NightSister
Animus
A completely neutral expression of mild curiousity formed on Aria's face as she listened, interested despite herself, to the explanation he offered. Chaos seemed, to her, to be the natural state of one's mind - one thought, then another five, then ten more branching from each in different directions - but perhaps that was unusual in most people. Perhaps it didn't pertain to a certain allegiance, only to living a certain type of lifestyle in which there was so much food for thought that it overwhelmed the mind. On that level, at least, Aria could relate.
"So," she said drily, trying to make sense of his explanation, "so - what, you view the Force as some kind of god? That there's a path set out for you and if you don't follow it you're going against nature." In a way it adhered to what Aria was fairly certain was the true Sith view; law and order to the extreme. It had taken her some time to figure out that code - it was just so easy to write off their goals as nothing more than mindless destruction, but all her research over the past few months hadn't been without an aim. It had taken a lot of investigation, which had landed her in trouble more than once, but Aria had come to realise that in their aims, the Sith were truly not that different from the Jedi. Two sides of the same coin.
"Well, fine, I'll respect that. I don't believe that the Force is anything more than a means of guidance and progression, but believe what you will." Though she was mildly incredulous that he truly seemed to serve the Force as though it were a deity, she kept the disrespect from her voice the best she could. She was tiring and soon it would be fully night.
"You can stop floating the lightsaber now, you know," she added, nodding her head towards the red blade hovering above him. Aria took her own lightsaber from her belt for good measure, fearful of whatever lurked outside. "Anyway, it's getting pretty dark now. Somebody should stay awake in case somebody finally answers the damn signal or if something big and scary gets hungry." She let out a yawn, apologetically covering her mouth with one hand and taking a seat on an aisle seat that hadn't been crushed. "Hey, what did you do with the food?"
[member="Darth Abyss"]
"So," she said drily, trying to make sense of his explanation, "so - what, you view the Force as some kind of god? That there's a path set out for you and if you don't follow it you're going against nature." In a way it adhered to what Aria was fairly certain was the true Sith view; law and order to the extreme. It had taken her some time to figure out that code - it was just so easy to write off their goals as nothing more than mindless destruction, but all her research over the past few months hadn't been without an aim. It had taken a lot of investigation, which had landed her in trouble more than once, but Aria had come to realise that in their aims, the Sith were truly not that different from the Jedi. Two sides of the same coin.
"Well, fine, I'll respect that. I don't believe that the Force is anything more than a means of guidance and progression, but believe what you will." Though she was mildly incredulous that he truly seemed to serve the Force as though it were a deity, she kept the disrespect from her voice the best she could. She was tiring and soon it would be fully night.
"You can stop floating the lightsaber now, you know," she added, nodding her head towards the red blade hovering above him. Aria took her own lightsaber from her belt for good measure, fearful of whatever lurked outside. "Anyway, it's getting pretty dark now. Somebody should stay awake in case somebody finally answers the damn signal or if something big and scary gets hungry." She let out a yawn, apologetically covering her mouth with one hand and taking a seat on an aisle seat that hadn't been crushed. "Hey, what did you do with the food?"
[member="Darth Abyss"]