Mistress of the Dark.

"I enjoy being a Queen, maybe one day, I can make it a reality."
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The air was dry with memory.
It clung to the skin, to the bone, to the soul—like ash, like secrets, like blood long since dried. Wind whispered through the ancient cracks of the stone tomb behind her, carrying with it the cold breath of a thousand curses and the scent of timeworn decay. And yet, Serina Calis emerged unscathed. No, better than unscathed. Empowered. Enriched. Reignited.
She stepped from the threshold of the tomb into the scarlet twilight of Korriban's sun, the dull roar of the dying wind parting for her passage. Her silhouette was framed by the jagged teeth of crumbled masonry, the remnants of some long-forgotten ziggurat looming like the shattered molars of a god slain in another age. She did not look back.
The cape trailing behind her moved as though it had a will of its own, curling and fluttering in defiance of gravity, catching the fading light on its glowing violet inner lining. It kissed the ground behind her with reverence, but never dared touch her heels. Her boots struck the sandstone path with rhythmic, deliberate precision—each step echoing with the weight of purpose.
Her bodice gleamed darkly in the crimson sun, etched with the ancient geometry of Sith knowledge, not merely decorative but alive, pulsing faintly like veins beneath skin. Crimson and magenta sigils flickered across her form like coals that refused to extinguish. They had learned her now. Accepted her. Claimed her. And she, in return, had claimed them.
The tomb behind her had not given its knowledge willingly.
There had been whispers—of trials buried in madness, of rites stained with the minds of those who failed them, of spirits who clung to their legacies like starving jackals. But she had moved through those shadows like a storm cloaked in velvet: graceful, violent, patient. The Force had not been wrestled with. It had been seduced.
The wind rose again, brushing strands of her golden hair across her cheek. A hand moved—slow, controlled—tucking them back beneath the deep hood that framed her features. The motion was elegant, practiced, almost theatrical. Her face, when revealed again, bore the same faint, knowing smirk she always wore after taking something she was never meant to have. Not just satisfaction. Victory.
Her piercing blue eyes flicked toward the horizon where jagged peaks met blood-red sky. She could feel them out there—others, lesser seekers of power, slaves to ghosts and doctrine. Wandering acolytes, self-proclaimed lords. Broken relics in living flesh. She did not fear them. She pitied them. Every step she took was already three they could never match.
This planet had forged Sith for millennia, and it would continue to do so. But it had not known her before now. And what Korriban did not know, it would learn. Quickly. Violently.
She came to a halt near the edge of a broken stone platform overlooking the valley floor. Ancient statues of long-dead Sith loomed around her in pieces, faceless, eroded by time and forgotten fury. One of them had crumbled entirely, leaving only a jagged foot and the suggestion of a once-proud hemline. Serina rested one armored hand atop the broken stone.
"I remember you," she said aloud, though no one stood nearby to hear her. "You all thought yourselves kings… prophets… gods."
The Force rippled around her—a slow pulse, dark and deep, like the distant beat of some slumbering leviathan. The tomb behind her had given her something old. Something twisted and sacred. Its knowledge now whispered through her veins, curled beneath her tongue, fed her mind like a lover feeds poison in a kiss.
"I am what you feared would come," she said softly, voice as smooth as black silk across a razor. "Not your heir. Your reckoning."
She turned, the broken statue at her back, and began descending the timeworn path into the valley. The sky above her bled into darkness, and with it, the desert heat surrendered to a colder, hungrier chill. The night was coming. And with it, her plans.
Korriban would remember her. But it would not mark her with statues or empty hymns.
It would mark her by what came after.