Star Wars Roleplay: Chaos

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Private Curiosity & The Heart of Darkness (Vaelith)

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Dathomir, Near Ruins of Angrabesh

The settlement was old, but surprisingly well-preserved in the seemingly endless swamps of Dathomir. It had been established at some point far in the murky past, prefabricated buildings sited with care and defended by high razor wire fences and thick, spike-studded pillars; intended to be deterrent to even the rancors which called the planet home. Perhaps it would have succeeded, pain and high voltage electric shocks doing much to dissuade wild beasts.

But Dathomir was not home to only wild beasts.

There was a certain intention to the destruction. The walls had been breached in several places, notably on opposite sides of the compound; the early breaches tore through fencing and damaged fortifications along the front of the encampment while a far more focused assault tore into the back, destroying the generators. Without power, even the mighty laser cannons could do nothing to oppose a Rancor, and men on foot even less so. The buildings had sustained token damage, windows broken and doors torn free, walls dented and cracked, but no concerted effort had been made to raze them; it wasn't needed, once the occupants were dead. The swamp itself would take care of the rest.

Vendryn had no interest in following too closely in their footsteps, and truthfully their fate was less a concern and more of a curiosity. The destruction was far from complete, especially internally; what had been the settlement's cantina still had three and a half intact walls, the area around the front door marred with claw-marks the side of his forearm. Even landing on the long-disused pad hadn't been much of an inconvenience, as an elevated expanse of duracrete was an unappetizing place for most plants and animals, leaving it smeared with dirt but still visible from above.

He walked slowly into the ruined cantina, inspecting his surroundings as he went. For a meeting place, he thought to himself, this will do. The 'settlement' was hardly worth the name, just a handful of ruined buildings, but it was enough of a landmark for his purposes. Dathomir was an awfully strange place to meet someone... Unless your intention was to meet one of the natives.

It was not often the Witches of Dathomir ever left their homeworld, which left him little recourse to sate his curiosity.

Curiosity he finally might get to satisfy, assuming this Witch was amenable to his terms. He felt they had been generous indeed; an old relic long-since stolen from Dathomir, a no longer functioning saber-whip said to have once been wielded by a powerful Witch in service of some criminal consortium. It had rotted in one vault or another since time immemorial before ending up... In his hands.

"I request a meeting," the message had read, "I would like to speak with a Witch of Dathomir with questions regarding the nature of the Force and their Magick, in the interest of furthering mutual understanding." Following had been his offer of the relic weapon, as well as the details of his requested meeting place. He could not have known who would be sent to meet him, and if he had, perhaps he might have had... Reservations. It was too late for that, however.

He pulled an old dusty bottle out from beneath the counter, inspecting the label to make sure it met his standards, and then briskly cleaned a pair of glasses, pouring each half-full.

And then he waited.

Vaelith Rhaen Vaelith Rhaen
 
Vaelith entered the ruined cantina without hurry, though her attention did not settle on Vendryn immediately because the specific nature of the damage drew her eye first. She looked upon the breached fencing and the collapsed supports, noting the precise destruction left behind where the generators had once stood as if reading a map of the assault.

There was a clear sense of structure within the violence, suggesting a mind had governed the chaos.

Her pale gaze lingered along the ruined walls as she stepped across the threshold, studying the settlement not as a survivor might, but as one examining the remnants of a completed ritual where every broken beam served a purpose. The rancors had not simply rampaged through the perimeter, but had been directed and guided toward specific weaknesses, loosed with a deliberate purpose that far outweighed mere animal instinct.

The swamp clung to the outside world in thick curtains of mist and wet heat, yet Vaelith carried none of that oppressive dampness with her as she moved. Her robes shifted softly with each measured step, composed of layered dark fabric threaded with muted bone ornamentation and subtle sigils worked into the fabric itself. Nothing about her appearance sought to project intimidation, primarily because nothing needed to when her presence alone occupied the room so completely.

By the time her gaze finally settled fully upon Vendryn, she had already taken the measure of the room by cataloging the exits, the sightlines, and the exact distance between his hands and the objects surrounding him. Silence settled naturally between them for several seconds, neither awkward nor hostile, but rather deliberate, in the way only careful people knew how to weaponize stillness.

"You chose a ruin carefully, as there is enough destruction here to discourage interruption without being so absolute that it erases the history of what happened."

Her eyes drifted briefly toward the claw marks carved beside the entrance before returning to him with an analytical weight.

"That suggests either a deep-seated respect for history or a clinical curiosity about the application of violence."

The bottle on the counter received only a passing glance, whereas the relic resting beside it commanded her full attention.

Vaelith slowed as her focus settled fully upon the dormant saber-whip, noting that even while stripped of power and long abandoned by time, it carried the unmistakable traces of Dathomiri craftsmanship through its balance and design. Most outsiders would have seen nothing more than an old, broken weapon, yet she saw a tangible piece of history that had been carried across the stars by unfamiliar hands.

She considered the fact that someone had stolen it from Dathomir long ago, and yet someone else had seen fit to preserve it until this very moment. Now that it had finally returned to its soil, the implications of its journey interested her far more than the formal invitation itself.

She approached the counter and rested pale fingers lightly against the hilt without immediately lifting it from the surface. Her expression remained entirely composed, though a quieter sort of focus settled behind her eyes as she studied the worn details and the aging engravings worked into the metal.

"You understand very little about the Nightsisters, which is a fact that remains quite obvious regardless of your intentions."

There was no mockery in the statement, only the calm certainty of someone stating a fundamental truth of the universe.

"Most outsiders who seek us arrive wanting immediate power, asking for weapons, rituals, or secrets they believe will elevate them above their peers. Very few come seeking genuine understanding, and fewer still bother returning anything of value once it has left the confines of this world."

Her fingertips shifted slightly against the hilt before she finally looked back toward him fully, her gaze remaining steady and precise in a way that seemed to weigh his underlying intention more heavily than his spoken words.

"That makes you either an unusually respectful individual or simply a man who is much more patient in his personal ambitions."

The faintest trace of amusement touched her expression then, though it was subtle enough that it disappeared almost as quickly as it had formed.

"In my experience, wisdom and greed often learn to disguise themselves as one another until the moment they are truly tested."

Outside, something large moved through the swamp water with a distant splash before the heavy silence of the Dathomiri night reclaimed the ruins once more. Vaelith paid the sound no attention because her focus remained entirely on Vendryn, remaining careful and unwavering in a way that suggested she was studying the very structure beneath his motives.

"You requested understanding of our magick, but you must realize that understanding is not at all the same thing as a simple explanation. The Force is not a mechanism to be dismantled simply because someone possesses enough curiosity to pry at its structure, and most who attempt that clinical approach eventually mistake their gathered knowledge for true mastery."

Only then did she finally lift the saber-whip carefully into her hands with movements that remained controlled and deliberate. She handled it neither with reverence nor with casual disregard, but with the familiarity of a scholar who recognizes a fragile and significant piece of history.

"This belonged to one of our own long before either of us were born, and you could have easily sold it, hidden it away, or traded it to someone eager to display a power they never earned. Instead, you chose to return it to Dathomir and came to this place alone to face whatever might meet you."

Her thumb brushed lightly across one of the faded engravings near the hilt before her gaze rose to meet his once more, demanding an answer.

"Why?"

Vendryn Del'therak Vendryn Del'therak
 
He smiled brightly at her words, as if her appraisal were a most heartfelt compliment. He let her speak, waiting until silence had once more asserted itself, drawing the quiet around himself as if a stole over his robes. He drew another slow breath, letting it out in a contemplative hum.

"Those who doubt that your Sisters can command the Rancors have not seen places such as this... Or if they did, did not understand them. This destruction was not the actions of mad beasts or a chance rampage, but quite specific and well-orchestrated. Dathomir is a place most unwelcoming to the unprepared." Another soft hum as he mulled over his words.

"In truth, I have chosen to disregard much of what I have learned of your kind. There is as much myth and superstition as there is misinformation, and far less truth than either." He gestured to the former weapon she held with one of his lower arms, "An item's value often depends who holds it and who desires it. Money cannot buy what I seek, but it can acquire for me something that opens the door; that item is far more valuable to me than the credits which purchased it. Information asymmetry is the key to good bargaining, is it not?" A small, indulgent smile crossed his lips.

"I have a theory about the Force. A belief. But given the nature of the beast, it is difficult to acquire information free of implicit bias... Requiring a far larger body of evidence to sift from it the grains of truth. Are not all things such?" His smile broadened for a moment as his words touched upon his passion.

"I am Vendryn Del'therak, and I stand before you here as myself, representing no other in these negotiations." He stood slowly, and offered her a moderate bow, his eyes never leaving her. "If your answers satisfy me, you may take the relic and depart. If they do not, you may try to take it and go, but I will oppose you. I leave it in your hands to determine how cooperative you would prefer to be." He gestured around. "After all, we are on your home grounds, are we not? I have no desire to initiate hostilities, but neither will I accept half-truths and misinformation in exchange for such an offering." His voice was still and cold, every word enunciated clearly as if he were concerned that they might be misunderstood otherwise. The smile never left his features, though its warmth withdrew from his gaze.

He resumed his seat after a moment, and gestured to the glasses. "And until time as such things become necessary, I would much prefer this be amicable. These were men of good taste in liquor, if not of good sense in profession; it seems they did not last long enough to do away with much of their supply." The amber liquid swam with the reflected darkness beyond the walls.

He found it easier not to answer her observations, allowing her instead to be her own judge of his intentions.

Vaelith Rhaen Vaelith Rhaen
 
Vaelith listened without interruption, her attention fixed steadily upon Vendryn as he spoke. She didn't pace the room or circle him like the theatrical predators of offworld stories; instead, she remained perfectly still beside the counter. One hand rested lightly against the dormant saber-whip while the other hung relaxed at her side, her stillness so absolute it seemed to draw the very shadows of the room toward her. Only her eyes moved, subtle shifts that betrayed a mind busy with calculation rather than suspicion.

When he spoke of the rancors, her gaze drifted briefly toward the ruins, toward the breached fencing and the precise destruction of the generators. He had seen the pattern beneath the violence, a realization that separated him from the typical outsiders who stumbled onto Dathomir believing survival and understanding were synonymous. They were not, and his recognition of that fact was the first genuinely intelligent thing he had said.

However, as he introduced the concept of bargaining, a faint tension sharpened her posture. She watched him with a newfound, deliberate awareness; he viewed knowledge as a transaction, structured, measured, and negotiated. It was an interesting approach, if a dangerous one.

She finally lifted one of the glasses, turning it between slender fingers to watch the amber liquid catch the dim, filtered light.

"You speak about truth as though it exists untouched beneath enough layers of distortion," she said, her voice calm and devoid of challenge. "It does not. Every culture shapes the Force through the prism of its own language, fears, and rituals. Jedi philosophy, Sith doctrine, even our own magick, none are free from interpretation. They are merely structures built around experiences too vast to hold cleanly."

She let the silence breathe, not to intimidate, but to allow the weight of the thought to settle.

"You search for an objective center, but the Force is not a corpse to be dissected into neat components. The moment someone believes they have isolated absolute truth, they stop observing and begin worshipping their own conclusions instead."

After taking a small, measured drink, she set the glass back on the counter. His polite threat lingered in the air alongside the scent of swamp rot, but Vaelith didn't react immediately. When she finally did speak, her voice remained smooth, though a crystalline coldness settled beneath the surface.

"You misunderstand something important, Vendryn Del'therak. I did not come here because I lacked the power to take that relic by force. I came because curiosity brought me here as surely as it brought you."

She straightened slightly, her fingers slipping from the weapon.

"You observe patterns and distrust simplified doctrine, which makes you uncommon. But you also attempt to negotiate understanding as though truth can be extracted through leverage. That is the habit of merchants and Sith alike, and knowledge gained under coercion rarely remains truthful for long. People simply begin shaping answers around survival."

For the first time, she moved away from the counter and approached the table. Her motion was unhurried and entirely without fear.

"If I wished to mislead you, I could simply tell you what you already suspect and let your own ambitions complete the deception for me. Fortunately, I find honest conversation far more interesting."

She settled into the seat across from him, her pale eyes holding his with a thoughtful, unwavering intensity.

"So tell me your theory."

Vendryn Del'therak Vendryn Del'therak
 
He held up all four hands defensively. "I do not doubt you could simply take the relic from me if you so wished. I did not mean to imply otherwise. Instead, it is simply a point of calculus. If you attempt to depart without giving fair value, I will oppose you. Is it not also a measure of you, to see what you consider to be enough? I let no knowledge go to waste, no opportunity." His smile widened, though it didn't touch any of his eyes.

"The Force is alive." He laughed. "A simple conclusion, I am sure, and not an uncommon one. What is less common is the questions that then follow. For a creature to be alive, it must want. It must desire. What does the Force want?" It was clear he had his own answer to that question, but he stilled his tongue for a moment, letting the thought linger. "Why does it give us this power? Nothing in the universe comes without cost. Even the simplest building blocks of the galaxy must pay a price to change their nature, combining or fragmenting, energy being consumed or entombed within them... In all other things, there is balance. A closed system. So what possible motive could the Force have for granting us these powers? What possible price could it extract to make the transaction balanced?"

"Just as with another sentient being, if you cannot simply ask for their motivations, you must instead assess their words, their actions, the choices they take or avoid, how they treat others above or below their station. I do not need to learn ephemeral truth, for if the Force is like us, its whims may change. But that, too, would be knowledge worth having. When someone has... Utter power over your life,"
his gaze centered on her own, an odd intensity to his words, "Absolute control over your fate... Would you not wish to know what it is they have planned for you? Especially when showered with gifts... Such as these." He lifted his hands slowly, thin tendrils of the Force twining around his fingers, moving around them in gentle currents, before letting the power fade.

"Doesn't that curiosity burn within you?"

Vaelith Rhaen Vaelith Rhaen
 
Vaelith remained still as Vendryn spoke, her attention sharpening as he moved deeper into his theory. While most approached the Force through the rigid worship of doctrine, Jedi wrapping it in morality and Sith in dominance, Vendryn treated it like an equation that refused to balance. That alone made him unusual enough to warrant her focus.

Her gaze lingered on the currents of energy twisting around his fingers. She studied the shape and texture of his power rather than the display itself, noting a deliberate restraint that lacked the reckless hunger common in those enamored with their own abilities. When the light faded, a heavy, contemplative silence settled between them.

Vaelith leaned back, her hand resting near her dormant saber-whip as her initial coldness gave way to genuine consideration.

"Yes," she said at last, her voice nearly blending with the mist. "Of course it burns. Anyone who claims otherwise is either lying or so surrendered to doctrine that they no longer recognize their own curiosity."

She turned her glass slowly, connecting his mathematical approach to her own observations.

"You are correct that the Force is no passive resource. It responds. It pressures. Dathomir understands this better than most; the planet pushes back against imbalance, forcing those who remain to either adapt or be consumed. But I think your mistake lies in assuming intent must resemble sentient desire."

A faint furrow touched her brow.

"You ask what the Force wants, as though wanting requires a personality. Hunger exists without morality. Gravity pulls without ambition. The Force may be alive without being a mind."

As she spoke, her intellectual engagement became visible, stripped of its earlier caution.

"Still, your question of cost is worthwhile. Power always extracts a price. The Nightsisters understand that every ritual changes the caster as much as the target. The Jedi pretend erosion doesn't exist, while the Sith mistake corruption for freedom. Both are eventually blinded by their own refusal to see the transaction."

She studied him then, reevaluating the man across from her.

"But you aren't truly searching for the Force's motives, are you?" she observed, her voice dropping an octave. "You speak like someone who has lived beneath something vast enough to decide your fate without explanation. People rarely become this obsessed with agency unless they have felt utterly powerless before a force they could not control."

She let that realization settle before offering a final, rare trace of amusement.

"So yes, I share your curiosity. Not because I seek a grand plan, but because understanding pressure reveals the structure beneath. It shows where things bend and where they break. If the Force possesses intention, I would rather study its mechanics than kneel before it blindly."

Vendryn Del'therak Vendryn Del'therak
 
Her responses were everything he had hoped. Yes! Precisely yes! "You say that the rituals change the caster as much as the target. If not the erosion of emotion, or the corruption of the mind, then what is the price that you pay?"

He let the question linger for a moment, before he added, in a carefully casual manner, as if the words had simply slipped from his grasp, "There is an erosion it enacts upon the user. Does it feed upon our emotions? Does it perhaps redouble the offering? The Jedi give from a cold heart and still mind, and in turn their hearts are turned to stone and their minds become stagnant. As the Sith feed it with passion, does it give them back a greater lust, a greater fury? Lead them to pursue higher heights of emotion, balancing out the deeper stillness of the Jedi? Is it intentional, or reactive? Does the Force see this as a price to be paid, or does it see this as a gift returned unto us? Hunger feeds, and therefore to the prey it is malevolent. Is the Force feeding upon us?"

He spread his hands out to his sides. "And everywhere I look, I find... Nothing! As if it is an answer that has either never been pursued, or one that is suppressed, or else one that is too painful to share. But which is it? An absence of evidence is not evidence of absence."

There was a ferocious intensity to his words, his eyes alight with inner flame.

"Does it hunger blindly? If so, what of these tales, of the Force desiring to bring balance? Acting to counter egregious imbalance. Too often in history has it been true. Light rises until it snuffs out the dark, then the shadows deepen until they swallow the light. Over and over again. Is it balance? Or is it the cycle?" He spoke as if delivering profundity, as if these words were the very axle upon which his beliefs spun. "Is it the growth it desires, or is it the death? The rise to power, or the fall?"

He spread his hands across the tabletop before him as if grounding himself, and swiped up his glass, taking another long, measured sip as if trying to drown the words bubbling up from beneath, allowing a long breath to hiss between his teeth. His eyes glittered with heat; Madness? Obsession? Perhaps the delving of these secrets had exacted their own price.

Vaelith Rhaen Vaelith Rhaen
 
Vaelith did not interrupt him as the intensity in his voice sharpened and spread through the ruined cantina like gathering heat before a storm. Instead, she watched him with the same deliberate attention she had maintained since arriving, though what she saw now had shifted. Earlier, she had observed curiosity and calculation, but this ran deeper than mere intellectual fascination. There was an obsession buried beneath his questions, not the mindless kind born from delusion, but the far more dangerous variety that emerged when someone spent too long staring into questions large enough to consume the person asking them.

The swamp beyond the broken walls seemed distant now, reduced to muted groans of water and unseen movement beneath the weight of the conversation unfolding between them. Vendryn's words filled the silence completely, carried by the kind of fervor that only came from thoughts revisited so many times they had worn grooves into the mind itself.

Vaelith remained still while he spoke, her pale gaze lingering on the tension in his posture and the restless energy behind his eyes. She noticed the way he spread his hands against the table as though grounding himself physically against the momentum of his own thoughts, and when he finally paused long enough to drink, she allowed the silence afterward to settle naturally instead of rushing to answer.

When she finally spoke, her voice remained calm and controlled, though quieter now, shaped carefully against the force of his intensity rather than opposing it directly.

"You are searching for intention within consequence," she said. "That is dangerous, not because the questions themselves are wrong, but because the mind eventually begins arranging chaos into design simply to escape uncertainty. Obsession can create patterns where none truly exist."

Her fingers rested lightly against the rim of her glass as she studied him steadily. "But you are also not entirely wrong." The admission came without reluctance.

"The Force changes those who touch it deeply enough. That much is undeniable. I have seen Jedi become so detached from fear, grief, and desire that eventually they no longer understood the people they claimed to protect. I have seen Sith consumed so completely by hunger that they ceased pursuing power for purpose and instead pursued only the sensation of wanting more."

She tilted her head slightly, thoughtful rather than argumentative, as she considered the shape of his theory.

"Whether that transformation is payment, corruption, resonance, or merely psychological reinforcement is far more difficult to answer. Power shapes behavior. Repeated behavior reshapes thought, and thought reshapes identity over time. Most traditions mistake the result for revelation."

Her gaze never left his.

"A Jedi trains themselves to suppress emotional turbulence in pursuit of clarity while using the Force. Over the years, that discipline calcifies into instinct until stillness becomes emotional distance. A Sith embraces passion to strengthen their connection, and eventually passion stops being a tool and becomes dependency."

A faint pause followed before she continued.

"But that does not necessarily mean the Force demanded those outcomes any more than a blade demands blood simply because prolonged violence changes the hand that wields it."

Still, something in his words lingered with her. That much showed in the slight narrowing of her gaze and the thoughtful silence that settled briefly between them before she continued.

"And yet there are patterns in history that are difficult to ignore. Civilizations rise around Force traditions and collapse beneath them. Balance is pursued, imbalance follows, correction arrives through violence, and afterward the survivors call the result destiny because chaos is far more difficult to endure than purpose."

The mist beyond the shattered walls curled lazily through the ruins while Vaelith leaned back slightly within her chair, her attention never wavering from him.

"You ask whether the Force desires the cycle itself. Whether it seeks growth through conflict, balance through suffering, or endless oscillation between extremes of light and dark."

This time, the silence stretched longer, not empty, but contemplative.

"I do not know," she admitted at last, the honesty in the statement absolute and unguarded. "And anyone who claims certainty about that question should frighten you."

Her expression shifted then, something quieter passing briefly across her features as another possibility surfaced beneath the structure of his theory.

"But I think there is another possibility you are not considering. You speak as though the Force must either love us, feed upon us, manipulate us, or guide us toward some greater design. You assume intent because the effects are profound enough to resemble it."

She folded her hands loosely together atop the table.

"What if the Force does not hunger at all? What if sentient beings are simply incapable of interacting with that much power without reshaping themselves around it? Gravity bends space simply through existence. Stars warp everything caught in their pull without hatred or compassion. Perhaps the Force alters identity the same way."

For the first time since he began speaking, a faint sadness touched her expression, subtle enough that it nearly vanished beneath her composure before it could fully settle there.

"You are searching for motive because motive can be understood, negotiated with, resisted, or escaped. But the truth may be far crueler than intention." Her fingers slipped from the glass entirely as she held his gaze. "It may simply not care about us at all."

Vendryn Del'therak Vendryn Del'therak
 
Her words stilled him. It was as if hearing a reflection of his thoughts, of the arguments he'd posed to himself on endless, far too late nights. It may simply not care about us at all.

The stillness overcame him, dousing him like water from a bucket, eyes half-lidded in thought. "Gravity, yes," he murmured after a moment, half a whisper from his lips. "That is an interesting thesis. Like gravity, bending us around it without noticing nor caring for our presence. Perhaps so." After several moments, his eyes open, the stillness fading away.

"But do you believe that? That the Force is simply our Pulsar, its tendrils reaching endlessly outward to encompass everything, careless and unheeding of its own effects?" He shook his head. "I cannot believe that. It is possible, I will grant you this... But I cannot believe it to be so. There is too much... Intention. Too much consistency. It cannot be blind chance, it cannot." He took a moment to regather himself, stilling his breath. "Besides which, if I am wrong, I am wrong, and time will bear that out. To assume there is no such intention behind it would be to accept defeat before facing the enemy, don't you think?"

His laugh carried a hint of that madness that had been in his eyes. The far more dangerous variety that emerged when someone spent too long staring into questions large enough to consume the person asking them. He drew in another deep breath. "Is it not the desire of all living things to leave their mark upon the Galaxy? In time I hope that this will be mine." He paused, his gaze - all four eyes - narrowing onto her simultaneously. "What is your legacy, Great Witch of Dathomir?" He canted his head curiously, his gaze unsettlingly focused. "What mark will you leave upon it?"

Vaelith Rhaen Vaelith Rhaen
 
Vaelith listened quietly as Vendryn spoke, her attention never wavering from him even as the intensity behind his words shifted from clinical observation into something almost vulnerable. Beneath his composed exterior, she recognized a fevered edge driven by the relentless pursuit of answers, sensing that he desperately wanted the Force to possess intention because intention could be confronted, understood, and even opposed, whereas total meaninglessness offered no such comfort.

That realization settled within her with unexpected clarity, and as he spoke of gravity and pulsars, her expression softened into recognition. She realized that he was not blindly worshipping his own theories like so many seekers eventually did; instead, he questioned himself almost as fiercely as he questioned the Force, a quality that separated him from the countless fanatics who disappeared into obsession without ever noticing the moment their curiosity became devotion.

Still, his refusal to accept indifference drew a flicker of contemplation into her pale gaze as she finally spoke.

"No," she admitted calmly, her fingers resting loosely against the side of her untouched glass while the swamp beyond the ruined cantina groaned softly beneath the weight of black water. "I do not fully believe it, and while I think possibilities should never be ignored simply because they are unpleasant, you are correct that certain moments in history feel far too deliberate. Corrections often arrive with strange precision, and certain individuals seem to rise at the exact moment of a civilization's collapse as though they were drawn upward by pressures much larger than themselves."

She tilted her head slightly, her tone remaining thoughtful rather than argumentative as she continued.

"Whether that is true intention, simple convergence, or merely the tendency of sentient beings to impose a narrative upon chaos is something I cannot say with certainty, and perhaps no one truly can."

The faint laugh that escaped him did not go unnoticed, and as she heard the subtle instability buried beneath the sound, she found herself wondering what his eventual answers might cost him by the time he reached them. However, it was his question regarding legacy that caused a genuine stillness to settle across her expression, prompting her to look away toward the claw-marked stone and the fractured shadows dancing beneath the dim light.

When she finally looked back toward him, her expression was composed yet notably quieter than before.

"I have yet to figure out what my legacy is going to be," she said with an honesty that held no trace of shame or embarrassment. "The Nightsisters speak often about the preservation of knowledge and bloodlines, believing that legacy is something inherited automatically through power or lineage, but I have never found that answer particularly satisfying. Most people think legacy requires leaving behind something that cannot be erased, influence, power, or a name remembered after death, but history eventually forgets almost everyone, as even the greatest empires are swallowed by mud and powerful Force traditions fracture into myth."

There was no bitterness in her tone, only a detached perspective as she leaned back in her chair, the low light catching the silvered strands within her crimson hair.

"So perhaps legacy is not about permanence at all, but rather the simple act of change and leaving something altered by your existence, whether it is a person, an idea, or a question that continues to echo long after you are gone. You speak as though your legacy will come from uncovering a hidden truth about the Force, but you should remember that dangerous questions tend to leave marks upon the galaxy regardless of whether they are ever actually answered."

Vendryn Del'therak Vendryn Del'therak
 
He shook himself slightly, as if physically breaking the track his thoughts had settled into. He drew in a deep breath, looking at her contemplatively as she spoke. "My legacy is in the seeking. The desire to understand. I will not... Relent... Until I have found some kind of truth. Perhaps it will consume me. Even so." He held his lower hands out to his sides as if shrugging. "Nothing is immune to the passage of time... Everything will be erased in due time, buried beneath the relentless cycle of empires and republics. I cannot change that. But perhaps... If I can find something true, I can create something lasting... Not eternal, no, but lasting. Even if it is merely an inscription upon my gravestone."

He gave her a small smile. "It's a private joke of mine. It is why I chose my... Name. Darth Cenotas." His hands expanded out to his sides in emphasis, and he gave a self-deprecating laugh. "It is often that our graves become our memories, is it not? Some build for themselves tombs the size of planets, or else make tombs of them in their desperation to leave a mark... But even such utter destruction cannot last. Alderaan, Taris; even Korriban has risen from destruction over and over again. Even this is not permanent."

He gave her a long, thoughtful look after he spoke, the smile remaining on his lips. "You are not much like your fellows, either, I would venture to guess." There was no doubt in his tone; he believed it to be true. "Many of your Sisters would reject even the most basic of contact, no matter the prize. Their knowledge is to be guarded jealously, possessed and secreted away. Their hatred, or fear, are stronger than their curiosity."

He dipped his head forward, voice dropping as if confiding in her. "And yet... Here you are."

"Why might that be, Witch of Dathomir?"


Vaelith Rhaen Vaelith Rhaen
 
Vaelith listened in silence while Vendryn spoke of legacy, graves, and names chosen with the expectation of eventual ruin. The strange intensity within him had not faded, but it had narrowed into something more focused now, less like wildfire and more like a blade held too long against a whetstone. There was danger in that kind of mind, not because it lacked discipline, but because a disciplined obsession often endured far longer than madness ever could.

Still, she found herself understanding him more than she expected, realizing his fixation was not truly on immortality but on significance, and a deep need to uncover something real enough that time itself struggled to erase it completely.

When he spoke the name Darth Cenotas, the faintest flicker of amusement touched her expression despite herself. It was darkly self-aware in a way most Sith titles rarely managed to be, especially since so many cloaked themselves in grandiose declarations of conquest and eternity while refusing to acknowledge how fragile even the greatest empires ultimately were. Vendryn, at least, understood impermanence, and that alone made him more dangerous than most.

The silence lingered comfortably between them after he finished speaking, interrupted only by the distant groan of swamp water shifting beyond the ruined walls. Vaelith studied him openly now, her pale gaze thoughtful rather than guarded, as she no longer viewed him as merely another outsider seeking forbidden knowledge because there was simply too much sincerity tangled within his obsession for that.

Then his question settled between them, asking why she was here.

For the first time since arriving, Vaelith looked away before answering, her gaze drifting toward the ruined settlement outside the cantina where fog curled through fractured stone and broken fencing. The silence of Dathomir stretched endlessly beyond it, ancient and watchful beneath the night sky, and when she finally spoke, her voice carried a quieter honesty than before.

"Because secrecy becomes stagnation if left untouched for too long," she said, her fingers resting lightly against the side of her glass. "The Nightsisters survive because we preserve knowledge carefully, but preservation and isolation are not the same thing, though too many mistake them for one another. Fear can protect knowledge, but it can also imprison it."

There was no bitterness in the statement, nor any open criticism of her Sisters, as the tone carried only a reluctant understanding.

"Most Nightsisters distrust outsiders because history has rewarded that distrust, given that Dathomir has been invaded, exploited, hunted, and mythologized for generations. There are reasons we guard what belongs to us, but there is still a difference between guarding knowledge and refusing to examine it beyond inherited doctrine."

The low light caught subtly along the metallic threads woven through portions of her attire as she leaned back slightly within her chair.

"You asked earlier whether curiosity burns within me, and it does," she admitted, the confession coming easier now than it might have hours ago. "I have spent most of my life surrounded by people who treat magick as inheritance first and structure second, repeating rituals simply because they have always been repeated, and obeying certain boundaries because someone long dead declared them sacred. I do not reject tradition, because I understand why it exists, but understanding something should never forbid questioning it."

Her gaze settled fully back onto him then, steady and unwavering.

"And you are correct that most of my Sisters would never have agreed to this meeting regardless of the relic you offered, whether out of caution, hatred, or because they would view your questions themselves as dangerous. They are probably right about that last part," she added as a faint trace of amusement returned briefly, though the humor faded quickly into thoughtfulness once more. "But dangerous questions are often the only ones worth asking. The alternative is accepting inherited certainty without ever examining the foundations beneath it, and I have seen too many people surrender themselves to doctrine so completely that they stop thinking altogether."

For several seconds, she simply held his gaze, letting the weight of the conversation settle naturally into the dim ruins around them before her voice softened slightly.

"So perhaps the simplest answer is this: I am here because I wanted to know what kind of person would willingly come to Dathomir seeking understanding instead of power."

Vendryn Del'therak Vendryn Del'therak
 
His smile was a cold and predatory thing as he listened to her speak, as if this look behind the curtain was a delicious meal for his mind. He leaned in closer as she spoke, topping up both of their cups while she spoke.

His body language had changed steadily as they spoke; first, stiffly formal, bleeding into professionally warm, and then straying outward into a glimpse of obsession... and now he sat, slightly leaning forward, focused and intent like a gambler with life-or-death stakes. He listened to her speak, more passionate and verbose than she had yet been, recognizing some of a kindred spirit in her gaze and manner.

Finally, he tipped his head forward, hunching in, as if about to share a secret. "And they hate you for it, don't they? Cast you out? Isolate you?" He sat back as if he'd just scored a point of some kind, upper hands clasped in his lap while his lower right held the glass. "There is power in understanding, but so few have the ability to truly grasp it. They fear that which they cannot touch."

"This has been a very pleasing exchange. May I ask your name, oh Witch of Dathomir? This will not be the last time I seek out your company, I think."
His words sounded like wrapping up the conversation, but his body language did not match it; he looked as if he were far from done. "It is rare to find one who thinks as such. It is much... Safer to adhere to doctrine, more comfortable in obedience."

His smile warmed, but the predatory look never quite left.

"I've always found comfort to be such a limiting emotion."

Vaelith Rhaen Vaelith Rhaen
 
Vaelith watched him carefully, her pale gaze lingering on the gradual transformation in his posture and manner far more than his actual words. Earlier, he had carried himself with the careful restraint of someone negotiating uncertain ground, every gesture deliberate, measured, and tucked behind layers of formality. That restraint had not disappeared, but it had thinned steadily throughout the evening, peeled back little by little beneath the weight of intellectual excitement and recognition.

Now he leaned toward her openly, his intent sharpened into something almost feral beneath the warmth of his smile. Vaelith found herself wondering whether he even realized how much of himself he had allowed to surface over the course of their conversation.

Probably not. Obsessive minds rarely notice the exact moment fascination becomes hunger.

His observation regarding the Nightsisters did not offend her nearly as much as it perhaps should have. If anything, the faintest trace of amusement flickered briefly across her expression at the confidence with which he delivered it, as though he had uncovered some profound, hidden truth merely by watching her speak for an hour.

Still, he was not entirely wrong.

"Hate is a strong word," she replied calmly, her tone carrying the quiet thoughtfulness of someone who had weighed the distinction many times before. "Distrust is closer to the truth. Suspicion, certainly. Some believe that questioning established structures creates instability, and instability on Dathomir has historically led to bloodshed more often than enlightenment."

She lifted her glass at last, taking a small, measured sip before continuing.

"I understand their caution, even when I disagree with its conclusions."

Her gaze settled steadily back onto him, stripping away any room for misinterpretation.

"And no, I was not cast out. If I had been, I would not still speak of the Nightsisters as my people."

The statement came without defensiveness; a quiet certainty that suited her far better than indignation ever could.

"Isolation is more subtle than exile. Sometimes, all it requires is becoming difficult for others to categorize comfortably."

The low firelight flickered faintly against the bone and metal talismans resting at her waist as a brief silence settled between them. Vaelith noticed the way he watched her now, no longer merely curious, but intent in a way that carried its own peculiar, magnetic gravity. There was danger in people like him. It wasn't the obvious threat carried by warriors or zealots, but the quieter peril of minds capable of dismantling boundaries simply because they could not stop asking what existed beyond them.

Then came his request for her name. Vaelith regarded him for a moment, weighing the value of the exchange despite already knowing she intended to give it.

"Vaelith Rhaen."

Her voice softened slightly around the syllables, not out of vulnerability, but the simple weight of familiarity. Names carried gravity on Dathomir, and identity mattered.

When he spoke of comfort, however, the faint trace of amusement left her expression, replaced by something much more contemplative.

"Comfort has its place and time," she said quietly. "Not all stability is weakness, and not all suffering produces wisdom. Too many people romanticize destruction simply because transformation sometimes follows it."

She leaned back slightly in her chair, her attention never fully leaving him as she let the weight of her words sink in. "A structure placed under constant strain eventually fractures, regardless of how strong it once believed itself to be."

It was an observation that doubled quietly as advice.

"You speak as though comfort inevitably leads to stagnation, but obsession can become its own form of captivity just as easily."

For a brief moment, her gaze sharpened, studying him not as a conversational curiosity but as a person standing dangerously close to the edge of something vast enough to consume him entirely.

"There is a difference between pursuing truth and sacrificing yourself to the pursuit."

The swamp groaned softly outside the ruined cantina while Vaelith slowly turned the glass between her fingers once more.

"It would be unfortunate to lose sight of that distinction."

Vendryn Del'therak Vendryn Del'therak
 
His smile remained warm and genuine on the surface as he listened, the kind of expression one might wear when sharing a quiet moment of philosophy with a respected peer. Yet beneath it, that predatory sharpness lingered in his eyes—hunger tempered by long discipline. He set his glass down with deliberate care, all four hands moving with fluid grace, the lower pair folding neatly while the upper gestured lightly as he spoke.


"Vaelith Rhaen," he repeated, tasting the name as if committing its weight to memory. "A name well-suited to one who walks the line between tradition and inquiry. You speak with the clarity of someone who has weighed these matters many times over. I find that... refreshing."


He leaned back slightly, though his gaze never wavered from hers. The ruins around them seemed to press in closer, the distant sounds of the swamp a low, living underscore to their exchange.


"You are right, of course. Obsession is a chain of its own making, just as comfort can become one. The trick, I suspect, lies in knowing when the pursuit has crossed from enlightenment into self-destruction. A distinction easier pondered than lived, perhaps." A soft, self-aware chuckle escaped him. "I have no intention of losing myself entirely. Only of understanding as much as this galaxy—and the Force—will permit me to grasp."


Vendryn rose slowly to his full, imposing height, smoothing his dark robes with a lower hand. His tone stayed courteous, almost regretful, as if reluctant to end so stimulating a dialogue.


"This has been a most enlightening conversation, Vaelith. Far more than I had any right to expect from such an overture. You have my gratitude for meeting me here, on your world, and for speaking with such candor. The relic is yours, freely given, as promised. I will not bar your departure."


He paused then, letting a thoughtful silence stretch for a beat. His head tilted fractionally, the silvery glint of his lightsaber hilt catching the low light at his hip as he made no move toward it—yet. A faint, almost playful challenge colored his next words, amiable in delivery but laced with unmistakable intent.


"Though I confess... words and theories only carry one so far. Theories about the Force demand testing against reality. Against power expressed without restraint or artifice. I wonder what a Witch of Dathomir might show me, if truly pressed—not in anger, but in the pure exercise of her craft. Magick, unfiltered."


His smile deepened, polite and inviting even as his posture shifted subtly into readiness, upper hands open and relaxed at his sides. His lower hands began to shift through minute movements, forming gentle mudras that began to tug at the edges of the Force. The thin layer of liquid left at the bottom of the bottle began to ripple.


"A final exchange, perhaps? One where understanding might be... earned more directly. No malice, no lingering resentment, only a different form of discourse. What would you think of that, Vaelith Rhaen?"

Vaelith Rhaen Vaelith Rhaen
 

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