Mistress of the Dark.

"War needs bodies."
Tag -

The air was still, and so was she.
Serina Calis stood at the edge of the landing platform, where the blackened steel met the abyss. Far below, the fractured surface of Polis Massa flickered with thin veins of industry—automated refineries, signal spires, and storm-shielded mining veins buried like arteries beneath cracked stone. Here, atop the high spire of Substation Varnak-8, the wind howled not from weather but from the low atmospheric pressurizers bleeding steam into the void.
She let it howl.
Behind her, the narrow corridor of the platform yawned open into a cavernous hangar, where muted lights pulsed like the heartbeat of some great sleeping beast. Her retinue had been dismissed. Her sensors were silent. Only the distant hum of repulsorlifts—perhaps a ship approaching—echoed like a whisper of the inevitable.
She waited.
Tyrant's Embrace shimmered faintly under the pale glow of the station's perimeter lights, each slow flicker casting her silhouette long across the permacrete. She stood motionless, yet somehow it was the world that moved around her, adjusting to her presence. Gravity obeyed her. Time slowed for her. Even the wind dared only brush the hem of her cloak, as if it feared to cling too tightly.
She did not pace. She did not fidget. The Redeemer was already late—or early, depending on whether you measured arrival by schedule or consequence.
Lucaant Vaneric. Human. Young. Untethered. A blank page drifting in the Force, one with potential—but no master. No past. No allegiances. A question waiting to be answered by someone strong enough to write the answer in blood.
She had read nothing about him, only enough to consider him interesting. And Serina had no patience for the uninteresting.
Her violet-glow optics narrowed by fractional degrees. In the mirrored dark of her faceplate, stars were reflected as pinpricks—tiny and brittle. She looked skyward not in reverence, but in calculation. Somewhere, he would descend from orbit. Somewhere above her now, an unmarked ship carried a man without a name worth fearing.
Not yet.
Behind the mask, she inhaled deeply—not with lungs, but with intent. Her mind reached outward like a coiled serpent sliding across the edge of the Force, tasting the air for signs of weakness, ambition, or promise. The Force responded with echoes. Faint. Raw. Young.
He is coming.
And when he did, she would not greet him with words, not at first. He would be met with silence so total it weighed upon the soul, dragging out every doubt, every crack in the armor of his psyche. Her gaze alone would dissect him. No ceremony. No welcome. Just the expectation that he prove he was worth more than nothing.
Serina Calis, Governor of Polis Massa, did not offer partnerships.
She offered power. And a place at her side—one always balanced on the edge of her shadow.
Let him come. Let him see her. Let him try to speak.
And she would decide whether his voice deserved to echo.