Mistress of the Dark.

"Nothing possibly can go wrong."
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The ocean sighed.
It was the only sound that truly lingered in Serina Calis' sanctum tonight—not the distant hum of subaquatic generators, not the occasional flicker of automated systems adjusting to her preferences, not even the soft crackling of a firekindle nestled into the wall behind her. Only the endless, murmuring hush of Manaan's tides brushing against the edge of the world, far beneath her window, filled the vast silence of the suite.
She stood before that window now, tall and unarmored, clad in a deep violet silk robe that swept like liquid across the floor as she moved. The fabric caught the glow of the soft golden interior lights and the cool cyan shimmer of Ahto City's undersea skyline, blending both realms into her silhouette. For once, she had allowed herself something purely indulgent—her hair, normally wound tight or left to cascade with weaponized elegance, now hung freely down her back, damp from the bath she'd taken only minutes ago. It smelled faintly of something expensive and floral, untraceable in origin.
And still, she hadn't sat down. She hadn't let go.
Not yet.
The retreat itself was an architectural jewel—vaulted ceilings, obsidian-marble floors threaded with veins of bioluminescent coral, and furniture carved from imported Wroshyr wood and polished to mirror-shine. Serina's room occupied the uppermost floor of the secluded complex, perched like a throne above the ocean's eternal abyss. Walls of transparisteel offered a panoramic view of Manaan's nightscape, the stars above mirrored by glowing fauna drifting through the sea below.
But her gaze remained fixed on a single point—just beyond the curvature of the horizon, where the light died and the water turned to ink.
She had seen this view before.
Once, while standing amidst the wreckage of a storm-gutted corridor, blood drying beneath her nails and the walls shaking from the impact of a falling comet. Another time, facing a self-proclaimed Demigod who had mistaken power for purpose. Always the galaxy dragged her back into its absurd dramas, its theatre of divine pretensions and cosmic tantrums. Always, the curtain rose too early, and never by her design.
But not this time.
This time, there was no one watching. No allies to impress. No threats to eliminate. No secrets to exploit.
Only the sea.
And yet… she still felt as though something was owed.
She pressed her fingertips to the transparisteel. It was cool, but not cold. Just like the breath of the ocean on the air-recycler's current—haunting and vast and alive in ways even PAD-1's machine dreams could never replicate. Her reflection stared back faintly—just enough to remind her that she still existed here, among the living. That she could feel the pull of solitude not as a blade, but as a balm.
Her voice, when it came, was low. Intimate. Not quite spoken aloud. "If you come for me now," she murmured to the darkness, "you'll find I am not ready to play."
It wasn't a warning.
It was a promise.
She finally moved—slowly, deliberately, crossing the room to sink into the chaise lounge positioned directly in front of the window. Its cushions embraced her like old memories. A nearby serving tray bore an untouched crystal glass of elshrum wine, cool and pale and glinting like starlight caught in liquid. She took it, sipped, and let the flavor sit on her tongue.
It was only now that she noticed the small pulse of light from her datapad across the room. Some message. Some signal. Some request for judgment, leadership, vengeance, or command. Something needy.
Serina closed her eyes.
And ignored it.
She listened, instead, to the ocean.