Administrator
Location: Space - Nerby Systems
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Fear and nightmares flooded unchecked into the starving phobis, which meant, that she also witnessed the terror that was engulfing the city. She could feel it all in the back of her mind in the form of an eternal burden…But her resolve could not be broken. Her will was made of iron and no matter the pandemonium Echnos City fell toward—She would remain. She followed the fears of her Sith with a more vested interest than the rest. It behooved her to know, to understand, what plagued them in this most challenging hour. InKasir Dorran she found the lost child.
The little boy who lived on the streets of Dromund Kaas. Abandoned.
The memory would feel changed, just slightly, in her profane intervention. His rage was fuel for the fire, a breath of life, but he would notice a flickering difference in what he recalled. A whispering female figure with long white hair who stood with the boy rather than looking down on him. There were no words. Merely, an invisible hand to the shoulder. Her power—Their power. It would make him stronger, more resilient, if only he managed to channel his fury and accept the truth beyond the pale.
He never had to be powerless again…He never had to be that boy again.
That was what she offered her people.
The images that haunted his mind, bringing back memories of his past, continued flowing like waves; yet amidst the confusion, another vision began to form, one that brought no physical strain, but rather a feeling of unexpected comfort. As he gazed upon his younger self, there was a figure beside him, almost maternal in nature, with a hand resting on his shoulder. All the pain began to ease, bringing forth a sense of clarity. Kasir’s inner turmoil was relieved, even if only for a moment. It made him feel more determined, causing the flames within to grow, driven by the force of some kind of new understanding. Everything clicked in that moment.
The Second Mirror of Echnos.
Pain.
It was an agony that did not belong to her, yet it momentarily braided itself through nerve and marrow as if her own body had been opened with the Qâztharûn. A phantom heat scorched her ribs before it turned into a freezing absence that left the edges of her consciousness raw and lined with ice.
That type of power had a price…And the pale Empress had made the Sangnir, as well as many others, a hinge to a door that only she could open. Now, as he screamed—That door was screaming.
Srina did not rise.
The stone of the throne of Alvaria was winter-cold against her spine. Spreading like wildfire, all around her, black crystal continued its less-than-patient ascent. It moved up pillars, jutting out in transparent perfection, across shattered fresco, and through the roof in a framework of night. Every drop of blood that had been spilled answered her call, and the surface of this world began to groan under her iron will before subsiding.
It was as if tectonic plates were shifting, changing, to make way for something new.
"I hear you," carried His voice upon the wind, caressing her ear with each succulent syllable. "Always."
The response she received from
”But you are not here.”
The statement was issued with a particular quality, something that mimicked both disquiet and the tones of a woman who did not expect to be denied for any reason. Not because she was an Empress or because he was a King…
But because She called. She asked. She—Waited.
They were more than what they had become.
Srina did not look up when another presence approached the throne room, though the picture that she made, surrounded by such sorcery, would do well to warn anyone of her current temperament. She might have appeared expressionless, without emotion, but few would know what churned in the deepest recesses of her being. She could feel the signature of someone halting at the threshold and molten orbs slowly turned toward
They had a physical likeness, but it was the hunger of a scholar in her that she noted first, something that would likely go hand in hand with cruelty. There was no other option because if her fascination with arcane practices such as this were her flavor…It could not exist without agony. The display of deference was correct if she had ever given a damn about etiquette; thus, she let it be. There were no sepulchral present to bark in her ear that all belonged on their knees.
“Rise, child.”, the order came swiftly, not a question, and gold-hewn orbs flickered with some sort of hawkish familiarity that would seem out of place. Jorryn did not know her. Srina, knew Jorryn—Because she existed in the orbit of her daughter. “I have heard interesting things with your name attached.”
There was no indication of whether these things were “good” or “bad” in any context, but Srina did note the odd wording of the greeting. What was it that this Sithling hoped she might be? Echani? Cold? Monstrous? If these were on the list, then perhaps what the young one stated held some modicum of truth. Her eyes flickered…Ever the teacher, even, amid what equivocated to a mass funeral. She lifted her hand, and the dark lattice-work of crystal pulsed once in reply. It was as if they spoke. “Attend...Watch and learn if you have interest in the alchemical—But I will warn you only once….”
“Do not get in my way.”
It wasn’t a threat, nothing so plebian, but a requirement for survival.
Her focus turned away from the first warrior to arrive, and her head angled as if listening to rain through a ruined roof. She could feel Quinn’s urgency cutting through the estate like a silver thread while the shining formations fed her the vow from
The damage that had been done to
The only way she could.
The rapidly blackening crystal responded swiftly. It knew him, having already tasted of his essence, sweeping the ichor down into smooth stone and earth so that it could join the rest of the fallen of Alvaria and propagate.
"Shaari nak drazh…", Srina whispered, and the throne’s crown of midnight glass shivered, power rolling through it as if it were made to hold the Darkside itself. She did not speak to her warriors this time, not her people, but to the fallen Sangnir. Across the estate, a thin black seam opened in the air, and Srina’s teeth snapped together hard when
He was shattered.
The planar tear that she had made let her see how a young man with equally dark hair seemed intent on saving his “brother”…But Srina could feel the extent of the harm
<<Never have to be that little boy, alone, again.>>
Even if he hadn’t thought about that day since, Srina did not lie. She always kept her word…Even if it didn’t look the same except to her eyes. Where the Qâztharûn had ripped the Force away, her lattice lay down a counter-script, runes of containment and separation folding over it, binding, while keeping
It replenished what it took. It gave of the souls it held—Taking his place.
<<…You are not permitted to die where someone else can claim the meaning of it out from under you. You fight, because you must. Take my hand as you did once before... >>
Her tone was the same as Echnos. Precise, cold, and protective to the point of obscene violence.
<<Fight—Drink as your savior bids...and...wake up.>>
Srina would not lose another, not when Malum of House Marr had seemingly been ripped away without rhyme or reason. She did not like it when things were taken from her, especially when there was no explanation to her questions other than silence. She tightened the crystal weave over the worst of Kasir’s wounds, and a single sliver of black glass broke away, thin as a needle, and threaded itself beneath his skin as an anchor.
It would remain nearest to where his heart would lie.
No.
She would not lose another to hubris and folly.
The alabaster Echani raised a hand to her temple to stem the tide of an aching head due to the risk of splitting her focus. Slowly, her digits lowered, and she turned her consideration back toward
“You will need to forgive my distraction.”
Srina had already called for her warriors once, politely, and without criticism or shame. She was not in the habit of repeating herself, and she would not be ignored. The Empress would not be the entertainer that distracted those before her, that lied to them, about how dire things had become. Her presence on Alavria was not a whim, nor some misguided attempt to change what the Sith were.
They needed the war.
They needed to fight.
She was simply what arrived at the end of that battle, wise and weary, to guarantee the slaughter stopped when needed. Srina would ensure that it remained contained so that the entire system didn’t fall into a state of cascading failures due to a delicate ecosystem being blown to hell. Alvaria would be remembered as the planet that once had a boy-king, fated, fabled, and troubled. The future would know this event as the Silence of Alvaria. The moment their King was gone. The moment the reaping began…
The moment it ended.
This world was wounded...The point had been made. No more.
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