Arris Windrun
Gutter Goddess
"Neriah knows," she answered.
There wasn't time to explain more than that just yet. She glanced at Kirie, who made sure to let Arris know that there was no 'us' in the equation. It startled her, because that was exactly how she would think; she did still think that way, mostly, but something had started to change. In a small way she felt proud of the acolyte. It was growth. It would help her at the academy, and in her dealings with other Sith. But...
She nodded once. Firm and committed, even as coolant began to leak from her synthflesh like discolored sweat.
When they neared the entrance, their way was blocked by scavengers. Arris held the heavy gun at her side, but it was a question of whether she had the strength to use it in her condition. Unkillable as Kirie might have thought, the Dark Horse was still hollowed of Sith power.
To her surprise, Arris heard the hiss and saw the crimson glow. Kirie now stood in front - a guardian postured like an apprentice. To the scavengers, all Sith were the same; killers and thugs of a caliber that even syndicates knew to fear. Their own fear was palpable in the Force. They paused like prey caught in an open field, before one, two, then all turned and ran away after Kirie threatened them.
The cyborg felt her heart drop. Whatever violence she was ready for never came, and it made her feel small. Still; stimulants coursed through her veins. Arris operated under a different chemistry than before, and it reflected in every subtlety about her.
She replaced the weapon in its holster and turned to Kirie still stanced like a guardian frozen in time. The obvious signs that her chemistry changed too, but unlike Arris, she wasn't yet acclimated to the rush. Would she like it? Would she feel awful? Would it make her chase impulse just to keep it going?
The cyborg reached out slowly, one finger pad extended towards the humming tip of Kirie's lightsaber. As it inched closer, the outer metal shell began to steam and glowed orange before finally the crimson was swallowed back inside the hilt.
Arris slouched against the entrance frame and drew a cigarette, bringing her cooling finger to light it before the glow subsided. She took a drag, then offered it to Kirie.
"What a dangerous weapon."
Her eyes never left Kirie when she said that.
"I was half your age plus a few when I first felt that way. Do you hate it?"
Arris asked with such interest.
She feared the other answer - the one she expected. How silly... Especially when this version of Kirie exhilarated her in a most unhealthy way, and Arris couldn't even hide the fact. Not with how she reached out to taste the woman's violence a moment ago; she felt herself a freak, and hoped smally that here was a kindred woman, someone to finally understand her. Hoped and abhorred.
There wasn't time to explain more than that just yet. She glanced at Kirie, who made sure to let Arris know that there was no 'us' in the equation. It startled her, because that was exactly how she would think; she did still think that way, mostly, but something had started to change. In a small way she felt proud of the acolyte. It was growth. It would help her at the academy, and in her dealings with other Sith. But...
'Think on your plan, Arris. I'm interested to hear it.'
She nodded once. Firm and committed, even as coolant began to leak from her synthflesh like discolored sweat.
When they neared the entrance, their way was blocked by scavengers. Arris held the heavy gun at her side, but it was a question of whether she had the strength to use it in her condition. Unkillable as Kirie might have thought, the Dark Horse was still hollowed of Sith power.
To her surprise, Arris heard the hiss and saw the crimson glow. Kirie now stood in front - a guardian postured like an apprentice. To the scavengers, all Sith were the same; killers and thugs of a caliber that even syndicates knew to fear. Their own fear was palpable in the Force. They paused like prey caught in an open field, before one, two, then all turned and ran away after Kirie threatened them.
The cyborg felt her heart drop. Whatever violence she was ready for never came, and it made her feel small. Still; stimulants coursed through her veins. Arris operated under a different chemistry than before, and it reflected in every subtlety about her.
She replaced the weapon in its holster and turned to Kirie still stanced like a guardian frozen in time. The obvious signs that her chemistry changed too, but unlike Arris, she wasn't yet acclimated to the rush. Would she like it? Would she feel awful? Would it make her chase impulse just to keep it going?
The cyborg reached out slowly, one finger pad extended towards the humming tip of Kirie's lightsaber. As it inched closer, the outer metal shell began to steam and glowed orange before finally the crimson was swallowed back inside the hilt.
Arris slouched against the entrance frame and drew a cigarette, bringing her cooling finger to light it before the glow subsided. She took a drag, then offered it to Kirie.
"What a dangerous weapon."
Her eyes never left Kirie when she said that.
"I was half your age plus a few when I first felt that way. Do you hate it?"
Arris asked with such interest.
She feared the other answer - the one she expected. How silly... Especially when this version of Kirie exhilarated her in a most unhealthy way, and Arris couldn't even hide the fact. Not with how she reached out to taste the woman's violence a moment ago; she felt herself a freak, and hoped smally that here was a kindred woman, someone to finally understand her. Hoped and abhorred.