Tyrant Queen of Darkness
"Pray. If that doesn't work, pray harder."
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Old legends spoke of a warrior named Hioronedon—human of birth, titanic in stature, and so relentless in battle that even the Lords of Korriban begrudged him a tomb among their own dead. The stories were sparse, brittle with age: a wanderer who carved his way to the Valley with nothing but a blade and a will, granted a sepulcher and ringed by ancient automatons whose metal sinew was stirred by the Dark Side itself. A man interred, and machines left to watch him rot.
And yet it was intact—one of the few resting places on Korriban that had not been gutted, robbed, or devoured by time. A rarity. A temptation.
Exactly the sort of thing Virelia coveted.
The young explorer inside her—the girl who once chased mysteries instead of empires—had never quite died. And here, in the dust-choked silence of Korriban, she felt that ember flicker with something dangerously close to nostalgia… or hunger. A discovery like this could sharpen her edge again, remind her of the ambition that once set entire destinies ablaze.
Reaching the planet had been its own trial, but finding the tomb without an excavation battalion was the true test. Korriban liked to hide its treasures beneath shifting stone and spite.
She chose a secluded valley for her camp, far from the routes where the Academy's aspirants trudged in their endless cycle of dying for a creed that deserved none of them. A faint regret tugged at her—she had hoped to see Tavis (
No matter. The tomb came first.
She hauled a crate of equipment from her dubiously sourced shuttle and snapped open its latches. An entrenchment tool gleamed within. Primitive work, but necessary. With a quiet exhale she began to dig out the foundation for her tent, each stroke sending dry red grit drifting like powdered bone. The heat pressed down like a living thing, eager to blister flesh, but her armor sealed it out. The mask shielded her face from the scorching light, leaving only the rhythmic crunch of metal hitting soil as she worked tirelessly toward her self-imposed deadline.
She had always been the maker of her own keep—the hand that judged, rewarded, and punished in the same breath. The idea of another trying to shape her, to "teach" her what only she could know, was an insult wrapped in presumption. Her discipline was a quiet, merciless thing; her will, a blade honed on solitude and stubborn, brutal persistence. That was who she was, and she would allow no one to redefine her.
The galaxy had tried often enough: whispering of compassion, urging her to kneel to empathy, insisting she spare concern for those forever flailing in the mud. But the moment she reached down with even a fraction of mercy, hands clutched at her ankles, dragging her into the same filth they had chosen as home.
Never again.
The loss of the Force—its absence like a phantom limb—made this expedition more punishing than any battlefield. But difficulty had never turned her aside. It was merely a whetstone. She would press forward, unearth the secrets of the Hioronedon tomb, strip truth from legend, and forge from its ruins the seed of her next ascent. Reflection had served its time; self-pity had been permitted its moment. Now the inevitable hungered.
The darkness must be fed. And she would not go gently.
She drove the final stroke into the trench and set the entrenching tool aside. With methodical precision she pitched the tent, staking it firmly into the scarlet earth she had carved open by hand. Korriban's furnace winds battered her, testing her, but her resolve stood like stone against the storm.
Yet even within that unyielding resolve, a quiet solemnity coiled. She knew what she sought to build. She knew the shape of her desires, the scale of her ambition, and the shadows trailing behind every one of her victories.
They were terrible things. Horrid things.