Rain thickened between them, a veil drawn thin but unbroken, each drop catching what little light the city bled upward. Morveth did not wipe it from his face, he let it fall, let it mark the stillness of him. She turned fully now. Good. There was no flinch in her. No wasted motion. He watched the minute shift of her footing, the tightening line of her shoulders. Not fear. Not even hostility. Calculation.
His gaze lingered there, not on her mask, but on the shape beneath it. The intent that moved her rather than the surface she presented. When she spoke, he listened without interruption. There was a familiar rhythm to her words. The same quiet separation from the structures other clung to. The same dismissal of the petty cycles that consumed the Order and all its lessor imitators. Morveth did not answer immediately. Instead, he took another step forward, not closing the distance fully but enough that the space between them felt chosen now.
"Distraction." He repeated, as if testing the word for weight. A faint breath left him, not quite amusement.
"No."
His hand rose then, unhurried, palm turning slightly upward between them. For a moment, there was nothing, only rain striking skin and cloth. Then it came. Not the crackling violence of lightning nor the crude flare of Sith displays. A slow bloom. Green fire curled into existence above his palm, thin at first, almost fragile in appearance. It did not burn like natural flame. It
coiled. Tendrils of it licked the air casting a sickly, shifting glow across the wet stone and the dark line of his hand. The rain did nothing to extinguish it. Morveth's eyes did not leave her as the fire moved, folding in on itself, unfolded again, alive in a way that had nothing to do with heat or combustion.
"I have no interest in their hierarchies." He said, voice low beneath the soft hiss of rain against unnatural flame.
"Or their endless circling of the same shallow victories."
The fire tightened, drawing closer to his palm, then stretching again as if tasting the space between them.
"They taught me enough to be useful. Nothing more."
The green light cast brief, warped reflections across her, something ancient meeting something unknown.
"You speak of what lies beneath. Of structures that remain when everything else is stripped away. I know that language."
The flame dimmed, drawn inward, controlled, until it became a smaller, denser thing.
"Not the way they pretend to understand it." There was the faintest edge there now.
"But as it is practiced where I come from."
He didn't name Dathomir. He didn't need to. He let the silence stretch again, the fire's low movement filling it like a second heartbeat. He took another step forward. The flame curled once more, then stilled.
"So no. I did not come as a distraction. I came to find the one who has power but is not part of the Order. And I intend to see whether it is a path worth walking."
His hand lowered slightly and the green fire faded away.