Administrator

The hour was late. Srina stood within the confines of her chambers on Ryloth, staring out the window at simulated twilight, as she gathered wayward thoughts. Her wounds from Tatooine, physically, had mostly healed. Every now and then she was still besot with a burning sensation in her blood, a black fire, that left her every nerve ending feel and inflamed. As far as poisons went, the Devaronian variety would not kill her, no, but it had the capacity to make her long for it. Each day, with help from Katrine Van-Derveld and the Grand Master of the Silver Jedi, Valae Kitra, she felt a little bit stronger.
A little bit more like herself.
Only now—Darth Metus was fearful. For now, she was caged within the safety of Sinner’s Well, unable to leave, out of respect for the wishes of her Master. He knew her fury. He knew her mind. He did not want her running headlong into a mission, blinded by vengeance before she was at her best. Her gilded cage had everything she could ever want, or need, but it was not enough. The Echani needed to feel a blade in her hands. She needed to move, to train, and to study the Force and the Galaxy itself. There was so much that she didn’t know.
The slender woman, wrapped in a shimmersilk sleeping gown, with a robe of ivory tied around her waist felt as if she might lose her mind to the silence. It was deafening. All of the other Acolytes had been sent from the Well to allow her time to rest, to breathe, without feeling tempted to join in their activities. Srina was tired, and yet, more than anything, she felt bitter. For all of her training, for all that she had learned, in the end, she had still been bested by an Empire dog.
Just the thought of [member="Adron Malvern"] made her tense. She could remember the fluidity of his movements, the grace of his attacks, and the unstable presence beneath the guise of a High Moff. She did know him, but she had known men like him, while fighting against Thyrsians on Eshan. Small fingertips reached for the polycarbonate window, pressing against the pane so that she could open it. A cool breeze disturbed lengths of unbound moonlit hair. It was strange, considering they were located in the Bright Lands, but the habitation sphere served its purpose.
She could smell fresh air, flowers, and the after scent of a heavy rainfall. Outside, she could only see darkness, with celestial bodies lighting the sky. Her vision expanded without warning. Force Sight had always been a gift, and a curse, to the young woman. She could not control it. Often she found herself swept away by things that had already happened or things that had not yet come to pass, while others lingered in the present. This was not quite the same.
Srina felt as if she were somewhere far from Ryloth.
She could hear a voice that she knew. It had never left her, not since Tatooine, and she realized rather quickly that she was an observer of something she should not see.
"Adron, please, help me!" His eyes grew wide as he finally recognized the voice.
"Mother!"
"You are still weak."
The Sith Apprentice watched a white blade burst from the chest of her enemy, feeling like a voyeur, but unable to look away. He woke up. She watched him move, watched his hand clutch his chest as he shook off the vestiges of his nightmare, and hated the fact that she could sympathize. She had not slept well. Not at all. The pale-skinned woman could not tell if what she saw was past, present, or future. It simply was.
Her Sight mercifully cut out when the Imperial disappeared into the refresher, and for the time being, the connection was severed. Srina couldn’t help it when it returned, however, and she found herself following the Dark Jedi in a place unknown. Everything seemed so clear. Real. She felt as if she could reach out, and her fingers would find him, versus empty air.
“Hello, Adron.”, she whispered gently, somehow knowing he would hear her, despite the oddness of the situation. The Force worked in mysterious ways. It felt like a very, very long-distance and vivid holo-call. “You look well. Better than I expected.”
Better than she’d hoped. For what he had done, for the Empire he served so blindly, she knew that it was her duty to wish him dead. Her own thoughts could not enter the scenario. He was the enemy. She had stabbed him with her lightsaber and in turn, he had sent a blade careening into her chest. War was bloody, long, and consuming. Even now it would not leave them be. At first, Adron Malven had haunted her night terrors, but now, he was stealing her waking hours as well.
He was still the enemy.
