Tyrant Queen of Darkness
"Dungeon Delving."
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Virelia listened in silence, standing with one hand resting lightly on the edge of the nearest pod, her fingers tracing slow, idle circles in the frost that refused to melt. Her expression didn't shift as Zee spoke—she was not the sort of woman to interrupt—but her stillness held a kind of gravity. Focus. She heard him. All of him.
When he finished—when the last observation hung in the air like dust stirred in sunlight—she exhaled a breath that was too amused to be relief, too self-assured to be indulgent.
Then she turned toward him fully.
"You would've made a very dangerous Sith," she said at last, voice low, curved like smoke off a hot blade. "And I mean that as a compliment."
She took a slow step toward him, the lightsaber glow dancing across the soft lines of her face, throwing gold and red shadows that kissed her cheekbones like war paint. Her tone didn't sharpen. If anything, it deepened—thoughtful. Intelligent. And pleased.
"You're not wrong. About any of it. Your grasp of bioalchemy and transformation tech is well beyond what I'd expect from someone your age. And your moral framing…" She smiled faintly, eyes half-lidded. "That's rare. Not because it resists corruption. But because it understands it."
She came to a stop just shy of him again—close enough for her voice to be quiet, yet unmistakably intimate.
"Yes. I know exactly what this could become in the wrong hands. A universal vector. Cross-species, communicable, stable, and—above all—subtle. What I'm looking for in these samples isn't mutation for its own sake. It's compliance. Controlled transformation, keyed to very specific environmental triggers. No necrosis. No death. Just… repurposing."
Her hand lifted, gently brushing the edge of his jacket where it crossed his hip. It was not a caress. Not quite. But it lingered long enough to leave meaning.
"That's the part you're avoiding, I think. Not out of fear. Just caution. You understand the temptation to rewrite flesh. What you don't want to admit is how easily that slides into rewriting will."
A pause. She let the words breathe.
"I do."
Her voice lowered.
"I want to create systems that do more than heal. I want them to remember. I want to build technologies that don't just repair damage, but encode a kind of loyalty. A return to function with a purpose."
She gestured vaguely toward the pods.
"The Sith who built this failed. Because they were too focused on the end-state—servants, beasts, soldiers. But what they missed was the process. The way transformation itself becomes obedience, if shaped properly."
Her eyes met his again—violet and unwavering.
"I want to master that process. Not because I lack options. Not because I'm desperate. But because every tool that reshapes the body reshapes the mind, and I intend to control both."
She stepped back—not retreating, merely giving space again.
"You're right to challenge me. I don't mind. I welcome it. You've earned the right to speak plainly."
A pause.
"And you're right again: this is not the only path. But the others are cluttered with ownership. Corporate patents. Institutional gatekeeping. Scientific arrogance. I have no interest in asking permission from corps that see life as a subscription model."
Her gaze sharpened, but not cruelly.
"And I don't ask other Sith for permission either."
She turned then, walking slowly along the curve of the chamber, one hand trailing along the bone-white supports as she moved.
"I will take what they buried. I will perfect what they failed to finish. And then I will make it mine."