Mistress of the Dark.

"Stepping into the Dark."
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The shuttle slipped through the storm-wracked skies of Dromund Kaas like a shadow in freefall, its passage unseen by all but the most vigilant eyes. Lightning surged across the heavens, drawn in hungry arcs around the vessel's approach as though the world remembered her—remembered what she had once brought here, and what she might bring again.
Inside, Serina Calis waited.
She stood alone at the center of the transport's deployment chamber, surrounded by silence and softly pulsing violet light. Her form, normally clad in the biomechanical terror of Tyrant's Embrace, was today sheathed in something far more deliberate.
This armor did not scream domination.
It whispered power.
A flowing garment of articulated plating and dark synthweave, trimmed in ceremonial gold and deep amethyst, hugged her figure like the breath of ancient nobility. The armor was regal, but not cumbersome. Decorative, but not fragile. Its curves accentuated rather than concealed—sharp-edged elegance designed to disarm, to provoke, to suggest.
Her hood was drawn low over her brow, casting her upper face in soft shadow, the embroidered trim glinting faintly with each subtle movement. Beneath it, her mouth was a precise line—painted not for vanity, but for effect. Controlled. Sharp. Her breastplate shimmered with a faint, internal glow at the sternum, not the aggressive pulse of a reactor, but the steady cadence of focused will. Runes had been etched into the inner lining—not ancient war-sigils, but prayers to discipline, etched in her own hand.
Serina had chosen not to wear Tyrant's Embrace.
Not out of fear.
Not out of weakness.
But as an act of respect.
It would have been a farce to shield herself with armor in the presence of Darth Prazutis. The Koshûyok did not care for masks of power. He was power. And Serina, in her infinite precision, had decided this visit would not begin with a lie.
Her intention was to request. But her presence would demonstrate growth and respect.
It had been over a year since she last stood on Dromund Kaas. Since she had last passed beneath the gaze of a being who did not see her as a rival, or a tool, or a servant—but as function incarnate. A blade to be tempered, honed, and used. And she had thrived under that cold weight. She had taken the silence he gave her and filled it with ruin.
The ruin of Saijo, of the Tsis'Kaar.
Now, she returned to bargain for a weapon that required no ritual: the Fourth Legion.
In return, she would offer her vote in the Assembly to the Kainites—without drama, without cost. And more: the Legion's oath, sworn to the Kainite cause should civil war erupt. Not as allies. As certainty.
The pitch was simple.
And lethal.
The shuttle's descent completed without fanfare. A soft hum, the hiss of pressure equalizing, the drop ramp easing down with practiced solemnity. No guards flanked her. No heralds announced her name. Only the subtle hush of systems powering down, and the mechanical rhythm of a world preparing to measure her again.
Serina moved.
Her boots, slender and elegantly pointed, made no sound as they touched the durasteel ramp. The light caught her armor and refracted through the mist like faint whispers of violet flame. Her silhouette was lithe and sculpted, but there was nothing soft about her gait.
She walked as if gravity bent politely out of her path.
But she was not in control of that gravity.
He was.
The cape that trailed behind her was silk-forged synthweave, woven in streaks of midnight and wine, its edges embroidered with arcane motifs that shimmered when struck by the faintest light. Every motion was practiced, every movement a declaration written in poise.
There were no weapons visible.
She did not need them.
The true edge of her presence was buried deep beneath the surface—beneath her words, her voice, her poise. The intelligence that waited behind every pause. The pressure she applied not to break, but to soften. She was a blade already in motion, arcing gently through the long game of Sith politics.
And now she had come to press that blade deeper into the throat of fate.
As she reached the edge of the ramp, her posture did not shift, her head did not turn. She simply existed, suspended at the very edge of the storm.
And then Serina Calis stepped into the world once more.
Let it bear witness.