weighing options and coming to the same conclusion every single time. Two options left. Only two. One of them would be an extreme change from everything that had come before, but could guarantee the safety of the Empire.

Liratt, again, inclined her head very slightly, a sign of respect when speaking to the Empress, “This is your decision to make, Marix, not mine. Not my people’s. We cannot help you make this choice without imposing our own will on you and the rest of the Empire. You are the Empress. You rule everything within this Empire, whether you want to or not.”

The tone with which the words were spoken caused Marix to say something out loud that she regretted a second later, “But if I make the wrong choice...”

“You know very well that it is not always about right and wrong,” Liratt replied softly, a three-fingered hand waving through the air very gently, “Trust your judgement as you always have trusted it. Do not let doubts instilled in you by anyone, no matter how close they are to you, affect that.”

Disbelief easy to see on her face, Marix stared at the group of Jendari. Her doubts, her sudden thinking right and wrong, were, in fact, instilled in her by someone else. Not only that, but it was by someone extremely close to her. Someone that, no matter how hard she tried, kept jumping right up to the forefront and making things so damned difficult...like always.

Jyren.

The idiot who always thought in right and wrong. The very poster boy for idealistic thought in the galaxy. The one man who could boil any grey situation into black and white just by easily squinting his eyes. And, truthfully, it wasn’t a completely terrible quality. Combined with Marix’s own rather grey sense of the galaxy, between the two of them, any situation could be dealt with. But he’d always hated that so much. Always come away from it feeling like he’d done something wrong.

And, for some reason beyond her, Marix had begun to feel the same way suddenly. Maybe it was because the definitely-dead image of Voort had mentioned him. Now she thought about what Jyren would say. And that was it, he would see it in right and wrong. He was answer it like that and it would sound so perfect and so easy to understand but it wouldn’t make it true...no matter how hard he wanted it to be.

“Protect the border,” suddenly, Marix’s voice was strong, firm, and almost icy in its tone, “Make sure that Mrrakesh cruiser gets back to their space then seal the border as tight as you can. Don’t let anything get through, no matter what.”

Almost as one, all of the Jendari bowed formally, with only Liratt speaking three, simple words: “Yes, my lady.”

Without anything else, not even a smile to acknowledge her making a choice they’d wanted, they left.

Marix watched them go, then, when she heard the door close shut, she leaned onto the back of the large chair she stood next to and let out a long sigh. Closing her eyes, she said softly to no one in particular, “You’d probably be proud of me. Gods, I’m talking to a dead man.”

“You did the right thing, Marix.”

The voice caused Marix to jerk upright and look across the long, empty chamber to see the blue-shrouded figure that was, yet again, Titus Voort. He stood there like he had on the Mrrakesh ship, stoic, with his arms behind his back and a surprisingly warm expression on his face.

Doing her best to put on her more sane face again, she took a few careful steps down from the throne to give this transparent figure a closer look, “Is it crazier to talk to a dead man you can’t see or one you can?”

“This is not as easy as it looks,” Voort said simply, “This is likely the last time I will be able to do this.”

Taking another step forward, Marix carefully inspected the figure from just a few meters away. It was him. It was exactly what Titus Voort had looked like before he died. He even wore a simple, plain tunic that was almost an Imperial uniform, but not quite. Folding her own arms across her chest, Marix said, “Why now?”

Voort shrugged, “You know why.”

She did know, though she wasn’t going to speak that, either. Instead, Marix just nodded, looking to the floor at her feet for a moment and then asking, “I’ve heard...stories about Jedi doing this, Voort. How did you do it?”

“I just did,” again, he shrugged and then motioned towards her with a simple wave of his hand, “I am sorry things worked out the way they did. I wish I could say the same to Jyren.”

And, again, Marix nodded. But then she latched onto the same name as before, “How do you know his real name?”

A hint of a smile formed on Voort’s transparent face, “I have been around for some time. It took so much to just exist in no form at all, this is...not something I can hold any longer. It is time for me to go forever. But you did the right thing. Don’t ever tell yourself otherwise.”

A feeling through the Force that Marix couldn’t describe emanated from Voort’s transparent figure. She gave up on working it out right away, then said quickly, knowing he was telling the truth, “We missed you, Voort. We needed you. You were a better man than you gave yourself credit for. Thank you for everything you did. And thank you...for being here now.”

“Thank you for making my life a little more interesting,” he raised a hand, smiled warmly, and then the image went away. When Titus Voort had died, Marix hadn’t really been there. She had been in a state of shock and it had just happened. So now, in an odd and very sudden turn of events that didn’t completely make sense to her, Marix was able to watch him go. And something about it was strangely comforting.

Closing her eyes again, Marix tilted her head up to the ceiling and just stared at the inside of her eyelids. There was so much she had to do. It would have been nice if Voort had stayed, even in that form. It was a reminder of a better time, back when everything was chaotic and insane but...fun. A word she so rarely associated with. A word she didn’t expect to use for a very long time, with the way things were going.

And then, Marix opened her eyes.

When she did that, all of the concerns and worries and nagging problems were forced away. She had to focus on the moment. Focus on the Empire. Settle it down after the attacks. Calm the people. Calm her people. Then...then Marix could worry about what was going to happen next.
 

Chapter 526: Getting a Grip

It was a rather awkward return to the shuttle that Tokarr had stolen. A quick comm message from Adria told Rulae that she had arrived at the shuttle and taken the Jedi woman’s body inside the mostly-wrecked shuttle. How she’d dragged it so fast was beyond him, as she never struck him as very strong but...apparently she had. And now, after running into a very surprising young Jedi apprentice that seemed to pop up all over the place, Rulae found himself carrying a body over his shoulder.

If it had been up to him, he would have left the body.

In fact, it should have been up to him. Rulae was still not completely sure why he had a corpse over his shoulder as they walked to the distant light in the darkness that was the shuttle. But Tobias had...begged. Begged and nearly cried. He was so damned insistent that the body be taken back to the Jedi, despite the fact that Tokarr had left the Academy when the war started.

After Rulae had relented and just picked the body up, Tobias had gone quiet. One thing Rulae did notice and thought to bring up was the fact that this young man was not human at all. In fact, he looked like his mother had when they’d fought at that Gateway. Taller, still a bit of a wiry build to him, but with a feline appearance to him and a dark blue stripe through impossibly messy black hair that made him stand out even in the dark, Thyferran night. Knowing what he did about the fact that Tobias could change his shape, Rulae was able to write this off without too much trouble.

Rea on the other hand...

To put it simply, she hadn’t stopped badgering the poor kid about it. But after the intense demanding that they take Tokarr’s body, Tobias had gone silent. He’d just fallen into step behind Rulae and walked with his head staring down at the grass at his feet. But the silence seemed to take Rea from a stance of curiosity as to how this could be the Tobias she knew to concern...the questions starting to direct to the “Are you alright?” end o f the spectrum.

But, finally, as the form of the shuttle began to become more than just a dim light on the horizon, Rea had given up and starting walking quietly, too. In the silence, though, something came to Rulae’s mind. He had been putting pieces together, trying to figure something out, but it still didn’t completely make sense.

Though he figured it was probably a futile act, Rulae stopped a moment and turned around to ask, “Tobias, what are you doing out here?”

The young man let out an overly dramatic sigh, then shrugged and made a weak motion to Rulae’s shoulder, “My...my Master...he and I were sent to bring him back.”

The same reason.

Well, no, not exactly the same. It was close, though. This Miraluka had stolen a shuttle and killed people aboard the ship, but the Jedi wouldn’t be after him for that. Obviously, Tokarr had a past with them, though it was brief. Still, what did the Jedi want with him?

“Master Ral said he was dangerous,” the words from Tobias were soft and barely audible, as if he was talking to himself.

But that didn’t make sense. The boy had just answered a question Rulae had thought...

“I’m...I’m sorry,” Tobias mumbled again, his face, and most of the skin that could be seen, going slightly red, “I can’t...can’t really...turn it off.”

His words were stuttered, but not in the nervous way that Rulae had heard from the young man before. He sounded afraid or worried or...something else. But at least he gave a good explanation, even if it wasn’t all that comforting. Tobias was, in fact, a Jedi apprentice and reading surface thoughts was supposed to be something they could do. But not turn it off? That seemed an odd way to put it.

One of Rea’s small, gloved hands came to rest on Tobias’ shoulder gently, “Toby, please answer me...what’s wrong?”

For the first time, the young Alraxian boy turned to look at her. Rulae had to shift his weight slightly, suddenly regretting just standing there with the corpse on his shoulder weighing him down. He was, however, intelligent enough not to bring up the annoyance of it when Tobias had finally responded to a question that was important and, up until that point, very strongly ignored.

There was one of those odd, uncomfortable silences that seemed to be just filling this walk back before Tobias shook his head and looked back down at his feet, “I almost killed him. Twice. The first time I made a mistake and he killed Venda...and...and I still wouldn’t kill him and I don’t know why. He would have killed me if...if you didn’t...” again, the young man shook his head, “I always wanted to be a hero like Jyren but I keep coming right to the brink and nearly getting myself killed.”

Now this Rulae could understand. This was something he could handle. It was like putting him in the cockpit again, it wash is natural environment. The Force, all these Jedi things, even the whole species thing with this kid were beyond Rulae, but this...this he could do. He’d dealt with so many kids coming into Starfighter Command just like that, then suddenly facing the reality of combat was really like. Most all of them froze up, didn’t react, and nearly got themselves killed. Actually, for most, it was not ‘nearly’. Very few new pilots survived because of that.

“No...no that’s not it,” Tobias was looking at Rulae again, shaking his head. The whole mind reading thing was starting to bother Rulae, and Rea didn’t look too happy with it, but Tobias didn’t even seem to notice it at all. In fact, he just kept going on, “I can fight. I...I’m not the best, but I can defend myself. I know how. Jyren...my mother, they taught me to fight for my own good. Its not that I freeze up. I just...I looked down at him, I had my lightsaber there at his neck and I was swinging to do it and...and I didn’t.”

Tobias continued shaking his head, as if that, in itself, was becoming a sort of nervous twitch, “And I don’t know why I keep stopping myself when I know if I don’t do it they’ll kill me.”

And just like that, it was right out of Rulae’s league again. It seemed that no matter what, no matter how close it seemed to get to being something he could deal with, one little thing had to jump right in and make it completely impossible again. This poor kid was on the edge of driving himself crazy from the way he was speaking and Rulae couldn’t do anything about it before he had no real insight into the whole Jedi thing...and if he said that thing, it could very well do more damage than good.

That thought, though, brought it into perspective. Then, almost without realizing it, Rulae said simply, “Tobias, look at me.”

It wasn’t the strong voice he used to give orders, but it was firm enough to get Tobias’ attention again. When a pair of silvery-green eyes looked directly at Rulae, the Duros officer went on, “I need you to focus right now. Its over. It may not have happened like you thought, but its over. You have to pull yourself together here and stay with me. Okay?”

“But two people are dead now because...”

“Not because of you,” that time, Rulae did speak in the same voice he used for giving orders, loud, strong, and very forceful. Part of it was deliberate, but part of it was also out of pure annoyance at the way Tobias was speaking. He sounded so much like his father, taking the blame just because he was there like he had some foolish desire to be the very reason for every single wrong that ever occurred. It was so damned infuriating because it never did anyone any good.

Quickly, though, Rulae pulled his voice back and made sure to keep his cool, “We’re going to regroup back at the shuttle, contact the authorities here on Thyferra, then head back to the fleet. But we cannot do any of that if you don’t calm down. You have to pull yourself together right now or I will leave you here. Do you understand?”

It was then that Tobias did something that Rulae had never seen Jyren do. The young man stared straight into Rulae’s pair of large, teardrop shaped red eyes and, as his face went from panic to a disturbing kind of nothing. Tobias’ breathing slowed to a more normal calm, and then, after one deep breath, he nodded and said softly, “I understand.”

Maybe Rulae should have said something more. Maybe he should have spoken his concerns of how Tobias had just so suddenly shifted. But to bring that up would mean continuing a line of discussion that had, thankfully, just ended. It did not need to be brought back...at least, not until they were off of Thyferra and back at the fleet, where all of it could be settled and everyone had a time for some rest. It had only taken a day to find the fugitive, but Rulae could see in both Rea and Tobias’ face that, for them at least, it had been more like a month.

Of course, the Duros couldn’t see the same feeling on his own face.
 

Chapter 527: Family

There were a fairly large number of species in the galaxy that had some kind of hive mind like activity. Sometimes it was very strong and literal like in most insectoid races, and other times it was much more implied and more like a collective conscious. For the Alraxians, it was somewhere in between, and even then was hard to really nail down when compared with other species.

The natural link that all Alraxians shared in the form of the so-called Network, wasn’t as much an independent thing like would be normally expected. It was there in a natural form, but not very strong and hard to really grasp by the average Alraxian. It took a very strong mind, almost always an Alraxian gifted in the Force, to pull it all together into one single Network that most of the species took for granted. Truthfully, this duty was the most important thing that the Alraxian Empress performed, essentially being the focus of the entire Alraxian Network and bringing all of the individuals together.

But this tendency for the Alraxian species to be more group oriented than individualistic was usually much stronger, naturally, in siblings. For twins and the like, it was the strongest. Because of this, twins were usually extremely close and very rarely went far from one another. It wasn’t so strong that direct thoughts and words could be felt from one mind to the other, but at least when they were in close proximity to one another, feelings and emotions were rather easy to pick up on.

But as Alyx BlueIce sat across from his twin sister, he found himself wondering, once again, if there were more differences between the two of them than similarities. He knew he should be able to read her better, especially while being just a few meters away, but her mind was just...blank to him. This wasn’t new to him. Marix had always been like that, especially in the last few weeks.

Part of him wondered if it was because he seemed to have no real connection with the Force. Of course, she’d always told him if he’d just stop and try, he’d find he was more skilled with the Force than he wanted to believe...but Alyx just never seemed to ‘feel’ it like he was supposed to. His mother had tried to teach him years before, but he just never could grasp it.

Marix was standing on the other side of the rather large, open room that was a sort of living area near the top of one of the Palace’s spires, staring blankly at the opposite wall so that all Alyx could see was her back. Just a days earlier, there had been Mrrakesh in this very room. The smell was still in the air, distinct but, thankfully, fading. At least the tension of the last few days was finally beginning to fade, though Jyren’s father was still safely offworld with Alyx’s niece and nephew.

“We could be at war right now, Alyx,” she said almost suddenly, having barely said a word to him when he’d arrived an hour earlier. Marix was standing with her arms crossed behind her back and had that worrying intensity to her entire presence that always bothered Alyx.

“You did the right thing,” the way he put the words together made it sound more like a question than a statement. While Alyx had gotten better about being so quiet over the years, even to the point of working as a sort of emissary between the various peoples in the Empire, his sister just had a way of throwing all of that away and making him act like the scared little child who didn’t know what to make of his twin.

He watched Marix shake her head, the black stripe getting slightly lost in the mess of white that had obviously not been touched in a few days...which meant that she had managed to keep the attendants that drove her insane away, at least. Tilting her head slightly, Marix looked over her shoulder to him, “The Jendari would have done it, Alyx. If I’d asked them to cross the border and go into Mrrakesh space, they would have done it. We would have won. They would have to fight on two fronts and they would lose. We could have been safe but I...” she turned her head again so Alyx couldn’t see anything but her hair, “...I told them to just hold the border.”

Alyx just stared at her. Like most of the people in the Empire, Alraxian or not, war was a very foreign concept for him. He knew about it, academically at least, but had never really, truly understood it. The whole idea of killing another being was unsettling to him. Of course, he knew that Marix was just the opposite and considered these things quite normal, but even she knew that she wasn’t the norm for the Empire. But because war was such an odd idea, Alyx just wasn’t sure what to say.

Of course she’d made the right decision! Alraxians didn’t go to war! The Empire wouldn’t! That was what set them apart from the Mrrakesh! But...

“But the chance was there,” Marix finished his thought, though Alyx had a distinct feeling he wasn’t going to end the thought exactly like that. Finally, she turned to face him completely, leaning forward on the chair she stood behind, “The Mrrakesh made a desperate move to survive, thinking I was gone and attempted to kill my children. Then, still following likely the same philosophy, outright attacked our worlds in a way that has no happened for thousands of years. But they barely had any ships. They thought we had nothing but unarmed Kanyaks. And every single ship they sent across the border to attack us was either destroyed or put out of commission. They failed completely. But not only that, they’ve failed and they’ve shown us their hand. If they could only spare that many ships for such a widespread attack, then they likely have very little to on this side of their territory...which means we could send a small force and do to them what they tried to do to us. But we’d succeed. We could end the Mrrakesh threat to our people right now. We would never, ever have to worry about them again. All of the empire would be safe.”

Marix sighed heavily and looked down at the chair she was leaning on, “It’s the kind of situation any commander would dream of. The very people that have terrorized us for so many thousands of years and we have the chance to stop it, end it now. And the Jendari would have done it. They would have gone across the border and destroyed them. Now the Mrrakesh will think we’re weak, and come back again like they always do.”

“I didn’t even know the Jendari had a fleet,” Alyx mumbled. He’d been dealing with the Jendari for the last six or so years and something that was suddenly very important had somehow managed to stay under the scanners so easily, “I don’t think they even hid it! I just...I don’t know how I didn’t know.”

He was supposed to know those kinds of things. That was what he did. But for Alyx to miss something so important, something that literally saved the Empire...well...it made him feel so damned useless. Here he was, sitting across from his sister who was probably the most accomplished Alraxian alive, and he couldn’t even manage to figure out something so major as to the fact that the Jendari had a very large, very powerful fleet of warships. Next to Marix, Alyx just felt so useless. She was just so...

“I’m sorry, Alyx,” the words sounded so alien coming from her. They were two words he’d actually her say before. When he looked up in surprise at what he’d just heard, Marix was walking around the chair and moved to sit next to him a bit awkwardly, “I’m really not any good at this sister thing...”

Alyx stared at her, eyes still wide in shock, “What are you talking about?! Marix you’re...gods, did you hit your head or something?”

There was a long moment where she just stared back at him, but Alyx could see something behind her eyes working. Then, almost suddenly, that cold mask of a nothing on her face cracked and she grinned, even laughed very softly before shaking her head, “You really know how to word things just right.”

And then, the tension was gone. Alyx wasn’t the type to take credit for it, as he’d really done nothing, but he had a much greater affect on his sister than even he knew. And seeing her smile like that again did nothing but make him happy. Maybe the Mrrakesh would come back, Marix was rarely wrong about those kinds of things. But what she hadn’t done was to drag their people into a war. She’d done the right thing, even if she didn’t really like it.

For all the worry that many in the Empire had about their Empress being overly exposed by the rest of the galaxy, Marix still make decisions like the Alraxian she was. Even thought Alyx knew she could see the situation from a tactical mind, she still could put that aside and do what was right for her people.

That was why Alyx was always so much in awe of her. She was everything that their mother had wanted her to be, even if Marix didn’t realize it.
 

Chapter 528: One Crazy Kid

Tobias felt like he was losing his mind.

Well, no, that wasn’t the right word. It wasn’t really losing his mind as much as it feeling crowded. Very, very crowded. It was so hard to tell one thought from the next and who’s it was and it had just started all of a sudden and he couldn’t make sense of anything and it wouldn’t stop!

He didn’t look very well, either.

Good thing she’d shot that Miraluka first, Toby really looked like he was in bad shape.

It would be nice to get back to the fleet though.

This whole ground thing was just so unnerving...artificial gravity really did have a different feel, and it wasn’t so...so open.

And why the hells did I get stuck with the body?!

“Shut up!” Tobias suddenly cried out, hands going to his head out of reflex as he tried to stop all of the voices.

Both Rulae and Rea had turned to look at him in surprise, and the second they looked at him, he could hear their concerns.

Shut up?

Is he okay?

What the hell is going on out there?

They were speaking, too, but Tobias couldn’t actually hear the words. Not the real words. Trying again, he focused inward, trying to do something, anything, to block out the voices. If he could just block them out maybe he could think straight, or at least hear his own thoughts and not be so...so panicked! He didn’t even know why this had suddenly started happening!

“What’s wrong with him?” the voice was heavily accented, and for a moment, Tobias wasn’t sure if he’d really heard it or not. But then he realized that there had been an accent, and it had been a very distinct voice, and so he opened his eyes and looked up to see he was once again beneath the floodlights of the shuttle.

The ramp was still down, and the entire area looked just as he’d left it however long ago it had been. Standing there, halfway down the ramp and in the same fatigues that the other two were wearing, was a red-haired human woman...pointing a blaster pistol at him.

“Put the blaster down, Harken,” Rulae said firmly, then turned to look at Tobias again, though he didn’t say anything. Tobias, though, stared at the Duros’ two large, red eyes and tried to make something of the look he was getting...but couldn’t. He was just impossible to read! And yet...

I don’t know how I’m going to deal with this all the way back. Where’s a Jedi to deal with this when you need one?

“She’s dead,” Tobias mumbled under his breath, then shook his head and closed his eyes tightly. He could still hear them all so clearly and it wouldn’t go away. Stop. Stop and focus. Calm down. Focus. Calm.

I drag one body all the way here then they bring another corpse and a crazy cat-thing. Typical.

No! Stop! Focus!

Calm down.

You have to be calm. Breathing first. Slow it down. Focus on it and slow it down...calm...

And then they were gone. Tobias opened his eyes again, then looked to the human, the Duros, and the Twi’lek all staring at him. And he couldn’t hear a thing. Nothing. The voices were gone. Well, except for his, but that was normal. Tobias could handle one voice.

Realizing they were still staring at him, he managed to say quietly, “I’m okay...I’m...”

Focus on the burn. Heal it. Keep breathing. Heartbeat going. Focus. Draw on the Force. Repair the damage...

Tobias blinked. That wasn’t him. And he was sure it was none of them...

“Where’s Venda?!” suddenly, his voice was much louder and back to sounding slightly crazed.

Tobias’ eyes had locked onto the red headed human woman, and the look he was giving her caused her to take a step back on the boarding ramp. But then, probably out of reflex, she answered the question, “The woman’s body? In the cargo hold...”

She trailed off because as she finished the sentence, Tobias started running to the ramp, then straight up it and right past her. In a matter of seconds, he got to the cargo hold that was in terrible shape after the fight with Tokarr, and saw Venda’s body laying there off to the side. Quickly, he ran over to the body and knelt down next to her, first trying to find a pulse.

Nothing.

At that point, he really saw the lightsaber wound. It had burned all the way across her torso from shoulder to hip, but wasn’t actually that deep, save for at the shoulder...where Tobias could across see a bit of bone. That unnerving sight he quickly put aside, though, as he could feel...something. Not that he was sure what it was, but it was something. Something he shouldn’t have felt. Something like...

It was the Force.

Not that he wasn’t supposed to feel the Force, but like this it was just odd. It was focused, concentrated, and very strong right around Venda’s body. Almost as if...

No. No, she had no pulse! And she wasn’t breathing! But...

“I’m sorry, Toby,” Rea’s voice surprised him, as Tobias hadn’t even heard her come up the ramp. He glanced over his shoulder to see the blue-skinned Twi’lek giving him an apologetic look.

For a few seconds, he stared at her. Had he been better at reading people, Tobias would have seen how much that unnerved her. But then, in the same sudden changes that were becoming normal for him in the last few minutes, Tobias’ head jerked back around to look at Venda’s body, “I don’t think she’s dead.”

“Usually not breathing is a sign of death,” it was the accented voice of the red haired woman again, who had just come back up the ramp and was standing behind Rea.

“I know!” Tobias yelled down at the floor in front of him, not bothering to turn around and sounding a bit more crazy than he’d meant to. He shook his head again, tail behind him flicking back and forth on its own, “But she’s...I heard her. She’s alive. I don’t know how but she’s alive!”

“Whoever this guy you picked up is, I think he’s crazy, sir,” the human woman said more quietly, obviously not meant to be heard by Tobias. Of course, Alraxians’ larger ears did work as would have been expected for their size and he heard her very clearly.

More boots could be heard coming up the ramp, then Tobias heard the voice of Rulae Nok, “His name is Tobias BlueIce. The late-Captain’s son.”

There was silence then, but it didn’t last too long.

“Oh,” the human made the noise more than said a word, then added in the same trying-to-be-quiet voice, “That doesn’t really change the fact that he doesn’t seem to be all there.”

“He’s just a kid,” Rea cut in now, her voice lowered as she, too, seemed to be trying not to be heard, “A kid that just saw two people killed right in front of his eyes.”

“One person,” Tobias corrected, speaking over his shoulder.

Again, silence. This time, Tobias figured the three others were taking in the fact that he’d heard them. When the silence hung in the air for an uncomfortable amount of time, he decided to say, “She’s not dead. I can’t...explain it but she’s not. She should be. And she almost is but...I can feel her drawing on the Force and trying to heal. I don’t know how to help, though...and its so weak and if she doesn’t get help I think she is going to die...”

Tobias’ head spun around again to look to the three others, then said something he didn’t mean to say, “...I want to go home...”

It was the honest truth. It seemed like no matter what he did, Tobias wasn’t ready for any of this. The galaxy abroad, the war, the killing...he just couldn’t handle it all. And now he’d seen his Master nearly killed, another Jedi who was supposed to guide him on the brink of death, and the person he’d been sent to bring back dead. It was the second thing that was eating at him the most, though.

Venda should have been dead. That kind of strike should have killed her. But she was alive, holding on by a thread. And everything in him told Tobias that she needed help, that she wouldn’t be able to heal the wound on her own...and he had no idea what to do. What bothered him the most, though, was the even if he knew what to do, Tobias didn’t think he could.

Nothing made sense anymore. All of the other voices were gone, but he still couldn’t think straight. Now, he really did feel like he was losing his mind...and Tobias couldn’t even make out a why for that.
 

Chapter 529: Lingering Doubts

As the chaos of the last few days began to settle, a sense of normality returned to the Alraxian Empire. The first sign of it was when the people began to return to the Palace, making it a living, breathing entity both inside and out once again.

The surprising thing, though, was that the Alraxians that returned were actually quite happy. Very few had died, but there were casualties. Of course, true to their nature, the dead were not mourned, but celebrated for their returning to the Force. Still, though, there should have at least been an air of tension throughout all of the various territories of the planet, itself...

Perhaps it was because it had been so long since the Alraxians had seen war. Perhaps they just didn’t know what to expect. With the situation with Halpak, it was over in such a short time, a matter of two to three days, depending on which planet in the Empire time was being judged by, and it was over. So why shouldn’t the people be content now that the Mrrakesh were pushed back and the Jendari protecting the borders with their ships?

Marix glanced to her right and looked to the open door, taking only a short moment to inspect the empty room.

Not everyone had returned.

Navik Keros had both Saaran and Andrea and they were safely off of Alraxia. Marix hadn’t actually received direct information on where they were, but that was due to the fact that the more normal lines of communication were being kept silent, especially of information like that. But, if she had to guess, and that was Marix wasn’t all that bad at doing, she’d put a strong bet on the three of them being on the Jendari’s homeworld, or a similarly well protected planet.

The past few days had been filled with boring bureaucratic nonsense...the kind which Marix had become very skilled at breezing through by giving non-answers that sounded decisive but didn’t cause any actual harm. Alyx had left the day before, making it all the more difficult to deal with.

It was odd, really, how much of an anchor Marix’s family was for her. Her immediate family, at least. Alyx, her children, Navik and Jyren. It wasn’t much, but it was family. Sure, there were all her other younger siblings that were around the Palace all the time, but they were almost more alien to her than the Yuuzhan Vong. Where Marix could understand the so-called ‘normal’ Alraxian, her younger siblings were all very odd and never seemed to like her that much. And yet, despite that, it was the six closest members of her family that held her down and managed to keep her sane through all of the insanity.

Without them around, Marix felt stranded in the vast Palace with people that were so difficult to deal with for so many different reasons, most of which weren’t even their fault. The few moments of peace she got, Marix spent in the quiet emptiness of her quarters: the large, multi-room ‘wing’ of one of the large spires of the Palace that was so much bigger than her old single-room quarters that, a decade later, it still felt wrong. Well, no, it wasn’t the size that currently bothered her...it was the quiet.

When they’d first been forced into the room, and it had definitely been forced, it was just Marix, Jyren, and Toby, who got his own separate little room that was now the twins’. But even with his own room, the age of Tobias at the time meant that there were rarely moments of actual quiet. He had even seemed to sleep loudly, which Jyren had always taken great amusement from...Marix assumed this was because Jyren didn’t know he talked in his sleep. But by the time Tobias got his own quarters, the twins were born and providing even more noise.

And now...

Now it was silent.

Perfectly silent.

Almost just to make noise, Marix let out a sigh, her eyes turning to look out one of the large windows to see the expansive Palace and the horizon beyond. At least the Mrrakesh hadn’t tried anything. She may not be happy with deciding not to retaliate, but the rest of the Empire was content with it and the Mrrakesh seemed too caught up in their own problems to take advantage of what they would surely see as a sign of weakness.

But they would come. Of that, Marix had no doubt.

Now, though, she wasn’t waiting on them to return. It would occur when it did, and likely not for at least a few days. Instead, Marix’s focus was on Loki and Hermes, who she had asked to go to the Gateway and search once more. Not just with their natural senses, which weren’t technically eyes, but through the Force, which most Kanyaks had a least a small connection to.

She had felt something before. And Voort had said something. That brief image of Voort that was still infuriating to think about...Marix just wished she could have gone to see for herself, but things had to be settled down at the Palace. Of course, she trusted both Loki and Hermes, and if there was anything out of the ordinary, they would find it. This was discounting the fact that the previous four sweeps of the area had shown nothing.

If he was alive, though, Marix would know. Gods, she would have to know. But if he really was gone, as the past month or so would seem to say was true, then she should know...because she should have been.

Marix growled under her breath.

Over and over and over, she’d come back to it. Everything in her told her that Jyren should be alive because she was alive. But, at the same time, all evidence proved that he was dead and gone. But why had Voort spoken like Jyren was alive? Voort had called him Jyren, too...but, no, Loki had to have been right. If there was a way around the link, and there was a way around everything in the galaxy, no matter how hard and firm the rule, Jyren would find it. He was the kind of stubborn bastard that would break even the laws of nature just to protect her.

Maybe Marix gave him too much credit...but, then again, maybe she’d never given him enough. It was so infuriating that he would do something like that, but it would be exactly him. And that very contradiction was still driving Marix insane. She needed real, hard proof one way or the other. A body, living or not, would make it so much easier than having nothing at all.

Not that she ever expected to find one...that would make things too easy. And if there was one thing she’d learned over the years, whoever, or whatever, was in charge of the galaxy didn’t like to make things easy for Marix BlueIce. That was definitely something that didn’t seem likely to change in the foreseeable future. She just hoped that was something that stayed with her and didn’t extend to her children.

...if only Marix knew the things Tobias had been through in such a short time.
 

Chapter 530: Return

Somehow, it was surprisingly reassuring to see the New Republic fleet still in orbit around what was left of Fondor. Sure, the New Republic had won, but the cost was terrible. Fondor’s shipyards were so horribly damaged that they likely would be out of commission for long enough to cause even more problems. Of course, getting off of Thyferra had been rather interesting.

It seemed like a foolish thing to try, but Commodore Nok still attempted to get the shuttle Tokarr had taken working. For lightsaber-related reasons, it didn’t work. But instead of bothering to walk all the way back to the spaceport, he sent a quick message to the local authorities, who begrudgingly flew a transport out to get the survivors...and the bodies.

The entire trip back, Tobias refused to leave Venda’s side. He continually swore that she was still alive, despite the fact that there were no real life signs. If she was breathing, it was barely happening at all, and if her heart was beating...it was so slow that none of the others waited long enough to hear it. But even if Tobias was wrong and she was dead, none of them could say anything.

The young Alraxian, who didn’t bother to morph back to a human body, seemed to be in a rather dangerous position. He seemed at least partially crazy, and the whole mind-reading wasn’t helping anyone at all. There was a silent hope amongst the three pilots that Tobias wouldn’t just snap during the flight like Tokarr apparently had. But Tobias didn’t really talk sense anymore, the few times he bothered to speak to anyone.

So, arriving back at the fleet and being greeted by both medics and marines was a nice change for everyone. Where the three pilots had quickly headed to their quarters aboard the ship to change out of the fatigues they wore, Tobias, Venda, and Tokarr’s body were taken to the medical ward. There wasn’t any comment on the fact that Tobias didn’t look the same as how he’d looked upon leaving, but it was likely due to the fact that barely anyone knew him. Besides, having the marines as escorts turned away any suspicious looks from the busy members of the crew still working damage control from the battle.

He looks terrible. What happened?!

Tobias turned carefully to identify the origin of the stray thoughts he was still inadvertently picking up. It wasn’t much of a surprise to see Master Ral sitting up in one of the medical beds, his white, feathery hair blending into the cream coloured walls around. The pale blue of his face, though, showed a concerned expression to go with the thoughts.

But then, suddenly, Tobias heard nothing. At least, nothing from Master Ral. Not even a feeling...

“What just happened?” he asked, walking over to the Jedi Master without even bothering to ask how he was doing.

“It is not polite to pry into another’s mind, Tobias,” Master Ral said in that familiar soft, yet pointed voice. But it shifted again, a hint of concern slipping in, “You do not look well, Tobias.”

Toby shook his head a few too many times and had a seat next to the Omwati Jedi Master, “I can’t...I can’t stop it. I just keep...” he looked over his shoulder to another patient, then back to Master Ral, “She wants to get out of here. But she’s the only one. The others are so distant...barely alive. But they still won’t go away...just quieter. And you just...I can’t...what did you do?”

“Stop,” Master Ral raised a blue hand, “Calm yourself, then think, then speak. Do not try all at once. Once you can do that, try again.”

Why that worked was beyond Tobias, but it did. There was no hint of the Force in the Jedi Master’s voice, but the calm way he spoke just managed to cut through all of the insanity of the voices Tobias could hear. Right away, Tobias began to slow his breathing, focusing on that and trying to ignore everything else around him. It took a few minutes, but slowly, Tobias started to calm down. His tail stopped flicking around, his breathing slowed, and his heart stopped beating at the speed of light.

When he opened his eyes, Tobias saw a slight hint of a smile on Master Ral’s face. But when nothing was said, Tobias knew he was still being waited on.

I can work! Why do they have to stick me in this damned bed?!

“They won’t go away!” Tobias nearly yelled, resisting the urge to pound something. He then realized Master Ral was giving him another critical look, and then tried to explain it again...but more coherently, “I’m not doing anything, Master. I just...ever since...when Tokarr died...it just started. I keep hearing it all. So many voices and I can’t make it stop.”

“Calm down.”

Two words, and yet, again, they caused him to stop. Tobias didn’t seem to realize how much he was working himself up until after they were spoken. A few more deep breaths later, and then Master Ral said, “Close your eyes. Continue to focus on your breathing. When you are ready, reach out with the Force. Feel the room around you. Feel everything you can here, see it all through the Force. Then pull inwards, remember what the walls looked like and build them around your mind.”

It was the most direct explanation of what to do, regarding the Force, that Tobias had ever received. Though it was still slightly abstract, it made perfect sense. Knowing, despite everything that was literally driving him mad, that this was a direct kind of approach he would likely never find again, Tobias latched on and did exactly as he was told.

Eyes closed, he focused on his breathing for at leat ten minutes. Then he found the Force and began to slowly reach out around him, feeling the outlines of the living beings the first, almost like bright lights in a dark room. But then, the bright lights formed outlines of sorts and the rest of the room began to fill out, though very dimly and hard to see...but it was there. Next, still trying to hold onto the Force-vision of the room, Tobias tried to pull the image inwards.

And then he heard nothing at all.

Tobias opened his eyes a few moments later, then looked to see a calm expression on his Master’s face. Seeing this, Tobias decided to very carefully ask a question, “What would...cause that, Master?”

“I cannot say, Toby,” shaking his head, Master Ral then looked over Tobias’ shoulder, “Keep your mind sharp and focused right now. And when you are ready, tell me everything that happened.”


As a heads up...going to be gone this weekend. Should be able to pick up on the updates again starting Sunday, though.
 

Into the Woods

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