Entry tags:
- !location: obs deck,
- adam park,
- albert heinrich/004,
- alex mercer,
- allison young,
- andros,
- angela,
- arha masaari,
- billy cranston,
- billy kaplan,
- bumblebee,
- caden holloway,
- captain kirk,
- captain picard,
- carol danvers,
- chris ramirez,
- claire redfield,
- danny phantom,
- ender,
- gauron,
- gavroche,
- hellcat,
- hellion,
- indiana jones,
- iron fist,
- john connor,
- john-117,
- jono starsmore,
- katara,
- kate bishop,
- kira yamato,
- kon-el,
- leon s. kennedy,
- lois lane,
- luke skywalker,
- luna lovegood,
- marcus wright,
- mr. wednesday,
- nana,
- nightwing,
- owen mercer,
- pixie,
- ron stoppable,
- roxie schreiber,
- sensor,
- sentinel prime,
- sheeana,
- sherry birkin,
- sokka,
- son of satan,
- speedy mia dearden,
- stature,
- steve burnside,
- vega obscura,
- waspinator,
- wendy watson,
- wyn callahan,
- xander,
- yuri otani
Meet-n-Greet
After being released from stasis, having the slime removed from their bodies and clothed in the creepy, pulsing leaf-suit that everyone wore, and being taken to the Weapons & Possessions lockers to collect their belongings, the new arrivals would find themselves standing in the Observation Deck. Round windows lined the fleshy walls, revealing the bright display of lights that was inter-dimensional travel. They would also discover that there were people--members of the command staff and crew that had woken earlier--waiting for them.
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"Are you waiting for something more to happen or just waiting?" she asked, her voice vibrant and warm with curiosity. Men waited for many things. Some died waiting, some lived.
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His very blue eyes met her blue-in-blue eyes, a flicker of curiosity rising in his own expression. "What about you?"
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She gestured, a quick flick of her fingers.
"Their confusion will settle in time, like all things do. It is good to want to soothe it, though exhausting. Stretch too thin and you may snap. That would be unfortunate."
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"If you don't mind my asking," Luke said, "What caused your eyes to become like that? I've never seen anything like it."
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She moved closer so he could inspect her eyes more thoroughly to satisfy his curiosity, should he chose. The cinnamon scent still clung to her, sharply sweet and tangy as she leaned forward, her red hair swinging slightly to curl against her cheeks.
"It is a potent thing."
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"If it has the ability to transmute aspects of the human body, it does seem that it would be very potent," Luke replied. "But surely you can break its hold? We have drugs at home--deathsticks, glitterstim--they poison the body and the mind..."
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Her fingers brushed his wrist gently, but not for more than a second, no longer than that. She felt a tingle of newness, a jolt of some sort of power that seemed to radiate up the two fingers she'd touched him with. It made her curious...and momentarily dizzy.
"I will live a long time and be of great assistance to many, so long as Stacy gives me the proper amount of Spice." She was quiet for a moment, her eyes closed, placidly attempting to find her balance again. The moments of prescience themselves were mere ripples, glimpses, a dizzy rush sometimes -- different than the thing she had felt moments ago. Her talent was dimmer in that than it was elsewhere, at least it was here. Back on Arrakis, it had helped her find water, to survive. Arha opened her eyes and pushed what weariness there was away.
She, too, was tired.
It had been a month since her arrival and her mothers-within were still loud. It took concentration to silence them, though a curious voice here and there stabbed out. What is he? Ask! What sort of creature? Does he hear? Does he see? What! She would not be a Reverend Mother if there was no Spice.
Or perhaps she would.
"Things are never as they seem," she said.
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"You're right, partially," he said, calming himself so that his Force-presence didn't roil too much and give his feelings away. He had so far encountered many things that were like to the abilities of the Jedi (and the Sith, for that matter) but were, on the whole, quite different. "Things aren't always what they seem."
Hadn't he made that folly before, though? Jacen's face swam up to his consciousness, and Luke looked away from Arha's fascinatingly blue eyes for a moment. He'd been mistaken, thinking that Jacen had simply been confounded by an outside source and once that source was removed, he'd return to normal. Jacen had, by the time they figured out what was really going on, sunk too deeply in the darkness to ever be saved.
"But sometimes a Sith is still a Sith."
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Arha folded her delicate hands contemplatively.
"Such things will always exist, cloaked and waiting, but yet the same. The paths of such things, they are laid out to challenge order and what one considers 'good'. Darkness," she mused, her words humming out, "may consume light, but there is always more light, is there not? I have always been amused that the dark is supposed to be wrong, evil, malignant. In the desert wastelands, darkness is your ally from the piercing heat of day. Someone, somewhere, set a fear in the darkness that reaches all Men in all places. The darkness has its uses. Your Sith, they have theirs, though it may be a hard thing to admit."
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"But their very nature," he continued, "Disrupts the balance, and in truth nature doesn't exist in perfect equilibrium. Even night and day aren't always the same length. Perspective may have a bearing on how you view good and evil, light and dark, but it doesn't change that the darkness consumes and twists those who touch it."
Perhaps that was what had happened with Jacen, Luke thought. On his five-year sojourn through the galaxy, learning the ways of the Force from other races who had learned its secrets, perhaps he had tapped the darkness within himself that had put his feet on the path that Lumiya had only widened and smoothed for him. They could never know; Jacen was dead, and his path was perhaps long cold.
"This is what we teach Jedi younglings when they are brought to us," he said. "Light will always triumph over darkness in the end."
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"It is a sound system of thought," she said softly. "The place from whence I came was in the middle of a power struggle. My Arrakis. I have since found out from another that the world I love is no longer there. Five thousand years of struggle, a changed Universe, a misled Messiah, darkness and light circling each other. The Universe is what it is in any place. Tyrants and Saviors, life and death. You do what you can, live, stir the worlds, shape the future, keep moving, keep fighting if you must. If you are in the right place, in the right time, perhaps then you may see the fruits of your labor. It is not often seen in one's own lifetime. I will have died long before I see such a thing as light triumphing over darkness."
Her fingers curled idly against her arm as she peered up at him.
"Come," she murmured, "if you are to wait, Philospher Jed-Eye, you should do so with a modicum of comfort. It is no easy thing to find yourself among strange company on a Thinking Machine. Walk with me. I shall show you a quiet place to recover."
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"It sure must get chaotic around here when people emerge from their pods, if this is any indication."
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It was preferable to the the claustrophobic mess Stacy had in store for them elsewhere.
The sound of the desert wind rushing and the familiar sweet sharp scent of cinnamon were comforting things of a world that no longer was. Somewhere in the distance there was the distant roar of Shai-Hulud. The spice cakes were not truly spice cakes, but they were better to look at than the things the ship gave them. With familiar ease, she moved to dip a small bowl into the water. This she offered to him and then gestured to a pallet.
"Rest. I shall remain watchful," Arha said, her tone solemn, but soft. "There is no quieter place than in the arms of my desert."
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"This is your home planet, then?" he asked, accepting the bowl with a soft word of thanks and drinking it. "This is where you are from?" He sat on the pallet, looking up at her with his own very blue eyes. It had to be; it smelled the same as she did.
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"As close to it as this place will allow, at any rate. This cave was my home for a year. Beyond, the deep desert with many creatures." It came again, the roar. "That is Shai-Hulud, a Great Maker. A Maker of Spice. It is not real, though, but I hear them once and awhile. They are sensitive to motion and are quite territorial, but we have an understanding, Shai-Hulud and I."
It was not something she could explain, it just was.
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He pondered what she'd said about water for a little while though, that it was anathema to the worms. It was an unusual thing, because he knew that the body was made up mostly of water; for something so essential to be a poison went against what Luke had come to accept as a rule of nature. "Water is poison to a sandworm? How can that be?"
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She held out her hand, palm up.
"Let me show you a glimpse of my desert sands. This cave is well enough, but dusk and wormsign? It is a sight."
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"Sure," he said, and stood, keeping hold of her hand for a moment longer. "Lead the way."
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"Stay to the rocks," she hummed, leaning to be heard above the wind. "Move as I do."
Nimble as a mountain goat and far smoother, she moved among the rocks without dislodging a single grain of windblown sand. When she got to a flat expanse, she found a place to sit near the edge. The whole area was lit in the dying glow of the fierce sun and the sand glittered from dark tan dunes, to cinnamon red, to pristine whites.
She leaned back, covering her mouth with her hand as she laughed; moisture preservation.
"Wormsign!" she called.
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"What's wormsign?" he asked, sitting neatly beside her as though meditating.
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She canted her head slightly.
"If he were a real worm, I would sense him." Arha laugh again, the old habit of covering her mouth still deeply ingrained. "In fact, I would be able to call out to him, though whether he would come is another matter entirely. The big ones generally do not." She watched the worm's progress for awhile and then lay back against the hot rock. This had been her favorite nighttime spot.
Well into the darkness before the first cold hit, she could lay back and watch the stars. The sun was disappearing, now, moment by moment, and the brightest stars had just begun to show. It made her miss Arrakis fiercely, though Sheeana assured her the desert planet was gone.
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