Alvaria:
Darth Carnifex
|
Quinn Varanin
|
Jorryn Fordyce
|
Darth Avida
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Darth Prazutis
[/USER] |
Lysander von Ascania
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Darth Caedes
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Seela Leini
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Kasir Dorran
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Ivalyn Yvarro
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Ansisa
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Eira Dyn
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Veradun Sharr
Location: Alvaria
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Jorryn Fordyce
seemed to want to learn as much as Srina had initially suspected, though the Empress feared there wouldn't be much more to educate her with. Alvaria was screaming so loudly that it was pressing on her mind, begging her not to deny the inevitable. She was every bit the monster that the Kainite claimed to be, worse, when the situation called for it—But that was the difference.
When the situation called for it. When, required.
This was like shooting fish in a barrel.
The throne room had gone deathly still whilst the Empress sat with her eyes closed and a pulse of power ran through the crystal network she had created, repeatedly, relaying information back to her. She kept Lady Fordyce present not only for her instruction but because it wouldn't be safe outside these walls. The people would eventually attempt to mobilize, and already outside influences were making themselves known…. None would ask which side of the fight they stood on. Not now.
She felt a burst of air fill her chest when the Second Mirror opened his eyes and
Kasir Dorran
was with them once again, awake, and alert enough to respond. Srina heard the call of "Mother" and the words that followed, which momentarily caused her fierce expression to soften. So—
He had not forgotten.
<<Leave this place…>>
The command was simple and filled with more than words. It held the pressure of agony, the kind that was brought to the surface by way of knowing a population had been decimated for nothing.
Quinn Varanin
and
Trayze Tesar
made it to the throne room and were subsequently directed to her personal ship that was waiting at the end of the landing pad. Whether they chose to listen or not—Srina gave herself the moment to witness the terror of babes, before having them secured, fulfilling the only role for them she could in the moment.
Safety.
"When we are done, Lady Fordyce…You will ensure the younglings have what they require."
Nothing would get through her and survive.
If only the mother had listened.
Srina saw everything.
She watched Ansisa rise like a distant ember amid the ruin and witnessed as gods metaphorically crushed her between their hands, mistaking destruction for order. The glass reflections in the crystals had shown her every angle, while the phylactery around her neck echoed with the taste of a baseless kill from which no joy was derived. For one exquisite, awful moment, the Empress of the Sith saw through a thousand lenses what it meant for a
mother to die alone in the dark.
The violent echo reached her before they did.
Not dead…Yet. Not yet. But her life hung like a thread just waiting to be pulled by the smallest hands.
The doors finally groaned open, hissing, as crystal that had jammed the gears shattered. Their delay had left her with too much time to think. Too much time to stew. A breath of cold pressure stirred the broken black shards around her whilst the Empress remained still as stone. The two Lords of the Kainite entered like a storm coming home, wearing the stench of copper, and bitter old credits. Their shadows fell across the marble floor and tangled with the lattice-work of her creation.
The crystals hummed with recognition. Resonating.
Sensing their nearness.
Her head bowed, white hair cascading over her face, until a tremor started. It began not in the ground but somewhere deep in her chest. It was a note, too low to hear, a vibration that only the crystal understood. Then came the voice beneath her voice, the one buried, hidden beneath the flawless veneer of calm and untouchable strength.
It was a scream.
Slow at first. Subsonic, so deep that it rattled even the long dead from beneath Alvaria's crust. Some of them might have even pressed out of their graves. The black glass made of the blood of the slain also responded, thousands of jagged spires bending, singing,
answering her anguish. The sound climbed from the pit of her soul to the vaulted ceiling until it became unbearable. The air itself began to distort, and the walls wept black dust…Starting to crumble.
And then…
Silence.
Srina lifted her head.
Her eyes, once burnished gold, had gone dark at the edges. Amber bled into onyx…So black that corruption seemed to be infecting her at an amplified rate. Her voice, when it came, was soft and full of air—Too soft for what it contained.
"You…", she trailed off, speaking to
Darth Prazutis
first, because his was the first visage she beheld on the other side of the door. Everything within this room…This was her domain.
"You have made this a habit…Of destroying things that belong to me. He was mine—She was mine."
There was no inflection of accusation, no plea, just fatigue that was too vast for words. She slowly pushed herself to her feet, and the crystal that had wrapped around her wrists snapped and shattered even though it was quite durable. Srina descended the throne's steps one by one, slow, as if wading through one memory or another. The hem of her black traveling gown brushed the shards, and wherever it passed, they brightened, absorbing her fury.
"Always the same…"
"Always another corpse, another mother, another lesson written in blood for me to translate into something useful."
Because slaughter itself carried no message. Not, when the intended ears were no longer around to hear it. Her gaze passed over the Mortarch first, sharp enough to wound, but that wasn't anything new. The white-haired woman was known for her hawkish expressions that could kill a man faster than any blade. Eventually…She found his nephew behind him. The Butcher King. The Eternal Father.
The man whose voice had reached through the phylactery, only moments before, whispering of forgiveness. She crossed the distance between them, and for a moment, her hands raised, and both men might feel a slightly uncomfortable pressure at their throats.
"I could wring your necks…"
"I should."
But it relented almost as quickly as it happened, so fast, that it might have been the effect of uncomfortable armor. Instead, she met
Darth Carnifex
in silence until the last step brought her face-to-face with his chest. Not for the first time, she exhaled. Slowly. The scream had left her hollow. Her head inclined, and a crown of white hair brushed against black armor as she let it rest against him. Lightly at first…But the weight increased. It was not a gesture of affection, but the forgiveness he had asked for in his absence. Her voice was achingly quiet…But they wouldn't have any trouble hearing.
"You will tell me this was necessary. That…This is what must be done. That he was weak, that she was weak, that a slight must be avenged…That weakness must be culled."
She breathed in, ignoring the weapons that
Darth Carnifex
had hidden on his person that could cut into her just as easily as the mother of Malum's children. The crystals behind her hissed as if offended by the lie that had yet to be spoken…
"And I will listen…", she uttered, because in part, he was correct. Weakness was a cancer that the Sith Order could not afford…But who determined that? They were wounded, without clandestine information, and she would have to rely on her own spies until the Tsis'Kaar could be replaced. The Kainite had their own.
"Because that is what I do. I listen, I remember, and I put the blood on my hands to keep Civil War from ripping through us."
Her fingers brushed against his, lightly, at first, before they threaded through and tightened in warning. The Force shivered, and through it came the promise of what would come after.
"But later…"
"Later…I will remind you what it means to hurt me."
Srina stepped back, the mask of composure falling on her face like rain, her tone returning to calm precision. Her fingers remained with those of the Butcher King, and the crystals around her seemed to settle. Obedient, if nothing else. She could not mourn. She could not stop, breathe, or lament the travesty. She could only…
Build. Only the work, mattered.
Only the work.
"You will allow Commonwealth Ships entry to handle humanitarian requirements, and your march against House Marr ends tonight. You have repaid any indiscretion tenfold. While you sew chaos, you forget that I have a job to do. Instead of dealing with the Tsis'Kaar...I have to be here."
She sighed. Weary. So very…very tired.
But the fight never ended.
"I will notify the assembly that Alvaria requires a new governor."