Mistress of the Dark.

"Welcome to hell."
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The asteroid did not welcome visitors.
No lights marked its approach. No towers marred its flat surface. The hangar doors were invisible even as they opened, cut so precisely into the pocked rock face that one could pass over them a dozen times and never know it was watching.
Polis Massa was a graveyard of secrets, and this place—Malleus—was where the dead were made useful again.
Inside, the air was dry and still. Every sound was devoured by the ancient, sound-absorbent stones of the inner ring. Even the distant hum of power systems felt... restrained, as though the machinery itself feared being overheard. Dim red light lined the corridor floors, casting long shadows between the tall columns of obsidian alloy that framed the hall like ribs in the body of some great mechanical beast.
And in its heart, she waited.
Serina Calis stood at the edge of the observation gallery overlooking the sparring arena far below—a chasm of black stone, steel, and sweat. The walls bore no ornamentation. The only decoration here was the sound of screaming iron. The training floor was silent for now. That would change. Soon.
She did not wear a robe.
Not here.
Here, she wore a sculpted bodysuit of dark synthweave and alchemized fiber, clinging like a lover's breath to every movement of her spine, her hips, her throat. Her hair was braided back in a crown of authority, and her boots clicked with each slow step as she paced the gallery.
Behind her, two Massan technicians observed quietly from behind dark glass, not daring to speak. The neural observation systems were active. The Arena's biometric feeds were calibrated. The guest wing had been prepared according to the Governor's meticulous standards—spartan, yes, but not austere. There was method in the minimalism.
Everything was ready.
All that remained was her.
Serina's eyes flicked to the side as a soft tone echoed in her earpiece. The shuttle had entered Massan low orbit. The trajectory was unbroken. Identity confirmed. Life signs: stable. Neural load: elevated. The girl was not sleeping anymore.
Good.
Serina placed a hand on the durasteel railing, her gloves creaking slightly under the pressure. Below her, lights flickered to life in the Arena. A low, pulsing hum began to emanate from the training pylons embedded in the floor.
"They always ask the same thing," she murmured to the air, more to herself than the silent observers at her back. Her voice was velvet and venom, laced with disdainful pleasure. "What is the Sith Order? How does it work? Where is my place in it?"
She turned her gaze upward—through layers of stone and gravity and steel, as if she could already see Miasmær stepping off that shuttle, blinking in the lightless hangar, wondering if she'd made a mistake.
"She will not ask it."
A pause.
"She already knows."
The Massans dared not reply. One adjusted a monitor slightly, as though seeking purpose in the shadow of her presence. Another simply watched the Governor from behind a curtain of silence.
Serina finally turned from the railing, every movement like flowing oil—smooth, dark, and impossibly dangerous. She began walking toward the chamber's exit, steps long and deliberate, not in haste. Nothing about Serina Calis rushed. The galaxy rearranged itself around her schedule.
Her voice followed her into the hall.
"Send her directly to me."
And then she was gone, her silhouette vanishing into the crimson haze of the facility's inner sanctum—like a blade slipping back into its sheath.
Outside, the hangar's blast doors began to open. The shuttle descended with quiet finality, engines winding down, its exterior still dusted with the remnants of Exegol.
Inside, Miasmær would be prepared to take her first steps into something far colder than a monastery, far harsher than an arena.
Not hell.
Worse.
Serina Calis.
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