The Mongrel had not called for Mercy when he had come to this wretched place. After everything that had happened on Dromund Kaas, where he had lost so many good troops and she had nearly died at the hands of the Eternal Empire's elite, he had left her in the care of a Final Dawn infirmary. For one of his tribesmen he would have used harsh tribal medicine, the kind that killed the weak and left deep scars on the strong. But not for her. Only the best of care for Mercy, his most trusted agent... and one who was becoming something far more.
Yes, he had left her behind to recuperate, to regain her strength after that brutal encounter in Kaas City. But he had not ordered her to stay there, had not insisted that she be kept in the infirmary until she recovered. It was an oversight, a lack of thoroughness he would not normally have displayed. But the truth was that he had
wanted her to follow him, wanted her to be at his side whether she was ready or not. She was the one creature who made remaining in this accursed galaxy seem worthwhile, the influence that restrained him from martyrdom.
So when her voice spoke in his mind, a sensual
purr that echoed in his thoughts before physical words were spoken, he would have smiled... if he'd still had a face to smile with. His secret hope had been fulfilled. Raising a durasteel hand, he brought his honor guard to a halt, waiting while her shuttle descended to meet him. He watched her walk closer, enjoying the sway of her movements in her form-fitting bodyglove. She showed no outward signs of her terrible wounds, the blood loss and organ damage that had so recently almost killed her.
The thought of those injuries filled him with rage.
But that rage, that moment of blinding, white-hot desire to rip apart the already-dead men who had hurt her, dissipated like mist in the breeze in the next instant. The Mongrel felt something he had not felt in
years, something he had lost long ago, when they had scooped his brain out of his ruined body in the wake of Coruscant and dumped it into a metal shell. He felt
touch. He felt her slender fingers run gently over skin he no longer had. Impossible though it was, he felt the heat of her breath, and the press of her lips against his long-lost flesh.
It was some kind of trick, some feat of magic, some blasphemous gift invading his mind and playing with his abused nervous system. He had killed for less, hacked down Jedi and other sorcerers who had
dared to infiltrate his thoughts and compromise his brain. He had buried
Sakadi Marathi Sinvala
alive in the dungeons beneath Goshen Keep when she had spoken to him through magic, trapped her - at least for a time - behind a waterfall of dark stone with a clever explosion. He ought to react just as brutally now. He could not risk this.
But he found that he did not care. No, he craved
more.
~ Mercy... ~ The name - not her true name, not the birth name given to the body she had arisen to control, but the only name that mattered to him - bubbled up in his thoughts. He was no telepath, and had no practice with forming mental messages that another could wordlessly understand, but in that moment he wanted to learn. He wanted to abandon this foolish hunt for omens and prophecies, to bring her back with him to his sanctum and explore all that her mystical touch could do. This was his first chance to
feel again, and he hungered for it.
~ Again, ~ The Mongrel... commanded? Pleaded? Even he was not sure. The power dynamic between them, the twisted relationship of master and servant, abuser and victim, had suddenly shifted, for now she had something he wanted more than anything else in the galaxy. That thought jolted him back to reality. He could not show weakness. Not here, in front of the warriors of his tribe. Legend or not, he was growing old in their eyes, a warrior for ten long years and a warlord for half that. Some young pup would rise to challenge him soon.
He must not give any of them an easy excuse for it.
~ ... but not yet, ~ he hesitantly amended. Whatever it was that was happening between them, it would have to wait. Already the anticipation was killing him, driving him, urging him to finish this task as swiftly as he could. When he spoke again, The Mongrel spoke aloud, answering the question Mercy had posed with her
audible words.
"We seek the source of a prophecy," the warlord boomed, his powerful mechanical voice giving no hint as to the state of his yearning mind.
"A weapon against our enemies, buried here but soon emerging."
Trying his best to push the lingering memory of
sensation from his mind, The Mongrel beckoned his hunters onward once more. He did not know that others had also traced the source of the omen - others like
Khaostra Devoid
and
Erion Justeene
, who even now closed in on its location - but he could feel in his long-absent bones that he needed to make haste if he was to be among the first to discover its source. As if in answer to the thought, the warlord heard heated shouting begin to bounce between the many jagged spires of rock.
One of his pickets must have found something.
It was not difficult to close in on the source of the bellowing; whatever Rook and Dreamer had uncovered, it - or he, as it turned out - certainly wasn't subtle or quiet. As the mysterious man, clad in ash and blood and his cracked mask, pinned Dreamer against the silicate pillar, the rest of the Scar Hound hunting party closed in, slipping through the forest of sharp rocks like a herd of sleek
Trintian Gallazes melting out of the trees. They formed a ring around the trio, watching, waiting. Not one man would move until The Mongrel gave the signal.
"Who indeed?" the warlord boomed, his powerful voice echoing through the narrow channels between the spires.
"You are the reason we have come here... but it seems that even you yourself cannot tell us why." The Mongrel stepped forward, the servos of his legs whirring, and peered at the strange man who had been reborn from Durace's accursed soil. Had he been able to peer beyond the mask, he might have noted a resemblance to someone he knew all too well... but he could not.
"Release my warrior. Then we'll find the truth."
If it came to a fight, he knew Mercy would have his back.
Even wounded, he trusted her with his life.