Velok the Younger
When I Was A Young Warthog
[member="Gilamar Skirata"]
They'd shared a drink on some Fringe border world, she honestly forgot which. She'd made her interests clear; he'd made his response just as legible. At her insistence, he'd walked away with a piece of top-secret Fringe tech, that the Mandalorians had since used to great effect.
She'd kept the glass.
In a sense, she was in the insurance business, life insurance. In a sense. Her conquest of Soledad, her experimentation on Kelsier -- her interest in genetic manipulation had been substantial and long-term. And among all those business projects had been a handful of personal experiments.
Not that she'd made this one for personal purposes. What attracted her about Gil Skirata had little to do with his looks; she was no Pygmalion. But just as a half dozen of her were on ice thanks to project SLATE, she liked keeping a contingency plan or two around.
Invocation of spirits was, all things considered, pretty much the only aspect of Sith magic that worked well for her. Invocation from afar, for a non-Force-wielder, was pretty much impossible, but she'd found a subbasement in Cinnagar that fit a small stasis pod -- not far from where he'd fallen.
The body wasn't stock Skirata, though his DNA was the base material, to ease the transition. Witch crafting had been applied, toughening his muscles, adding bulk and height to his frame, sharpening the clone's mind. The brain held only the loosest form of flash-learning, just muscle memory. The personality, the personal memory, ideally all of that would come with the spirit.
The Dark Side flared around her, channeled through her. She whispered an incantation as she shrugged and bent to kiss him awake. Tradition was a witch thing. Every little bit helped.
They'd shared a drink on some Fringe border world, she honestly forgot which. She'd made her interests clear; he'd made his response just as legible. At her insistence, he'd walked away with a piece of top-secret Fringe tech, that the Mandalorians had since used to great effect.
She'd kept the glass.
In a sense, she was in the insurance business, life insurance. In a sense. Her conquest of Soledad, her experimentation on Kelsier -- her interest in genetic manipulation had been substantial and long-term. And among all those business projects had been a handful of personal experiments.
Not that she'd made this one for personal purposes. What attracted her about Gil Skirata had little to do with his looks; she was no Pygmalion. But just as a half dozen of her were on ice thanks to project SLATE, she liked keeping a contingency plan or two around.
Invocation of spirits was, all things considered, pretty much the only aspect of Sith magic that worked well for her. Invocation from afar, for a non-Force-wielder, was pretty much impossible, but she'd found a subbasement in Cinnagar that fit a small stasis pod -- not far from where he'd fallen.
The body wasn't stock Skirata, though his DNA was the base material, to ease the transition. Witch crafting had been applied, toughening his muscles, adding bulk and height to his frame, sharpening the clone's mind. The brain held only the loosest form of flash-learning, just muscle memory. The personality, the personal memory, ideally all of that would come with the spirit.
The Dark Side flared around her, channeled through her. She whispered an incantation as she shrugged and bent to kiss him awake. Tradition was a witch thing. Every little bit helped.