Axar
New member
- Joined
- Mar 22, 2026
- Messages
- 9
The den was three levels below the main concourse, past a service corridor and through a door that didn't advertise itself. No name. Low ceiling. Changeling-run, like everything on this station that mattered. The half-gravity made the air feel thin and the drinks pour wrong, but it kept the locals light on their feet, and Axar had learned to use that a long time ago.
He sat with his back to the far wall. One hand flat on the table. Drink in front of him, barely touched. He hadn't come here to drink.
The room sorted itself out fast enough. Two exits — the corridor he'd come through and a freight access behind the bar that the staff thought was subtle. A Konatsian blade dealer three tables over, conducting a sale he clearly believed was discreet. It wasn't. Two low-rank Saiyans burning credits on a rigged dice game, too loud and too drunk to notice. A Kanassan in the far corner, doing what Kanassans did. Selling futures. Probably overcharging.
Axar knew the types. He'd dragged most of them across a ship's deck at one point or another.
He'd been running the room for the better part of an hour when his attention caught on the east alcove.
A figure, standing where the foot traffic thinned out. Not hiding. Placed. She'd chosen a position with clear sightlines to the bar, the main entrance, and the Kanassan's corner — the three points in the room that generated the most movement. That was deliberate. That was someone who'd mapped a space before settling into it.
He couldn't place her species.
Not Konatsian. Not Human, despite something in the build that suggested it at a glance. Nothing from the bounty boards. Nothing from the Cold Clan's imperial census, which the Scorch networks had copied and picked apart years ago. Axar had committed most of it to memory. She wasn't in it.
His tail shifted once beneath the table. He caught the motion. Stilled it.
She was watching the room the same way he'd been watching it. Not browsing. Sorting. Filing bodies into categories. He recognized the behavior because it was his.
Unknown species. Unknown capability. Alone, in a place that didn't welcome strangers, carrying herself like she understood exactly where she was.
Axar stood. Crossed the room without rushing, threading the gaps in the crowd the way the half-gravity let him — smooth, no wasted force. He stopped at the edge of the alcove. Close enough that she'd have to decide what to do about him.
He sat with his back to the far wall. One hand flat on the table. Drink in front of him, barely touched. He hadn't come here to drink.
The room sorted itself out fast enough. Two exits — the corridor he'd come through and a freight access behind the bar that the staff thought was subtle. A Konatsian blade dealer three tables over, conducting a sale he clearly believed was discreet. It wasn't. Two low-rank Saiyans burning credits on a rigged dice game, too loud and too drunk to notice. A Kanassan in the far corner, doing what Kanassans did. Selling futures. Probably overcharging.
Axar knew the types. He'd dragged most of them across a ship's deck at one point or another.
He'd been running the room for the better part of an hour when his attention caught on the east alcove.
A figure, standing where the foot traffic thinned out. Not hiding. Placed. She'd chosen a position with clear sightlines to the bar, the main entrance, and the Kanassan's corner — the three points in the room that generated the most movement. That was deliberate. That was someone who'd mapped a space before settling into it.
He couldn't place her species.
Not Konatsian. Not Human, despite something in the build that suggested it at a glance. Nothing from the bounty boards. Nothing from the Cold Clan's imperial census, which the Scorch networks had copied and picked apart years ago. Axar had committed most of it to memory. She wasn't in it.
His tail shifted once beneath the table. He caught the motion. Stilled it.
She was watching the room the same way he'd been watching it. Not browsing. Sorting. Filing bodies into categories. He recognized the behavior because it was his.
Unknown species. Unknown capability. Alone, in a place that didn't welcome strangers, carrying herself like she understood exactly where she was.
Axar stood. Crossed the room without rushing, threading the gaps in the crowd the way the half-gravity let him — smooth, no wasted force. He stopped at the edge of the alcove. Close enough that she'd have to decide what to do about him.
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