Yasha Cadera
Mom'alor
Sundari Palace
Mandalore
The diffused Mandalorian sun radiated through biosphere and distance to paint warm marble with the beauty of a desert’s dawn. While the majority of the planet was terraformed due to the Infernal’s efforts to an unkempt and increasingly populated oasis, the desert refused such modifications.
A jetty of sand whirled from the open pillars. Mand’alor the Infernal, that youth known as Yasha Cadera remembered walking with her birth father on the sand dunes of Dromund Kaas. The one lesson Preliat taught his daughter, before falling insane.
'Power, little one. Power was a shifting sand dune, ever present but mutable. A tumbling drift part-oasis, part-desiccation of flesh without limit. Power, like sand flowed out of the fingers of those who clenched it, and poured into the crannies of others, who opened their fingers and let it run free.'
Draped in the beskar’kandar of her station, the Hell Wolf of Manda’yaim walked through the Throne Room, which punctuated so much of her life. She was both child and woman in this room. Haunted by the memories of Ra Vizsla, the Undying tyrant, who taught and extolled her. Gave her a place to sleep, food in her belly, and tutors to eradicate the stutter he hated. Yash'ika was his Ward. The adopted family of a Gurlanin, who survived resurrected under the will of Manda.
But, as his shadow disappeared from Sundari City, so did the beauty of an aging warrior committed to the will of Manda. In his absence, twelve year old Yasha found a journey, which took her to Dathomir and the Netherworld for a second time, enduring seven years of torment until knowledge became her jubilee at the feet of Ember Rekali. He sent her back, aged outside time, to the moment of inevitable unravelling.
One word of warning for his young enemy: "Repair Mandalore, or death will come down on you without restraint."
Rubber soled beskar-plated boots echoed across the marble hall, each step closer to the black marble throne increasing the gravity pushing at Yasha Cadera’s orphaned shoulders. She spoke the words of the Riduur'ok at the throne, her riduur as eager as his equally young bride. And when Kaden passed to Manda, Yasha's wails of grief shook transparisteel and stone to tears.
Gravity threatened to bow her. Until she stood on the dais. Until she turned her back to Ra’s throne, rebuilt by Death Watch, who refused to deny what they built in the Infernal’s name. Until a twenty-five year old girl, near six years encased in the protective and cloistered aura of Mand’alor, sat upon her throne.
No crown rested on the Sole Ruler’s raven hair. No adornment on the pretty Epicanthix face, but black lips and the vertical lines of a chin tattoo commemorating the lives of the Mando’ade. But for the stern expression of command, Yasha Cadera looked as any young woman, who could laugh and shop with friends, look to what her life could be.
Six Gurlanin in lupine form settled around the throne: her keepers. Her protectors. The last of Yasha’s childhood guardians, and those who set an Empire upon her shoulders too soon, for the desperation of lean and hectic times.
The sunlight burned at Yasha’s sensitive eyes. Beskar feather-like folds drifted from her shoulder pauldrons up the back of Yasha’s neck, and enfolded around her. The Wolf-Helm, with its’ lupine standard blocked her into a world of darkness accented only by the colours and vision of artifice. Once more locked away. Sealed by duty, by position, by armour, by protectors and by necessity.
Yet, one woman passed through the lock and key sequestering the young Sole Ruler from the Galaxy. [member="Alexandra Feanor"] broke the bonds, in her unselfish act of healing a stranger. And in that act, the beginnings of a love, which shook Yasha’s spine.
Once more, Yasha Cadera had a duty. That duty called. Another caught Alex’s wounded, but loving eye, and Yasha would not allow silence to breed jealousy or insecurity.
[member="Noah Corek"] brought a separate and comparable joy to Alex’s life, and upon hearing the briefest dossier of the Republic’s military machinator, Yasha did what Ra was incapable of.
She opened the comm, and called the Warrior of Clan Corek home. All who asked received. For all who followed the Resol’nare, and the collective consciousness of Manda were both welcome by the Infernal, and considered by providence as her responsibility. The Undying and his regime of terror burnt across worlds, and desolated reputations. While the Galaxy remembered the horrors of the Undying, his protege and Ward stepped forth from Dathomir those five years prior with the precarious nature of the Mandalorian position pressing on her spine.
Unlike her predecessor and against the advice of her Death Watch guardians, Yasha called to those Clans and Mando’ade who lived on the margins, or uncelebrated cusps of their history. If all were destined to be one with Manda, then this was the task of her years.
“Olarom, Noah Corek. Come closer, my protectors will not bite without cause. Thank you for coming, I hope you understand it is difficult for me to leave my borders these days.” The voice flowing from the audio projector on her buy’ce was feminine and alto. It lilted in Mando’a with a twinge of foreign accent. The legacy of birth parents, who spoke Epicant and took to Mandalore as immigrants.
“One dear to us spoke of your Mandalorian heritage, yet I have none of Clan Corek in my Halls. I do not remember your feats in battle for the Vode, unless its’ history was lost. Please, humour a fellow warrior. Tell me the tales of Clan Corek.”
A seat of ori’ramikad wood was set upon a dais of equal height to Yasha’s throne, the chair facing the Mand’alor. Equal footing for the man, who captured an equal amount of Alex’s attention. Yasha motioned to the chair, as two gigantic bipedal lizard skittered in with two small tables, two trays of Mandalorian food and stim-caf placed beside Noah’s chair. Tea placed reverently on the Infernal’s.
“I hope my cooks haven’t startled you. The Hetikles Baatir refuse to let anything happen in the Palace without appropriate food and drink. They’re ineffable.”
Mandalore
The diffused Mandalorian sun radiated through biosphere and distance to paint warm marble with the beauty of a desert’s dawn. While the majority of the planet was terraformed due to the Infernal’s efforts to an unkempt and increasingly populated oasis, the desert refused such modifications.
A jetty of sand whirled from the open pillars. Mand’alor the Infernal, that youth known as Yasha Cadera remembered walking with her birth father on the sand dunes of Dromund Kaas. The one lesson Preliat taught his daughter, before falling insane.
'Power, little one. Power was a shifting sand dune, ever present but mutable. A tumbling drift part-oasis, part-desiccation of flesh without limit. Power, like sand flowed out of the fingers of those who clenched it, and poured into the crannies of others, who opened their fingers and let it run free.'
There was no mercy in power.
Draped in the beskar’kandar of her station, the Hell Wolf of Manda’yaim walked through the Throne Room, which punctuated so much of her life. She was both child and woman in this room. Haunted by the memories of Ra Vizsla, the Undying tyrant, who taught and extolled her. Gave her a place to sleep, food in her belly, and tutors to eradicate the stutter he hated. Yash'ika was his Ward. The adopted family of a Gurlanin, who survived resurrected under the will of Manda.
But, as his shadow disappeared from Sundari City, so did the beauty of an aging warrior committed to the will of Manda. In his absence, twelve year old Yasha found a journey, which took her to Dathomir and the Netherworld for a second time, enduring seven years of torment until knowledge became her jubilee at the feet of Ember Rekali. He sent her back, aged outside time, to the moment of inevitable unravelling.
One word of warning for his young enemy: "Repair Mandalore, or death will come down on you without restraint."
Rubber soled beskar-plated boots echoed across the marble hall, each step closer to the black marble throne increasing the gravity pushing at Yasha Cadera’s orphaned shoulders. She spoke the words of the Riduur'ok at the throne, her riduur as eager as his equally young bride. And when Kaden passed to Manda, Yasha's wails of grief shook transparisteel and stone to tears.
Gravity threatened to bow her. Until she stood on the dais. Until she turned her back to Ra’s throne, rebuilt by Death Watch, who refused to deny what they built in the Infernal’s name. Until a twenty-five year old girl, near six years encased in the protective and cloistered aura of Mand’alor, sat upon her throne.
No crown rested on the Sole Ruler’s raven hair. No adornment on the pretty Epicanthix face, but black lips and the vertical lines of a chin tattoo commemorating the lives of the Mando’ade. But for the stern expression of command, Yasha Cadera looked as any young woman, who could laugh and shop with friends, look to what her life could be.
Six Gurlanin in lupine form settled around the throne: her keepers. Her protectors. The last of Yasha’s childhood guardians, and those who set an Empire upon her shoulders too soon, for the desperation of lean and hectic times.
The sunlight burned at Yasha’s sensitive eyes. Beskar feather-like folds drifted from her shoulder pauldrons up the back of Yasha’s neck, and enfolded around her. The Wolf-Helm, with its’ lupine standard blocked her into a world of darkness accented only by the colours and vision of artifice. Once more locked away. Sealed by duty, by position, by armour, by protectors and by necessity.
Yet, one woman passed through the lock and key sequestering the young Sole Ruler from the Galaxy. [member="Alexandra Feanor"] broke the bonds, in her unselfish act of healing a stranger. And in that act, the beginnings of a love, which shook Yasha’s spine.
Once more, Yasha Cadera had a duty. That duty called. Another caught Alex’s wounded, but loving eye, and Yasha would not allow silence to breed jealousy or insecurity.
[member="Noah Corek"] brought a separate and comparable joy to Alex’s life, and upon hearing the briefest dossier of the Republic’s military machinator, Yasha did what Ra was incapable of.
She opened the comm, and called the Warrior of Clan Corek home. All who asked received. For all who followed the Resol’nare, and the collective consciousness of Manda were both welcome by the Infernal, and considered by providence as her responsibility. The Undying and his regime of terror burnt across worlds, and desolated reputations. While the Galaxy remembered the horrors of the Undying, his protege and Ward stepped forth from Dathomir those five years prior with the precarious nature of the Mandalorian position pressing on her spine.
Power was fragile, most of all.
Unlike her predecessor and against the advice of her Death Watch guardians, Yasha called to those Clans and Mando’ade who lived on the margins, or uncelebrated cusps of their history. If all were destined to be one with Manda, then this was the task of her years.
Reconciliation.
It took a child of Hell to open Eden’s gate.
“Olarom, Noah Corek. Come closer, my protectors will not bite without cause. Thank you for coming, I hope you understand it is difficult for me to leave my borders these days.” The voice flowing from the audio projector on her buy’ce was feminine and alto. It lilted in Mando’a with a twinge of foreign accent. The legacy of birth parents, who spoke Epicant and took to Mandalore as immigrants.
“One dear to us spoke of your Mandalorian heritage, yet I have none of Clan Corek in my Halls. I do not remember your feats in battle for the Vode, unless its’ history was lost. Please, humour a fellow warrior. Tell me the tales of Clan Corek.”
A seat of ori’ramikad wood was set upon a dais of equal height to Yasha’s throne, the chair facing the Mand’alor. Equal footing for the man, who captured an equal amount of Alex’s attention. Yasha motioned to the chair, as two gigantic bipedal lizard skittered in with two small tables, two trays of Mandalorian food and stim-caf placed beside Noah’s chair. Tea placed reverently on the Infernal’s.
“I hope my cooks haven’t startled you. The Hetikles Baatir refuse to let anything happen in the Palace without appropriate food and drink. They’re ineffable.”