Star Wars Roleplay: Chaos

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Private DAGGERFALL - Embers to Flames


Embers to Flames
Location: Sullust
Tags: Darth Virelia Darth Virelia Kali'ka Kali'ka Ellissanthia Ellissanthia Sable Varro

The skies above Sullust were restless, a churning mass of thick volcanic smoke and storm-laden clouds twisting in slow, ominous spirals. The ever-present glow of the planet's molten veins illuminated the underbelly of the darkened sky in flickering shades of red and orange, as if the planet itself was bleeding from a wound long forgotten. The air carried a stifling heat, heavy with the scent of sulfur and metal, thick enough to coat the lungs with every breath.

Far above, Sith interceptor patrols cut silent trails through the upper atmosphere, their searchlights sweeping across the industrial sectors below, scanning for anything that might threaten the fragile order imposed by the Governor's iron grip. Their presence had become routine, yet there was something different tonight—an undercurrent of unease in their movements, the way their patterns tightened over key structures. They sensed it, even if they did not yet understand it.

Beneath the surface, Sullust's sprawling subterranean cities pulsed with artificial life, a vast network of industry and governance held together by hardened tunnels, durasteel corridors, and towering factories that never slept. A thousand conveyor belts rattled in mechanical rhythm, assembling everything from ship components to military supplies, each cog in the grand machine feeding into the Sith war machine. Sullust was a planet that manufactured power, a vital artery in the Sith Order's endless hunger for expansion.

But for all the activity, the streets of the capital's underbelly were different tonight.

The usual background noise of the working districts—the distant pounding of hydraulic presses, the clatter of cargo droids on metal walkways, the hum of Sith-commissioned transport ships—felt muffled, as if the world itself was holding its breath. Patrol droids moved in tighter formations, their amber optics scanning each alley with a mechanical vigilance that seemed more anxious than methodical. Sith troopers stood at checkpoints near key industrial hubs, their crimson-tinted visors betraying no emotion, yet their hands hovered just a fraction closer to their rifles than usual.

It was not outright alarm. Not yet.

But something was wrong, even if they could not name it.

At the fringes of the industrial sector, beyond the towering refineries and processing plants, lay a district long thought abandoned. Once, it had been a hub of Sullustan ingenuity—an old ship-parts assembly yard, decommissioned and left to rust when newer, more advanced facilities rendered it obsolete. Time had turned the place into a graveyard of forgotten machines, their skeletal remains scattered in the shadow of the still-active factories.

Yet the facility was not as empty as the records claimed.

Buried beneath layers of rust and dust, a warehouse remained standing, its structure reinforced beneath decades of neglect. What had once been a storage depot for decommissioned droids now served another purpose—one known to only a select few.

Inside, the air was thick and stale, tainted with the lingering scent of oil and oxidized metal. The long-dead assembly lines stood like ancient relics, their once-busy conveyor belts now frozen in time. The emergency lighting flickered sporadically, casting shadows that danced across the cavernous walls, giving the illusion of movement where there was none.

Then, in the darkness, a presence stirred.

Footsteps. Quiet. Measured. Purposeful.

A door hissed open at the far end of the facility, an old maintenance passage long thought sealed. A figure stepped through first, clad in the dark folds of a traveling cloak, their movements deliberate and efficient. Another followed, then another. Soon, a slow procession of figures entered through unseen passageways—each arriving in silence, each taking their place in the darkened chamber.

They came without fanfare, without ceremony, their identities concealed beneath hooded cloaks and anonymous garb. Some moved with the quiet confidence of those accustomed to secrecy, others with the precise, disciplined steps of seasoned operatives. There were Sith among them, their presences restrained yet undeniable, their forms indistinct in the half-light. Others bore the mannerisms of mercenaries, ex-intelligence officers, and smugglers, men and women who thrived in the shadows between empires.

Each had been summoned. Each had come with purpose.

As the last of the figures entered, the warehouse doors sealed once more, locking the gathering within the forgotten depths of Sulon Prime. A single, dimmed holoprojector flickered to life in the center of the room, casting a weak glow over the aged durasteel floor. The meeting had begun.

But beyond the confines of the chamber, the planet continued to churn.

 

Embers to Flames
Location: Sullust
Objective: Begin Destabilization.
Allies: Kali'ka Kali'ka Ellissanthia Ellissanthia Sable Varro
Opposing Force: ???
Tags: ???


"The inexorable march to triumph, begins today."

The warehouse was silent, save for the occasional flickering of dying lights overhead, the dull hum of forgotten machinery, and the distant echoes of Sullust's industrial heartbeats above. Shadows clung to the rusted walls, shifting with the glow of the emergency lamps like ghosts of a dead era.

And in the center of it all, Serina Calis waited.

She was reclined in a chair of dubious integrity, one leg crossed over the other, her posture the very picture of casual indifference, as though she were lounging in the atrium of some opulent estate rather than an abandoned factory in the bowels of a world soon to be set ablaze. A glass of deep crimson liquid—too fine for a place like this, no doubt smuggled in from some distant Core World vintage—rested in her hand, held between two slender fingers. She swirled it lazily, watching the liquid lap against the sides like some miniature storm in a crystal prison.

Her eyes flicked toward the entrance, where the air was thick with secrecy and the promise of impending arrivals. They would come. One by one. Some with the stiff efficiency of professional killers, others with the quiet skittishness of men who knew they were about to do something irreversible. She would greet them all the same—with a knowing smile and the patience of a queen awaiting the inevitable bow.

A slow, amused breath slipped from her lips as she adjusted her position, stretching in a way that was deliberate, unhurried, teasing the line between elegant and decadent. The soft fabric of her dark attire clung in all the right places, a subtle contrast to the sterility of the durasteel surroundings. There was an art to this—command through presence, through suggestion.

She thrived in the tension, in the weight of the moment before the storm.

One boot rested against the edge of the holoprojector's frame, propped just enough to allow her to tilt her chair back slightly—a delicate balance between comfort and the ever-present possibility of falling backward in an embarrassingly un-Sith-like display of gravity's triumph. But that was part of the fun, wasn't it? The illusion of recklessness masking the blade-sharp awareness behind those cool, piercing blue eyes.

She lifted the glass to her lips, taking a slow, indulgent sip before letting the silence swallow the moment again.

They would come.

And when they did, she would own the room.

A flick of her wrist sent the glass twirling idly between her fingers, the deep red liquid dancing just shy of spilling. A game of control. Of precision. Just like everything she did.

Tonight would be no different.

With a lazy smirk, she let her gaze drift toward the door again, the barest spark of amusement flickering in her expression.

Come in, ladies.

Let's get started.


 

Sable Varro

Guest


sith-divider-pink.png

Ember To Flames


Tag: Kali'ka Kali'ka Ellissanthia Ellissanthia Darth Virelia Darth Virelia

Deployment Location:

  • Primary Target Zone: Sullust

Equipment Loadout:




Sable stood just out of Serina Calis's line of sight, a silent sentinel in the shadows behind her, her posture impeccable. The flickering emergency lights cast brief glints off the edge of her polished armor, but she remained otherwise indistinct, a shadow amongst the rust and decay of the warehouse. Her hand rested lightly on the hilt of her blaster, but she didn't move, her presence unspoken, yet unmistakable.

From this vantage point, Sable observed Serina's every calculated motion. She was a picture of confidence, a delicate dance of power and elegance, but Sable knew better than to be fooled. The illusion of carelessness—propping a boot on a holoprojector, lounging in that chair like she ruled the room—was exactly that: it was a project of control. Serina was in control of the situation at hand, and Sable knew that better than most.

The soft swirl of the crimson liquid in Serina's glass caught Sable's attention, and she couldn't help but smirk beneath her helmet. The woman was playing her part well, but Sable was here for a different purpose. She wasn't here to play mind games or revel in false confidence. No, she was the one who kept things in balance—maintaining vigilance, waiting for the slightest sign of danger. While Serina focused on the doorway, Sable kept her senses alert to everything else.

Her eyes flickered to the shadows around them, noting every movement, every sound. The distant hum of machinery, the faint shifts in the air, even the barely perceptible scrape of metal against metal. Everything was a potential threat. She wasn't just standing guard; she was anticipating the moment when the tension would snap, when someone would make a move.

As Serina's gaze drifted back to the door, Sable's voice broke the silence, low and steady, a faint whisper as she inquired to her status. "Do you need anything?”

The words hung in the air, a subtle reminder of her presence. She wasn't here to be the show. She remained standing, waiting for the arrival of the guests.
 


Kali'ka had flourished since she had become the acolyte of Serina Calis. Sometimes harsh, sometimes nurturing, and still very much a mystery to the Kiffar, Serina nonetheless had opened Kali'ka's eyes to deep and dark things, even about herself. She was growing stronger, more powerful, even as her soul was being shaped. The acolyte's devotion remained strong.

A few minor tasks had been completed on behalf of her mistress, the acolyte arriving separately from Serina and the others. As she tread the abandoned metallic corridor's of the dead facility, her hand grazed the tarnish walls. So readily did the mental images come, her innate Kiffar abilities enhanced masterfully by the Force. A thriving factory, teaming with Sullustian workers, droids and the rhythmic thrum, hiss and clank of a myriad of machinary. Dispelling the visions, the hallways that smelled of corroded metal seemed even more forlorn and dark. Just the place for her mistress to call her meeting.

Kali'ka didn't know what it was about, mostly. Serina had summoned a select few, carefully chosen, for what purpose the acolyte had yet to learn. No matter. Soon they would all find out. At least as much as Serina wished them to know.

Arriving from a different entrance, one behind Serina, Kali'ka strode into the chamber. Not one for theatrics, the sorceress simply strolled up to stand beside the seated woman. Certainly Serina would know it was her acolyte behind her, long before Kali'ka even entered the room. The acolyte wore matte black skinsuit armor beneath her dark cloak. No helmet veiled her micshievous features, framed in long locks of raven-black hair. Two dark eyes, one organic one cybernetic, peered out almost mirthfully from the inky Kiffar bar tattooed across her face.

From beneath her cloak Kali retrieved a curious phrik bar. Silently it expanded to a meter and a half long weapon haft. It was not ignited in some show of intimidation or prowess. Kali'ka simply wanted something to lean on, and she wrapped both hands around it and leaned against it casually.

Her head turned to look at her mistress in acknowledgement. "Mistress," was the only word she uttered. Then the acolyte scanned the room with her cyberoptics as individuals were arriving. The Kiffar's gaze paused on a figure lingering in the shadows, seeing the hint of armor, it's features hidden behind a glinting mask, it's stoic posture a contrast Serina's nonchalance.

Kali'ka relished the thrum of Darkness that grew as the nefarious guests arrived.

 
Location: Sullust
Tag: Darth Virelia Darth Virelia Sable Varro Kali'ka Kali'ka

The warehouse was a dull reflection of Sullust’s industrial character. Lights faded in and out of illumination, powered by an old, yet still functioning generator that ran in spite of visible wear and rust on its frame. The machine’s endurance was a testament to the efficacy of Sullustan engineering, representing one of the many reasons why the world was such a prize for the Sith Empire.

Attired in her bodysuit which she had layered over with a dark cloak to shield and obscure her form, Ellissanthia entered the warehouse through one of the side entrances, her features concealed beneath a dark mask. Sensing that the air was slightly cleaner inside the structure, the Undine took off the mask as her gaze swept across the area, surveying the gathered figures beneath the flickering half-light. The Kiffar woman was the first to draw the Undine’s notice, who she spotted leaning casually against her pike.

The Undine shifted her gaze onto another figure—a woman clad in dark armor and a full-face mask that shrouded all of her features. She was quite visibly armed, with a long blaster, hand cannon, vibroblade, and various gauntlet weapons attached to her person.

At the center of it all, was Serina.

There she sat reclined in a chair, a glass of wine held languidly inside her grasp. Ellissanthia came to a halt, her eyes lighting up as they lingered just a touch longer than normal on her outstretched form. At that point, the Undine’s gaze met Serina’s, at which point she returned her amused expression with a brief flicker of a smile.

Then, almost as if she had forgotten to do so, the Undine breathed.

Ellissanthia pulled her eyes away and shook her head, before pulling out her spray bottle and spritzing herself over with it. From there, she moved to take a place within the assembled group, before offering Serina a polite inclination of her head.

And as she did, her violet-hued eyes sparkled with renewed fervor.


 

Embers to Flames
Location: Sullust
Objective: Begin Destabilization.
Allies: Kali'ka Kali'ka Ellissanthia Ellissanthia Sable Varro
Opposing Force: ???
Tags: ???


"The inexorable march to triumph, begins today."

Serina smiled. A slow, knowing curve of her lips, equal parts amusement and ownership.

They came, as they always did. Like planets drawn into a star's gravity, pulled by forces beyond their understanding. One by one, the figures she had summoned filtered into the abandoned warehouse, their silent footfalls swallowed by the hum of machinery far above. Shadows lengthened, pressing in like voyeurs to their secret gathering, but Serina did not fear the dark. She was the dark.

Her glass twirled idly between her fingers, the deep crimson swirl of the liquid catching the flickering light—as rich and red as blood spilled over silk sheets. She exhaled slowly, savoring the moment, stretching like a lazily coiled predator atop her throne of rust and dust.

Her throne.

The thought amused her. The chair was hardly regal, a relic of a forgotten facility, its frame stained with time and neglect. But Serina had long since understood that power was never about the throne itself. It was about who commanded it.

And tonight, she commanded everything.

Sable Varro stood just behind her, just outside her vision, just where she wanted her to be. A silent specter, the gleam of her polished armor barely catching the fractured light. Ever watchful, ever poised, ever waiting.

Serina did not need to see her to feel her presence. Sable was as much a fixture to her as her own shadow—silent, sharp, and infinitely loyal in ways Serina had yet to fully unravel.

Her lips parted in a soft exhale, more amused than anything when Sable finally broke the silence.

"Do you need anything?"

Serina
tipped her head slightly, as though considering the question, her crystalline blue eyes flickering toward the shadows where Sable stood. The words were simple, but the implication was everything.

"Need?"

She let the word linger, letting its weight settle in the air, before she hummed—a quiet, velvety sound that was equal parts deliberate and indulgent.

"What a dangerous word."

Her tongue ran slowly along the edge of her glass, tasting the wine as she turned her gaze fully toward Sable, expression unreadable. The implication behind her words was clear enough. Serina needed nothing. Serina wanted everything.

But there was a difference between what was desired and what was required.

"For now, I require only patience."

Her smile sharpened. "For everything else… well, I do enjoy surprises."

She had felt her long before she entered the room.

Kali'ka Kali'ka .

Her dark flame, flickering with an intensity that was still shaping, still bending, still hungering.

Serina's acolyte moved through the dead corridors of the forgotten facility with the quiet confidence of someone who had long since learned to navigate the paths of the unseen. She did not arrive through the same entrance as the others—no, Kali'ka understood discretion, understood that Serina had eyes in places others would never think to look.

The Kiffar's presence was a comfort in ways Serina rarely admitted. Not loyalty. Not yet. But devotion? Yes. That, she could nurture, mold, twist—until one day, there would be no distinction between the two.

She barely tilted her head as Kali'ka stepped up beside her, her only greeting a single, reverent word.

"Mistress."

Serina
smiled. Soft. Almost affectionate. Almost.

She turned her eyes toward her acolyte, the ice and fire of her gaze settling on the sharp lines of the Kiffar's tattooed face. Kali'ka's dark eyes met hers, one organic, one cybernetic—a reminder that even the flesh could be rewritten, if only one had the will to carve away what was unneeded.

"Punctual as always," Serina mused, her voice an indulgent purr. Her fingers drummed lazily against the glass in her hand. "Tell me, dear thing—do you enjoy waiting? Or does the anticipation make you burn?"

A test.

A game.

The difference between them was slight.

And Serina loved to play.

Then, another.

She felt her enter before she saw her, though it was not with the same familiarity as Sable or Kali'ka. No, this one was different.

Ellissanthia Ellissanthia .

Serina let her gaze drift lazily toward the new arrival, watching as the Undine removed her mask, as violet-hued eyes lingered on her just a moment too long.

Oh, how she enjoyed that.

The barest flicker of a smile crossed Serina's lips as their eyes met across the dimly lit space. She did not look away. Not yet. Instead, she held the gaze, let it stretch between them, drinking in the quiet hunger that burned beneath it.

Then, as though she had suddenly lost interest, she turned her head away.

Casual. Effortless. Cruel.

Ellissanthia moved into place, settling among the others, her form stiff with whatever thoughts had lingered from their exchanged glances. Serina waited just long enough for the moment to settle before she finally spoke, her voice like silk over steel.

"You wear your control well," she murmured, just loud enough for Ellissanthia to hear. Her tone was smooth, indulgent—yet edged with a knowing amusement.

"But control is such a delicate thing, isn't it?"

Her fingers ran along the rim of her glass, a slow, circular motion, as if she were tracing the edges of something far more fragile than crystal.

"I wonder—what would it take for you to let it slip?"

She let the question linger.

Not to be answered.

Not yet.

The silence hung thick, curling around them like the coils of some unseen beast, waiting—breathing—anticipating the moment when words would slice through it like a well-honed blade.

Serina let it linger, savoring the weight of expectation, the hunger in their eyes—some veiled, some blatant—as they waited for her to illuminate the darkness.

She had always loved an audience.

Her fingers ran idly along the rim of her glass again, slow, deliberate, as though she were teasing the edge of something dangerous. Then, with the same careless elegance that defined her every movement, she set it aside.

And she stood.

Graceful. Languid. Predatory.

The motion was fluid, sensual in its own right, yet undeniably commanding. She did not need to slam a fist on the table, did not need to bark orders like some rigid military officer. No, she owned the room without raising her voice, without lifting a finger.

That was the power of a woman who knew that desire and control were often the same thing.

She stretched, slow and indulgent, her spine arching, her arms lifting above her head, as though she had all the time in the world. A deliberate display, an unspoken reminder that she was as much a spectacle as she was a force to be reckoned with.

Then, finally, she spoke.

"Sullust is a furnace."

The words dripped from her lips, low, velvety, and edged with amusement.

"It burns, and yet it remains unbroken—kept alive by the hands of creatures who have long since forgotten what it means to truly suffer. To truly fear. To truly kneel."

She turned, her gaze sweeping across those gathered, her expression a study in indulgent cruelty.

"But kneel they shall."

She let the promise settle before she moved, slowly, deliberately, stepping toward the center of the room, the dim light casting flickering shadows against the rusted walls.

"The Governor of this wretched world fancies himself untouchable."

Her tone was mocking now, dripping with sweet, poisonous amusement.

"He believes in the strength of his alliances, the loyalty of his soldiers, the invincibility of his industry."

She exhaled a soft, almost sultry sigh, tilting her head as though she were speaking of some tragic, foolish lover.

"I find his confidence... adorable."

Then, her lips curled—sharp, predatory.

"So let us break him."

She turned then, facing them fully, her hands sliding lazily to her hips.

"Two hands, my darlings. One to caress, one to strike."

She extended one hand outward, palm up, as though offering something unseen.

"The first will move through the barracks. Gently, seductively, deceitfully. A whispered lie here, a falsified order there. A touch of persuasion, and suddenly, the Governor's own forces will march against him, blades bared and muzzles primed."

Her fingers curled slowly, closing the imaginary space.

"They will not know until the moment they pull the trigger that they have already lost."

Then, her other hand rose, fingers tracing a slow, deliberate path along the curve of her collarbone before extending outward—this time, fingers poised as though holding a lover's chin.

"The second?"

A smirk.

"Rougher. Hungrier. Impatient in all the ways that make devastation so very... intimate."

She stepped forward, just a hair's breadth from Ellissanthia, her voice dipping, as though she were sharing something meant for her alone.

"They will take the factory. Slip inside, delicate and unseen—like fingers beneath silk."

She let the words breathe, exhaling softly before pulling away, her movements deliberate, teasing, never rushed.

"And then?"

Her eyes darkened, a flicker of something far more dangerous glinting beneath the surface.

"They will tear it apart. From the inside out."

Her hands dropped to her sides, sharp and decisive, her expression now fully transformed into something deadly, resolute.

"A symphony of fire and collapse. A thunderous scream of metal against metal, of Sullust's industry choking on its own arrogance. The echoes of our handiwork will stretch across the stars."

She paused then, tilting her head as though considering.

"But do not mistake this for chaos, my dears. No, no, no."

A single finger lifted, wagging playfully.

"This is surgical. Precise. Controlled. Every thread has been woven, every moment orchestrated. There will be no accidents tonight."

Her eyes flickered toward Sable, toward the silent watcher, the one who would ensure that control never wavered.

"The barracks will burn. The factory will crumble. And when the dust settles?"

She exhaled, soft and satisfied, as though she could already taste the victory on her tongue.

"The Governor will be left grasping at the ashes of his own security. He will scream for order. For justice. For salvation."

She turned then, walking leisurely back to her chair, lowering herself with deliberate ease, crossing one leg over the other in a slow, serpentine motion.

And then?

She smiled.

"And we?"

She plucked her glass from the table, raising it in a lazy, elegant toast.

"We will be the only ones left offering a hand to pull him from the flames."

She took a slow, indulgent sip, letting the moment stretch, thicken, burn.

Then, without looking up—

"Any questions?"

 

Sable Varro

Guest


sith-divider-pink.png

Ember To Flames


Tag: Kali'ka Kali'ka Ellissanthia Ellissanthia Darth Virelia Darth Virelia

Deployment Location:

  • Primary Target Zone: Sullust

Equipment Loadout:




As Sable waited, her gaze still fixed on Serina, her thoughts drifted, briefly, to places she rarely allowed them to go. She thought about the delicate shift in the air whenever Serina entered a room, the way her presence made everything else seem insignificant, as if the world bent around her. It was the kind of power that was intoxicating, like a well-crafted poison slipping through the veins, sweet and dark. But was it power that Sable was drawn to—or something else?

Sable let her eyes narrow ever so slightly, her thoughts playing over the past weeks, months even. How many times had she found herself listening to Serina's voice and wondering if it was more than the carefully constructed words? How many times had she felt that rush of something—something deeper than respect, something raw—when Serina's gaze lingered too long?

She shook her head imperceptibly, as if to clear the thoughts away, but they lingered, stubborn. Was it real? Was the way Serina's presence pulled at her so fiercely some kind of twisted admiration, or something more? Desperation, perhaps? The feeling of wanting something so badly it felt like a need, not a desire. There had been so many times—too many—that Sable had tried to convince herself that it was just the circumstances, that it was merely the nature of the game they played, the pull of an intoxicating, dangerous mind.

But the truth was, she wasn't sure. Not anymore.

Her pulse quickened as she thought of the way Serina's smile could make the world feel like it was on fire, how a single touch from her could send Sable's thoughts scattering like dry leaves in a storm. And yet, she could feel the distance. The distance that kept her at arm's length. It wasn't love—it couldn't be. She knew that.

Maybe it was just the loneliness that made it feel like something more. Desperation, a hunger for something to cling to in the cold, unforgiving galaxy. To be seen, to be acknowledged—perhaps that was what Sable craved most. Not Serina, not the intoxicating force of her presence, but the feeling that she mattered, that her place in this dark world wasn't just a whisper in the shadows.

She forced the thought away, setting her mind back on the present, on the now. The truth, whatever it was, didn't matter.

What mattered was what she could control. What mattered was what she had learned to value in herself—not in the woman in front of her, not in the people around her, but in the choices she made.

If Serina was the catalyst for the hunger inside her, it didn't matter. If what she felt was real or just a product of her own need for connection, it didn't matter. Not anymore.

The game was always about power. And in the end, that was all that mattered.

Her breath steady now, Sable turned her gaze back to Serina. The moment of vulnerability had passed, buried beneath a mask of composed coldness. She didn't need to understand it. She didn't need to feel anything other than what was necessary to survive, to remain in control.

And if that meant walking this razor's edge of obsession and manipulation, then so be it.

"I know better than to question you, Serina."
 
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Serina greeted her acolyte. As was often the case, the Mistress did so by posing a question, probing questions that always gave Kali'ka a sensual feeling of violation.

"You know the answer, my Mistress..." Kali replied with a oily croon. She knew Serina wanted to hear the words. "Waiting is a delicious torment."

All eyes then fell to another figure that stalked into the rusty and corroded room that had become a sort of audience chamber for Serina. The new arrival was cloaked like the others. Kali'ka's cybernetic vision cut through the shadows to see the face. The curious blue-skinned woman was of a race the acolyte could not place, but she found an exotic appeal to her features. Their eyes met for only a breath before the stranger's gaze moved on, finally settling upon the woman who had summoned them all.

Serina's presence filled the room with a familiar tension. It wasn't that Kali found the tension uncomfortable. No, in her time with the Mistress, the Kiffar had come to find a twisted comfort in that sultry tension, feeding upon it. The new arrival drew closer. The smirk that was often painted upon Kali'ka's lips faded as she watched the interaction between the newcomer and Serina. Jealousy? Perhaps, but the smirk returned as soon as more devious thoughts were entertained.

Silent, Kali'ka listened to Serina reveal her scheme. Bold in its intent, simple and devious in its execution. Serina possessed power, but her craving for more, for the planet itself, made the Dark Jedi all the more intoxicating to the devoted acolyte.

At the conclusion of Serina's revelation, the dark assassin spoke, a truth that surely all of them understood.

"I know better than to question you, Serina."



 
Location: Abandoned Storage Depot - Sullust
Tag: Darth Virelia Darth Virelia Sable Varro Kali'ka Kali'ka

Serina’s gaze stretched towards Ellissanthia’s in turn, and the Adept felt her heart race in response to the silent connection forged by eye contact. And yet, the exact nature of that connection was something that she had yet to figure out. She knew only that she was attracted to Serina, drawn magnetically to the power that the woman radiated and the power that she herself gained in turn, as if via osmosis.

And that power was the will to embrace the Dark Side within herself.

By virtue of her nature, Ellissanthia knew that she was uniquely infused with the Dark Side, in a way that perhaps others were not. In that regard, knowing that Serina possessed a stronger bond to the Dark Side than she did in spite of her seemingly Human nature, the Undine both admired and respected the woman. She had done something to earn the touch of the Dark Side, so much so that she simply exuded it, even when not directly harnessing its power.

In that regard, Ellissanthia could only imagine what Serina was capable of when her power was unleashed.

Ellissanthia bit the corner of her lips at the thought. However, it was then that Serina turned her head away, causing the Undine’s insides to turn frigid and empty upon realizing that the woman’s attention was seemingly elsewhere.

But then, she spoke.


"You wear your control well," she murmured, just loud enough for Ellissanthia to hear. Her tone was smooth, indulgent—yet edged with a knowing amusement.

"But control is such a delicate thing, isn't it?"

Her fingers ran along the rim of her glass, a slow, circular motion, as if she were tracing the edges of something far more fragile than crystal.

"I wonder—what would it take for you to let it slip?"

“My control is instinct, borne from long training and study.” Ellissanthia answered softly. “I have yet to overcome it, to wholly embrace the Dark Side within. I can not help but to falter, to draw back and retreat to the methods I am more familiar with.” She continued. “However, I am working on it.” The Undine finished, a flicker of a smile raising her features as she did.

From there, Ellissanthia fell into silence while Serina explained her plan. And again, a playful smile tugged at her alabaster-painted lips, a pink undertone rising within her features as the woman stepped towards her, her words carrying equal parts playfulness and sensual indulgence as the Undine’s role in the plan was revealed.


"They will take the factory. Slip inside, delicate and unseen—like fingers beneath silk."

For naught but a moment, Ellissanthia’s control faltered, her thoughts drawn off-course as her stomach fluttered with excitement. A soft, coquettish giggle slipped out from the Undine’s lips, barely audible, yet unmistakably distinct to the Kiffar and the masked woman who were within the immediate proximity. She glanced towards them, taking in their disciplined silence, before blinking and clearing her throat as her chest tightened with embarrassment.

And yet, Ellissanthia realized then that perhaps she was further along in overcoming her controlling instincts than she had thought.


"We will be the only ones left offering a hand to pull him from the flames."

She took a slow, indulgent sip, letting the moment stretch, thicken, burn.

Then, without looking up—


"Any questions?"

Oh, how exciting.

 

Embers to Flames
Location: Sullust
Tags: Darth Virelia Darth Virelia Kali'ka Kali'ka Ellissanthia Ellissanthia Sable Varro

Ellissanthia Ellissanthia Sable Varro
The Sulon Industrial Complex loomed in the distance like a great mechanical beast, its massive silhouette barely visible through the thick plumes of sulfuric fog rising from Sullust's molten depths. The air here was heavy, thick with the acrid scent of burning metals and reactor exhaust. The glow of superheated foundries pulsed in the distance, casting eerie shadows along the towering assembly lines and labyrinthine walkways that stretched for miles.

It was not a single building, but a vast, interconnected sprawl of industrial hell, a living machine that had not stopped churning in over a decade. The factories of Sulon were responsible for manufacturing starship plating, high-output reactor cores, and precision components for the Sith fleet—materials so valuable that they were stored beneath layers of reinforced security, buried within hardened vaults and labyrinthine warehouses.

Tonight, all of that would burn.

The Approach


Ellissanthia and Sable stood amidst the shifting tides of workers, their movements blending into the throng of figures slogging toward the factory's primary checkpoints.

The third shift cycle had begun—hundreds of workers moving in clusters toward the towering security gates, the checkpoint where guards would scan identifications and clearances before allowing access. Their disguises were simple yet effective; they wore maintenance uniforms stolen from low-level workers, complete with forged credentials and dirt-streaked gloves to match the laboring masses.

Ahead, the checkpoint scanners glowed ominously, manned by black-armored security officers armed with Sith-issue blaster rifles—not the standard-issue sidearms given to civilian security. These men were hardened enforcers, a private force answering not to the Sith Empire itself, but directly to the Governor's war chest.

Beyond the checkpoint, the factory complex stretched into the distance like a maze of metal and fire—walkways suspended over boiling coolant vats, assembly lines that extended for miles, processing centers where molten ore was poured into starship plating molds.

Three primary targets awaited them inside.
  1. The Fusion Core Relays – Buried deep beneath the main foundry sector, where plasma conduits funneled geothermal energy into refined fuel cells. A perfect weak point—if it were to explode, the cascading failure would take half the factory down with it.
  2. Structural Load-Bearing Supports – Giant reinforced struts held up the entire facility, intertwined with transport elevators and conveyor systems. Detonating the right ones would collapse the factory from within.
  3. Automated Production Lines – The automated processing hub, where thousands of droids and robotic arms worked around the clock, feeding the war effort. Destroying these would cripple the factory's ability to recover, ensuring the damage wasn't just temporary—it was absolute.
But none of this would be simple.

Security Presence


While the factory's laborers worked in shifts of exhaustion, the security teams did not.
  • Checkpoint Guards: Heavily armed officers monitored every entrance.
  • Surveillance Droids: Automated sentries patrolled key intersections, scanning for unauthorized movement.
  • Turret Emplacements: Positioned along walkways and high-traffic corridors, set to neutralize intruders immediately.
  • Interior Guard Rotations: Small teams of elite mercenaries patrolled the inner sections, watching over sensitive areas like the fusion cores and control centers.
Getting inside would be one challenge. Placing the charges and getting out before the detonations? That would be something else entirely.

The Plan in Motion


At this moment, Ellissanthia and Sable stood within the slow-moving mass of workers being funneled toward the checkpoint.

Two options presented themselves:
  1. Pass through the main checkpoint using their forged credentials. If their IDs held up to scrutiny, they would enter without raising suspicion—but risked being tagged in the system, making escape harder later.
  2. Find an alternative entry point. Maintenance tunnels, service vents, or supply drop zones could provide a quieter way inside—but required finding the right access points without drawing attention.
The factory was awake, its pulse beating through the night.

Now, they had to slip into its bloodstream—and poison it from within.
Mission Objectives (Factory Infiltration Team - Ellissanthia & Sable):
  • Gain access to the facility (via checkpoint or alternative route).
  • Infiltrate the industrial sector without raising suspicion.
  • Plant explosive charges at key weak points.
  • Escape before the factory detonates.

The mission had begun.

The flames were waiting.


Darth Virelia Darth Virelia Kali'ka Kali'ka
The barracks of the 43rd Sullustan Planetary Defence Unit stood like a fortress within the city's northern district, its dark metal walls lined with turret emplacements and watchful sentries patrolling the perimeter. Unlike the sprawling industrial complex in the south, this place was not built to produce—it was built to enforce.

And tonight, it would enforce the will of Serina Calis.

Beyond the looming walls, inside the heart of the barracks, rows upon rows of troopers slept in their bunks, cleaned their weapons, or engaged in the idle banter of men and women who thought themselves safe within their own stronghold. They were not Sith Lords or champions of the Dark Side—they were soldiers, trained to obey, conditioned to follow orders without hesitation.

That was what made them so easy to steal.

Serina and Kali'ka walked the city streets, their disguises impeccable, their stolen Sith officer uniforms crisp, their forged command codes hidden beneath dark fabric. To any passing observer, they were nothing more than an officer and her escort, moving through the shadowed walkways of the military sector with the kind of confidence that ensured no one would think to question them.

Ahead, the barracks gates stood open, flanked by two sentries clad in black duraplast armor, their red-tinted visors unreadable in the dim lighting.

Inside, the compound buzzed with quiet activity—a half-full mess hall, soldiers relaxing in the courtyard, others preparing for routine security shifts.

This was not a battle. Not yet.

This was a matter of a single push, a whispered command, a false order slipping through the ranks like venom.

And that order was already written.

The Plan in Motion


Serina and Kali'ka's forged orders were perfect.

In the data terminals of the barracks command center, an encrypted directive had already been placed in the system.
  • Immediate Tactical Deployment.
  • Target: Criminal Organization, House Rendix.
  • Threat Level: Coup Plot Detected.
  • Execute Without Question.
The Governor's own database had been manipulated to reflect these commands as authentic, appearing to originate from one of his own military liaisons.

If no one questioned the orders, then the soldiers would move, believing they were carrying out a sanctioned purge of the city's criminal elements.

The plan required two crucial elements to succeed:
  1. Infiltrating the Barracks Command Center.
    • The data terminals held operational clearance codes, and the soldiers would need a final, verbal confirmation from an officer on-site before deployment.
    • Serina and Kali'ka would need to convince the command staff that the attack orders were legitimate.
  2. Leading the Troops into the False Flag Attack.
    • Once the command center approved the deployment, the soldiers would march into the undercity, storming House Rendix's fortified hideout in a full-scale tactical assault.
    • The criminal syndicate would have no warning, no defense. By the time the shooting started, there would be no survivors left to expose the deception.

Inside the Barracks


The halls of the 43rd PDU barracks were a maze of steel and order, lined with banners of the Sith Empire, each one a hollow promise of loyalty.
  • To the left, the troop barracks—long halls filled with rows of cots, lockers, and footlockers containing the personal effects of the soon-to-be pawns in Serina's game.
  • To the right, the mess hall, where off-duty soldiers sat hunched over their meals, unaware that in mere hours, they would be slaughtering their supposed allies.
  • Ahead, at the far end of the corridor, the Command Center loomed—an armored, reinforced room, its doors guarded by two elite troopers.
It was there that the final keystroke would be made.

Security & Potential Obstacles


Though the false orders were already planted in the system, Serina and Kali'ka's success depended on not being questioned.
  • Barracks Commanders. While most officers would blindly follow orders, some were more cautious. If the wrong person asked too many questions, the plan could unravel.
  • Access Codes & Authorization. The security systems would still require verbal confirmation, meaning they would need to be convincing enough to ensure no suspicions were raised.
  • Unexpected Variables. There was always the risk of an unexpected Sith or intelligence officer checking in on the troops. Any deviation from the plan could lead to a fight before the deception was complete.
Once the final approval was given, the soldiers would march.

The streets would fill with gunfire.

And the Governor's own forces would unknowingly strike the first blow against him.

Mission Objectives (False Flag Team - Serina & Kali'ka):

  • Enter the barracks undetected, maintaining the officer disguise.
  • Access the command center and confirm the false orders.
  • Ensure the troops deploy without question.
  • Lead the attack against House Rendix.
  • Eliminate all criminal elements—no survivors left to tell the truth.
The pieces were in place.

And soon, Sullust would bleed.

 

Embers to Flames
Location: Sullust
Objective: False Flag.
Allies: Kali'ka Kali'ka
Opposing Force: ???
Tags: ???


"The inexorable march to triumph, begins today."

The streets of Sullust's military sector pulsed with quiet, orderly efficiency. Unlike the chaotic industrial sprawl of the lower districts, this part of the city was all discipline and control, measured movements and sharp-angled architecture.

The air was different here. The civilians whispered, their voices kept low in the presence of armored patrols. Sith banners fluttered from the blackened steel walls, each one a silent declaration of the empire's dominion over this molten world.

And yet, power had always been a lie.

Serina let her gaze flick toward the barracks gates in the near distance, where the Governor's troops moved without suspicion, unaware that their loyalty would soon be turned into a weapon against them.

She smiled.

This was going to be fun.

At her side, Kali'ka kept pace, her dark cloak shifting with every step, the weight of expectation draped across her shoulders like an elegant noose.

Serina watched her from the corner of her vision, taking in the quiet precision of her movements, the way her cybernetic eye flickered in the low light, drinking in every detail. Kali'ka was disciplined, clever, capable—but discipline alone was not enough.

Not for this.

This mission was not just about deception, about disguises and falsified commands. No, no, no—this was a test. A game of shadows and whispered truths, where hesitation meant failure, and failure meant irrelevance.

And Serina had no use for things that were irrelevant.

She slowed her pace slightly, letting the moment stretch, letting the silence grow just heavy enough to make it meaningful. Then, she turned her head, her lips parting in a smirk both knowing and cruel.

"Tell me, my dear thing," Serina purred, her voice like silk over steel, low enough that it belonged only to them, yet sharp enough to cut. "How would you do this?"

Her steps did not stop. She let the question hang, her blue eyes gleaming beneath the dim glow of the passing streetlights.

"We are at the gates of power, walking the halls of men who think themselves rulers of this world. They trust their orders, they trust their system. They think they know who leads them."

Serina's
gloved fingers trailed lazily along the metal railing of a deserted walkway, her touch light, like a caress.

"But we know better, don't we?"

She stopped then, turning fully toward her acolyte, her stance casual, indulgent.

"So tell me, Kali'ka—"

Her lips curled, mocking, yet inviting.

"If this were your test, your mission alone—if I were not here to hold your delicate little hand—how would you walk into that barracks and make those men march to their own execution?"

Serina tilted her head slightly, watching every shift in Kali'ka's expression, every flicker of calculation in those dark, knowing eyes.

"Would you speak with authority? Would you charm them into submission? Would you rip the answers from their minds like a greedy lover?"

A step closer.

"Tell me, sweet thing."

Another.

"How would you break them?"

She did not blink, did not look away, her expression poised somewhere between genuine curiosity and indulgent cruelty.

The answer, of course, mattered.

But what mattered more was how Kali'ka answered.

Would she hesitate? Would she crave approval? Would she offer something unique, something sharp, something worthy?

Serina waited, the heat of Sullust's ever-burning veins a distant hum beneath her feet.


 



They moved with military discipline, and the arrogance of an officer and her aide. None questioned the hard stares of the women, especially the officer. As Mistress and Acolyte strode along the street on the approach of the barracks, Kali'ka felt an inferno of excitement burning in her core. She always felt a scintillation at Serina's side, an ensnaring cocktail of the woman's dark presence, relentless allure and the acolyte's own surrendered devotion to her mentor and benefactor. It had become necessary for Kali'ka to train herself to manage her reaction to Serina's captivating nature, so that she could operate in her full faculties in the dark jedi's service.

And this mission, Serina's plans, were intoxicating. Taam Moghul, as her former master, was a puppet of the Jedi Order, bound to serve their purposes. But Serina seized control of her fate, and in turn, strove with stark boldness to seize tremendous power for herself. And Kali'ka would be there.

They drew closer, and Serina's pace slowed. She addressed her acolyte. Of course, there would be a test. It was how Serina taught, how Kali learned. It was how the acolyte's devotion was gauged, how her trustworthiness was measured. With the barracks entrance in sight, Serina spoke. Kali'ka's head turned to meet the gaze of her mistress as the woman's words glided across her hearing like a coiling serpent. How beautiful Serina was. Beuatiful, cold, demanding, enthralling. The test was unfolded.

The acolyte knew not to toss out an answer right away, Serina had a way about her, a manner in which she wove her words, paced, deliberate, in just the right way to make the hearer crave the next one, made to wait just long enough to whet a deeper appetite. Finally it came, the question, the true test.

Kali'ka paused as their steps halted, dark eyes darting to the lit gate of the barracks, with its sentries. Her lips finally parted as that gaze returned to her master. The choices were simple, each plausible. Command them. Seduce them. Undo them. But there was a danger in setting one's self on a single method. Such an approach could become a trap of one's own making.

"I would use all three methods. I know the mind of a soldier. They are trained to take orders, as long as those orders don't stray far from the expected. Those men and women will need to see authority in the demands. Those with any mind of their own may need convinced, their minds twisted to accept the unusual nature of the orders. There may be some stronger in mind among them. Those will be the ones of whose minds I would tear open."

Kali'ka allowed a hint of a smirk to touch her plush lips.


 
Location: Sulon Industrial Complex - Sullust
Objective: Infiltrate Facility and Industrial Complex
Tag: Darth Virelia Darth Virelia Kali'ka Kali'ka
Direct Mention: Sable Varro

Even with her disguise, Ellissanthia felt that she stood out. In a crowd full of Sullustans and Humans, her dirt-streaked features and black hair dye were only a small mask to the fact that she was not a being of the more common species in the galaxy. Fortunately, the Undine had picked out a hood to wear with her uniform, which served to partially conceal her ears so as to avoid rousing suspicion.

Otherwise, she might have risked being picked out of the crowd almost immediately.

Wearing her bodysuit and gear beneath the baggy maintenance uniform, Ellissanthia ran her hands over her hips, missing the familiar contour of her lightsaber. Although it was a weapon she used only sparingly, her training and discipline had initially compelled her to bring it. It was only upon realizing that she might have to go through a security checkpoint did she leave it behind, as the Undine had only a limited amount of space in her scanner-blocking bag, all of which needed to be used for explosives.

Still, if they could avoid going through the checkpoints altogether...

“Before we commit to the checkpoint line, do you see any alternate entrances?” Ellissanthia turned towards Sable as she moved towards the checkpoint line. The Echani blended in much better with the crowd, as the Undine had seen to it personally that she had her hair dyed as well. All the while, the Adept scanned her surveyed the courtyard, her eyes lighting up as she caught sight of something which held promise.

“Ventilation shafts near the waste coolant reserves.” She whispered. “But we’ll have to find a way past the western turret grid in order to reach them.” The Undine frowned, unconsciously tugging at her left ear before remembering that she needed to keep them concealed.


“Do you see anything else?”

 

Embers to Flames
Location: Sullust
Objective: False Flag.
Allies: Kali'ka Kali'ka
Opposing Force: ???
Tags: Sable Varro Ellissanthia Ellissanthia


"The inexorable march to triumph, begins today."

Serina listened. Not with her ears—but with her full attention, her presence, her intent. She stood like a monument of indulgent gravity, every inch of her angled toward Kali'ka, eyes narrowed, lips slightly parted as though the very act of listening was a form of slow consumption.

And as the acolyte spoke, Serina's gaze did not waver. It never did.

When Kali'ka's answer finally ended, when that smirk—that wicked little thing—slipped across her lips like a sinful afterthought, Serina exhaled a breathless hum. Not a laugh. Not amusement.

Appreciation.

Her gloved hand lifted, fingers lazily brushing a strand of hair behind her ear as her body pivoted to close the distance between them. Not quite touching. Never quite touching. But close enough that the heat between them felt like a blade sliding between silk.

"Yes..." Serina whispered, her voice velvet-draped iron, every syllable stretched just enough to make it linger in the mind like perfume in silk sheets. "That is the answer of someone who has been paying attention. Who understands that control—true control—isn't a weapon. It's a texture. A flavor. A scent that follows a person into their dreams."

She took a slow step forward, her hands clasped behind her back, posture elegant yet intimate, like a predator circling its favorite pet.

"Orders are not enough. Neither is seduction. Nor fear. But together? Together they form a symphony. And tonight..."

She leaned in, her lips brushing the air near Kali'ka's ear, voice dipped to a tone that felt more like a secret than a statement.

"Tonight, we play it like music."

Her head tilted back, eyes narrowing with indulgent approval.

"You've learned well, little flame."

The words weren't praise—not really. They were a leash, lengthened just enough to let the acolyte run, but always tethered, always close enough to pull taut when Serina desired it.

"But let us see how well you perform when the sheet music is on fire."

She circled then, slowly, deliberately, her boots whispering across the ground as she stepped behind Kali'ka. A finger reached out—not quite touching—but tracing the ghost of a line along the curve of her shoulder.

"What will you do, I wonder," she murmured, each word dripping like honeyed venom, "if they do not fall in line as you expect? If they question, not out of suspicion—but out of spite? If one of them dares to mock you, to challenge your place, your right to command them?"

She stepped to Kali'ka's other side, now in front once more, her gaze locking again with that cybernetic eye.

"Would you hesitate then?"

She smiled. Slow. Wicked.

"Would you lose your temper? Would you fall back on rage—on crude violence?"

A pause. Her hand finally lifted, one gloved finger resting gently beneath the acolyte's chin, tipping her head just slightly upward, a small, calculated claim of power.

"Or would you do what I trained you to do?"

Another step closer. Now too close. Intentionally so. Her breath danced across Kali'ka's cheek, warm and slow.

"Would you seduce their loyalty… with whispers and promises and lies tailored so sweetly they'd beg for more?"

A slight tilt of her head, her voice dipped even lower.

"Would you reach into their minds and show them the faces of their lovers begging them to obey you?"

She paused. Letting the silence expand between them like a stretched string ready to snap.

Then, softly, like silk unraveling—

"Would you make them kneel?"

The question lingered.

Not just between them, but within Kali'ka herself.

Serina withdrew her touch then, stepping back with a grace that suggested she had never needed it in the first place. The connection had already been made, the seed already planted. And Serina?

She was always cultivating.

Her eyes turned once more to the distant gate, where the first soldiers stood in casual conversation, unaware of the wolves circling just outside their walls.

"Go on, little flame," she said finally, her tone now almost nonchalant—but the weight of command pulsed beneath it. "Show me how brightly you burn when no one's holding the torch for you."

Her smirk returned.

"And if one of them resists..."

A slow breath.

"Make sure they enjoy it—before they die."
 



The soft sigh from parted lips, the simple word 'yes' whispered with a silky coo, played upon Kali'ka's being like the rare but coveted touch of Serina's gloved hand. I revealed appreciation for the acolyte's answer. The Mistress was pleased.

Exhilaration trilled in the acolyte's heart as her master took a step closer, her desirous lips close enough to disturb strands of hair as the breath kissed Kali'ka's hearing. More promise of victory, of their power prevailing over the weak. The anticipation ignited a hot tightness in Kali's core, she wet her bottom lip with measured eagerness.

The visceral tension Kali so loved tugged at her with binding cords in the hands of Serina. The dark jedi circled her acolyte, ever the patient predator, observing the work-in-progress that was Kali'ka. With her unique method, Serina questioned, challenged her acolyte, ever testing the Kiffar's acuity and devotion, playing the devil's advocate, all the while nurturing that darkness within Kali that she so skillfully stirred and manipulated.

What would she do? Serina offered scenarios, preparing her protege for contingencies, all the while seeming to lick at the delicious ways Kali could and should deal with the soldiers in the barracks. Would she? Could she? Kali could not hesitate or show doubt. Nothing was more important than impressing and pleasing the Mistress. She would perform to her best ability because failure was not an option for her.

Serina drew close again, and Kali'ka's heartrate responded. The warmth of the woman's breath brushed the skin of her cheeks, and Kali'ka wished she could breath it in like oxygen. A gloved finger touched her chin, the command in that single digit as it coaxed the girl's chin to lift, spoke a million words to the acolyte. She belonged to Serina. Not only that, but she was raw material to be shaped, honed, used by the dark jedi for her purposes, in any way she desired.

Again Serina withdrew. Kali'ka sighed in the space of the void created. "You have taught me well, Mistress," Kali'ka replied in a quiet, confident voice. "Your will be done." She added.

Serina gave Kali'ka her commission, and the acolyte's nefarious smirk returned as her gaze fell to the barracks entrance. Turning, she assumed the demeanor of an officer, erect posture, confident measured gait, haughty glances cast to those she passed.

She drew close to the gate, where the sentries lingered lax and unattentive. She drew up to them and halted with a sharp stop, hands behind her back. She paused, glaring at them as they scrambled to attention. "Pathetic. Direct me to your commander." She insisted. Her words were laced with the faintest taint of the Dark Side, toying with their minds to render Kali'ka somewhat familiar as an officer, while painting an impression that she was not a person with which to trifle. Weak minds, she knew how far she could have twisted them. But her deviant pleasure was not the purpose that night, and she awaited for the soldiers to comply.




 

Embers to Flames
Location: Sullust
Objective: False Flag.
Allies: Kali'ka Kali'ka
Opposing Force: ???
Tags: Sable Varro Ellissanthia Ellissanthia


"The inexorable march to triumph, begins today."

Serina watched her acolyte with the indulgent satisfaction of an artist admiring the first confident brushstroke on a canvas that still promised so much more. Kali'ka had stepped forward into her role with poise, with force, with hunger. Not flawless, not yet—but that was what made her so deliciously raw. There was still room to break her further. To refine her edges, smooth her flaws, sharpen her instincts into something absolute.

And oh, how Serina delighted in the shaping.

She remained just beyond the gate's periphery, a figure in shadow, framed by flickering crimson light, where smoke coiled from an exhaust vent like incense rising before a shrine. Her arms were crossed loosely, her posture relaxed, but her eyes... her eyes were locked onto Kali'ka with a focus that was anything but casual.

The soldiers—two men, simple things, faces half-hidden behind visors and fatigue—scrambled to attention beneath Kali'ka's imperious command. Their surprise at her sudden appearance was visible even through their helmets: a straightening of the spine, a twitch of a hand too slow to salute, a half-step back as if retreating from something they couldn't name.

Fear, perhaps. Awe, perhaps. Or something baser.

Serina smiled.

A slow, decadent smile that curled her lips with pleasure and quiet amusement.

Kali'ka had used her voice like a blade and a leash all in one—and the minds of those soldiers bent like reeds in the wind. It wasn't just the Force, though Serina could taste its caress in the air. It was presence. Tone. Poise. Performance.

And it was working.

But she wasn't finished with her yet.

Serina stepped forward—unhurried, elegant, every movement imbued with that impossible mix of military grace and unrepentant sensuality. Her hips swayed as if the very ground rose to meet her stride, the long folds of her cloak trailing behind like a shadow that refused to leave.

She came to a stop just behind Kali'ka, her presence blooming behind her like a tide of perfume and pressure. Not a word yet. Just her proximity.

Then, in a voice soft enough to be mistaken for affection—but twisted with layered intent—she spoke:

"Mmm. Lovely. Look at them squirm."

Her gloved fingers lifted once again, tracing lightly—just lightly—along the length of Kali'ka's spine, a gesture too intimate for the context, but exactly because of that, it possessed all the power Serina intended.

"You wear authority well, little flame," she murmured, her breath brushing against the curve of the girl's ear. "But it isn't enough to command. You must own. Their time. Their thoughts. Their every breath. You must not simply lead them into ruin..."

Her voice dropped to a near-whisper, decadent and edged like a kiss before a knife.

"...You must make them thank you for it."

She moved again, circling Kali'ka with a predator's languor, letting her eyes pass over the sentries who now stood still, statues against a storm they couldn't see coming.

"Do you know what I see when I look at them?" she asked, not to the soldiers, but to Kali'ka, her voice now loud enough to be heard by all.

"Tools. Nothing more. Disposable assets shaped by routine, dulled by safety. They are bored, soft things. They want a war, even if they won't admit it. They want orders that bleed. They want to feel important."

She stepped up to one of the guards then, her gloved fingers reaching out to adjust his collar with an absurd intimacy. The soldier flinched—but did not move.

"So give it to them."

Her tone was sweet, sugar-laced with the threat of violence. "Feed them the lie. Make them feel like predators when they are, in truth, prey. Let them rush into the night believing they are avengers—righteous, loyal—only to die on the altar of our ambition. Because that is what we're building here, isn't it?"

Her eyes flicked back to Kali'ka.

"An altar. And you, my dear thing..." She stepped beside her acolyte once more, fingers trailing again up her arm, "You are the sacrificial dagger. Beautiful. Sharp. Willing."

A pause.

Then, quieter:

"But I wonder..."

Her eyes narrowed, searching Kali'ka's face with something darker than scrutiny—a test made of affection wrapped in barbed wire.

"Are you willing to sacrifice yourself, if I ask it of you? Not your life, no— something more precious. Your soul, your certainty, your sense of self. Would you sever that last tether to the light—if it pleased me?"

She tilted her head. Her smile now was soft. Almost loving. Almost.

"Because that is what power demands. And I intend to make you powerful."

Her gaze fell then on the command tower behind the gates.

"So prove it. Lead us in. Give the orders. And when they die screaming, I want their last thoughts to be that they died serving you."

Her voice turned to velvet once more.

"Then… perhaps, I'll reward you properly."

And with that, Serina fell into silence again. Watching. Waiting. Smiling like a goddess in the moment before worship begins.

 

Sable Varro

Guest


sith-divider-pink.png

Ember To Flames


Tag: Kali'ka Kali'ka Ellissanthia Ellissanthia Darth Virelia Darth Virelia

Deployment Location:

  • Primary Target Zone: Sullust

Equipment Loadout:




Sable's lips curled in a tight sneer, her gloved fingers twitching at her side as she cast a sidelong glare at Ellissanthia. She knew it was perhaps foolish, and indeed childish to make a big deal about her hair.

Yet, recalling the horrific events still filled her with fury. "There are a few. Which would you like me to detail?" She grunted under her breath, her voice tight.

She adjusted the hood she'd pulled low over her face, scowling as she fought the instinct to rake her fingers through her now-darkened hair. "There will be the vents, possibly utility passages for the power to be feed into, and we would also need....access to a sewage processing for...sanitary reasons. Some might be more...complicated than others." The word came out sharper than intended, but the irritation was real. She already felt like a stranger in her own skin. Now, with the unfamiliar weight of the dye clinging to her hair, the sensation was almost suffocating.

She was probably overreacting, but just knowing that her hair was now....not...bothered her immensely.

Deep breathes Sable. Deep breaths.

Still, Sable forced herself to exhale and refocus, glancing toward the ventilation shafts Ellissanthia had pointed out. "The turret grid's will be a problem," She muttered, jaw tightening. "We could try the ventilation shafts, but the heat might be a bit much."
 


A twinge of pleasure touched Kali'ka as the soldiers snapped to attention at her words. It was out of duty of course, she was in an officer's uniform. But there was something else in their eyes that gave her true delight. Her sorcery, the Darkness in her nurtured by the Mistress, left them afraid of something they couldn't define.

Then, that presence crept over her from behind, draping over her shoulders like a mantle, wrapping around her like a tight belt, covering her head like a cowl, penetrating her like a welcomed poison. Serina had arrived. Kali retained her demeanor, even as her insides coiled around that presence wontonly. A soft sigh escaped her lips when the faintest trace of an unseen gloved hand ran down her spine, sending scintillation through her nerves, to her core and sacred places.

The warm breath of her master kissed the acolyte's ear, silken words seizing the protege's attention. The Dark Jedi wove her spell around her acolyte, in the hearing of the guards. Serina cared nothing for them, regarding them fi they had already died in the name of her cause.

A smirk touched Kali'ka's dark lips as the Mistress studied the erect men, they stood unmoving. The cryptic, seductive words of Serina again taught her acolyte. Yes, the soldiers would bend to her will. Kali wished to make them fools, puppets, unwitting tools in the machinations of a wicked goddess. Her Mistress.

But when that ensnaring gaze caught her, Kali'ka felt like a fly in a spider's web. There was always a challenge, always a need to prove devotion when it came to Serina. But Kali'ka was hungry for power, and for the attention of her master. This time, the stakes were higher, the demand more stark, the result eternal.

Would she sacrifice her soul?

Kali'ka met the melting gaze of her Mistress. Serina asked if her acolyte was willing to surrender her entire being to her. And with the challenge came the promise of reward. The fly sprouted strong wings, and a sting, eager. Kali'ka would not strive to escape the web. No, she would wrap herself in it and offer herself fully to the spider.

"Yes, Mistress, I would lay in on an altar, surrender it as you rip it from my being. Take from me what you desire."
She purred, yearning to draw closer, to feel Serina's breath on her again, the touch of her gloved hand. "Make me a mace in your hand, and a balm to your soul, and a dog at your feet." She asked boldly. Then turned back towards the gate.

Her hands lifted like serpents, curling around the back of the necks of the two guards, drawing them close, pulling them along as she strode through the gate. The Kiffar acolyte employted her mistress' tactics, whispered into their ears, her lips brushing their skin. Lies, promises, the Dark Side casting delusion as her slithering words convinced them that they were special, the kind of soldier she needed to deal with sedition, with corruption.

Inside, she released them to spread her poison. With a silken gait worthy of her seductive master, Kali'ka moved from group of soldiers to the next. Each was guaged with one cybernetic eye, and one evil eye with wicked discernment. To the devout, she touted Sith devotion and denounced the illegitimate rule of the corrupt governor, preaching compelling words of cleansing and victory. To them she was the banner of righteousness.

To the greedy, sensual promises were slathered on them like amber honey, giving them cravings that they only saw satisfied in the dark sorceress, To them, Kali'ka became their visceral obsession. Their idol promised reward for 'choosing the right side'. Little did they know thier reward would be death and freedom from ther pathetic lives.

And to those who resisted, arrogant fools. They proved the most delightful. The sorceress laughed at them as inky shadows grip them, irrational fear licking at their souls. She became their monster, and in wide-eyed horror, they begged release and vowed to serve.

And for Kali'ka, the Dark Side flowed through her like hot liquid metal, toxic and wonderfully warm. Her delicious pleasure piqued at the expense of the hapless soldiers. Would her deception, her seduction, her bravado take hold? Would it drive them to move against the governer? And, would the Mistress be pleased by her performance? Kali'ka fould the last question the most compelling for her.

 

Embers to Flames
Location: Sullust
Objective: False Flag.
Allies: Kali'ka Kali'ka
Opposing Force: ???
Tags: Sable Varro Ellissanthia Ellissanthia


"The inexorable march to triumph, begins today."

Serina stood in the corridor's edge like a queen without need of throne or crown, the glowpanels behind her casting her in ghostlight, painting shadows across her high cheekbones and the obsidian trim of her officer's uniform. Her arms were draped at her sides in perfect relaxation, but everything about her was tense with delicious, calculating attention—like a sculptor watching her apprentice press chisel to stone, wondering whether she would strike beauty or ruin.

And oh, what a performance Kali'ka gave.

Serina didn't interrupt. She didn't have to. She watched. She devoured.

The way Kali'ka moved—so fluid, so certain—was no longer mere mimicry. It was no longer the girl trying to impress her mistress; no, this was a woman dipping her fingers into the currents of power and learning how it tasted. She was trying it on for size, testing whether it would fit her like silk or cut her like glass.

And Serina adored it.

The grip on the guards. The whispers into ears. The manipulation of devotion, lust, and terror. Serina could feel the ripples in the Force, not as tidal waves—no, not yet—but like the first stirrings of a storm that knew it would one day drown cities.

She moved forward slowly, the sound of her steps muffled by the smooth stone beneath, the soldiers around them oblivious to what walked among them. Serina passed through them as if they were not there. As if they were already corpses.

Her Kali'ka was crafting a massacre.

And doing it beautifully.

When she reached her acolyte's side once more, Serina did not speak immediately. She let her presence answer first—a furnace of attention, saturating the air, making the space between them unbearable in its gravity.

Then, softly, low enough for no one else to hear:

"So very eager to offer yourself, aren't you?"

Her voice caressed the side of Kali'ka's jaw like a velvet chain.

"To be my mace, my balm… my pet."

Serina's gloved hand lifted, and with two fingers she traced the line of Kali'ka's lower lip, slow and sensuous, the leather cool against heated skin.

"Mmm. Do you know what I do with pets, my flame?" she whispered. "I leash them. I break them. I train them into beasts so fearsome that even gods tremble when they growl."

Her touch fell away, but her breath remained.

"And then I put them down when they disappoint me."

The words were cruel. Unapologetic. A blade drawn across soft skin.

But the look in her eyes—that soft, dangerous glint—said something far more complicated.

"But not tonight."

Serina turned then, her cloak fluttering as she gestured toward the central comms terminal at the back of the hall—where lieutenants had begun gathering, whispering about the orders spreading among the rank and file like wildfire.

Kali'ka's words were already working. Her poison was sweet, and they were drinking deep.

Serina smiled.

"You've infected them. All of them. They can't see it yet, but their loyalty has already been burned down to its roots. What grows in its place now will serve you, serve me, until the roots rot and the bodies fall."

Her hand slipped into the datapad at her hip. She tapped it once—a final signal.

The forged orders would now reach the officer's command terminal. Everything Kali'ka had whispered would be confirmed. Every lie, every seduction, every manipulation—now gospel.

And then Serina turned back to her apprentice.

"You did well," she said, voice dipped in satin and smoke. "But one good performance does not a queen make."

Her fingers caught Kali'ka's chin once more, firmer this time, her grip intimate and inescapable.

"When they march into the governor's undercity and paint the alleys in blood, when they scream their loyalty as fire catches their uniforms and burns away their names, when they fall and beg for salvation thinking it will come from you"

Her lips were now nearly brushing Kali'ka's.

"—I want you to watch it all. I want you to savor it. I want you to feel that fire you cradle in your belly spill out into the streets and scorch this world clean."

Then she pulled away, suddenly aloof again, her smirk reformed like armor.

"And then, when it's done, when you've offered this planet its first true taste of despair..."

Her gaze slid over Kali'ka's form like the touch of silk dragged across bare skin.

"Perhaps I'll unchain you long enough to let you feel something real in return."

With that, Serina turned, striding toward the command center with the assurance of a woman who had already won. Soldiers moved to clear her path without understanding why. The fire was lit. The massacre had begun.

And behind her trailed a shadow that was learning how to burn.




The moment the final orders were confirmed, the barracks changed.

Gone was the casual rhythm of idle soldiers at rest. Gone were the doubts. Kali'ka's poison had seeped deep—into their instincts, into their pride, into that cavernous place in every soldier's heart that longed to do something righteous.

Now?

Now they marched.

With swift, armored precision, the 43rd Sullustan Legion began mobilizing, unaware they no longer served their Governor. Rows of troops fell into formation, their boots hammering the durasteel floors like a war drum echoing through the bowels of the building. In the central command hall, crimson lights strobed overhead, signifying an urgent tactical deployment. Officers barked orders. Weapons were drawn from locked vaults. Assault speeders rumbled to life in the motor pool.

All of it…

For Serina.

She stood at the apex of the chaos, arms clasped behind her back, the perfect specter of command. Her head turned slightly, regarding the movement around her with the detached amusement of a woman watching a city prepare for its own funeral.

And beside her, Kali'ka glowed.

Not literally, but with something darker and more divine. The kind of glow that came from being seen, used, wanted. Her lips parted ever so slightly, and Serina's eyes flicked toward her—always aware, always predatory.

Without a word, Serina stepped behind her again, moving close, so close the space between them became intolerable. Her gloved hand grazed the side of Kali'ka's neck—a featherlight touch, deceptively tender.

"Do you feel it?" she whispered, her voice low, throat-deep and soaked in velvet. "The tremble in the air? The breath before the scream? You did this."

The fingers trailed down to Kali'ka's collarbone, tracing the line slowly, as though Serina were drawing a blade she had no need to use yet.

"They'll die with your name echoing in their heads, and they won't even know why."

She smiled, and her lips ghosted over Kali'ka's ear.

"And yet, it's not death they march toward."

A pause.

"It's you."

Then—she stepped away. Swift, like the whipcrack withdrawal of a lover mid-ecstasy, leaving behind hunger sharpened into pain. Serina turned, leading the way toward the open bay doors where transports were loading, where squads stood at attention waiting for orders they didn't understand had been born in seduction and shadow.

And Serina let them wait.

She turned on her heel, her voice cutting through the din like a blade wrapped in silk.

"You have been called to restore purity to this world. The Governor has allowed filth to fester in the undercity—criminals, cowards, degenerates who dare to call themselves allies."

She began to pace in front of the assembled troops, hands clasped behind her back, her stride slow, sensual, theatrical—designed to make them watch her.

"You will burn them out. You will purge them. You will take your rightful place as the hand of the Sith, and leave behind only ash and obedience."

She paused. Looked over her shoulder—straight at Kali'ka.

"Lieutenant," she said smoothly, voice dipped like melted gold. "I trust you will lead the charge. Remind them who they march for."

It was not a suggestion. It was a stage.

The lights of troop transports flared.

The streets below flickered with anticipation.

The air was thick with impending slaughter.

And Serina stood at the center of it all, a siren amidst the flames.

As the troops began to move, and the barracks began to empty, she watched Kali'ka with the intensity of a goddess who had sculpted a temple with her own hands—waiting to see if her chosen priestess would spill blood in her name.

And in that moment, she whispered—more to herself than anyone else—

"Let her seduce the world the way I seduced her… and then destroy it."

Her fingers curled at her side.

She had given the girl fire. Now she wanted to see it
devour.
 
Location: Sulon Industrial Complex - Sullust
Objective: Infiltrate Facility and Industrial Complex
Tag: Darth Virelia Darth Virelia Kali'ka Kali'ka
Direct Mention: Sable Varro

Ellissanthia frowned, webbed ears twitching as they registered the annoyance in Sable’s voice. It had not been easy to convince the Echani to dye her hair. Fortunately, the actual act of applying the dye to her hair had been relatively painless. Once her hair was prepared, the Instadye had acted in mere seconds, changing its color from a conspicuous white to an unremarkable brown.

“I’m sorry for messing with your hair.” Ellissanthia said, her tone low and apologetic. “If you would be willing, I will help you remove the dye, after we are finished.” She added, her expression softening.

Scanning the courtyard, the Undine surveryed the bustling crowd with a focused gaze. Provided they could avoid the patrols, it seemed possible for them to simply fade into the crowd, at which point they could peel off from the checkpoint line and slip away into the maze of heavy machinery.

And thereafter, they could make their way into the ventilation shafts.

“There are worse things than heat.” Ellissanthia stated. “That said...” The Undine paused then, her gaze shifting towards the crowd. “Let’s enter the line. The workers are coming out of the industrial complex in groups.” She noted. “We’ll slip through one of those groups before heading into the western sector. The large machines there should give us plenty of cover.” She finished.

With Sable’s agreement, Ellissanthia made her way into the checkpoint line, before pulling up a breath mask to cover the lower half of her face.


“Another group is coming up the turbolift. Follow my lead.”

 

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