Axar
New member
- Joined
- Mar 22, 2026
- Messages
- 9
Earth was a small world, and it smelled like rain.
Axar stood at the edge of a plateau overlooking a settlement the locals would have called a city. By the standards of any civilization that had achieved interstellar travel, it was a village — low structures of glass and steel in unremarkable grids, ground vehicles crawling along paved arteries, the ambient noise of a species that had not yet learned how quiet the universe could be. He'd made planetfall six hours ago in a descent trajectory calculated to avoid their rudimentary sensor networks. It had not been difficult. Nothing about this job had been difficult so far.
The contract had come through a Scorch Clan intermediary — a Changeling woman whose name Axar had not asked for and whose face he had already forgotten. The employer wanted thoroughness: the target eradicated, his associates dealt with, his operation on this world dismantled root and stem. Clean work. The kind Axar had done a dozen times across half as many species, though rarely for a mark this far removed from the trade lanes.
A Saiyan. Third-born of a family with some modest standing back home — enough to produce one sibling worth the name and two who weren't. This one had been exiled young and landed here, of all places. Running a mining and prospecting company on a planet whose dominant species didn't know what Ki was. The cover worked precisely because no one with real power would ever think to look. The target had bet his life on obscurity, and for years, that bet had paid.
It wasn't paying anymore.
The compound sat at the settlement's edge — warehouses, equipment yards, a modest office building. Human employees moved through their routines with the comfortable ignorance of people who had never once considered that their employer might be something other than what he appeared. Axar had spent two hours on the ridge above the site, motionless, reading the patterns of the place. Shift changes. Vehicle traffic. Entry points. Professional habit, mostly. For a target like this, it was overkill.
Ki Sense had confirmed a single signature inside the main building that didn't belong to the local species. Faint. So faint that without the specific biosignature markers Axar had been given, he might have mistaken it for a slightly above-average Human. Seventy. Maybe less. The kind of power level that, among Saiyans, got you exiled to a backwater in the first place.
Now Axar watched from the rooftop of an adjacent warehouse, close enough to see through the office windows. The Saiyan was there — dark-haired, lean, sitting behind a desk with actual paper documents spread in front of him. He moved with the unhurried ease of a man who believed he was safe. No combat readiness. No suppression technique. Just the open, unguarded energy of someone who had stopped expecting the universe to come find him.
Axar's tail curled once behind him, a slow and deliberate motion, and settled. The polycarbonate crest of his helm caught the flat grey light. Red skin, dark-edged armor plating, the warm tones of the Scorch Clan — all of it meaningless on a world that wouldn't know what it was looking at.
He studied the Saiyan the way he studied all of his marks in the final moments before contact. Not for threat — there was no threat here. For habit. How the target held himself. Where his attention went. Whether the eyes moved like prey or like something that had simply forgotten it could be hunted.
This one had forgotten.
Axar stood at the edge of a plateau overlooking a settlement the locals would have called a city. By the standards of any civilization that had achieved interstellar travel, it was a village — low structures of glass and steel in unremarkable grids, ground vehicles crawling along paved arteries, the ambient noise of a species that had not yet learned how quiet the universe could be. He'd made planetfall six hours ago in a descent trajectory calculated to avoid their rudimentary sensor networks. It had not been difficult. Nothing about this job had been difficult so far.
The contract had come through a Scorch Clan intermediary — a Changeling woman whose name Axar had not asked for and whose face he had already forgotten. The employer wanted thoroughness: the target eradicated, his associates dealt with, his operation on this world dismantled root and stem. Clean work. The kind Axar had done a dozen times across half as many species, though rarely for a mark this far removed from the trade lanes.
A Saiyan. Third-born of a family with some modest standing back home — enough to produce one sibling worth the name and two who weren't. This one had been exiled young and landed here, of all places. Running a mining and prospecting company on a planet whose dominant species didn't know what Ki was. The cover worked precisely because no one with real power would ever think to look. The target had bet his life on obscurity, and for years, that bet had paid.
It wasn't paying anymore.
The compound sat at the settlement's edge — warehouses, equipment yards, a modest office building. Human employees moved through their routines with the comfortable ignorance of people who had never once considered that their employer might be something other than what he appeared. Axar had spent two hours on the ridge above the site, motionless, reading the patterns of the place. Shift changes. Vehicle traffic. Entry points. Professional habit, mostly. For a target like this, it was overkill.
Ki Sense had confirmed a single signature inside the main building that didn't belong to the local species. Faint. So faint that without the specific biosignature markers Axar had been given, he might have mistaken it for a slightly above-average Human. Seventy. Maybe less. The kind of power level that, among Saiyans, got you exiled to a backwater in the first place.
Now Axar watched from the rooftop of an adjacent warehouse, close enough to see through the office windows. The Saiyan was there — dark-haired, lean, sitting behind a desk with actual paper documents spread in front of him. He moved with the unhurried ease of a man who believed he was safe. No combat readiness. No suppression technique. Just the open, unguarded energy of someone who had stopped expecting the universe to come find him.
Axar's tail curled once behind him, a slow and deliberate motion, and settled. The polycarbonate crest of his helm caught the flat grey light. Red skin, dark-edged armor plating, the warm tones of the Scorch Clan — all of it meaningless on a world that wouldn't know what it was looking at.
He studied the Saiyan the way he studied all of his marks in the final moments before contact. Not for threat — there was no threat here. For habit. How the target held himself. Where his attention went. Whether the eyes moved like prey or like something that had simply forgotten it could be hunted.
This one had forgotten.