God's Gonna Cut You Down
It was only a matter of time before the weight of their own hubris would prove them wrong.
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It was oftentimes thought that the Jedi were the greatest enemy of the Sith, that their eternal war that was sparked at the genocide of its Pureblood ancestors made them their greatest threat. As Silara walked quietly through the gates of this massive subterranean city, welcomed with perhaps only the slightest scrutiny, as inconspicuously as any Sith could in their almost uniform mode of dress, she challenged that very concept herself as her robed form was lost in the sea of people within. It was a common misconception that the Empire was founded on the ban of kaggaths because its emperor believed them bad for his people, or that the careful placement of laws and propaganda that fostered a cult of personality were meant as a means to glorify their dear leader rather than prevent the very infighting and treachery that had acted as the first of many moves on the proverbial dejarik board.
Hours later, when a guard never returned to the barracks, a connection might have been made and hubris might have been recognized. By then, however, Vitium had already made her way deep into the city and arrived outside the palace walls looking just a little different. Gone were the robes of the Sith, but perhaps most puzzling of all the woman that had walked into the city as, well, an older woman, was now in the guise of a much younger man - or perhaps in his flesh. Such sick things one might do to take from another what had been taken from them.
Just another day for the city of Amaranthine. Maybe a squabble between a merchant and a customer here, or a quickly silenced insurrection in the quarters of the poor, but otherwise normal. And a rather unremarkable guard heading to his post?
Darth Morrow
It is the green-ey'd monster, which doth mock the meat it feeds on.
- William Shakespeare, Othello
There were so many benefits to a kingdom built under the crust of its planet, hidden from the spying eyes of enemies that might peer down from the heavens, cut off from the rest of the world and the stars beyond. So long a list to justify the sense of security it gave that its own protection robbed itself of the greatest mitigation of threat, the knowledge of one's own hubris. Impenetrable, unassailable, untouchable. She had heard them all before, long before the Empire was even in its infancy, when she'd been trained as an acolyte and well into knighthood. There was no fortress too great, no defense so strong, to keep everything outside of its walls. It was often times that these magnificent stone facades and iron gates lulled their protectors into the same presumptuousness that the Sith themselves fell into.- William Shakespeare, Othello
It was only a matter of time before the weight of their own hubris would prove them wrong.
-
It was oftentimes thought that the Jedi were the greatest enemy of the Sith, that their eternal war that was sparked at the genocide of its Pureblood ancestors made them their greatest threat. As Silara walked quietly through the gates of this massive subterranean city, welcomed with perhaps only the slightest scrutiny, as inconspicuously as any Sith could in their almost uniform mode of dress, she challenged that very concept herself as her robed form was lost in the sea of people within. It was a common misconception that the Empire was founded on the ban of kaggaths because its emperor believed them bad for his people, or that the careful placement of laws and propaganda that fostered a cult of personality were meant as a means to glorify their dear leader rather than prevent the very infighting and treachery that had acted as the first of many moves on the proverbial dejarik board.
Hours later, when a guard never returned to the barracks, a connection might have been made and hubris might have been recognized. By then, however, Vitium had already made her way deep into the city and arrived outside the palace walls looking just a little different. Gone were the robes of the Sith, but perhaps most puzzling of all the woman that had walked into the city as, well, an older woman, was now in the guise of a much younger man - or perhaps in his flesh. Such sick things one might do to take from another what had been taken from them.
Just another day for the city of Amaranthine. Maybe a squabble between a merchant and a customer here, or a quickly silenced insurrection in the quarters of the poor, but otherwise normal. And a rather unremarkable guard heading to his post?
