Mistress of the Dark.
The Governor's Burden.
Location: Anoat, Serina's Private Laboratory
Objective: Learn.
Allies: ???
Opposing Force: ???
Tags:
Allyson Locke
"I will save them—not for virtue, but because they are mine."
Location: Anoat, Serina's Private Laboratory
Objective: Learn.
Allies: ???
Opposing Force: ???
Tags:

"I will save them—not for virtue, but because they are mine."
The lab was everything Serina Calis had wanted.
And nothing she needed.
Built into the volcanic bedrock beneath Nefaron's fortress, the complex was a triumph of Sith architecture and quiet madness—curved walls carved from blackstone, humming containment tanks of green-silver ichor, altar-laboratories adorned in obsidian runes, and scrying lenses peering into the blackness beyond the material world. The air was thick with incense, with the sterile sting of chemical fumes, and the dark perfume of ritual oils—her own concoction.
It should have been a sanctum. A place of wild invention. Here she could have broken the Light upon her worktable, twisted Force healing into weaponized metamorphosis, or conjured something so exquisite and terrible it would make Jedi Masters fall to their knees in desire and shame.
But instead…
She sat beneath a low-reading light, her crimson-and-magenta armor peeled down to the waist, revealing only the silk-black undersuit that clung to her form. Her golden hair was loosely braided, strands falling across her cheek, uncharacteristically unkempt. Her legs were curled beneath her on the chair like a wayward disciple, and resting across her lap was a datapad that felt heavier than a sword.
The title glared up at her, white and pitiless.
Military Logistics and Supply Doctrine: Volume III, Strategic Resource Management in Isolated Sectors
Her jaw was clenched in a way she hadn't noticed, and her brow furrowed deeper with every line she read.
"In the event of complete communications collapse, planetary governors must rely on short-wave encrypted loop-nodes and pre-coded protocol chains to synchronize orbital and planetary supply lines…"
She blinked, slowly. Took another breath.
And read it again.
It didn't help. None of it helped. Not really.
She hated this.
Not the reading. Not the labor. She had loved learning once—before the lies of the Jedi. Before the discipline of the Temple turned her curiosity into leash and doctrine.
A part of her still loved it.
No—she hated what this meant. That she had to do this. That she couldn't be in the Forge Wing, synthesizing corrupted Light into viral blessings. That she couldn't be out hunting some poor Jedi Knight and folding their screams into crystal matrices. That she had to put down the brush of madness and pick up the pen of responsibility.
Because he had.
Reicher.
She could still see the faces of the six, ghosting at the edges of her vision. Men and women who had followed her adopted brother to hell and back, and now… handed everything to her like a broken heirloom.
Ten million souls. Eighty-three soldiers. A planet teetering on death, its atmosphere choked by asteroid dust and bureaucratic rot.
And they were hers now.
She wasn't built for this.
Or so they thought.
She closed the datapad for a moment, pressing it to her chest. Her fingers flexed around the metal frame. The breath she took was not calming—it was clenched, brittle. Her armor pulsed faintly beneath the folds of her undersuit, syncopated with her corrupted, phantom heart.
How long had it been since she'd felt anything but fury or desire?
No, that wasn't right. She felt something now.
A coil of grief.
A glint of loneliness.
A sliver of shame.
None of which had any place here. And yet… they remained.
She stood slowly, pushing the datapad to the side of the worktable. Her laboratory hummed around her, alive with stillbirths and possibility. Specimen tanks blinked lazily in dormant stasis. Vials of Force-reactive compounds shimmered against the darkstone shelves. Half-finished holocron schematics hovered quietly in the center console, like unborn thoughts waiting for her will to make them real.
And yet none of it mattered.
Because Polis Massa was bleeding.
And it was hers.
She walked across the lab, bare feet silent on the cold stone. A side shelf held a decanter of Amarellan redwine.
She took a sip.
Then another.
Then—
Back to the desk.
The datapad slid open again, the screen igniting with dull efficiency.
"While military triage operations are most effective with battalion support, it is the commander's responsibility to classify industrial sectors into vital, latent, or loss-expected…"
She scribbled a note in the margins.
Adjusted a logistic node projection.
Created a false reinforcement pattern to deceive pirates.
Again.
And again.
And again.
Hours passed. Maybe more. She didn't keep time here. The lab didn't recognize it.
But when the next page of the book opened with a diagram of internal fuel reclamation routing, something inside her snapped.
She stood abruptly, her chair groaning under the momentum. The wine glass shattered against the wall, the spill of red a too-perfect stain.
She walked to the far side of the lab, to a wall of clear duraglass. Behind it lay the beginnings of her true work: a suspended crystalline heart, pulsing with the essence of twisted Light. The pink and purple glow inside it danced like a lover's eye—willing, delighted, half-mad.
Her hand pressed to the glass.
She exhaled.
"Soon." she whispered, not to the crystal, but to herself. "Soon I will return to this. When the world has been made to bow to reason. When my people are not starving, or hunted. When I can create again."
Her voice trembled, but her will did not.
She returned to the desk.
Sat again.
And read.