Tyrant Queen of Darkness

"I will find you."
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The stars stretched thin through the cockpit viewport, smeared into long, silent lines of white as the shuttle hurtled through hyperspace. The engines hummed with a low, steady drone—like a predator's purr before the strike. Within the craft, bathed in pulses of deep violet light from the navigation systems, Serina Calis sat alone.
Not a word had been spoken since departure.
She had not allowed it.
The pilot was silent behind his mask, a clone whose tongue she had once threatened to remove for an idle cough. He knew better now. The atmosphere within the shuttle was suffocating—not from pressurization or temperature, but from presence.
Hers.
Serina sat on a raised platform near the shuttle's rear, encased once more in the sovereign exosculpture of Tyrant's Embrace. She had not removed it since the girl knelt in devotion. The armor was more than a second skin—it was her will made manifest. The synthetic threads of her hood fell low over her brow, veiling her face in shadow as six violet lenses glowed like facets of an ancient insect. Watching. Calculating. Consuming.
The datapad in her hand flickered with streams of old Sith coordinates, code-fragments, and electromagnetic signatures scavenged from Holonet blackframes and Imperial junkcode. They painted a picture she had already known—something had reawakened on Exegol. Not just ancient machinery or orbiting wreckage. No, this wasn't accidental. Someone had breathed life into the corpse of a world better left buried.
And she knew who.
The girl had asked for safety. But Exegol did not offer safety.
Only inheritance.
She had gone there alone. Serina hadn't stopped her. She had wanted to see what the girl would choose, when faced again with the charred roots of her fear. Serina's power was not in forbidding.
It was in letting them crawl willingly into the flame.
Now she was returning to that graveyard—to the ruined heart of Sith mythos, where so many masters had fallen, and where so many pretenders now whispered like ghosts in static-choked echoes. The shuttle's sensors had picked up volatile anomalies near the debris belt. Automated defenses still flickered to life in unpredictable intervals. Interference from the planet's maelstrom core continued to distort Force presence around the site.
But that didn't matter.
The girl had gone.
And where her apprentice walked, Serina would follow—not to save her…
…but to claim her if she survived.
The lights within the shuttle dimmed slightly as the hyperdrive began deceleration procedures. The coiled talons of Serina's gauntlet tapped the edge of her armrest, one by one, slow as a ticking metronome.
Tap. Tap. Tap.
She did not feel anxiety.
She did feel something… deeper.
Something like memory.
She had walked that world once, long ago, in another name, another shape. Not yet the sovereign. Not yet this inevitability. She had stood on the altar of the dead and dared the dark to answer her call. It had. In ways she was still unraveling.
And now the girl had returned to that same place.
Not to resurrect it.
To understand it.
To make it hers.
Serina closed the datapad with a flick of her fingers. The screen died with a final, whining chime. The chamber fell into near-darkness, lit only by the intermittent flashes of the emergency systems.
A countdown appeared on the central viewport, glowing red:
Reversion in T-minus 00:00:11.
Ten.
She rose from her throne-like seat with the grace of a storm made flesh. The segmented skirts of her armor whispered against the durasteel floor, the durafiber tendrils in her cape slithering gently as she moved toward the viewport.
Nine.
Exegol waited.
Eight.
The planet that birthed monsters and buried gods.
Seven.
She did not fear it.
Six.
She had survived it.
Five.
She had become because of it.
Four.
The stars narrowed.
Three.
The Force twisted.
Two.
Something… reached.
One.
Realspace collapsed inward in a single, stuttering blink.
And there it was.
Exegol.
A broken spheroid half-wrapped in crackling ion storms and the drifting bones of orbital stations. Shattered obelisks hung in stasis between fields of metallic dust. The ancient catacombs—flooded, collapsed, but still alive—glowed faintly beneath thunderclouds so thick they could drown a sun.