Cedric Grayson
Ashlan Kaiser
It would be the last time he called the banners, or at least that was what he'd told himself.
His lifetime had been an epoch of conflict, and yet none had been more important than this. His return to the role of Jedi Knight had been the beginning; the return to Ruusan that followed cemented his path. With the chaos spreading throughout the galaxy, now was the time to make a move. The bastions of the Ashla were not so righteous as they once were, nor as impregnable as they might have allowed themselves to believe. Even now, Cedric could see the early links of rot worming their way into the foundations of the state he had helped to forge A society without faith was a society without morals, and the lacking of that mixed with an increasingly bloated bureaucracy would eventually bring an end to any civilization. Soon enough the servants of the great enemy would wreathe the galaxy in hellfire - would the democracies be able to put out the flames before they consumed everyone and everything?
Cedric thought not. The genocide on Csilla had only served to bolster his conclusion. He could only do so much for the people of the core on his own, and his own people suffered beneath their boots. The Essonians were little more than mercenary bands, vagrants, and church gatherings spattered about the galaxy. If he was to resume his role as a leader, then it would not do to ignore the plight of his kinsmen in favor of strangers.
A quarter of a million had set up camp both within and outside the walls of the Graywall. The lights of their fires colored the night in bursts of orange and crimson, their presence a constant reminder of what Cedric was setting out to do. He allowed himself a moment's break from the logistics sheet he'd been pouring over and stepped out on to the balcony of the fortress' highest turret.
"My lord," one of his guardsmen had entered his office unannounced. "There's someone here to see you. One of the Sages smelled the touch of the Bogan on him. We were moving to apprehend him, but he says he knows you." The guardmen let the words hang their as he awaited an order.
Cedric lofted a brow. Of all the places for one of his many enemies to show up, this was quite possibly the worst. "Is that so?" He asked, arms folding behind the small of his back. "Bring him in then." The guard could not keep a flash of worry from coloring his features. "Even the greatest of Sith Lords is little threat here." Cedric reminded, bowing his head toward the guardsmen to make it clear that he would brook no argument.
Darth Petrichor
His lifetime had been an epoch of conflict, and yet none had been more important than this. His return to the role of Jedi Knight had been the beginning; the return to Ruusan that followed cemented his path. With the chaos spreading throughout the galaxy, now was the time to make a move. The bastions of the Ashla were not so righteous as they once were, nor as impregnable as they might have allowed themselves to believe. Even now, Cedric could see the early links of rot worming their way into the foundations of the state he had helped to forge A society without faith was a society without morals, and the lacking of that mixed with an increasingly bloated bureaucracy would eventually bring an end to any civilization. Soon enough the servants of the great enemy would wreathe the galaxy in hellfire - would the democracies be able to put out the flames before they consumed everyone and everything?
Cedric thought not. The genocide on Csilla had only served to bolster his conclusion. He could only do so much for the people of the core on his own, and his own people suffered beneath their boots. The Essonians were little more than mercenary bands, vagrants, and church gatherings spattered about the galaxy. If he was to resume his role as a leader, then it would not do to ignore the plight of his kinsmen in favor of strangers.
A quarter of a million had set up camp both within and outside the walls of the Graywall. The lights of their fires colored the night in bursts of orange and crimson, their presence a constant reminder of what Cedric was setting out to do. He allowed himself a moment's break from the logistics sheet he'd been pouring over and stepped out on to the balcony of the fortress' highest turret.
"My lord," one of his guardsmen had entered his office unannounced. "There's someone here to see you. One of the Sages smelled the touch of the Bogan on him. We were moving to apprehend him, but he says he knows you." The guardmen let the words hang their as he awaited an order.
Cedric lofted a brow. Of all the places for one of his many enemies to show up, this was quite possibly the worst. "Is that so?" He asked, arms folding behind the small of his back. "Bring him in then." The guard could not keep a flash of worry from coloring his features. "Even the greatest of Sith Lords is little threat here." Cedric reminded, bowing his head toward the guardsmen to make it clear that he would brook no argument.
Darth Petrichor
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