[member="Sage Bane"] asking her to trust him was tantamount to turning your back on a hungry Rancor and expecting it not to eat you, as far as Elensa was concerned, and she wasn't in the mood to get torn to shreds, which was probably the outcome of doing whatever it was he wanted of her this time. Frankly, I liked it better when I knew he was trying to kill me. I didn't have to worry about it. Now that he was, well, trying to be nice, she didn't know what to make of him. As a Jedi, perhaps she might have understood that he was trying to make amends, and work with her, but she knew that such was not the Sith way. Even if he's not going to stab me in the back immediately, that's no guarantee that he won't work against my interests or manipulate me into a bad position. At this point, she could very much see that being the case.
Grabbed and locked into the first servo-cuff, she made to struggle against him for a moment, but he moved too quickly, and had her other wrist snapped into the partner cuff before she could properly respond. She glared at him with her usual silent fury, feeling violated beyond belief. Nobody had ever been allowed to manhandle her in such a fashion - it simply wasn't done to lay hands on a Hapan noblewoman without her permission, but to then be locked in cuffs like chattel...that was just something that did not happen. It was an offense to her dignity, her status and, frankly, for a man to even think about it... On Hapes, someone would have restrained and shot him by now, provided they weren't thinking of a more severe punishment. Not that any man would ever have considered trying it. She honestly couldn't fathom it.
Restrained as she was, she couldn't even sign at him, so her sole expression of the anger she felt remained locked within her expression and the way she tensed as he grabbed her arm in that rough, possessive fashion he seemed to have mastered. It was hard to keep up with him when she was bound like this, and she felt her feet get caught in the skirts of her dress a few times as they walked, but the iron grip Sage had of her arm prevented her from falling. Much though I'd like him to stop so I can kick him to death. She knew what he was doing, though, and made certain to keep her eyes downcast when they approached people, so that they wouldn't think that she was capable of any resistance. That'll come when I take these cuffs off and teach him a good lesson in manners. The bruises she was certain were forming beneath his rough grip were just going to be the start of what she had in mind for him.
The fact that he could speak Huttese so fluently did surprise her, although on reflection, she wasn't sure why - he was, of course, more than capable of communicating far better than she ever could. Learned Huttese, but didn't bother with GSL, did you?, she thought sourly, reflecting on the fact that he could clearly understand these aliens better than he did her. It was yet another act on his part that just outright annoyed her. Which he seems to be doing a lot of. Truth be told, she didn't know why she let him get under her skin so much - nor why she kept putting up with it. The pet names, the way he had the audacity to touch her without even asking, the way he kept putting her in these positions and thinking nothing of it. In terms you'd understand, when this is over, we're going to have words! And since she couldn't speak, he wasn't going to find that very pleasant.
It was ironic that he waved her to silence when they closed in on those prefabs. The Acolyte felt very tempted to roll her eyes, but he obviously wasn't thinking of the effect on her - his attentions were clearly elsewhere, judging by the way his eyes were distant, at least as much as she could tell in the awkward position he'd pushed her into. She, too, heard the loud voices, all speaking in a dialect she had no understanding of. Give me Hapan, or even Basic, and I've got it... She'd not been raised to recognise the throaty, coarse language that her companion both understood and could speak, so she had no idea what was being said. The response he gave to it...that she could understand.
It started as a moment of intense pain as his hand gripped the flesh of her arm a little tighter, as if he were angry with her. She felt her arm go a little numb, knew that his fingers had imprinted her flesh with ugly marks, but sensed more than that: he was practically shouting his feelings through the Force. This close, she could sense a deep hatred, more than anything he'd projected towards her before, anger bordering on rage, a flame being fanned into an inferno, a darkness deepening in the way a candle might flicker out and then suddenly cease all illumination, plunging them into black deeper than any night. It struck against her in a wave, and it was evocative, this call to fury: she felt it, sensed it touch her and kindle the anger within her slender frame: annoyance at this man dealing with her as he had; indignation of being handled like a sack of fruit; displeasure at being used as a slave in his absurd pretense; and true outrage at the fact that he was dumping all of his emotions on her, stood as she was in such close proximity.
Threatening to drown in it, succumb to those base feelings, that simple desire to break free of her restraints and then break him...it was a hard thing to resist, that sublime temptation that sang to her like a gentle lullaby, tinged with red rage. The Jedi had spoken of this as the most dangerous of moments, and it would be if she decided to loosen herself from his grip, but not for her. The Sith said to let it touch you, to tap into it and weave it into your soul, so that you might grasp at the Force more fully and unleash it on your enemies without a merciful thought to sully that dark purity. But I am not a child of that darkness, not even though he pushes me that way, she thought. Sorrow had ever been her song, remembering intense pain and anguish as her world was swept aside. I cannot let his anger be mine. That can wait for another time.
She inhaled a deep breath, slightly tremulous as the grip on her arm remained so agonising, allowing that practiced ritual to calm her a little, to let her gather her thoughts. It wasn't normal for a Sith to do this, she knew that, but Elensa wasn't purely Sith, and not as well trained as her companion. It takes trust to sink beneath your emotions without knowing if you'll ever again come up for air. She could not do that yet - to her, control was more important than allowing temptation to take her. Calm yourself now, boy, she thought in a soothing fashion, though doubtful he would sense any of it. Sing your song when the times is right. Don't let go now!