Tyrant Queen of Darkness

"Hard choices require hard minds."
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The moons above Ansion hung swollen with moisture, their pale light filtering through the half-shattered dome of the derelict observatory. Shards of transparency glass clung to its upper edge like jagged teeth, and beyond them, the sky bled crimson where the ion storms stirred at the horizon. It was supposed to be a neutral site—abandoned during the Clone Wars and left untouched ever since. A relic. A wound sealed in rust.
Serina Calis walked its perimeter in slow, deliberate silence.
Her cloak dragged behind her like the trailing veil of a widow who had outlived too many funerals to still bother weeping. Beneath it, the lacquered blue-black of her armor glinted with subtle edges. Her exposed collarbone shimmered faintly with moisture—dew, or sweat, or something more primal. The air was hot. Too hot for comfort. She liked it.
Her steps were whisper-silent, the click of her boots muted against the ruined marble floor. There was a rhythm to her pace—a careful orchestration of movement designed not to echo but to linger. Like a perfume. Like a poison.
She had not chosen this location by chance.
Everything here had a function.
The observatory itself was built as a temple to curiosity—a place where truth had once been gazed upon through lenses of ground crystal, charted in sterile reports, and fed into the Republic's academic engines. She could still feel the ghosts of that hunger—intellects that thought they could dissect the stars with math, that believed the Force to be a subject of classification. They had all been so sure of themselves.
Now all that remained was dust, decay, and the distant electric hum of a predator's sky.
Her tongue wet the inside of her lower lip slowly, contemplatively.
A Jedi was coming.
She did not know which one.
She had not asked.
The message had been simple. A falsified transmission intercepted by several systems, seemingly from a disbanded Resistance cell asking for aid. Refugees. A surviving child. Some report of an artifact. It didn't matter. The bait was irrelevant. The Jedi had responded.
That was enough.
She stood at the center of the chamber now, ringed by empty chairs—broken stone benches, half-toppled, as if a debate had once ended in fire. Her fingers brushed against the lip of a podium long since scorched, and she allowed herself to smile faintly.
There would be no debate here. Only understanding. And ruin.
The Force coiled around her like a serpent asleep in the sun—content, but not tame. She reached out with it—not pressing, not probing. Just present. A pressure in the atmosphere. A weight in the mind. The taste of something metallic on the tongue before blood even reaches the surface.
A shadow flickered across the dome's fractured roof. The wind had shifted.
She turned her head, just slightly.
A figure entered the ruined observatory—tall, lean, with olive skin kissed by moonlight, and eyes like ocean frost. Blue on blue. Her armor was modest. Her steps were disciplined. But Serina saw it in the way her limbs held tension like a coiled dancer refusing to perform. Controlled. Wound tight. Trained far too hard not to break eventually.
Serina didn't move.
Didn't speak.
She simply watched the Jedi enter.
And smiled.