Mistress of the Dark.
In Putrid Flame.
Location: Polis Massa.
Objective: Begin developing further relations within the Sith Order.
Allies: ???
Opposing Force: ???
Tag:
Odrin Rath
Wisdom consists of knowing how to distinguish the nature of trouble, and in choosing the lesser evil.
But when did I say I was wise?
The ancient sublabs beneath the shattered asteroids of Polis Massa were buried so deep within the stone and silence that the galaxy above felt like a myth.Location: Polis Massa.
Objective: Begin developing further relations within the Sith Order.
Allies: ???
Opposing Force: ???
Tag:

Wisdom consists of knowing how to distinguish the nature of trouble, and in choosing the lesser evil.
But when did I say I was wise?
Serina stood alone in the ruins of what had once been a sanctuary of medical science, now abandoned, forgotten, and claimed by the creeping fingers of the Dark Side. The laboratory walls still bore faint scarring from surgical incisions and autopsies of long-dead species, now overwritten by creeping veins of blackened crystal—Force-tainted remnants that pulsed with residual malevolence. Dust clung to the air like a veil of age, stirred only when her cape whispered across the cold floor.
She made no move to disrupt the quiet. Serina Calis was patient when she needed to be.
She stood beneath a cracked durasteel archway, its overhead lights long since extinguished, replaced by the eerie luminescence of her own presence. Her armor shimmered faintly in the half-darkness—sharp lines of glowing crimson and magenta carved across her bodice and limbs like bleeding script. The stylized crest upon her chest radiated a pulse in time with her heartbeat, alive with barely restrained power. From beneath her deep hood, strands of golden hair caught the fading light of the flickering control panels, spilling like sunlight through the cracks of a tomb.
Her hands were clasped before her—still, serene, deceptive. She looked like a queen awaiting tribute. Or an executioner awaiting confession.
She let the silence stretch, her blue eyes scanning the shadows without turning her head. No need to feign nervousness. No need to pace. She knew he would come.

A new name in the Sith ranks. A fresh servant freshly sworn. But a servant to whom? That remained unclear—and Serina despised ambiguity when it did not serve her.
No whispers, no holovids, no cautionary tales whispered in backroom halls or dusty scrolls of Dromund Kaas. He had emerged suddenly, like a thunderbolt from a cloudless sky, already crackling with strength, already leashed to a master whose name had not yet been uttered aloud. Too much power, too little context. Serina could smell the inconsistency on him like cheap perfume—and she would uncover its source. That much was inevitable.
Raw strength… Yes, that was the rumor. That he was strong. That he could cleave through walls, command the Force like it were his birthright. That he had never once knelt before the Order until now.
That intrigued her.
Not because she feared him. But because she understood what such strength without structure often meant.
It meant inexperience.
It meant influence yet to be claimed.
It meant… potential.
Her eyes narrowed slightly, her smile tightening into something between amusement and promise.
When she had written to him, the message had been subtle but firm. An invitation veiled as a summons. Polite, yes. But unmistakably authoritative. That he had accepted told her more than a full dossier ever could.
He wanted something.
They always did.
The labs around her echoed with distant creaks—old air systems breathing their last. But not all of the machinery here was dead. Some of it had been… repurposed.
A burst of gas hissed from a corroded pipe to her left, venting into the stale air like a sigh from the planet itself. It swirled outward in delicate plumes of pink—faint at first, almost imperceptible, then gradually thickening, curling around her ankles and licking at the edges of her cloak like fog drawn to flame.
But this was no accident of decay.
Serina had reactivated the old dispersal valves hours earlier, overriding their safety protocols with a few precise gestures and a whisper of the Force. What once released sterilants and sedatives for long-forgotten surgical procedures now served a far more elegant purpose.
The gas was of her own design—filtered through ancient Sith alchemical knowledge and modern chemical engineering. Non-toxic, of course. That would be far too crude. It wasn't meant to kill.
It was meant to influence.
The pink haze carried a subtle psychic signature, tuned to enhance susceptibility in those nearby—ever so slightly dulling their resistance to suggestion, loosening their mental defenses without them even realizing it. Not mind control. No, that would be obvious, brutish, and unsustainable. This was art. This was ambience.
It encouraged openness. Vulnerability. Honesty, when one thought they were being clever. Boldness, when one should be cautious. It created a mood in the room—intimate, electric, charged with something not quite definable. A sense that reality had become just a little more dreamlike. That things mattered more here.
She breathed it in like perfume, letting it suffuse her presence. Her crimson and magenta armor glowed more vividly within the colored mist, her silhouette flickering like an apparition in a fever dream. Her cape, her hair, her eyes—they all caught the hue and returned it transformed, radiant and unnatural.
Serina knew the effect it would have on Odrin the moment he arrived. His heartbeat might quicken. His focus might waver. The shadows might seem to stretch a little longer than they should. He would feel powerful, emboldened, perhaps even disarmed by the haze and the woman standing amidst it, regal and unflinching.
She wanted him off-balance. She wanted him wondering if what he felt was his own thought or something she had allowed him to think.
This was her theater.
And in it, every breath was a question he would not know he was answering.
And yet... there was something else to her, just beneath the surface.
That soft smirk. That glimmer in her eye. That sense of unspoken hunger that accompanied every word, every silence. A velvet undertone in her presence, intoxicating and dangerous. The way her armor clung to her like a second skin wasn't by chance. It was a weapon in its own right—beauty that disarmed, allure that invited, before the trap snapped shut.
Her voice echoed in her memory, the letter she had sent him already rehearsed a hundred times:
Footsteps."Odrin Rath.
The Order is a garden overgrown. Wild branches rise, with no root beneath them. You are one such vine—brilliant in color, but I wonder: do you have a purpose?
Meet me beneath Polis Massa. In the broken cradle of knowledge.
Let us speak.
And let us see what you are truly made of."
Finally.
She did not turn. Let him arrive. Let him see her first. Let him wonder why she waited here alone, deep beneath a dead world, so far from the eyes of her so-called superiors. Let him try to guess what she wanted. Let him try to define her.
He would fail, of course.
They always did.