Silence of the Land

Poe Ett

Character
Rank
Processing

Character Profile
Link
OOC
Die Shize
Joined
Apr 12, 2023
Messages
3
Reaction score
0
photo-1477468572316-36979010099d



Poe hadn't known that he would begin that morning trading the city skyrise for a spire of ice.
Coruscant, a glorious ecumonopolis, was one giant city in itself, with towers impossibly high.
Too many took such architecture for granted, never mind arcane structures as with pyramids.
The Jedi and Sith knew how to erect temples, quite true, but they were not within Poe’s vision.

He woke up in a highrise, a large apartment complex that served well for a man of his function.
His place was typical—a bed, a hybrid television/holovision set, a closet, bathroom and kitchen.
Amenities were simple things, covering his needs, while his wants were limited to what he sees.
Out the window, watching vehicles fly beside the towers of civilization, he was a man of dreams.

He had gazed out that window sipping his coffee, wondering who else might be city-watching.
That morning, in the present, the modern world was on offer for the citizens, but he saw future.
He wondered how the blocks might shift ten, fifty, a hundred years later, if streets might yet turn.
Possibility went hand in hand with reality, but that man just as much sees the past like a painting.

Birds flying. A white peak. Poe Ett recited in his mind back at that window.
Hours later, from the window of his ship, as he landed to begin his mission.
Birds flying. A white peak. The frigid wind howled against it, pounding the hull.
A blizzard raging against this visitor, storming snow, as Poe flew into the cold.

Kaspas was an ice world, a total shift in direction like the wind from Coruscant.
The situation was dire enough to warrant a Sector Ranger to service the planet.
Whether there was a grand city, it was a remote town where Poe’s ship landed.
Beside gargantuan mountains, like a city’s buildings, roaring up into the dawn.

It was approaching morning on Kaspas, as if giving Poe time back from his own.
His courier, Star’s Honor, set its struts upon a landing pad connected to the town.
The settlement was simple, favoring practicality over imagery, bracing into ground.
The weather was cold and cruel out here, but these people held on, would not slow.

A slower way of living than out in the city though. Poe mused as he lowered the ramp.
A calmer existence. Less noise. Less traffic. Yet peace was being ripped from the land.
The wind bit into him as soon as the ship opened, battering against his layered garments.
No hair on the Rodian’s head, the hat protecting his flesh, gloved fingers dipping into a pack.

Securing the strap on his back, he descended the pad and headed into the town of Frostfang.
It was a tight settlement, buildings kept close enough to limit the distance one had to walk to.
It made sense given the frigid conditions. Poe spotted few residents outside, on the move.
Droids labored alongside, making routine repairs to beacons and dishes, sparing no glance.

Residential section. Town hall. Research station.
Poe painted a mental map amid the snowfall.
His datapad had a digital map but nothing beat what the naked eye could see, he learned.
Further in, a child spied him from a window, a pedestrian turning to stare, another called.
“Hey! Stranger!” The woman waved. Poe did not look like a Ranger. “Best get into cover.”

She didn’t sound alarmed, more like someone offering advice on how to bake bread.
“A storm’s coming.” Poe offered her an arced brow at that. “Thought this is a storm?”
That caused her to laugh. “More a sprinkle of rain before the downpour, my friend.”
The locals know best. “I’m heading for the constable’s station. Show me which door?”

She tapped her hand on the wall behind her.
“This door to my right. Are you a police officer?”
Poe shook his head as he approached her further.
“Close. I’m an offworld visitor. I am a Sector Ranger.”

She nodded the way one does to confirm their own theory.
“Glad to hear it. As expected. Follow me. Just made coffee.”
I should have expected. Evidently she is not just lollygagging.
“Splendid.” Door opened. They walked in. I smell it already.
 

Poe Ett

Character
Rank
Processing

Character Profile
Link
OOC
Die Shize
Joined
Apr 12, 2023
Messages
3
Reaction score
0
Piping hot coffee. That was a term, a turn of phrase, rather familiar to this Rodian’s face.
No weak brew, and Poe knew that immediately. It was strong, bold, smokey and earthy.
“Dark roast?” He asked as much as stated. His contemporary nodded. “Hope it’s okay.”
“Just so.” The coffee pot all but beckoned him in amid the cold outside. Nutty if spicy.

The aroma was heaven to the Rodian, which might have been a bit of a contradiction.
Science aside, and while biology could not be refuted, the Rodian’s nose is different.
He had heard the descriptions of others, never mind his own senses, as he looked.
Spotted that pot of black coffee; bubbles at the surface, darkest of amber, hooked.

“Perfect for cold weather, wouldn’t you agree?” The woman offered in a bit of a grin.
“Indeed,” Poe Ett agreed, waiting patiently in the office they had just stepped within.
The constable’s station was basic, as expected—everyday amenities and equipment.
“Here you go,” she extended a cup of Joe. “We do keep the best brew in this station.”

It was a statement worth its weight in compliment. “It’s strong.” Poe licked his lips.
Delicious.” A bold, bittersweet nectar, warm to the core. “What is your situation?”
He cut right to the chase. No need for conversing about everyday nothing as it is.
“A man of the badge and the task at hand,” she winked. “Then I will cut right to it.”

He was glad for that. “Take a seat,” she all but commanded. “Thanks. I will stand.”
No less politely at that. “Firstly…” she took a seat. And it was just the two of them.
Others of the constabulary likely few and far, further in the building at best guess.
“Jalissa Menderbury. Constable.” She sipped her coffee. “You?” Her gaze like glass.

“Sector Ranger Poe Ett,” sipped. “Called in due to the nature of this environment.”
“Right. I am the one who called it in.” Jalissa sighed. “It is an out of the way town.”
Kaspas was certainly no Coruscant, and the town of Frostfang is a cold settlement.
More than one definition. “We get few visitors. Most here are buried in the ground.”

Ominous. “What is your meaning?” Poe asked as he leisurely sipped from his coffee.
“Just that few tend to leave once they arrive, whether born or raised or on business.”
She shrugged. “The occasional explorer, maybe, which may explain a disappearance.”
“You don’t sound convinced.” She just grinned. “Not after more than one in one week.”

Indeed. "More than one what, exactly?"
"Read me." Teasing. "What do you think?"
"I think it's common for a missing explorer."
"Agreed...but not when it comes to...murder."
 

Poe Ett

Character
Rank
Processing

Character Profile
Link
OOC
Die Shize
Joined
Apr 12, 2023
Messages
3
Reaction score
0
As he stood there sipping his coffee, and she sat there on her chair, he witnessed a sudden shift between them; a parallel that was already there.

It wasn’t a paradox. It wasn’t some mystery once an uncertainty that was now so certain. It wasn’t that he was crazy, he just had a tendency to think, think, think, until his thoughts were overthought. Overthinking. Yet again.

Yet he had a tendency to do it when the situation was serious, and the more serious the situation, the more his thoughts drifted. It wasn’t so much that he was so very distracted, or his thoughts were lost; rather, they were a web in his head that interconnected in ways that others just couldn’t comprehend.

There she was, Constable Jalissa Manderbury, sitting while he was standing. In proximity. Watching him while he watched his coffee. Ranger Poe Ett watched its bubbles set, thought of how hot it was on his tongue, how it warmed him up in the cold. Cold. Snow. Old. Bones. Frost. Lost. Coffee. Hot. Calmly.

However, whoever had been murdered was frozen in the grave. In the morgue, surely. This coffee they cannot taste. “You okay?” He looked up to see that the Constable had her head tilted to him as if he had drifted for minutes. No. Only for seconds.

“I am okay.” He wasn’t surprised to find out that murder was at the root of the issue here. Small town problems. Murder is a bigger problem the smaller the town. It tended to be less frequent given the population, and when it happened in an isolated community that meant its inhabitants were even more desperate to address it.

What was the saying? One death is tragic? A million is a statistic? A Sector Ranger like Poe Ett disagreed with that statement and sentiment.

Death was death. Murder was another matter. One was already too many. Yet she had said there was more than one.

“Show me the bodies. Please."
 
Top