Syd Celsius
The Reflection
"You aren't trash." Syd said firmly. "Trash isn't such a good shot. Trash doesn't last against Sith trying to get their family crystal. Trash doesn't manifest the light so powerfully and succeeds at driving back an alchemized abomination on the first go-round. Are you rough around the edges? Certainly? Nobody's perfect..."
(Cutaway of Darth Phyre standing in the middle of an inferno of burning bodies laughing insanely.)
"...least of all 'me'." She admitted.
"You're anything but trash, Kid. I would not have accepted trash for an apprentice. Don't call yourself such."
Syd blinked as Starlin Rand asked about how she was made.
"That...that's the single most succinct way anyone has ever managed to describe it..." Syd admitted, somewhat amused.
Well not exactly. The Man in White had succeeded in creating Syd Celsius, The Flame Geist.
But he had only succeeded in doing so by using magic to tear apart her old self, Darth Phyre...
(Note: The following is a passage copied from a prior thread. Reposted here due to relevance.)
"Your crimes are abominable. You were a scourge during the plague, and if you are permitted to be a scourge after, the galaxy will suffer. By all rights, I should simply have you executed. Court systems are still spotty in most parts. Processing your sorry hide would be a nightmare for 'any' court system..." The Man in White declared.
Darth Phyre snorted at this.
"If you're trying to psyche yourself up you might as well just embrace the darkness and slay me. Either way, the darkness gains another servant." She mocked. "But I can show you the truth about the Force. I can show all of you the truth. Simply release me."
"I have a better idea..." the hooded, masked figure turned to her. "I believe in second chances..."
Phyre scowled at him, the dim settings of the poorly lit, unfinished tomb casting shadows across her face.
"I'll never turn to the light side!"
"Nope. No you won't."
Phyre felt the snip of scissors as someone cut a lock of dark red hair from her.
"You've prepared a magical ritual. Interesting. Am I to be altered in some way?"
"Oh no, you're going to die, alright. But you will be reborn. Reborn without your pesky hatred and vile cruelty."
"You are enslaving me."
"How many have you enslaved? Murdered? Tortured? Roasted alive in front of their families? For that matter, how many families 'have' you roasted?"
"Lost count." Phyre sneered.
The Man in White shook his head. "See what I mean?"
Phyre watched as his other men brought in a strange, hourglass like machine. It wasn't until she saw the twisted, unnatural mathematical scrawl glowing green against the transparisteel casing that she realized how doomed she was.
(BFG Division by Mick Gordon plays for a few seconds.)
The bottom of the hourglass, whose frame was of a twisting wrought iron lined with pearls of amber had an inner light from within that made Phyre's skin crawl.
"You...you have the Kolda-Bratha Calculus..." Phyre trailed, a tinge of fear entering her voice for the first time.
"You're one of the strongest pyrokinetics on record. Imagine the good you could have done with such a power."
"Sounds boring."
"To you, perhaps. The other you? She'll be doing a lot of good. Galaxy needs time to heal. Gulag is barely over. No thanks to monsters like you however..."
Two of the masked, green robed men unsealed the top of the hourglass. Phyre winced as she felt the flesh painfully tug at her face. The lock of her hair was carefully secured to the chamber in the hour glass bottom via two prongs.
"So much for the vaunted Jedi morality--"
"You lecturing us on morality is like a Mandalorian telling someone blasters are too savage a weapon of war." The Man in White interrupted. "Considering who you once were...its so sad to see you this way."
Phyre looked at the strange masked man. "Do I know you?" She asked, bracing herself for the horror about to ensue.
This only earned her silence from the Man in White.
"Begin the ritual." He said curtly.
The other robed and masked people around Darth Phyre began to chant. Phyre winced in real pain as the flesh started to tug on her face.
"There is a historical precedent, of course..." The Man in White trailed as Phyre began to howl and thrash in agony in her chains, the flesh on her skin rupturing and ripping parts of itself away starting with her face. She thrashed, her blood and flesh flinging itself into the top of the hour glass, where it swirled as a cloud of gore. Phyre screamed in agony, every ounce of blood and tissue, even the marrow, ripping itself from the bones, which thrashed still, even until the very end, when the brain leaked out through the eye sockets and swirled into the top of the glass, which was quickly sealed.
Phyre's skeleton, still clad in the white and gold chrome suit, clattered lifelessly into a heap.
The Man in White stared at the lock of hair suspended in the bottom. Watched as the blood and tissue flowed to the bottom chamber, and into the lock of hair which seemed to swell and wriggle as an entire human body's worth of tissue seemed to vanish into the dark red lock, which turned a fiery orange red.
The Man in White stared at the lock of hair, the hour glass now empty of blood and gore.
"Now for phase two, my old friend..."
Syd remembered her old self's murder more and more, in better detail. Remembered the pain and humiliation of being brought low and subverted by magic, Phyre's element.
The more she learned or remembered, the more she was certain Phyre was absolutely deserving of the terrible fate she had received at that strange Jedi's hands. Phyre had been cruel beyond what words could adequately express. If anything, Phyre being painfully ripped apart had not been harsh enough a death for that beast whose face Syd now bore.
Sometimes it genuinely worried Syd, whether Phyre would come back of her own accord, simply by remembering more and more while wearing this armor. Would Syd even notice it if it happened? Or would she suddenly blink after remembering one cruelty too many and then that beast would be standing in her place, like she had never left at all, while Syd would merely be a short footnote, a brief pause in Phyre's legacy of cruelty and destruction?
Syd wanted Phyre to never return. She hated her old self. She had never really made it personal with other Sith. But she 'hated' Darth Phyre. The worst part was not being able to pretend she was her own fully seperate entity. She would not exist without the actions and body of that horrid, wretched Sith. So Syd had vowed to do everything she could to spite her old self, hoping each good deed she did would bury the wretched creature a little more.
"Yes, somebody mixed some Force Funk, chanted magic words, and here I stand. You hit it right on the nose." She answered, bemused.
She sighed.
"My creators were a group of Jedi Alchemists called The Resistors of Darkness. The individual who was my chief handler, The Man in White, personally oversaw all facets of the project that led to my creation. Within moments of coming to life, I was given my first task. I was told to slay the alchemist they had forced to aid in my creation. I burned him alive and then decapitated him. I was crafted as a living weapon to slay Sith, their minions, and their abominations, confiscating or destroying their equipment and supplies as needed. I was very effective at my job. Perhaps...too effective...for my own good. I was imprisoned, after operating for twenty-five years without a shred of disloyalty or even a hint of disobedience towards my creators. They stuck me in a chunk of Nullification Resin the size of an apple and left me to scream inside it for over three centuries."
All of that had happened 'after' her recreation as The Geist.
"I got out, eventually. Understandably I have claustrophobia. This place is 'not' doing me any favors."
All of what she had told him had happened--but after Phyre's death.
The Man in White had been a cunning, subtle motherfether...twenty-five years taking his orders to kill people and he never let anything slip, no off-color comment or joke that would have aroused her curiousity or suspicion in the slightest. His minions, who often served as her field support, had never let anything slip either.
Part of her hated him, but as more of Phyre's memories started to come back, each more horrific than the one before it, it had begun to cross her mind that perhaps she had killed someone he cared about...perhaps multiple people he loved...
If so, had he hated her so much that he stayed coldly silent except to instruct or give orders, only to trick her onto her prison without a second thought?
More than once had Syd thought about the day she had been imprisoned...even then, he hadn't said a thing. The man's Sabaac face had been perfect. But why. What would have been the point in holding it in then if her usefulness was expended? Why not tell her the truth to grind it in? Why not mock her for unknowingly being his combat-slave?
Syd didn't know. To be honest, most days she tried not to think about him. There was now. There was Starlin. A young man with much promise in the Light.
"When I joined the Jedi..." she admitted. "It took realizing the truth about how I was little more than a weapon to try and rethink my identity. To actually try to develop one. Developed a fondness for collecting shiny things...I've even gotten better at holding conversations, like so."
Syd stood up, looking at an exposed, upright broken slab.
"As long as I'm holding one, might as well use it to show you new tricks, apprentice. Ever seen The Men Who Stare at Wampas?"
Syd sprinted at the exposed monument and focused. Effortlessly she phased right through it.
"You give it a shot." she offered. "Don't run on your first try. I see padawans break their nose doing that. They always try and recreate the last scene where the reporter runs through the wall so they can say out loud 'We need The Jedi!' if they succeed."
Syd scratched the back of her head awkwardly.
"It got so frequent some of the masters even took bets on which of the padawans would run into the wall they trained with the fastest before they semi-banned running during the phase-training. Knew a padawan who actually 'did' get it on the first try, though. He was treated like a God by the other padawans for about a week...sooo...sorry, I got off track there. Don't run! Walk."
(Cutaway of Darth Phyre standing in the middle of an inferno of burning bodies laughing insanely.)
"...least of all 'me'." She admitted.
"You're anything but trash, Kid. I would not have accepted trash for an apprentice. Don't call yourself such."
Syd blinked as Starlin Rand asked about how she was made.
"That...that's the single most succinct way anyone has ever managed to describe it..." Syd admitted, somewhat amused.
Well not exactly. The Man in White had succeeded in creating Syd Celsius, The Flame Geist.
But he had only succeeded in doing so by using magic to tear apart her old self, Darth Phyre...
(Note: The following is a passage copied from a prior thread. Reposted here due to relevance.)
"Your crimes are abominable. You were a scourge during the plague, and if you are permitted to be a scourge after, the galaxy will suffer. By all rights, I should simply have you executed. Court systems are still spotty in most parts. Processing your sorry hide would be a nightmare for 'any' court system..." The Man in White declared.
Darth Phyre snorted at this.
"If you're trying to psyche yourself up you might as well just embrace the darkness and slay me. Either way, the darkness gains another servant." She mocked. "But I can show you the truth about the Force. I can show all of you the truth. Simply release me."
"I have a better idea..." the hooded, masked figure turned to her. "I believe in second chances..."
Phyre scowled at him, the dim settings of the poorly lit, unfinished tomb casting shadows across her face.
"I'll never turn to the light side!"
"Nope. No you won't."
Phyre felt the snip of scissors as someone cut a lock of dark red hair from her.
"You've prepared a magical ritual. Interesting. Am I to be altered in some way?"
"Oh no, you're going to die, alright. But you will be reborn. Reborn without your pesky hatred and vile cruelty."
"You are enslaving me."
"How many have you enslaved? Murdered? Tortured? Roasted alive in front of their families? For that matter, how many families 'have' you roasted?"
"Lost count." Phyre sneered.
The Man in White shook his head. "See what I mean?"
Phyre watched as his other men brought in a strange, hourglass like machine. It wasn't until she saw the twisted, unnatural mathematical scrawl glowing green against the transparisteel casing that she realized how doomed she was.
(BFG Division by Mick Gordon plays for a few seconds.)
The bottom of the hourglass, whose frame was of a twisting wrought iron lined with pearls of amber had an inner light from within that made Phyre's skin crawl.
"You...you have the Kolda-Bratha Calculus..." Phyre trailed, a tinge of fear entering her voice for the first time.
"You're one of the strongest pyrokinetics on record. Imagine the good you could have done with such a power."
"Sounds boring."
"To you, perhaps. The other you? She'll be doing a lot of good. Galaxy needs time to heal. Gulag is barely over. No thanks to monsters like you however..."
Two of the masked, green robed men unsealed the top of the hourglass. Phyre winced as she felt the flesh painfully tug at her face. The lock of her hair was carefully secured to the chamber in the hour glass bottom via two prongs.
"So much for the vaunted Jedi morality--"
"You lecturing us on morality is like a Mandalorian telling someone blasters are too savage a weapon of war." The Man in White interrupted. "Considering who you once were...its so sad to see you this way."
Phyre looked at the strange masked man. "Do I know you?" She asked, bracing herself for the horror about to ensue.
This only earned her silence from the Man in White.
"Begin the ritual." He said curtly.
The other robed and masked people around Darth Phyre began to chant. Phyre winced in real pain as the flesh started to tug on her face.
"There is a historical precedent, of course..." The Man in White trailed as Phyre began to howl and thrash in agony in her chains, the flesh on her skin rupturing and ripping parts of itself away starting with her face. She thrashed, her blood and flesh flinging itself into the top of the hour glass, where it swirled as a cloud of gore. Phyre screamed in agony, every ounce of blood and tissue, even the marrow, ripping itself from the bones, which thrashed still, even until the very end, when the brain leaked out through the eye sockets and swirled into the top of the glass, which was quickly sealed.
Phyre's skeleton, still clad in the white and gold chrome suit, clattered lifelessly into a heap.
The Man in White stared at the lock of hair suspended in the bottom. Watched as the blood and tissue flowed to the bottom chamber, and into the lock of hair which seemed to swell and wriggle as an entire human body's worth of tissue seemed to vanish into the dark red lock, which turned a fiery orange red.
The Man in White stared at the lock of hair, the hour glass now empty of blood and gore.
"Now for phase two, my old friend..."
Syd remembered her old self's murder more and more, in better detail. Remembered the pain and humiliation of being brought low and subverted by magic, Phyre's element.
The more she learned or remembered, the more she was certain Phyre was absolutely deserving of the terrible fate she had received at that strange Jedi's hands. Phyre had been cruel beyond what words could adequately express. If anything, Phyre being painfully ripped apart had not been harsh enough a death for that beast whose face Syd now bore.
Sometimes it genuinely worried Syd, whether Phyre would come back of her own accord, simply by remembering more and more while wearing this armor. Would Syd even notice it if it happened? Or would she suddenly blink after remembering one cruelty too many and then that beast would be standing in her place, like she had never left at all, while Syd would merely be a short footnote, a brief pause in Phyre's legacy of cruelty and destruction?
Syd wanted Phyre to never return. She hated her old self. She had never really made it personal with other Sith. But she 'hated' Darth Phyre. The worst part was not being able to pretend she was her own fully seperate entity. She would not exist without the actions and body of that horrid, wretched Sith. So Syd had vowed to do everything she could to spite her old self, hoping each good deed she did would bury the wretched creature a little more.
"Yes, somebody mixed some Force Funk, chanted magic words, and here I stand. You hit it right on the nose." She answered, bemused.
She sighed.
"My creators were a group of Jedi Alchemists called The Resistors of Darkness. The individual who was my chief handler, The Man in White, personally oversaw all facets of the project that led to my creation. Within moments of coming to life, I was given my first task. I was told to slay the alchemist they had forced to aid in my creation. I burned him alive and then decapitated him. I was crafted as a living weapon to slay Sith, their minions, and their abominations, confiscating or destroying their equipment and supplies as needed. I was very effective at my job. Perhaps...too effective...for my own good. I was imprisoned, after operating for twenty-five years without a shred of disloyalty or even a hint of disobedience towards my creators. They stuck me in a chunk of Nullification Resin the size of an apple and left me to scream inside it for over three centuries."
All of that had happened 'after' her recreation as The Geist.
"I got out, eventually. Understandably I have claustrophobia. This place is 'not' doing me any favors."
All of what she had told him had happened--but after Phyre's death.
The Man in White had been a cunning, subtle motherfether...twenty-five years taking his orders to kill people and he never let anything slip, no off-color comment or joke that would have aroused her curiousity or suspicion in the slightest. His minions, who often served as her field support, had never let anything slip either.
Part of her hated him, but as more of Phyre's memories started to come back, each more horrific than the one before it, it had begun to cross her mind that perhaps she had killed someone he cared about...perhaps multiple people he loved...
If so, had he hated her so much that he stayed coldly silent except to instruct or give orders, only to trick her onto her prison without a second thought?
More than once had Syd thought about the day she had been imprisoned...even then, he hadn't said a thing. The man's Sabaac face had been perfect. But why. What would have been the point in holding it in then if her usefulness was expended? Why not tell her the truth to grind it in? Why not mock her for unknowingly being his combat-slave?
Syd didn't know. To be honest, most days she tried not to think about him. There was now. There was Starlin. A young man with much promise in the Light.
"When I joined the Jedi..." she admitted. "It took realizing the truth about how I was little more than a weapon to try and rethink my identity. To actually try to develop one. Developed a fondness for collecting shiny things...I've even gotten better at holding conversations, like so."
Syd stood up, looking at an exposed, upright broken slab.
"As long as I'm holding one, might as well use it to show you new tricks, apprentice. Ever seen The Men Who Stare at Wampas?"
Syd sprinted at the exposed monument and focused. Effortlessly she phased right through it.
"You give it a shot." she offered. "Don't run on your first try. I see padawans break their nose doing that. They always try and recreate the last scene where the reporter runs through the wall so they can say out loud 'We need The Jedi!' if they succeed."
Syd scratched the back of her head awkwardly.
"It got so frequent some of the masters even took bets on which of the padawans would run into the wall they trained with the fastest before they semi-banned running during the phase-training. Knew a padawan who actually 'did' get it on the first try, though. He was treated like a God by the other padawans for about a week...sooo...sorry, I got off track there. Don't run! Walk."