Kiskla Grayson-Matteo
Redeemer
Seven years ago
Naboo
Sensitive as ever, Kiskla hadn’t been awake for the past quarter of the hour. Her hands were locked behind her head, and ankles to her awkwardly long legs were crossed. Her breathing was soft, and nigh undetectably laced with the odd snore. At the sudden start of sounds, the violet curtain she had been dozing behind slowly lifted, and she caught the tail end of her companion’s wistful wiles. She exhaled tiredly, and rolled to her side — physically forcing herself awake. The grass folded in response to her adjustment, and she propped herself up on an elbow; fixing the ends of her hairs as some were desperate to cling to her pouted lips.
She literally had the biggest mouth on Naboo in so many ways.
“Maybe.” Kiskla agreed, blinking heavily as the stars circled above the pair of Padawans. “Though you’re not very good solo.” She ‘hmmm’d’ thoughtfully and nodded against the heel of her palm, reaching out to poke his chest with her limp arm. "You need me, like I need you.” Content with her input, she rolled back to her shoulder blades and rested her palms on her flat belly and smiled to herself, letting her eyes lull to a content close once more.
Present
Dagobah
The Redeemer of the Republic had no qualms in fending him off, whilst eradicating him. Kiskla had a penchant for taking what was thrown at her, and throwing it right back. It would be no different with the incorporeal — especially when a faint, familiar whisper graced her awareness. Her eyes squeezed shut with a millisecond of relief, exhaling sharply before re-acquainting herself with the now. She could feel the bite of the tendrils, though she didn’t release her grip on the wedge she’d driven to discover the faint echo of [member="Harland Gates"]. If this all went well, she was going to kill him later for getting re-involved in her lift at this point of critical mass. The dark grip threatened to seep into her, and she let it — reducing the intensity of her Force Light for a fragment of a moment.
“You forget how familiar I am with your powers.” Kiskla replied, speaking to the distorted face of her childhood chum “How they’ve fuelled me through many victories. You forget how accustomed I’ve come to manipulating your madness.” That said, she reactivated her focus, the intensity searing. It was like resurrecting the sun. The Force burned her body, cells exploded within her as the Force endotracheal channel to exhale sharply through — as if it had been suffocating through centuries and this was it’s first deep gasp. Kiskla couldn’t help it, a piercing yelp echoed from her in response to the pain — within her the clash of the dark and the light occurred. The darkness was powerful, a trifle moreso than she could muster. Her own strength wavered and she felt her knees turn to honey. The glow that had been surrounding her began to fade, and after her haughty words, she was losing her grip -- losing the sound of Hal, and everything. Like the world beneath her was a fragile puzzle, slowly falling away piece by piece.The darkness extended it's breadth and plunged against her, creeping and seeping. The will within flickered, and the Grandmaster choked on her hold.
Her psyche was cast backwards, into a holding all of her own. Unlike Hal's prison, there were no lights. Only a suffocating cloud -- this was death. She was sure of it. She could feel it's cold, murky atmosphere unlike anything she'd ever experienced. The liquid that stung her eyes was cold, rather than the usual hot salt. Her mouth was dry, and everything felt 10 pounds more than usual -- weighing her down against the resistance. The lull of a haunting hum seduced her to a state of pleasant acceptance, that this was okay. She'd done what she could, the Force Light, but it hadn't worked. Whispers of her experiences ricocheted around invisible walls -- but a single string stood out. A Nabooian accent, but not belonging to Hal: "I promise returning to you is a priority." Kiskla was woozy still, on a delicate balance between giving up and clawing her way back. Then reason stepped in, and an emotion she'd not come to terms with. Something from the bowels of Kiskla's affectionate pit churned, roaring loudly to activation -- would you say love? I would. So would she. [member="Marcello Matteo"] said his life would be worse off without her, even if she was a pain in the ass -- and she was the perfect person to stick around and keep ruining his world! She wanted to see him again -- to be with him again as a real person, not as an afterlife afterthought. That wouldn't do. She'd promised him that she had something to say -- before anything ever happened to her, anything mortal, anything fatal, he had to know in an undeniable expression that she loved him. That's right, she loved him! She was a keeper of her word, always, and she had made a promise. With a deep, ethereal groan she rolled her heavy, shadowed shoulders forward and reached to tear through the constrictive black walls. Her holistic fingers were like wrecking balls, and the walls didn't stand a chance with Kiskla's newfound vigour.
She’d allowed a lot of those tendrils to seep in and affect her, and absorbed them via tutaminis. The purple shadows swirled in her blood, pumping angrily as she searched them out with her own subatomic views via her practiced power, Art of the Small. There wasn’t a single sentient that could match her prowess with that technique. She used this efficiently, in what was seconds in real-time, knowing that time was of the essence. The darkness was manipulated, and exposed to her brilliant internal bursts of light that were brewing again. It was burning now, causing a deep, searing pain from the inside out. Like a shovel, she manipulated the curves of the blended powers to dig, dig, dig deeply into Hal and his conscious and otherwise. There would be no Beyond Shadows. There would be nothing for this demon. A combination of Art of the Small and Force Light burst from the girl’s blindingly glowing body; reaching for the ethereal form of The Son with her own immaterial grip. She found it. After desperate groping, she found the bodiless, hollow shape and evil silhouette. Her physical teeth grit; blood starting to cake at her nose and ears, lips splitting from the intensity. Strong, determined clutch curled around the ferocious body that was The celestial’s. He was weaker than before, she was using the power he had tried to thwart her with, against him; but at a different angle. Everything he tried to pull away now, still pumped through her.
There were no sounds now, nothing but horrified silence and determined, silent fighting for the ultimate victory. Kiskla would succeed — she’d die before the alternative came to fruition. With a final, exhaustive attempt, she wrapped the entirety of her spiritual spread around the Architect and gave a powerful tug upwards and outwards.
Nothing.
Nothing.
Nothing.
Yoink. Out in the open, the explosive clouds rolled, Kiskla and her tormentor clawing at each other in a deathly wrap — tangled in a disembodied intimacy that couldn’t be fathomed. Art of the Small still worked with Force Light to determine what was The Son, and rip, and meld, and reconstruct what he was. It was a savage struggle, but Kiskla was beating down with an intensity she’d never manifested before. Particle by ethereal particle, The Son was being picked apart as the celestial wildly reacted, looking for somewhere, anywhere to hide now. Not take over, but just hide from the Jedi’s rampage. Her feral power was more than he’d bargained for, it was something he’d thought only he could provide — but here she was, barbarically yet meticulously using his own strength against him and contorting it into something unrecognizable and the complete contrast to what it was. White light overpowered the purple shadows bit by bit until finally, finally, there was an unceremonious pop.
A loud gasp hurled itself from Kiskla’s diaphragm and she dropped to her knees. Her body was coated in sweat, blood and mud. Her head hung limply as her weight rolled to one side, the hip pulling downward toward the puddle until her hands also dropped into the damp liquid. Heavy breaths coated her lips as she panted, desperately fighting to continue breathing even though it felt like everything within her was on fire or bleeding. The will to remain upright wasn’t strong enough, she wasn’t strong enough, and soon her right shoulder joined her right hip for a brief moment until, as on naboo, she rolled over onto her shoulder blades. Her body was screaming in protest, her head pounding and swirling as an after affect to the struggle. Still struggling for breath. But she’d won.
She’d won.
Hal. Was Hal okay? She winced at the thought, but couldn’t summon any energy for an investigation — which deeply concerned her.