Shadow Hand

The air over Jutrand hung thick with the weight of its own ambition. From the upper causeways of the Eternalist dominant Sith capital-world, endless spires pierced the sky like the spears of some titanic army raised in eternal defiance. The arcology stacked skyline shimmered beneath dark clouds, a polluted dusk locked in perpetual twilight. Hover traffic screamed through the distance, muffled by the atmospheric interference of a dozen military fields. Here, where stone, steel, and circuitry formed a horizon that had long since devoured any trace of the natural world, the Sith Academy stood like a blackened shrine. Not the oldest of the temples, but one of the most unrelenting. It was here that the summons would come.
No warning preceded his arrival. No announcement over comms, no honor guard deployed from the Academy's fortress walls. The structure itself seemed to feel him first. Lights dimmed, weakest among them shriveling in the wake of shadow. Statues cracked. The hum of hidden repulsorlifts shuddered in their very coils. In a place where darkness ruled its grip tightened with crushing resolve. When the Shadow Hand approached, even silence dared not remain ordinary, it warped into a pressure, a tremor, a vast suffocation of presence. The gateway arch to the central atrium peeled open without a signal, scorched by proximity alone. The scent of cold ash and scorched metal lingered in the air, as if the Dark Lord of the Sith dragged war behind him with every step. He entered alone.
Tall as a monster from a warlord's nightmare, clad in cloth of obsidian etched with slivers of runic crimson, Darth Prazutis cut the visage of a dark king, a supreme monarch as he passed beneath the archways like some risen revenant of an age that never died. The giants boots rang like funeral bells on the stone floor. Those molten orbs of blazing fury stared forward his face clad in a stoic, unreadable expression of absolute certainty. Runes gleamed across the folds like the pulse of something buried far too deep. An amulet of blackened chain and deep red crystal gleamed around his neck, its power remaining dormant yet it pulsed like the beat of a heart. All that remained at the Dark Lord's side was a single large hilted lightsaber radiating fell power like the blaze of the sun yet ever present. No guards moved to intercept him. No instructors dared protest his passage. The threshold had been crossed, and now the Academy was drowned beneath his might.
The Mortarch had come for something. Past rows of frozen statues, halls echoing with the fading clash of training sabers, and walls steeped in the smell of cold blood and scorched ozone, the Dark Lord of the Sith moved with unhurried finality. Every Sith acolyte who passed him turned aside without a word, some falling to their knees in reflexive terror, respect and fealty, others simply freezing in place as though their bodies refused to continue. His presence did not merely oppress, it consumed. A young instructor rushed to intercept him just beyond the eastern hall. He tried to speak. He failed. The Dark Lord didn't even stop walking. Then the central chamber doors parted. Beyond stood the Headmaster of the Sith Academy, a bald-headed man in voluminous robes he had come to see, the one who would get the Dark Lord what he came for. Aerik Lechner. The son of Gerwald. The last ember born of Naedira Darcrath, kindled in blood, fire, and the hunger of things not meant to walk free. There was irony in the air, irony and something else. Memory twisted with destiny. The wolf's pup now stood at the threshold of a far more terrible inheritance.
Darth Prazutis came to a halt. The air grew still. A dark pulse radiated outward from the titan's frame, unspoken yet undeniable, like a command issued from the marrow of reality itself. For a moment, nothing moved. Only the low thrum of power, like a war drum beneath the skin of the world, echoed through the floor. The Headmaster was forced to his knees, shaking in his presence. He did not need to speak to be understood. But when he did? The words were knives. They fell with ironclad certainty that there was no alternative, the finality they carried enforced the only acceptable response was obedience.
"Bring me the wolf." The titan rumbled, voice like stone dragged across a grave. "Bring me Aerik Lechner."