Bad Kitty
K O R R I B A N
The winds blew from out of the mouth of the cavernous chasm which seemed to spread as a great scar across a swath of solid rock. Red dust painted the landscape in a pink haze, as the breeze brought with it a chill which seemed to permeate the soul. Arms resting against the handlebars to racing swoop, the boy's unkempt mass of violet hair flitted in the air as gilded eyes stared out over a valley that was far older than any who lived know might believe. A sea of tombs and memorials, graves and altars to kings and those who would hold dominion over more than just mortal man.
A monument to Sith achievement, the end and the beginning to the wisdom of the Dark Side.
Perhaps that was the lesson that the boy's master had sent him to Korriban to learn, but the Force was not the only transcendental reality the boy had encountered while here. The other was perhaps even more important to him, and infinitely more personal. He'd been introduced to the Force at the age of seven, but he'd been Primeval since he'd been born. As an infant, he'd been presented as an offering to the Old Gods in accordance with rites and traditions that were ancient when the galaxy had still been young. The three yellow 'rays' on either side of his face were reminders of the three gods of Sargon's creation; the Starmaker, the Dead One, the Broken Creator.
In many ways, the boy never thought about why he was Sith. His master would kill him if he didn't what he was told, so he'd simply done it. Never thinking about what he was doing. Perhaps that was the answer. He was Sith because he'd been too afraid of his master then. A seven year old orphan given a choice to serve or die. Boo only continued serving because he wasn't certain what else he'd be doing otherwise. He didn't want to go back to pickpocketing on Coruscant, if for no other reason than because that was how he'd gotten into his current predicament to begin with.
He wasn't afraid anymore though. He knew -- he'd known for awhile now -- that his master intended to kill him. It was an adage as old as the Sith or the Jedi. The first rule of assassination is kill the assassin. So while Boo might have thought he served at his own convenience, it was the other way around.
But what else did the boy have, save for a faith handed down to him by parents who had left him to fend for himself in the ghettos of Coruscant?
And yet, here he was. Here they were. Faith, it seemed, had found a way. Or perhaps faith had found him.
Sliding down from off the speeder bike, the blue-skinned youth unhooked the gunbelt that he wore. Tossing the weapons into the speerder, the tweenage youth turned toward a stout Bothan and asked the only thing he knew of that was worth living for. "How can I serve the Prophet?"
[member="Tyro'din"]
The winds blew from out of the mouth of the cavernous chasm which seemed to spread as a great scar across a swath of solid rock. Red dust painted the landscape in a pink haze, as the breeze brought with it a chill which seemed to permeate the soul. Arms resting against the handlebars to racing swoop, the boy's unkempt mass of violet hair flitted in the air as gilded eyes stared out over a valley that was far older than any who lived know might believe. A sea of tombs and memorials, graves and altars to kings and those who would hold dominion over more than just mortal man.
A monument to Sith achievement, the end and the beginning to the wisdom of the Dark Side.
Perhaps that was the lesson that the boy's master had sent him to Korriban to learn, but the Force was not the only transcendental reality the boy had encountered while here. The other was perhaps even more important to him, and infinitely more personal. He'd been introduced to the Force at the age of seven, but he'd been Primeval since he'd been born. As an infant, he'd been presented as an offering to the Old Gods in accordance with rites and traditions that were ancient when the galaxy had still been young. The three yellow 'rays' on either side of his face were reminders of the three gods of Sargon's creation; the Starmaker, the Dead One, the Broken Creator.
In many ways, the boy never thought about why he was Sith. His master would kill him if he didn't what he was told, so he'd simply done it. Never thinking about what he was doing. Perhaps that was the answer. He was Sith because he'd been too afraid of his master then. A seven year old orphan given a choice to serve or die. Boo only continued serving because he wasn't certain what else he'd be doing otherwise. He didn't want to go back to pickpocketing on Coruscant, if for no other reason than because that was how he'd gotten into his current predicament to begin with.
He wasn't afraid anymore though. He knew -- he'd known for awhile now -- that his master intended to kill him. It was an adage as old as the Sith or the Jedi. The first rule of assassination is kill the assassin. So while Boo might have thought he served at his own convenience, it was the other way around.
But what else did the boy have, save for a faith handed down to him by parents who had left him to fend for himself in the ghettos of Coruscant?
And yet, here he was. Here they were. Faith, it seemed, had found a way. Or perhaps faith had found him.
Sliding down from off the speeder bike, the blue-skinned youth unhooked the gunbelt that he wore. Tossing the weapons into the speerder, the tweenage youth turned toward a stout Bothan and asked the only thing he knew of that was worth living for. "How can I serve the Prophet?"
[member="Tyro'din"]