Darth Immortuos
Nulgath sits cross-legged on the floor of his cell, the cold, featureless walls surrounding him a stark reminder of his captivity. The dim light reflects off stacks of datacrons, datapads, and a few holocrons lined up along the floor, their faint hums and glows illuminating the otherwise dark chamber. The Jedi, whether out of an ironic mercy or a calculated cruelty, have surrounded him with relics of their own order—historical records, treatises on philosophy, and accounts of ancient battles fought for a purity of purpose that has always left him disinterested. Yet now, in the solitude and silence, he reads them all, his mind ravenous for knowledge, even if it is knowledge that repels him.
The powerlessness he experienced on Tython is not lost on him. His separation from the Dark Side had left him weak, vulnerable—forcing him to choose survival over pride. He used to be a Sith Lord and a prominent member within the ranks of the Dark Empire. Remaining with the Jedi was not out of some misguided curiosity but necessity; had he returned to the Dark Empire in this state, he suspected that he would have been a mere subject for their twisted experiments, a resource to exploit rather than a force to respect. He had chosen his captors not out of fear, but with grim practicality, knowing the Jedi would deny him his power without subjecting him to the horrors the Empire would likely inflict. They saw themselves as his moral superiors, assuming his captivity would humble him, blind to the strength he could summon simply by enduring.
They held hope. Something for the time being Nulgath did not understand.
His musings are interrupted as he heard the faint echo of footsteps approaching his cell, the dull thud of each step drawing closer, pausing just outside the door...
But who?
The powerlessness he experienced on Tython is not lost on him. His separation from the Dark Side had left him weak, vulnerable—forcing him to choose survival over pride. He used to be a Sith Lord and a prominent member within the ranks of the Dark Empire. Remaining with the Jedi was not out of some misguided curiosity but necessity; had he returned to the Dark Empire in this state, he suspected that he would have been a mere subject for their twisted experiments, a resource to exploit rather than a force to respect. He had chosen his captors not out of fear, but with grim practicality, knowing the Jedi would deny him his power without subjecting him to the horrors the Empire would likely inflict. They saw themselves as his moral superiors, assuming his captivity would humble him, blind to the strength he could summon simply by enduring.
They held hope. Something for the time being Nulgath did not understand.
His musings are interrupted as he heard the faint echo of footsteps approaching his cell, the dull thud of each step drawing closer, pausing just outside the door...
But who?