Lysander replacing Vestra. A few months ago, that would've made sense to him. It was clean. Logical. Lysander had always been on that trajectory. He was disciplined, capable, and positioned well. Ace would've even respected it, been glad to see it happen.
Now? Now it didn't sit right. What he'd felt on Bonadan hadn't been clean. Lysander's Thread had cut through everything around him: sharp, controlled, but wrong underneath. There'd been weight to it. A lingering hunger that
wanted. And it wasn't fading. If anything, it was getting louder.
Ace said nothing. He let it settle where everything else did: buried, contained, and hidden deep within his own Thread in the Force. Where no one else could touch it.
Arris kept talking. About claiming a planet. Being independent. Earning the right to become a Lord of the Sith.
Quietly, and to himself, he smirked. Not at the idea. At her. At the assumption. She thought he'd follow that path, that he'd go out, pick a world, carve it up, plant a flag, call it power. That wasn't just wrong. It was…
basic.
Ace didn't want a planet nor care about conquest for the sake of it. He wasn't interested in playing king over something just to prove he could hold it. She knew that, or at least, she
should've.
The Vergeworks wasn't ambition. It wasn't some grand move toward power. It was home... and a mess he'd helped create. Killing Tessk, the power vacuum and chaos that followed. That was on him. So he went back and fixed it. Took control because no one else could do it properly. Stabilized it. Gave it structure.
And soon? He'd make it better. Not just stable.
Better. Bonadan was his. Not because he conquered it, but because he
understood it. Because he knew what it needed and was willing to do what others wouldn't.
If that wasn't enough? If that didn't meet whatever standard she was setting? Then she could fuck herself.
Ace's gaze didn't shift. The thought passed through him clean and unfiltered, then settled like everything else: contained and irrelevant to anything he needed to say out loud.
When Varin spoke. Asking what had happened with Vestra, his eyes flicked to Varin for a brief second before shifting back to Arris. The look he gave her was clear:
Go on. Say it.
Arris Windrun
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Varin Mortifer