For a long time, Allyson had no path. She wandered the galaxy, always searching for something or someone to give her purpose. She found herself at odds with the Empire in every corner of space, no matter what form it had taken. She had fought the Butcher King more times than she could count. Taeli Raaf draped her in gifts and honeyed praise—things the Corellian had never received from those she once called allies.
Everything changed for a reason.
She found herself in an apartment filled with knowledge, thick with old lessons and quiet revelations. The walls practically hummed with the promise of transformation. Here, finally, was the guidance she'd craved her entire life. True freedom—
He spoke of it, warned her of its cost. And as she remembered their conversation after Woostri, her hands clenched, skin stretching tight over knuckles. Everything He had warned her about was beginning to unfold. She could already feel the corruption bleeding into her bones, slow and patient.
And still, Allyson didn't resist.
She
relished the change.
The old Jedi lessons had taught her to fight it, but instead, she leaned in. The clarity filled her. For the first time, she felt anchored. She was breaking chains, erasing the leash that had kept her bound to duty and blind loyalty. She didn't want it anymore.
She wanted the freedom to choose who was worthy of her loyalty on her terms.
The pile of tomes around her grew steadily as she buried herself in the material her Master gave her. Still, she made time for missions and training—whether for the Dark Council, for her Master, or quietly, for another.
Now, stretched across one of the larger tomes, her mind was melting from repetition. The texts all bled together, philosophy and Force theory layered on top of one another until they were noise. How did her Master expect her to understand all of this?
Leaning back, Allyson sighed, eyes drifting to the ceiling. Her thoughts looped. How do I move forward? Everything made sense, and yet none of it did. She exhaled, longing filled her chest, raw, aching. She just wanted to be
free.
That's when she felt it—something pulling.
A nudge in the back of her mind. She tried to ignore it. Her eyes were tired, her brain worse. But the pull grew sharper, harder, like something trying to tear her from herself.
When she opened her eyes, a gateway shimmered into being above her. Of course. She'd seen holofilms that started like this. And they
always went sideways.
Rising from her desk, Allyson gave the portal a deadpan look, then turned her back on it.
"Not tonight," she grumbled. After Anoat, she had no patience for whatever theatrics
Taeli Raaf
had planned next.
She poured a glass of whiskey in the kitchen. Persistent and apparently not getting the hint, the portal moved to hover near the fridge, a swirling mass of Force energy demanding attention.
Allyson took a sip. Then, without warning, her hand brushed too close. Just like that, the Force yanked her through. The whiskey glass shattered behind her, hitting the floor in her absence.
She blinked. The world was unfamiliar, yet strangely
right. Towers spiraled into the sky, flickering and reshaping as she walked. The dreamscape bent with every step, molding itself to her subconscious. She knew this feeling. She knew
who had done this. The Force vibrated with His signature.
She moved forward, the dream building itself, until it delivered her to a gathering. Her Master stood there, the Empress beside Him, and a blonde girl Allyson had never seen before. She raised an eyebrow but didn't hesitate. She approached, keeping her usual confidence.
"My Master. Empress." She offered a respectful nod, her voice measured. Then she glanced toward the unknown girl, tilting her head slightly.
"Scary Girl." Another nod, assuming that was appropriate.
She looked around the world, twisting around them, her senses open and searching. A quiet thrill pulsed beneath her skin.
"Is this one of those places your lessons speak of?" she asked, directing the question toward her Master.
"Between realities? A place that is, but also isn't?" Even as she spoke, she could taste it in the air. The freedom she had always imagined.
And for the first time, it didn't feel like a dream.
It felt
possible.