Tyrant Queen of Darkness

"Endless War."
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The shuttle cut through the smog like a scalpel, a black wedge slipping into the open wound of Artus Prime. Slag fires licked the horizon. Ore-haulers lay on their sides like broken beetles. Somewhere below, a drill site had become a battlefield: miners in hardseal, mercenaries in mismatched armor, and hired witches who mistook anger for power. The ground shook with shaped charges and cheap artillery—cheap enough to spend, loud enough to feel important.
She liked the noise.
Virelia stood in the open maws of the ramp as the wind knifed past, cloak snapping, armor humming with a low, predatory purr. Violet light bled under the mask's lenses—an electric promise. In the backwash of the engines her silhouette was a dare: poised, unhurried, utterly at home in ruin.
"They said he was a warlord," she murmured to no one in particular. "Warlord is a generous title for anyone who fights to be seen." A fingertip traced the rail, idly, as if tasting the metal of a stranger's teeth. "But some rumors deserve to be seduced into becoming true."
The ramp kissed cinder. She stepped into heat that clung like want, particulate ash stippling polished pauldrons, turning the white of her breath into smoke. Ahead, an elevated conveyor ran like a spine over the scarred plain to a processing tower shaking under mortar bloom. The warlord's banner—crude, clever—hung from the tower's ribbed flank: a -sigil burned into synthcloth with the same obsession a child might scorch initials into bark. Possessive. Hungry. Announcing a claim to a world that did not love anyone.
She smiled beneath the mask.
The first squad that saw her tried to take cover and failed at it. She did nothing—no gesture, no flare—only let her presence lean. Knees found gravel. Fingers forgot triggers. Fear, properly tuned, does not look like panic. It looks like obedience that believes it was its own idea.
Blasterfire traced ragged constellations through the haze. She let it write its nonsense and walked straight through, trailing silence behind her like a train. When a bolt came purely by chance too near to be polite, she shifted its path with a thought so lazy it was almost affectionate. The shot curved away and cut a warning glyph into a stack of ore crates. A handful of men swore. One laughed from disbelief. Their hearts changed tempo. She filed the tempos away.
Close now—close enough to feel the thing that had drawn her. Not a person yet. A pressure. A weather system of will. It rolled out from the tower's core—compressed, violent, badly leashed—and every time it flared she could hear structure break somewhere inside. Floor plates. Ribs. The bright chime of discipline failing in someone who had only ever commanded by being louder than the room.
"Ah," she said softly, delighted. "You are real."
Her gauntlet brushed a dead man's pauldron as she passed. The corpse twitched, jostled by an explosion across the yard. She didn't look. No need to confess interest to the dead. She had a living thing to catch.
At the base of the tower a brace of militia blocked her path with all the doomed gallantry of a last-ditch plan. One of them—for once, a sensible one—lifted an open hand instead of his rifle and shouted over the war, "Identify yourself!"
Virelia let the request travel through her. Then she tilted her head as if considering mercy. When she replied, it was with the tone reserved for lovers and verdicts.
"Darth Virelia."
It struck them in different ways—some flinched, one laughed again (a brave man, or a stupid one), two lowered their muzzles without understanding why. She stepped between their barrels as if slipping into an offered seat, and they parted because she had already decided that they would.
Inside, the tower smelled of hot metal and wet copper. Stairwells spiraled up like throats. Somewhere above, something screamed with power and then cut off abruptly, as if bitten. She unsealed her mask. The air was terrible. She breathed it anyway. It put a film on her tongue like a promise.
"Warlord," she called, voice lilting, intimate, as if they were already alone. A shell burst somewhere close enough to shake rust into slow, red snowfall. "You have made an entrance. Now make a choice."
She began to climb, unhurried, every step a lover's hand on a bruise.
"I've come to invite you to the Dark Court," Virelia said, eyes bright as a sin. "Or to demonstrate why you should have asked first."
