Note: Thread takes place shortly after
The Thin Line
- Primary Weapon(s): N/A
- Secondary Weapon(s): N/A
- Specialized Gear: N/A
- Armor & Attire: N/A
Sable's grip on the sink tightened until her knuckles were white, her head spinning with the assault on her mind.
It would be so easy, she thought,
just to let it burn away. To forget. To make it stop. Her breath came in ragged gasps as the flames of the Force swirled within her, pushing her toward that precipice where she'd lose herself entirely. The pain was unbearable, but she didn't stop. She couldn't.
She couldn't destroy every memory, but she could remove enough. Enough to disconnect from Alana. Enough to just be ALONE. Each burned to ash in her mind, like unwanted weight, forcing her further down into the fire. They were
nothing now. Only shadows.
And yet... beneath the rage and fire, there was a flicker of something more. A memory of a hand on her shoulder, a whisper of comfort, a voice that said
I'll be there. But no. She couldn't allow it. She clenched her teeth and forced her focus back. There was no room for those fragile things. Only what was left behind. The only way forward was through the ashes. Her own name,
Alana, seemed to burn in her throat, choking her as if the very act of holding onto it would shatter her.
Alana Calloway had to die for Sable Varro to live. With one last tear through the veil, she felt the pieces of herself break free, evaporating into the fire. The memories faded into the white noise of nothingness. And Sable Varro, the woman who would live, stood there alone.
Serina was the only one that could accept her. That would accept her.
"I think of you as so much more than just a plaything."
"Then you never have to be alone again."
"If you wanted to get yourself killed, you could have just asked me to do it instead of making me chase your half-feral ass through a forcedamned death trap."
"Every time I have given you control, every single time I have loosened my grip, you've either run or gotten yourself hurt."
She had done all this to herself. At the end of it all, it was her fault, for everything.
When the pain grew worse, when she wanted to cease the pain, she held onto that one true notion.
She
deserved, all of this.
The pain inside her skull exploded, a horrific wave of agony that gripped every fiber of her being. Her head throbbed with such force that the room tilted dangerously, her vision blurring at the edges. Blood seeped from her nostrils, hot and slick, staining the sink beneath her. The pulse in her temples beat erratically, like an internal war. She could feel her mind—
her brain—cracking under the pressure. Memory after memory tore itself apart with sickening snaps, her focus was nonexistent, as she just purged whatever came to mind in her agonizing haze.
Her vision went white, then flickered to black. Her breath hitched, her body trembling violently as it fought the overwhelming, suffocating heat surging through her. Her fingertips dug into the porcelain, the edges sharp, but it did nothing to ground her. The room spun, violently.
Something was
breaking.
A series of memories—bits of her—burned, withering away, consumed by the chaotic force she had unleashed. She could feel herself slipping, the last shreds of Alana's existence being torn from her like fabric. There was no going back now. They flayed about like burning film, no finesse, no guile, just brute force, and all the complications that brought with it.
A sickening sense of hollow emptiness began to take root. No one had ever told her it would feel like this. No one would ever know she had done this. No one would care.
The blood thickened at the back of her throat. Another wave of dizziness crashed over her, and for a moment, she swayed on the verge of collapsing. Her legs felt like they might give way at any second, but she fought it.
Stay with it. Just stay with it. This needs to happen. The struggle to breathe became a battle against the agony in her chest, but she held onto the thread of destruction, pulling until the last remnants of the girl who had been Alana disappeared into the void.
Finally, silence.
The storm subsided. The burning in her mind faded into a painful, pulsing ache that was still far too much to endure. But the process was done. She was empty now. Hollowed out. The weight of her past erased, wiped clean. But at what cost?
Sable trembled, her knees weak, feeling like she had just ripped apart the very fabric of who she was. Her blood still dripped from her nose, staining the white porcelain sink beneath her. She couldn't even feel the burn on her skin anymore, the residue of the fire she had used to cleanse herself.
Was it worth it?
Only time would tell.
She struggled for breath, her vision blurred, as she laid on the floor of her quarters. Her head was splitting, her palms bleed from where her nails had dug in at, and she felt as if she was swimming in a haze.
A small, quiet question bubbled as she rose. She could almost hear the voice that accompanied it, as she struggled to rise.
"Do you have anywhere to stay, Alana?"
No. Not anymore.
She wouldn't need anywhere else to stay, not anymore.
Not as long as Serina would take her.