Heavy, taloned feet ripped trenches through cobblestone streets as the beast stalked through the shadowy remnants of a once-great nation.
Naboo.
It was a desolate, smouldering, empty world now that the Confederacy had abandoned it to death and destruction. Perhaps that is why the beast had chosen to hunt here. Every corner, every street, every home, business, building, and basement was filled to bursting point with fear. Something that the beast could not ignore. Acantha did not have the strength to stop it. Nor did she want to. She had come to Naboo to find Domino, and within him, respite. But he was not there. Nobody was.
Instead, she had been greeted with the perfect playground. The beast and the shadow had been reeling since the ship had set off from Illyria. They had known what it meant even then. No meals for weeks. Not if they wanted to arrive on Naboo safe and sound. Acantha had tried to fill herself before the journey, but she wasn't permitted to hunt on Illyria. Even with her father gone, she couldn't force herself to break the rules. So Naboo it was. To find the only other man who could offer her some solace in such a confusing and turbulent time.
They did not find him there, and Acantha could not ignore the hunger that boiled in the pit of her stomach when she stepped off the ship. It was everything they had been craving and more. The shadow fed off fear, off the darkness, and from the fragmented souls who remained trapped here. The beast fed from the flesh. Naboo had been torn in two by war, a conglomeration of all their favourite things bundled into one neat little package. With such a buffet spread before them, it was likely nobody could have stopped them.
Why would she have wanted them to, anyway? The beast whispered.
I don't, Acantha answered.
Who was there to tell her off anymore? The shadow cooed.
Father is gone, she called back.
Who was there to think of her as anything but what she was born to be? They both demanded in unison.
Nobody.
A deep, growl filled the alleyway where shadow and darkness dominated. The beast had caught the scent of something. Someone. Dying, or almost dying. It didn't matter to the beast. Flesh was flesh. Its great wingspan spread, brushing the edges of the walls that surrounded it. In three heavy beats that sent a torrent of brick dust and stone up into the air, the beast took flight. The cool air rippling through its feathers ripped a shudder of pleasure through its hollow spine. It had been far too long since it had been allowed to reign over the body, and it was not going to pass up the opportunity to feed.
Naboo.
It was a desolate, smouldering, empty world now that the Confederacy had abandoned it to death and destruction. Perhaps that is why the beast had chosen to hunt here. Every corner, every street, every home, business, building, and basement was filled to bursting point with fear. Something that the beast could not ignore. Acantha did not have the strength to stop it. Nor did she want to. She had come to Naboo to find Domino, and within him, respite. But he was not there. Nobody was.
Instead, she had been greeted with the perfect playground. The beast and the shadow had been reeling since the ship had set off from Illyria. They had known what it meant even then. No meals for weeks. Not if they wanted to arrive on Naboo safe and sound. Acantha had tried to fill herself before the journey, but she wasn't permitted to hunt on Illyria. Even with her father gone, she couldn't force herself to break the rules. So Naboo it was. To find the only other man who could offer her some solace in such a confusing and turbulent time.
They did not find him there, and Acantha could not ignore the hunger that boiled in the pit of her stomach when she stepped off the ship. It was everything they had been craving and more. The shadow fed off fear, off the darkness, and from the fragmented souls who remained trapped here. The beast fed from the flesh. Naboo had been torn in two by war, a conglomeration of all their favourite things bundled into one neat little package. With such a buffet spread before them, it was likely nobody could have stopped them.
Why would she have wanted them to, anyway? The beast whispered.
I don't, Acantha answered.
Who was there to tell her off anymore? The shadow cooed.
Father is gone, she called back.
Who was there to think of her as anything but what she was born to be? They both demanded in unison.
Nobody.
A deep, growl filled the alleyway where shadow and darkness dominated. The beast had caught the scent of something. Someone. Dying, or almost dying. It didn't matter to the beast. Flesh was flesh. Its great wingspan spread, brushing the edges of the walls that surrounded it. In three heavy beats that sent a torrent of brick dust and stone up into the air, the beast took flight. The cool air rippling through its feathers ripped a shudder of pleasure through its hollow spine. It had been far too long since it had been allowed to reign over the body, and it was not going to pass up the opportunity to feed.
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