Mistress of the Dark.

"Hard choices require hard minds."
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There was no sky on Polis Massa. Only the cold, unyielding silence of voidstone above, and beneath it, layers of lifeless bedrock carved into sanctuaries of calculation and conspiracy. No sunrises touched the corridors of her palace. No sunsets marked the passage of time in the ash-choked atmosphere. Even light here was synthetic, obedient, indifferent. And that suited Serina Calis just fine.
She stood alone on a precipice carved into the edge of the gravity-simulated command spire, one of the few exterior-facing platforms overlooking the barren face of the asteroid. From here, she could see nothing of note—just the same field of rock shards and old facility domes studded with red beacons that blinked in rhythm, like a dying heartbeat. But she wasn't here to see Polis Massa.
She was here to think.
The air was still, save for the subtle pull of the artificial atmosphere bending around her body. She wore no helmet, no mask. If something struck her down out here, unannounced and unseen, then it meant she had grown weak—and she would deserve it. But that was not today. Today, her mind was too sharp, her attention too measured.
Her gloved hand brushed against the edge of the obsidian railing as she stared into the emptiness, her gaze not falling upon the asteroid itself but into the hollows between stars—into the cracks that had opened since the planeshift.
They were calling it The Reappearance in some circles. Others whispered of forbidden maps, occult gravity scars, and the return of systems that had been scrubbed from galactic archives centuries ago. Planets that had never been found. Civilizations that had never existed. Worlds that had, according to every imperial record, every Jedi cartographer and Sith historian, never been at all—and yet now… they were here.
Real.
Reachable.
And hungry to be claimed.
She exhaled, long and slow. The breath misted briefly in the crisp cold. Was it chance? Or inevitability?
Serina did not believe in divine interventions, nor in the simplistic will of the Force. She believed in consequence. In echoes. In plans so vast and precise that they masqueraded as fate to minds too slow to track their trajectories. These worlds—these refugees from other dimensions, timelines, or forgotten eras—they were not gifts. They were opportunities. And like any opportunity, they were vulnerable to those who arrived first.
That was why she had sent the invitation.
It had been phrased delicately, in the way only Serina Calis could manage—elegant, restrained, threaded with implication and subtle obligation. The Sith she had summoned would arrive soon, if they had any sense of what this moment meant. But this meeting was not just about politicking or formalities. This was the first stone in a mosaic of domination she intended to weave across the unknown sectors.
Her laboratories had already begun parsing ancient galactic cartographies, charting gravitational echoes against subspace anomalies, looking for the weak points, the emergence points. A half-dozen expeditions were already underway under false identities. Mercenaries, archaeologists, Sith-aligned research guilds. Nothing pointed back to her—except the results.
Of course, the Sith Empire had taken note. They always did. But they were too slow, too concerned with holding what they already had. Serina had no such sentimentality. She was not here to preserve. She was here to conquer. And conquest did not wait for council meetings and bureaucratic permission. It required movement. Quiet. Swift. Precise.
Her thoughts lingered on the nature of these planets.
Some of them shimmered in the holomaps like mirages, appearing for days before vanishing into static. Others were dense with readings of radiation or psychic interference—suggesting ancient warzones, or worse. One, she remembered with acute clarity, had registered as a perfect void, a gravitational null where light bent the wrong way. The kind of place where something had gone horribly right. And yet, even that had sparked her interest.
She tilted her head. Somewhere beyond this black sky, entire continents awaited names. Cultures awaited annihilation or assimilation. Technologies long divorced from galactic evolution waited to be torn apart, understood, and turned into weapons. The future of the Sith did not lie in reinforcing the brittle territories they already held—it lay in the cultivation of the unclaimed, the unseen, the unbelieved.
A thin smile, cruel and knowing, touched the corner of her lips.
Yes. This was the moment. Not one of drama or ceremony—but of weight. Of gravity. The kind of moment that, in hindsight, entire empires traced back to as their genesis.
Her hands folded behind her back as the wind whispered through her cloak.
Serina Calis would not repeat the mistakes of those who ruled like tyrants but thought like cowards. She would not scream her ambitions across the stars or draw lines on a map and call it power. She would infiltrate the very foundation of galactic myth. She would seed her will in the soil of the forgotten and the impossible. And when the Sith Empire finally turned to face the void—she would already be entrenched within it.
The door hissed behind her.
She did not turn to greet her guest.
Let them come to her. Let them walk across the threshold and feel the weight of this vision.