Tyrant Queen of Darkness

"Becoming mine."
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The surface of Malachor V was a ruinous labyrinth of basalt canyons and half-buried catacombs, a graveyard where the very soil bled with memory. The world never stopped whispering—ash winds carried echoes of detonations that had scarred its mantle centuries ago, and the ground itself seemed brittle with the weight of a wound that never healed. Darth Virelia walked through it like a shadow given form, her pace neither hurried nor idle, every stride a calculation. Tyrant's Embrace clung to her like a second skin, its silent plates catching the pale light of Malachor's fractured sky, its violet glyphs pulsing faintly in rhythm with her measured breath. She did not walk as a pilgrim to a holy place. She walked as a sovereign reclaiming what was already hers.
She had come in search of relics—the detritus of Sith who once believed themselves immortal, their artifacts buried deep in the planet's scarred crust. The Dark Side here was not subtle, not patient. It pressed against her like a tide, testing the edges of her mind, promising power with every inhalation of the ash-laden air. It was a familiar pressure, and she welcomed it. It reminded her that even worlds could be broken, but not her.
Halfway along a ridge, she slowed. Something tugged at her senses. Not a relic, not stone, not memory—a presence. Faint, unrefined, but alive. Her helm turned, violet eyes slitting to sharp facets, scanning the gloom. Across a ravine lay the outline of something incongruous in Malachor's desolation: the skeletal remains of a campsite. Canvas fluttered faintly, staked against the wind. A cooking dish glimmered faintly with residue. A lantern burned low, too careful to be accident. And yet… no bodies. No movements.
Her fingers flexed, talons whispering against each other as she tested the air. The Force confirmed what sight and sound denied: a single presence, coiled near the edge of the camp, trying to hide, unpracticed. Young. The aura was turbulent, storming with hunger and confusion in equal measure. Not yet disciplined. Not yet dangerous. But the spark of the Dark Side was there, and it burned bright.
Her cape whispered as she descended from the ridge. The armor moved as though alive, each step deliberate, a predator's prowl softened by the whisper-silence of engineered plates. She could feel the eyes of the unseen apprentice struggling against her presence, like an insect caught in a web, aware of the hunter but unable to flee. She let the tension build with each approach, her pace steady, inevitable, never faltering.
The campfire cracked, brittle and nervous. Her six violet eyes caught its reflection, scattering it into insectile shards of mirrored flame. The young one could feel her now—an inevitability drawing closer, cloaked in dread and desire alike.
Virelia crossed the last stretch of blackened stone and stepped into the circle of firelight. Her armor pulsed once, runes whispering as if to announce her arrival. She said nothing. She only approached.
