Text
ands: the new year's debacle
Wayne Enterprises & Subsidiaries NYE Event, where Director Yang is in attendance with a tall, gorgeous, and mysterious Plus One. They are both seen cheerfully making conversation with Chief Fox, much to the bafflement of the combined office betting pools.
(aka: post bruce and co resolving the UST over the holidays, it's Wayne E's holiday party and he finds out that vivienne and rosalyn know each other, and know each other well. ft: kevin the mortified and unsuspecting office worker.)
“I’m not—” Kevin feels his heels slipping as both Patricia and Claire pretend to double-over with laughter, arms hooked around his as a pretense to frogmarch him towards the trio at the large window of the event space.
“The General likes you best,” Henry says in that obnoxious way where he thinks he’s contributing to the discussion, but it’s just hot air.
“Marvin the Martian’s her favorite,” he refutes.
Simon gives a hard stare over at their wayward co-worker and they all follow his gaze. Marvin “the Martian” is either trying to describe how superconductors work or the mechanics of the wobbling gelatin dessert in his hands to his plus one. Poor woman looks completely lost, as if she’s been beamed to another planet.
“She thinks his nickname is funny, but she thinks you’re actually funny,” Johanna explains with a tone of talking down to a toddler.
Another voice joins their conversation. “Maybe you can go? Female-female solidarity?” He was thinking it, and Michael is the one to say it out loud. He comes up behind Simon, nodding greetings and holding hors d'oeuvres.
Johanna gives him a scornful once-over. She doesn’t move any closer despite the haughty attitude—she’s just as terrified of their boss as the rest of them are.
Kevin continues to struggle to no avail. He hisses, “Ladies, please!”
They’re slowly but steadily inching closer towards doom. Kevin’s never been a proponent of more than a light jog every two days, but the way Henry looks pityingly at him makes him reconsider stopping by the top-of-the-line gym facilities that all WayneTech employees get access to. Unfortunately, it means he’d have to account for running into trouble outside of business hours, as well.
Speaking of trouble—
“Director Yang!” Patricia gives off a bubbly laugh—the only natural blonde on their floor and she leans hard into it. Kevin would buy in, too, if he hasn’t seen how she gave that Enterprise Division asshole Asher Mulland the run-around. He was none the wiser, either; too busy dealing with Director Yang reaming him for wasting everyone’s time when his side pushed for ‘tighter integration’ in the first place.
“Patricia, off-hours,” Director Yang says with a small raise of her champagne flute. “I see you and Claire are…” The way she trails off that sentence while looking askance at him makes Kevin want his every molecules to drop down to absolute zero, no motion whatsoever.
If he doesn’t move, she can’t see him, right?
“Kevin’s more fun than the rest of the boys’ club you’re running, Vivienne.” Claire is both purposefully casual and careful with how she says Director Yang’s name. The little curl of the draconian woman’s lips—blood red lacquer and a hint of teeth—at that mockery seems to be a good sign (if an unnerving sight all the same), as the rest of the women in their circle start to laugh.
“We came over because we had to know who you’re wearing?” Patricia ends her statement with a questioning lilt.
“Hervé Léger,” she answers easily, and the striking brunette next to her leans close to clink their flutes together with a laugh. “Nothing wrong with a bit of excitement to greet the new year,” Director Yang says with a warm expression that actually reaches her eyes, curving them into crescents.
“As if you need an excuse to buy more clothes or shoes,” the brunette teases with a winsome smile, and all that prompts is a small flicker of an eye roll before Director Yang leans into her side.
“Where would she be without her shoes?” Chief Fox adds on dryly. “They’ve been making a statement since her undergraduate showcase. The terror of her division, too, if the scuttlebutt’s to be believed.”
“The terror of her calves, more like,” Statuesque Brunette jumps back in.
“But you have to admit they look amazing.” Director Yang’s tone takes on an unrecognizable quality.
Kevin has to admit nothing. He’s not looking at how his boss is in a dress that shows off her arms and shoulders and back and legs, and even if he were, his brain would do him the courtesy of applying a pixelated modesty filter over things no human was meant to perceive.
She looks over at them as if on cue and his mind goes blank with momentary terror. Maybe she can read minds. Maybe Claire says something agreeable or whatever, and Patricia nods along, but he can’t process the words.
It’s bizarre and hair-raising. She’s never gone out of her way to make it known, but within the first two years of working at WayneTech it was factual that Vivienne Yang was a hardass at best and a tyrant at worst. The fact that she’s rarely wrong and backed up all but officially by the CTO of WayneTech and acting CEO of Wayne Enterprises Lucius Fox means that she has leeway to be as despotic as she pleases. It’s true that one would have to monumentally cause something to go FUBAR for her to turn her attention on them, but those with survival instincts cringe at the sound of ‘click-clack-click-clack’ heels marching directly towards their desk.
The horsemen of the apocalypse in his dreams wore fitted suit jackets and pussy-bow blouses, and were all the more terrifying for it.
Hires that didn’t know better and got cocky—they were usually the type to run their mouths, fuck up anyways, and got made examples out of. It’d be better if she yelled, but she would coldly and without pause tear into every bit of their professional and technical integrity until there was nothing left. If it were Kevin, he wouldn’t even dare apply to a different job elsewhere, non-compete clauses notwithstanding.
When he gains awareness of the conversation again, it’s at the mention of his name.
“—must be Kevin.” Statuesque Brunette smiles over at him, with the most perfectly manicured and shaped hand reaching out for a greeting. She’s taller than him, too. “Vi’s told me a lot about you. I’m Rosalyn.”
“I—ah—” And thank god he automatically reaches over to shake her hand, even as he stutters. To his horror, Patricia and Claire are nowhere to be seen. He’s on his own. “All good things, I hope? We’re, well…’the nail that sticks out gets the hammer,’ as they say around here.” He tries for a joke to break the tension.
“You stick out in a good way,” Rosalyn says warmly, reassuringly, except it makes him that much more afraid. “Notable work, great attitude.”
Director Yang doesn’t point out anything unless it’s an egregious error. It’s either ‘good, proceed,’ ‘alright, I see,’ or the dreaded ‘hm.’ And then it all goes downhill from there.
“You’re the division’s foremost expert on frogs, right?” Rosalyn brings up, her straight, ivory teeth flashing in a show of mirth. She tucks shiny, flawlessly wavy hair behind an ear.
“Toads, actually,” comes out of his mouth before he can process the fact that Director Yang has 1) seen his work desktop background, and 2) told her plus one about it.
“Toads, Ros,” Director Yang concurs and takes a sip of champagne. “There’s a difference.”
He must be in a lucid nightmare right now, because Chief Fox nods thoughtfully and Rosalyn hums before asking, “So, what is the difference?”
His parents were right; he should have gone to church more and played less in the swamp, because a toad-shaped demon takes possession of him to rattle on about the differences and he can’t stop himself. The fact that Director Yang and Chief Fox hold a little side conversation but still have the wherewithal to nod along, even adding in little factoids of their own to Rosalyn’s follow-up questions, traps him in this never-ending psychotic break.
“—and Michael’s finally here to complete the duo act,” Director Yang drawls when Kevin has a pause. “I was wondering how long you two could bear to be separated.”
“These two submitted the winning proposal for the small-sat bid, yes?” Chief Fox turns an appraising look towards them. “Good work.”
“And lively all-hands meetings, from what I hear,” Rosalyn comments wryly.
Cold sweat drips down his back, and Michael’s not doing any better now that he’s also in their sights. His smile freezes in a way that starts to look like a grimace.
“So, how were the holidays?” Director Yang brings everything back to polite, standard conversation. “I assume everyone’s hard-fought-for and well-deserved PTO was spent wisely?”
“That does include you, too, Vi,” Chief Fox says.
Rosalyn chuckles. “Oh, don’t worry about that—she was forced to take it easy because—”
Kevin thinks he might prefer the regular work week interactions—at least he has those rules of engagement memorized. Here, he feels like a bug on display in front of the two most terrifying individuals at the company and a cheerfully intimidating plus one; the mood is awkward and Michael’s expression shows he clearly regrets coming over to bail him out.
---
Half an hour later, Kevin and Michael have made a partial escape and are lingering to the side of the room’s large window and attempting to look like they’re making conversation instead of standing awkwardly close to the curtains and eavesdropping as Rosalyn is now regaling Chief Fox with the details of a recent house tour she and Director Yang had taken. She has him honest-to-god chuckling. It’s just not right.
Kevin and Michael are still sharing bulging eye contact at the revelation of Director Yang getting a house with anybody, much less her apparent girlfriend(?) —Chief Fox seems to handle this information with more grace, but then he actually seems to like Director Yang—when Rosalyn is interrupted by the man of the perpetual hour.
“—wiring done by someone who’s idea of electricity hasn’t gained any sophistication past flying a kite in a storm based on the way the bathroom light sparked when I turned it on—”
“Of course I’d find you with the smartest, most beautiful women in the room, Lucius,” says Bruce Wayne, a half-emptied glass of champagne in hand as he smoothly sidles his way into their conversation. He and Chief Fox exchange a brief handshake and inquiry-answer about Chief Fox’s wife, who had other obligations.
And then—
“Hi, Bruce.” Rosalyn leans in to hug Mr Wayne and kiss his cheek. Kevin makes a choking noise and Michael elbows him to make him be quiet, transfixed by the way the very fabric of the universe is unraveling in front of them. “I was wondering if I’d get to see you this evening.”
“If I’d known you were coming, I would’ve been here that much sooner, Rosalyn,” Mr Wayne returns. He pecks her cheek back and releases her, hand trailing her midback as he pulls away. “What brings you to my neck of the woods?”
“I’m Vivienne’s plus one.”
“Bruce,” greets Director Yang with a smile that for once has settled on something that doesn’t look like she’s considering evisceration. Her handshake appears similarly nonviolent; she even goes so far as to add a second hand on top. Kevin and Michael glance quickly at one another, neither sure if it’s a play for dominance or an uncharacteristic but genuine expression of warmth. “Happy New Year’s.”
Mr Wayne reclaims his hand, head tilted just slightly, but still looking happy as a clam, if a little confused. “Happy New Year’s, Vivienne. I didn’t realize the two of you had gotten on so well! Glad it was a worthwhile referral, then.”
“Very worthwhile,” Rosalyn agrees. “I’m sure I must’ve thanked you for the introduction back then, but I’m happy to reiterate it.”
“Of course, of course.” And Mr Wayne’s eyes are flicking between Rosalyn and Director Yang, apparently taking in the lack of distance required for him to do so. Director Yang’s smile, meanwhile, evolves into more of a smirk. Kevin shivers as he weathers a flashback to when Director Yang had given Director Schroeder enough rope to hang himself with and watched him do so while in an inter-department meeting.
Kevin clamps a hand onto his companion-in-misery’s elbow, and Michael doesn’t even flinch when his fingers dig in through the fabric of the suit jacket, too busy staring.
“Mr Wayne introduced them?” Kevin asks in a frantic whisper. Why would Mr Wayne even know Rosalyn? Why did he know Rosalyn first?
And Michael frantically whispers back with the horrible speculation of, “I think Director Yang stole Mr Wayne’s girl out from under him.”
Kevin struggles to find evidence to argue against that fearsome proposition. The closest that he can come up with is that Rosalyn isn’t the wafer-thin type that Mr Wayne’s been seen with in the past. Regardless, she (and Director Yang, in fact) both have the polish of Mr Wayne’s supermodel pursuits, somehow—every woman in attendance is dolled up and dressed to impress, but there was an ineffable and insurmountable difference between them and the two women in front of him.
He thinks it’s dark magic, personally. Blood of the innocents, perhaps.
“Rosalyn was just telling me about an ill-fated house tour their real estate agent gave last week,” Chief Fox segues. Whereas Director Yang is terrifying like a guided missile strike aimed at your desk, Chief Fox is worse in the way of finding assassins invading your home in the dead of night; Kevin can never get a read on him. Is this social grace? Or adding fuel to the fire?
“The house was Murphy’s Law in residential form.” Rosalyn takes her cue masterfully. “It was almost comical, though poor Sharon was nearly in tears when a door literally swung off its hinges at the end.”
Mr Wayne blinks and gives a little laugh. “You didn’t mention you were house-hunting, Ros! I’d be happy to set you up with my agent.”
“We found a place in Fashion last week,” demurs Director Yang, eyes sharp though the rest of her expression is pleasant.
Kevin’s pretty sure the way Mr Wayne is showing his teeth now is more about holding in a scream than smiling. He can completely commiserate with the feeling.
“Finally, it’s been months,” agrees Rosalyn, apparently impervious to the tension Kevin is currently absorbing into his nervous system. He’s attempting to expel it, and Michael is taking the brunt. His elbow is probably going to have bruises. “Needs some work, but it’s gorgeous and has—what was it Sharon said?”
Director Yang answers, “Good bones.”
Rosalyn nods, satisfied. “Weirdest turn of phrase. It has a sturdy foundation, anyway. And doesn’t seem like it’s been shot up by the mob recently, at least, which is more than one of the houses we looked at can say.”
“Some poorly plastered-over bullet holes in the foyer,” Director Yang says with an amused raise of an eyebrow. “Semi-automatic, gives it character.”
Rosalyn’s cheer contrasts with her next words: “Though no visible bloodstains in that one! That was the house we looked at on Irving and Park—”
“Terrible HVAC, too—”
“It’s been quite the adventure, in any case,” Rosalyn concludes. “But I suppose that’s house hunting in Gotham for you. We’re only waiting on the home inspection now that the holidays are wrapping up, but that should go fine, and then it’s just closing. We’re hoping to move in in February.”
“Fingers crossed.” Director Yang takes a drink from her glass, glancing fondly up at Rosalyn from the side of her eyes.
Fondly. Kevin is going to combust, especially when Rosalyn nudges into Director Yang’s shoulder.
“Well, that’s—I’m glad you’ve found a place,” says Mr Wayne, sounding a little faint, and looking like the champagne has hit him with a two-by-four instead of BAC.
“Thanks, Bruce.” Rosalyn beams, her cheeks gone a little pink.
“How long have you and Vi known each other, Rosalyn?” Chief Fox asks. “She’s so tight-lipped about her personal life, I’m afraid it’s a mystery.”
“Oh! That’s—” she flashes a quick look at Director Yang “—a little under a year?”
“Eight months,” says Director Yang.
Rosalyn clears her throat, pinking a little more, but Chief Fox just makes a noise of sudden comprehension.
“Ah, so it’s you we have to thank for the office’s standing desk trend, then.” He raises his glass at Rosalyn, eyes crinkled.
“Trend?”
“It caught on after Director Yang got hers and everyone started making a fuss about her timers for changing desk positions.”
“I—well—yes, I suppose that was me, then. I didn’t realize it’d made a fuss, though. Vi, you didn’t say!”
Kevin and Michael share yet another aghast look, and Kevin is rapidly revising his ranking on who present is scariest, Rosalyn now taking the top slot. Anyone who can get Director Yang to do their bidding and make Chief Fox laugh and who somehow knows Bruce Wayne well enough to be on a first-name basis deserves the gold medal.
Rosalyn takes a sip of champagne, seemingly a little flustered, and her bright lipstick doesn’t even leave a mark on the glass. Just in case Kevin needed more evidence of her uncanny, eldritch powers.
---
Nothing as gauche as a shouting match, dramatic declarations, or running off into the night happens as the New Year’s ball drops.
Instead, the attendees are all witnesses to various anomalies: the domesticity of Rosalyn and Director Yang fetching drinks and hors d’oeuvres for each other, giggle fits from the women and a round of full-bellied laughter from Chief Fox, and glassy-eyed looks cast over the edges of a speedily replenished series of champagne flutes by Mr Wayne as he makes his social rounds. Whether the expression was caused by sentiment, alcohol, or pure bewilderment was the point of contention fueling a new betting pool.
The cherry on top is when Rosalyn, herself some glasses in, starts loudly care-taking Director Yang.
“—I can see the goosebumps, Vi!” she chastises, starting to shrug off the jacket of her fuchsia pantsuit. Kevin is gratified that Henry also chokes at the arm muscle and cleavage displayed by the now-visible camisole, the same shiny fuchsia fabric as the suit.
“My coat’s in the car, I’ll be fine,” Director Yang—pouts?!
“Yes, it’s doing you so much good in the car.” Rosalyn manhandles Director Yang into putting on the jacket over her silvery-gray dress while Director Yang sulkily submits, but Rosalyn ends with an affectionate kiss on the cheek that has Claire gasping and clutching onto Patricia, making a high-pitched coo.
“Mr Fox, I think we should take this as our cue to exit for the evening,” says Rosalyn, arm lingering around Director Yang’s shoulders.
Director Yang gives a sharp, two-fingered jab to Rosalyn’s ribs, making the woman let out an “Eep!”
“Lucius, please, Rosalyn,” Chief Fox protests, and Michael’s jaw drops at his words. Chief Fox’s eyes are sparkling at the scene in front of him, though Johanna has been keeping the tally on everyone, and he’s had five glasses by now according to her. “And of course. I’ll be in touch with Vi about Tanya and I having the two of you over for dinner once things settle down on the housing front.”
Rosalyn seems to inflate with the force of her happiness at the prospect. “Absolutely, I’d love to meet her! Luke and Tam, too, now that I’ve heard so much!”
“Little Luke’s a riot,” Director Yang says dryly. “You should grill him on how he thinks shoulders work.”
“Those sound like fighting words.” Rosalyn nods, completely serious, though not losing the sense of good humor she’s kept throughout the night. She and Chief Fox shake hands and exchange genial goodbyes, while Director Yang detaches herself from her date long enough to give the man a two-armed hug. Rosalyn then returns her arm to Director Yang’s shoulders, steering her towards the valet service at the exit.
With the intimate proximity and rhythmic complexity of tango dancers, ‘clickety-clack-click-clackety’ and away the devil saunters with her consort.
The office pool pivots back to watching Chief Fox when, in the aftermath, he approaches Mr Wayne—who had watched the two women leave with his brow furrowed ever-so-slightly—and they share a few words before Chief Fox gives him a clap on the back that looks suspiciously conciliatory.
Johanna assesses her nearly empty flute of champagne. “I need something harder.”
Kevin just wants Mr Wayne’s two-by-four from earlier in the evening, hoping that traumatic brain injury will still be less traumatic than everything he’s been forced to witness tonight.
#verm's and my take: knowing modern makeup is going to give you an edge over typical 90s fashion#and if you're dressing to the nines it's that little bit extra#and otherwise neither of them fits the era's beauty standards#a number of different selves#folie a deux#forgot to add explicitly that we cowrote this over the week 😅#my brain doesn't like functioning sorry
40 notes
·
View notes
Text
SHAN, Overture.
Among the fires, the crashing rubble and whatnot around her, time stops. She realizes she's probably staring down death. It's not unusual, she'd done it before and come out of it stronger. Cults that she oversaw called her immortal for a reason, after all.
She can still grasp onto what she has during it all. Onto her spiraling sanity as chaos reigns in the ship, screams of troopers Republic and Imperial falling around her. Her hair is pasted to her forehead with sweat as the world spins, gripping her lightsaber and throwing a droid backwards into a wall. They fall apart with ease, the crunching of the durasteel comforting during these trying times.
How had she gotten here?
Well, that question was answered easily enough, she deadpans in her thoughts, helpful questions only. A shot from behind surprises her, as she just barely deflects it and sends an arc of lightning right back at it. The droid is electrocuted and quivers before her as she stabs it through with her doublesaber. Staring out a viewport once that's dealt with, she wonders where in blazes her personal ship is. No one has answered for ages and she's terrified for their fate.
Given a moment to think as the onslaught by the droids pauses, that's what she does.
-
Lexulle Kallig can remember the first time she met Theron Shan rather clearly. She had still been damp with salty ocean water from Manaan's endless sea (her weave was entirely ruined, and she'd just gotten it done days earlier on Dromound Kaas), suspicious of his intentions but willing to compromise with her newfound ally (it was one of the first times he'd saved her), Lana Beniko and not throw a hissy fit over nothing. He'd had a chiseled jaw, stubble, a strong form. He'd been nothing more than a liability at first, for she didn't trust anyone who fought for the Republic and tore down Korriban brick by brick, but no one would ever say that she had the best taste in men. She couldn't afford to keep her standards high, not like she was anyone but Darth Occlus. She thought about him for a while during the months they were undercover on Rishi, but nothing that ever bothered her. Nothing that ever kept her up at night. The flirty lines that she'd dropped had shocked him, yes. That was always the look she was looking for, the one that filled her with satisfaction. His force presence had been locked off to her for very long time, but his hazel eyes had always said otherwise. He piqued her curiosity, and with his actions during that time, it was safe to say she'd done the same to him.
There were quite a few flings during that era that she could name and place a face to. Plenty more that even after some thought, she still couldn't remember. Not that many could say they'd been with Darth Occlus, but the man or woman in question could always remember it with pleasure.
She didn't keep in contact. Lexulle didn't keep ties, those were dangerous to have as a Sith. You never knew who wanted you for your body, or who wanted you because they were a spy for one of her enemies. The less people who knew where to find her, or what drew her in to someone, the better.
Lexulle seemed to gather quite a few enemies within her time on the Council. People either loved her, or hated her for loving her. The love letters were sweet and typically were genuine, the threats made her laugh.
It was such fun to watch them struggle with these ideas. Call it wrong or stupid, but she wouldn't care. Lexulle never cared for rules or social norms, she was never one for them to begin with. It wasn't like she had anyone waiting for her at home, and with the commitment debacle with Andronikos, she didn't need any reminder of her failures. Rumors be damned, Lexulle was a siren and people would always listen to her songs.
Then Rishi came.
If only she knew the trouble she'd get into before landing, she would've ignored the ominous premonition Ashara had and left to get into surely more trouble.
It was much too hot a planet, and she'd been forced to find someone to braid up her hair before it got too frizzy (they'd charged much more than it was worth, but if she could pay a thousand credits to still have hair when she left, well it was priceless) There were plenty of fascinating people on Rishi, some worth a night in the cantina with, others that reminded her why boundaries were a thing. Still, it was interesting discovering Lana had thrown her on a wild goose chase for her and Theron. Still then, he was just Lana's ally to her. But, Lexulle was also a merciless tease, and watching a man squirm was a little fun, if not also entertaining to the highest degree. Andronikos may not have approved of playing games with the man's heart and even warned against it, but she didn't care anymore. Nik had been her ex at one point, yes, but she didn't heed his words. They were friends, yes, but he couldn't tell her what to do.
She knew her heart best, right? What did he ever know about wanting to cause a little chaos with people? All was fair in love and war.
Then had come the tight leathris pants and skimpy top that was probably better for bathing than running around fighting Revanites in. Given it had also been much too hot for her usual wear, but the eye candy she surely became, that was worth it. Oh how things became interesting after that. Who could resist, really? Andronikos couldn't, not in the beginning. Plenty of people couldn't, as frustrated as they were about this admittance. And as it quickly was made apparent just as she was getting ready to leave for the jungle moon, neither could Theron Shan.
The genuine panic that had filled her when she'd heard he'd been taken was unwarranted, really. Andronikos had left plenty of times before, she left people every damn day. Why did it actually hurt this time around, knowing someone else had him and was threatening his life? They'd gotten him back, yes, and the relief was sweet as it washed over her body. Battered and bruised, maybe, but still alive.
She'd given the Revanites a way to remember her, yes. By massacring what was left of their blasted cult.
The way he tasted of sweat and spice, and oh stars everything nice left her wanting more. Had they not been on such a tight schedule, she would've spent a few days more on Rishi with him, taken him right then and there in the safehouse. The kisses they shared during their Yavin excursion made her warm all over. Lexulle always wanted more, always craved for things she couldn't or shouldn't have (and Theron classified as both of these), but for some reason she wasn't satisfied with just annoying him. Couldn't ever find a reason why their little meetings should stop, why she'd get hurt in the long run.
Lexulle never got hurt in the long run. Everyone else wanted her, not the other way around. Absolutely never.
Something was off about this though. By now, she would've switched gears to Lana (she was a pretty Sith, blonde with lips just so kissable. she was beauty, she was grace and she could probably be the end to the entire sith race if that's what she wanted), but something about him was just so alluring she decided she wasn't ready to let go just yet. She could play her games a little bit longer, especially with someone so handsome. Theron was simply someone she enjoyed, physically that was. He was smart, calculating, and just awkward enough to make her smile a little more than necessary. It didn't make it any worse that he was rather strong as well, which was clear from his figure to begin with, but running hands wherever she could get the made her realize what sort of a catch he was. Forget that he was five years older than her, she was content with making him her's for as long as she could.
And his jacket looked so nice on a floor. His shuttle's specifically, but all the same.
The way he ran his fingers through her hair, careful not to get them caught in knots and yank on it, but just rough enough to make it pleasurable. How rough and husky his voice could get, how delicate his touch was just about everywhere made the chase worthwhile. The nights they spent away from the others of the coalition that she doubted she'd forget about anytime soon. Lexulle made a note that she'd have to acquire a jacket like Theron's, for no reason other that she liked the way it looked. It wouldn't make much a difference, as it wouldn't be his, but impulse purchases weren't above her.
Then came all these things about caring about her, about how he didn't want her to die even if he never saw her in person again, on the same side again. How he was so very sorry that he wouldn't ever see her again. When had she ever said anything to make him think this was anymore than what she'd made it? It set a fire in her that burned at her skin, burned at her heart, burned away at her. Made her regret what she'd been doing, leading him on when he was just a fling. She couldn't bear to tell him she didn't care in that way, not with the way he looked at her. It was so easy with everyone else because she could simply hop back on the Defiance and leave the star system with them still whispering her name under their breath. Sleazy people, people out for money instead of themselves, people who wouldn't remember her in the morning.
It had taken her this long for her to realize that Theron wasn't like everyone else. He'd begun to care.
She was afraid that unlike Andronikos, he wouldn't be nearly as forgiving.
Afraid that they'd have the same conversation, and she'd make the same mistakes again. That instead of being remembered pleasantly, the memory of Theron Shan would eat at her for years. Lexulle made a habit of not having regrets, and an SIS agent, especially one that she'd had so much fun toying with, she was praying would not be one of them.
Lexulle found out she was afraid of a lot of things as she patched up after their fight with Revan. She could fight an ancient evil, watch as another rose because of it and brush it off like it was a mid-afternoon training session. Lexulle could have ghosts in her head, face down death because of her pursuit of power and accept that it was just happening. These things were all normal, all things she could do with a lightsaber or a flick of her wrist. These things could all be fixed with a bacta patch or another dark ritual. But as soon as someone wanted to stick around for longer than a night, that was when the anxiety began roiling off her in waves. Ate her up. Drowned her in feelings that she didn't want to have.
Made her want to run. Run far, run fast. Just anywhere away from whatever was causing it. Most problems she could do that to, Theron included. Or so she'd assumed so very foolishly.
She and Andronikos weren't that different in that regard. He'd disappeared for a week after his marriage proposal, which had been one of the toughest weeks in her entire life to date. Knowing she'd offended him, knowing she'd disappointed him. Lexulle knew he deserved more than someone more than a decade younger than him, knew he deserved better than someone who only knew how to run from her problems.
Lexulle had made the mistake of guessing that because he was so much older than her, that he'd given up on love. She always figured older spacers weren't looking for marriage, instead someone to just be on again off again partners with. That's what she thought they were, they hadn't ever been mutually exclusive to each other either. Neither her or Andronikos ever made that boundary entirely clear, and now she was paying for it.
That wasn't Nik. He'd begun to care about her at some point, with how she'd disregarded him entirely she couldn't even name a specific planet that she'd noticed the change in behavior. And then she'd gone and hurt him because of how stupid she'd been. How awkwardly she'd stood there, his hands in her's, the world spinning around her as the word 'marriage' was uttered. He'd looked so happy, so absolutely ecstatic that she couldn't do anything, say anything in response. Lexulle could only imagine how guilty he'd felt in that moment, scaring her in such a way. Her eyes had gone wide, and she'd dropped her hands entirely, barely able to choke out a 'no' as she hung her head.
He'd left in the middle of the night. The only person who knew was gone was Khem, and even so he didn't try to stop him. They must have spoken that night, because Khem was much less informative than he should've been. Not a clue on where he was, what he was doing. Not even a note was left anywhere on the ship. Lexulle tried not to make it obvious, she went about her daily tasks until she had to ground them on Dromound Kaas for a period of time to get her mind back in order, prepared for the fact that he might not come back that time.
He'd come back later that week while they were docked on Vaiken, all himself and joking around. When she eventually had been able to apologize for her behavior, he'd chuckled, responding only that he was a tad shocked but not offended by her rejection. That he'd always be there for her anyways, in whatever way she needed him. She knew hurt in anyone's eyes when she saw it, and the dark eyes of Andronikos Revel screamed that it wasn't the truth. His presence said he was deeply hurt, and as much as she desperately wanted to talk to him about it, wanted to say she was sorry, even take back her decline of his proposal, she couldn't find the strength to. Not in the end.
They rarely if ever brought up the topic if not to jester each other about it. That was the way they'd comfortably been for months, leading up to their dealings with Arkous and Lana. Always something on the tip of their tongues, lingering touches that were reminiscent of something that should have been.
The night that they were due to leave Yavin was...quiet. Too quiet.
Softer than usual, sensual. They took their time that night, or more like Theron did. He asked questions about the scars littering her body, which she gave genuine answers to. It made her more nervous than it had any audacity to be, the slower pace leaving her confused. The conversations that they had were probably meant to be more meaningful than she'd seen them as, than how'd she responded to them. She'd congratulated Theron on his return to the SIS, he'd done the same to her for her acception to Darth Marr's side. There was a lot that went over her head that night, trying to wrap her head around not only the rise of the Emperor, but also the feelings that were bubbling up and over in her. They'd laid with each other for much longer than they should've, Andronikos had commed her at least ten times that night, wondering where she was. Theron wasn't sentimental, even after a few weeks of passionate love, she could tell that wasn't who he was. Like her, she was sure he had also been with other people than her and wasn't quick to admit that he loved her. He didn't, not then, but his actions lead her closer and closer to the assumption.
While he slept that night, the more and more her heart pounded. The more and more she couldn't handle the idea the rest of the galaxy saw as committal love.
The more and more she couldn't stay there.
Couldn't stay with him.
Trusting her physical being to someone was one thing, trusting her spirit, her entire life with someone else for the rest of forever? It made her feel as if she could be attacked at any moment, as if she was in danger all the time, and that she always had to be on her toes. The rush she got from every action she took was amazing, but making herself vulnerable to other people also gave her a rush, one that sent her careening over the metaphorical edge.
One she didn't want to ever feel again, to ever be taken advantage of again.
Theron was good, she knew that much. Why he'd taken so much interest in Darth Occlus of all people, as morally okay she could be, Lexulle would never know. She'd never know why he found her so interesting. She knew her own reasons for what she did, those were clear enough. But he'd never left himself open enough to her to learn. Theron had his own reservations about their current situation, then.
The middle of that night, she found herself slipping on clothes as she felt around for them, later she'd discovered that she'd ended up accidentally taking his shirt with her in the pile of clothes. Without even saying goodbye, the only indent of her ever even being on the shuttle was the wrinkle in the sheets and missing gauntlets that she'd left on his nightstand. Like a twisted fairy tale, she disappeared into the wee hours of the night, silent as Andronikos returned them to the Imperial Fleet.
He didn't press the matter, for he already had known where she'd been all that time. He was content enough to sit with her in the cantina, neither drinking much, just...existing among it all. It was a sort of out-of-body experience, one she didn't remember well. There weren't any tears, weren't any words. Only them, and the few people that still straggled around the Fleet at 06:00.
It was comforting, in the odd way they comforted each other. There weren't any snippy remarks that surely anyone else would give her about her infatuation with the SIS agent, there wasn't any snide comment made about his upbringing, nor was there any 'I told you so' to be said or heard. There was whiskey, there was a dark corner, and there was quiet music playing. Lexulle didn't do anything, all she could think about was static. As if someone had turned her head to another channel entirely.
For a long time, the shirt didn't leave her personal quarters.
It was too personal. So much of a risk. It felt like a crime when she'd eventually awoken the next day (she'd slept through the next twenty-four hours until about 03:00), and found his tan shirt with her things. She could only stare at it through her bleary eyes, thick with sleep and holding it in her hands as she looked at it in tired confusion. What spurred her on to wear it back to bed that same night, she wasn't sure.
It smelled like him. Reminded her of him as she dozed off into unconsciousness. Softer than expected, a tad larger than expected as well. It offered some solace in those months, doing menial tasks in the shirt, gently yanking at a hole she'd found at the bottom of it when she got nervous and was working in private.
Then came what the crew of the Defiance dubbed the hellish year. She was sick off and on for weeks at a time after she'd left Yavin, and Lexulle couldn't detect what in blazes was wrong with her for the longest time. It drove her nearly to madness, assuming there was something she'd come across in those caverns that was causing this. Certain scents would throw her for a loop, and there was a period of time that there wasn't anything she could eat and not gag from. It frustrated her, and it confused her crew to no end. Lexulle had never been picky, not with people and definitely not with food. To that day, Ashara would swear up and down nothing had changed with her force presence, nothing that she could figure at the very least. They stayed on Dromound Kaas for a period of time before they discovered that the smell of the rain was causing nausea as well. And that was just odd in itself, Lexulle loved the scent of the rain on her homeworld.
Lexulle had found out during a particularly bad day with her senses being off the wall.
She could remember that rather clearly. She'd been meditating in her personal quarters, trying to keep herself from losing what little she'd eaten earlier in the day. It was becoming increasingly difficult to ignore, but she was slipping more and more into the depths of the Force. Her senses had begun to numb as she was surrounded with the fluid ability, feeling more at ease than she had in days. She could feel everyone's presence around her, Talos' curious nature in the cargo bay, Khem assisting him boredly with stars knew what. Andronikos' and Ashara's in the cockpit, surely learning to fly the Defiance from the pirate. Xalek's in the crew quarter's, in a similar state to her's. Her own, dimmer than usual, but another that shone brighter. At first she tried to focus in, completely lost and where it was coming from. Convinced it was simply a small creature that has snuck aboard, but as she did, it was clear it was nothing unnatural or mystical.
It was emitting from her.
After a few moments of confusion, that was when the entire galaxy shattered around her. At first, it logically didn't make sense. She was on medication, and it was essentially fool-proof. It had been for years. Andronikos was living proof. Lexulle was in denial for about ten minutes before she really was nearly tearing out her hair, curled up in a corner with bile burning her throat and tears streaming down her face in a silent sob. Maybe she was overreacting, it happened and would probably continue happening. She was an actor half the time with everyone else anyways, maybe her senses were wrong. Maybe there really was a force sensitive beetle somewhere nearby, and her exhaustion was catching up her. Everything was throwing them off right now, she wouldn't put it past them to run haywire when she needed them to just be accurate for once.
It added up when she thought it about it, scouring through the pack she'd brought with her to Yavin during her panicked ransack of her room, and finding that her medication had been empty for weeks through blurred eyes. Among everything going on, she must've made a note to refill it, but had forgotten at some point trying to fight Revan and his cult. It had never crossed her mind again that she hadn't done so, simply thrown away the other non essential things she needed to do before she left. Maybe there was a mental note bouncing around in there that she wasn't supposed to be with Theron. No wonder everything had felt so off lately, now that she had the answer everything began to fall into place.
She was pregnant, with Theron Shan's child. Those words were enough to cause a lot of emotions, if not also drive her crazy. Even just thinking about it, knowing what she'd caused yet again, scared her to no end.
And now there wasn't anything she could do about it.
That was the worst part of that year. Though Lexulle had tried to keep it a secret as long she could, she'd ended up crying to Andronikos in the middle of the night because of it, unable to keep a hand on her emotions properly any longer. Things hadn't gone flying like the last time she'd had a mental breakdown (her apartment was untouchable for months after Andronikos had proposed, she'd only recently cleaned when they'd gone to try and remedy her symptoms), but she was more scared than upset this time too. Scared because even though she figured this was the beginning of her legacy, something she'd been chasing since she'd been given a power base, it wasn't with someone who would watch them grow. She couldn't get in contact with Theron since Yavin, she couldn't just go looking for him either. Only the stars knew where he'd be, and they would never align for Lexulle Kallig. Andronikos was here for her, as was the rest of the Defiance's crew, but her child would never know their father. Her biggest fear was them turning out like her. Jaded, scared of commitment, and never knowing anyone but the people who claimed they cared about her. From what she'd heard from Theron before they'd split, his relationship with his mother at least had suffered dangerously for years before they were reunited on Rishi. Attempts were made, at the very least. They'd seemed civil the last time she'd been in contact.
Knowing she couldn't get in contact with him, made her wonder if it was fate. Wonder if it was destiny that was playing games with her, forcing her to make decisions even she didn't believe in.
It didn't make her feel any better, knowing she was carrying on a twisted legacy. Knowing that history was repeating itself only a generation later. She couldn't imagine how the Grand Master of the Jedi Order would react to knowing a Dark Council member was carrying on her name, if she ever found out.
Lexulle wrote letters that were never sent. Long, short. The longest one was her admittance to being with child. She'd desperately wanted to send it, but without any screen or pen name to address it to, the letters gained dust in her inbox.
Everyone else found out slowly after that, and it was general acception. Khem was the only one who was truly disgruntled by this development, and threatened to rip Theron limb from limb the next time he saw him, but the complaints were quickly silenced by the others. All she wore for months was the shirt she stole from Theron, and silently thanked whatever gods were out there for it being over sized so that she could continue to wear it as she slowly grew. She'd intended to stay on the fringes of Sith society, helping where she could until she began to show. There was a period of time where she wondered what she'd do when she did, as there were already enough rumors spiraling around about her. Mostly of her infidelity, but she digressed. Who her baby's father was, was not one she wanted floating around for her child to grow up in the shadow of. Lexulle had decided she would cross that bridge when she came to it, and if worst came to worst she'd see how Andronikos felt about being viewed as her child's father in society's eyes.
Ziost interrupted those plans.
It was only a month after she'd found out, so she wasn't concerned about Lana finding out while they were on planet (later she was curious if Lana had known from the beginning, considering her power). Against everyone's wishes (she was very quickly reminded why she and Andronikos would never work, not very well at least, he worried too much and she didn't worry enough according to the pirate) she went to go and assist the blonde Sith Lord. With all the adrenaline running through her veins, the two days she spent on the dying planet were relatively symptom free, which was a horrible form of bliss because she could feel them pulsating at the back of her nerves.
When she'd seen Theron again, beaten and bruised by his excursion through the planet, she couldn't even react. Everything came crashing through her, every single emotion of elation, frustration, depression, regret, excitement, and confusion hit her like a train. Lexulle had been so convinced that she'd never see the SIS agent again that she'd literally crashed. She'd stared like a fool until Andronikos gently shook her out of her stupor, and even then she couldn't acknowledge him properly. With everything going on, she highly doubted even he found anything off about her, especially after nearly dying earlier in those two days. She wouldn't have, there were more things to worry about other than that she was just more tired than usual. Lexulle put her game face on, pretending nothing was wrong and being the same way she was on Yavin. He didn't react as quickly, though he noted her actions with visible understanding. The mission went on without a hitch (well, multiple hitches that she had no hand in), and she couldn't even get a moment alone with him before the planet lost all the life on it. It'd died right before her eyes, a planet she'd risked her and her unborn child's life for, and there was all of their work going to dust. There was crying from people around her, frustrated yelling, and all she could focus on was the viewport, watching as the various colors of the planet were overtaken by a solemn grey. How small she felt, how vulnerable she felt, how powerless she felt. Vitiate was rising again, and there was nothing she could do about it.
There was so much that she could do nothing about. So much that she could grasp, but couldn't hold onto.
Nothing was concrete in her life anymore, and that scared her much more than the Emperor's ability to destroy a planet's life just like that. Knowing that a galactic menace was on the rise, that her child would be born into all of this.
Knowing that history was repeating itself again. This time through her. Her mother had known that things were taking a turn for the worse. The illegitimate daughter of a Commander and his slave, she had been raised in a time of galactic upheaval. Never having a home, never having real parents at all. War was no place to have a child, to bring one into the galaxy. Yet, she existed.
And now, so did her own baby.
She was quiet for a long time. Lexulle couldn't think straight, considered every option that she had. Then she left the space station with her crew in tow, vowing to stop thinking like a lovesick teenager, buckle down and prepare for what came next. This was just one of probably many examples of when she'd have to grow up and deal with what happened. Lexulle couldn't raise herself and a baby, even if she was twenty two. This was her own fault, and now she had to deal with the consequences.
Though it was difficult, she kept a handle on what she could, still honing her lightsaber technique as her baby grew underneath her fingertips. Lexulle can't remember exactly when Ashara had recommended her to stop until her pregnancy was over, or when Andronikos had much more forcefully said so. Giving up her proficiency in lightsabers was definitely an inconvenience she hadn't expected to face, but later she figured they were only helping in the ways they knew how to.
Suddenly, it all died down. No more odd sightings of the Emperor running wild like a child in a sweet shop anywhere. The occasional Empire-Republic skirmish on neutral planets that she was denied participation in. Not a single sound of oddity, no quiet whispers of new powers rising anywhere. The galaxy went quiet for the rest of her pregnancy. It was too quiet, too domestic for her to be comfortable. It made her skittish, knowing that no one was doing anything. Nothing that would get her heart racing, nothing she had to stay up poring over. Any basic missions that were undertook by her crew, she oversaw from the Defiance's pilot chair.
As relaxed as she was supposed to be, as figuratively excited as she was supposed to be, it was the most stressful time of her life.
She stayed on the Defiance for as long as she could before it simply wasn't safe for her to be flying all over the galaxy anymore, considering how close she was to being due. It had become her home, and she simply wasn't ready to leave by the time she did have to. She understood the concern her crew had, but she'd been sidelined enough. Not seeing her ship for the next few weeks was absolute torture. The Defiance had all her memories, not the apartment Zash had bought for her during her apprenticeship.
Everyone came with her, at the very least. There was no argument to the request. She wouldn't be alone on the planet, she'd have her family around her. The apartment was smaller than she'd remember, now full of life instead of desolate with dark side energy emitting from it alone. There was a lot of rearranging, getting used new things and new places. Ashara and Xalek had been to Dromound Kaas, but now here permanently (or at least as permanently as they were), they'd taken a bit to adjust. The force wasn't suffocating to either apprentice as she'd assume it would be, and Ashara found the Sanctum rather interesting. The two took up looking over what she was missing while she was away, which served as a distraction for Lexulle. Watching as they grew in power, in intelligence, made her proud. She had yet to screw them up, at the very least.
Writing letters brought some calm to the progressing situation. They weren't all pleasant, sometimes she asked the inbox why he couldn't be here with her on particularly bad days, why he had to go up and be so damn alluring all the time. Other times, they were good, happy updates about her progression, about what color the crew helped her paint the nursery. Sometimes they were about nothing, about normal, everyday things that went on around the home. They made her feel better at least, looking at her own writing and his name in the empty subject box. Some days it made her feel worse, made her feel more alone in the galaxy. Still, they were a good distraction from her own anxiety, and Ziost.
Ziost would hang over her head for years, and she could still remember hearing the screams of people trapped as she ran by. The alarms that blared, the deathly empty eyes of the possessed as she was forced to strike them down. Being force choked by a Sixth Line Jedi until Andronikos was able to distract them enough so she could be let go.
Lexulle could remember the day Malcom Ngani Kallig was born like it was yesterday. She'd like to say she was able to stay calm the entire time, it was a bit of a lie. (that was saying a lot, she'd nearly died a few times from worse injuries) But, it was also the best day of her life. Andronikos had been by her side the entire time, swearing up and down he was just fine until he relented and let Ashara heal his hand after they'd heard the first cries of her son. She'd been too distracted to notice his predicament when the nurse had put him on her chest for the first time, a red, screaming baby boy, but relatively healthy all the same. She'd hesitated to touch him at first, he'd seemed so delicate, like if she did touch him, he'd shatter to pieces before her eyes. Her hair was slick with sweat against her forehead, and everything was a little too loud for her tastes. She was much too hot, and her vision was swimming in the bright lights of the medbay, pain ebbing at the edges of her consciousness.
But she couldn't notice. For a time, it was just her and her son. The entire world could've lit ablaze, and it still wouldn't have been as important as her child.
He had Theron's eyes, she noted when she saw them for the first time. Speckled hazel with bits of her own gold eyes if you looked right in the light, and his skin tone closer to his father's than her's. What little hair he did have alluded to him having a mix of her coiled hair and Theron's. She was mesmerized as he began to calm down, the nurse taking him for just a moment to clean him up and run whatever tests she needed to. Having him in her arms, after all the trouble he'd caused her, made her heart ache in a way it shouldn't have. She loved him, the first person she could say that to was her own son. And it was well deserved, how he looked up at her, never really a focus in his eyes. Maybe he still knew he was looking at her, knew who she was.
There wasn't a single dry eye in the room that day.
Malcom wasn't force sensitive. That much was clear within days of his birth. Sure, there was always the idea that he'd develop it later in life, but she stopped hoping after his first birthday. It was a question that had been on her mind for a while, but with how busy things had gotten, it hadn't mattered. A part of her wishes that he was, wishes that she could make him feel the way she did, to calm him when a bottle wouldn't. Bring them closer together even. It sounded selfish, but she thought she could share this with him. A disappointment, but not one that she ever dwelled on or blamed him for. She was grateful that he was even alive to share her apartment bedroom with her. Things could've been much worse, but they weren't.
He was here.
And Theron wasn't.
As much as she tried to stop caring, and she did for the longest time, every time she looked into her son's eyes, his face, all she saw was the SIS agent. All she could see was his father, and how she'd failed to say the things she'd wanted to. How much she genuinely appreciated his company, how she wanted to thank him for at least being civil with the Imperials. How she'd desperately wanted him by her side this entire time.
No one called her Lexi but Andronikos up until that first night they spent together in the sticky heat of Rishi that they'd created together. Somehow, the nickname was more endearing than it was annoying these days.
She hearing missed it from him. Did he know just how much she adored the way he said it? Did he know the hole he'd left in her life?
Lexulle didn't have any love for Theron. Nothing that was real at least. Basing how her heart felt after only a few weeks of being around him, worse only a few weeks of making passionate love away from prying eyes, it meant nothing. She knew less about him than she'd thought. She knew how old he was, she could pick him out for a crowd, she knew he was a talented slicer. She could recount their better nights together, and how it had made her feel. After a botched excursion out to the jungles that she's sure was supposed to be romantic, she'd learned to fix his cybernetics with his gentle voice guiding her through the procedure. But after that, she drew at a lot of blanks at the more important things. Did he even know his father very well? What was he like, outside of work and his less committed relationships? What made him want to join the SIS, make him want to do what he did? Yes she'd seen him upset, worse she'd seen his eyes when he felt betrayed. She'd seen him smile, seen him laugh, seen him with his eyes so lidded she wasn't sure he could see.
She didn't even know his birthday.
Did he share his birthday with Lexulle or Malcom now?
Did he miss her?
A question she figured would never be answered.
They'd come upon his name not by sheer luck. No, Lexulle wasn't that stupid. Originally she'd wanted to distance him as much as she could from Theron, settling on the name Rohtyr for a while. It was her grandfather's given name, given by a slaver yes but it still held a place in her heart as important. Still, it sat with her, it felt wrong to not at least give him something related to him. She came upon the name late one night, rubbing circles into her bump and watching as the rain fell outside her window. It was during that same talk that she'd zoned out that he'd admitted to knowing who his father was, and then and there she found his name. Naming him Theron outright would've been too much for her to handle emotionally, and attempting to legally call him Shan would probably get the council gossips talking again, and a lot of questions asked.
When she did return to the Council, the newest addition to the Kallig line was assumed to be the son of a deceased Sith Lord. It was believed, in fact, it even managed to earn her quite a bit of sympathy from people. Some were suspicious, but it was easy enough to brush them off. Lexulle ignored those, but began to make a habit of staying away from cantinas after the birth of her son.
Things went back to business as usual, or at least as business as usual as a crew of an ex-Jedi, a Kaleesh Sith, an Imperial Reclamation Officer, a Dashade, his master, a pirate and a baby could. Lexulle only left Dromound Kaas a few times within the first few months, but still brought Malcom with her, where she could keep him safe. For three years, she took the new responsibilities in stride, or at least attempted to. The apartment became a home, as she watched Malcom grow and learn of his new surroundings. He was nearly a carbon copy of Theron, though adopted a curious outlook on life. A slippery child, there were plenty of times that various objects went missing and were found in the small hands of Malcom Kallig over the course of those years. The most precious moments, she found, were when he was still learning his pronounciations. He'd given up weeks beforehand at trying Andronikos' name (Ashara was referred to as simply Shara, even better was his infatuation with calling Khem 'Khemmie' for a period of time), before asking for something as Nik. The way the pirate melted figuratively, she saw as endearing and rather adorable.
He would deny that any day of the week, claiming he didn't know what she was talking about. Whether he was beginning to care for the boy was seen in time though, so she let it slide. There was a time when he'd have the boy with him while he was playing sabaac with Talos or Ashara, or strapped to his back while he was tinkering with the Defiance.
The first time she'd been called 'mum' was the day she cried for one of the first times in her life. Lexulle was not an emotional person, so as the tears built up in her eyes, was an entirely new feeling that she adored. He had still been figuring out the word himself (he was babbling a lot of time, carrying on nonsense conversations with anyone he could get to listen), though upon seeing her smile and urging for him to say it again elicited only happy giggles. She'd felt warm, a way that she'd never felt before.
Sometimes she found herself wondering how things would've been if she still had Theron by her side, experiencing all these things with him. How he would react even knowing he had a son to begin with? Where would she be? Coruscant? Somewhere else he lived? How often would he even be around, working odd jobs for the SIS, as things surely went. Where would her crew go, if she weren't flying the Defiance any longer? There were rules and regulations in place, especially since it was under her name and officers were hard to convince on these things. Would she be leaving a family for one she was sure many would disapprove of.
She was Sith. He was an SIS agent. Lexulle brushes the thought from her mind, it was too fantastical to deal with, letting her thoughts run wild in the middle of the night as she dozed off. She wasn't about to abandon the Empire, and chances were Theron wouldn't leave the Republic even if he was being threatened at blaster point. Even on the best of days, everything became too loud when he got involved in her thoughts. There was always the chance he wouldn't want anything to do with Lexulle or Malcom, in that regard.
Malcom asked a lot of questions that she wasn't ready to answer.
Thankfully (and she felt bad just thinking about how she'd distracted him from such a question that she'd asked for years), he had shorter attention span than she'd thought from how fast he learned. The father question came up a lot, but distracting him wasn't extremely hard to do. Maybe Theron's genetics were shining through, for he did love his datapads. It was too early to find whether he would be a mechanic with the things he took apart or a slicer with his adamant need for all things tech, but whatever made him happy made things a little bit easier to deal with. At least Nik was always there for her, in a way she couldn't describe as love, but mutual care. She couldn't say either of them were good with kids, they weren't, they struggled a lot in the early days, but they learned together.
That made things..nicer. She finds herself wondering what life would be like if she did settle down with Andronikos, if Malcom was actually his. They got along much better than she'd ever think a pirate and a three year old with a penchant for dismantling things ever would. Maybe she would't have so many regrets if Malcom was theirs. Maybe she wouldn't feel so incomplete anymore, like something was always missing no matter what she did.
He never wanted to be referred to as his father. Didn't want to be acknowledged that way, and she didn't blame him for it. It worked, Malcom had never uttered the word before either. Maybe it was a matter of fear, maybe he felt he was taking something from him.
Lexulle kept from bringing it up with the pirate in fear that they'd have another relationship-crashing talk on the bridge of the Defiance. What his position was on the matter or his reasoning, Lexulle respected it. If Andronikos had no desire to be a father, well she'd take parenting him alone eventually. As much as her crew was around, she knew one day Ashara and Xalek would no longer be her apprentices and would find their own places in the galaxy. Talos would get off to somewhere else (probably Yavin, he'd nearly thrown a glee-filled fit there), and she'd let Khem go if that's what he desired. Not that he was disgruntled with her, in fact he'd been rather kind lately, but no Dashade who'd lived for as long as he did would be happy with the same person for the rest of his existence.
As much as she wanted to hang onto that hope, Andronikos would want to settle down somewhere. Most likely not with her, and she accepted that in stride. Yet it always crossed her mind that one day she would be alone. Malcom would grow up, he'd become his own person and eventually take the Defiance with him.
Then what would she have left in the galaxy, nothing left to live for, surely.
Still, as much as she wanted to appreciate this all, her son, travelling the galaxy with the people who mattered most to her...there was always something off about just how smooth things were running for that long. People were getting quiet up top though, including Marr, and he usually kept her up to date with things, considering she was considered a Dark Council Elite by now. She felt as if she were missing something crucial. Yet no one could put a finger on what it was, or no one would tell her. Contacting Lana a few times when she wasn't busy, she found that she wasn't the only one with the premonitional feelings of dread. Intelligence wasn't providing much more than brief reports of ships going missing in wild space, and even so that meant basically nothing.
Ships always went missing in Wild Space. That was nothing new. Nothing could be trusted in the outer regions of their galaxy, stars knew if life was even out that far yet. Really, she wasn't ready to ask that question just yet. It took a long while before she decided to get involved in the investigation, figuring just a small amount of risk was exactly what she needed to remedy all these odd feelings.
Now, she was feeling guilty for even entertaining the idea.
-
17 ATC. WILD SPACE. 13:00.
Lexulle never forgets a thing. Andronikos has commented on it time and time again. And it's true, her memory spans for years at a time. Sometimes it's useful, remembering what makes someone tick when she needed something from them.
Other times, it was so unhelpful.
Today included, and today was out to get her, no matter how she spun it. It had started out okay, not nearly as much trouble seeing Malcom off that she'd thought she'd have (the poor boy nearly lost his mind when he'd heard that Lexulle was leaving -- for only a few hours at that) and actually making it here within two or so days. The discussion was going well too, no one from opposite factions had shot each other either. It seemed like it, at least. Darth Marr reminded her why she did still have alliances on the Council, he was a good leader and better strategist than she could ever be. It was a tad disappointing, no one had seen Vitiate in the years since Ziost. Even worse, the Force just felt...strained so far out in Wild Space. Not gone, but it felt like their was a knot in the hose, with only droplets dripping out of the faucet, and she knew something big was going down.
Then the ship was attacked. First by a probe that they hadn't been able to identify, then an entire fleet of ships arrived on the scene that no one could place knowledge on. She'd never seen models like these before, and even worse their forces were struggling to push them back. It was much too strong, and running now, with a whole star destroyer, was impossible. They were essentially dead in space, and the droids enroaching upon the crew were stronger than she'd encountered before. To try and get back to the Defiance was becoming more and more of a hazard, and she was considering an escape pod, no matter how long it took to clear the airspace.
Marr's ship shuddered again, hit from multiple directions as she stumbles, trying to right herself. What was this absolute onslaught? They were in Wild Space, she'd expect this from somewhere in the Core Worlds, maybe Hutt Space if anything.
At least these droids were easy enough to cut down. They fell clean in half too, exploding moments after she finished them off. Not that these soldiers of Marr's were any help, really. Hopefully, Dol didn't think too little of her after all of this, rejecting to help his soldier through the airlock. He knew the consequences of war, and she wouldn't always pay for those consequences either.
"--ever get my hands on...there! We're in some trouble here, Sith--droids shot through the airlock, and the docking clamps won't let us loose." Andronikos' voice crackles over her com. Stars, not this. Not so early in her return to work. Things would never be easy, that isn't what she was asking for, but two seconds of normal battles, like the ones that she was part of while she was under Zash, any mode of formality to her past would've been nice. But yes, it seemed that this what they were doing today. Her heart pounds in her ears, and not just from her run down here either. Malcom must be terrified, this was the first space battle he'd ever been in, and if the shots were this deafening here, then she could only imagine what sensory shock her son was going through.
Dragging a hand down her face, she sighs in disbelief though her voice shakes, "Hold on, Nik. I'm on my way back."
He doesn't respond, the connection cut. Too much interference, and she bites back the urge to scream into the literal void. Still, she curses the blasted Emperor for his hand in this. Not that she knew if he was the one behind this, but she could take her chances with her assumptions. Gripping her saber as her rage overtakes her, she fights through the next wave of these droids. The more and more that Malcom took over her thoughts, the more and more her surroundings blurred. All that mattered now was getting back to her son and getting him and her crew out of here. Screw the rest of the mission, finding out where Vitiate had gone. Lexulle wasn't just Darth Occlus anymore, she was 'mum' and Lexi and she would kill the man in death if she couldn't get back to them.
That, was not an exaggeration made lightly.
The last droid she comes across, she crushes it with more force than truly necessary before stomping on it with a force-fueled kick. It seemed as if it was supposed to be a stronger version of those that had come before it, but as the force rolled off her in waves, nothing was standing in her way before being crushed to bits. When she lifts her head, her first thought is the fires. It's stifling now that focuses on it, and she tries to keep the worst of it out of her face with bursts of the Force as she dashes down the hall. Slamming a hand on the release button to the airlock, the Defiance shoots off into space just through the viewport. She sighs a shaky breath of relief as she leans against the terminal, they aren't stuck to this sinking ship anymore.
"Hah! We're loose! Just got to pick one of the million some-odd ships out here to shoot at first." Andronikos' voice returns, and her heart rate picks up again. Racing to the airlock, another fire rages. Frustrated, it goes out as she focuses on pulling it away from the rubble that's at least another six feet taller than her. Peering around it, she tries to yank at it with the Force, her muscles straining against it. It creaks, easier to move because of the heat that's surely melting it, yet it remains in place with all her effort going to waste. She lets it go as it rattles around, before stabilizing again. She tries again, and again and again until her muscles are burning as much as the air around her is. Panting hard, she patches back into the com system.
"Nik, I'm stuck here." She starts, staring up at the rubble that keeps her trapped, "If you see an opening, take it. Someone has to make it back to the Empire."
"And leave you here to rot? Are you kidding me?" Static invades her ears before the connection grows clear again.
"Andronikos, that's not a request!" Lexulle tries to hold back from yelling, but she does anyway. Something comes loose from above her, and she just barely makes it out of the way as it crashes, flames spreading before her as just manages to raise her forearms to protect her face from the brunt of the flames. Quivering, she brushes her damp hair back as he groans, probably just as frustrated with the situation as she is before she quiets his tone, "Get everyone out of here, I'll catch up!"
"Lex, what about the kid?" He asks, and her heart stops for a moment, her thoughts spiraling, "Poor thing is shaking in Ashara's lap right now."
The picture is all too clear in her head, the auburn curls that she'd sworn she'd get cut hiding his green eyes with his face buried in Ashara's chest, trembling at the sounds that are even too much for her. Her son needed her, and she wasn't there for him. Tearing up at the thought, she's quiet as she thinks about what to do, her concentration waning on the fires that she holds at bay around her. Her baby was still in more danger out there than he was at home, if they got shot down because she asked for them to stick around and wait for her...
She's not sure what she'd do. Kill someone, probably. Kill everyone and anything she saw in the wreckage.
"Andronikos?" Lexulle asks, an idea formulating in her head. If Dol and Ralo managed to get out of here, then surely she could as well. She didn't know the layout of the ship well enough to bank on the escape pods as a copout though, and she didn't have the time to go searching.
"Yeah, Lex?" He asks, a pause before he answers again.
"Give the com to Malcom, I want to talk to him." She asks, before moving further away from the airlock, further away from the fires. She can nearly hear him queuing up his next argument or whatever he wants to say to her before she interjects instead, "Don't hesitate, just...please. Let me talk to my son."
He must've given up arguing with her at that point, because she can hear the sound of movement and whispering beneath the space battle raging around them, "Malcom?"
"Mum?" His tiny voice asks, and the tears begin anew. He should have no reason to be afraid now, yet here they are. With him wondering when she'd be back, presumably, "Mummy where are you?"
"Malcom, darling, I need you to be brave for me." She wipes away what she can with the sleeve of her armor set, still one ear out listening for any approaching droids as she calms her voice for him. If she panics him, then what good is she really doing? She has to put her own brave face on, keep him doing the same. If she knows he's safe, then she can fight twice as hard with his safety being one of her lesser concerns, "Can you do that for your mummy?"
He sniffles again, "Yes."
"Mum is going to be gone for a while, but I need you to listen to everyone. I know mum said she'd be back in a few hours but I may be longer." Just saying the words are getting to her more than they should, and she hears the telltale sound of duracrete against durasteel. More of those blasted droids on their way, "Mum needs you to stay as brave as you can for Andronikos and the others, you can do that, can't you?"
"Yes mum." He responds, quieter this time. Maybe she's successfully calmed him down to the best of her meager abilities. Cloaking herself, droids run by in rapid succession with blasters in their hands. The ship gets hit again, and she stumbles, falling to the ground and nearly tumbling into the rubble. Righting herself, she stands again and peers out into the hall before heading out to where she'd last seen Marr -- or at least somewhere less on fire, "When will you be back?" He asks, desperation in his young voice.
"I...I don't know, darling." She whispers, careful that she may be being watched. The Defiance shudders audibly, and Malcom shrieks in a way that makes her want to forget about the rest of the attack and rush to his side. It puts a hole in her heart nearly, and she has to focus. Keep him calm, keep herself from losing it, "When I do though, we can go to the park you liked near home, yes? We could even get the ice cream that you love, and we can spend the whole day together."
"O-okay." Without the com being nearly as close as she's sure it is, she wouldn't be able to hear her son anymore, "Mum, come back home. I'm scared. It's so loud and-", he cries.
"I know darling, I know. I'm just as scared, but we always do these things together, right?" She doesn't wait for his response as the ship nearly rolls, and she smacks into a viewport hard, "Malcom, I love you." She chokes out, ears ringing as her head pounds.
"I love you too, Mum." Static crackles again before Lexulle finally breaks, she runs and runs and runs. Anywhere is better than here, and her stealth is falling away as tears run down her face in rivers.
"Lex! We need to get out of here!" Andronikos' voice yells back over the com, panic setting in, "Did you find a pickup yet?"
"Nik. Go. Get my son out of here." She says sternly. Now, she isn't going to let them stay for her, and she will not continue to take no for an answer, "That is not an request! Hurry!"
"I-Fine. We're going, but do us and favor and don't die out here, huh?" He asks, and a gear shift later he sighs, maybe reconsidering his earlier agreement already, "Lex, if I don't see you in forty-eight hours I swear I'm coming back out here for you."
"Andronikos, please." She quiets to a whisper, begging him as she watches what she assumes is the Defiance pass by outside, blaster shots only just narrowly missing them, "Take care of him for me, please."
"Don't you start talking like that-"
"Nik!" She shouts, "I said to go and get out of here!"
He's quiet. Then, she can hear someone else talking in the background and Malcom's shriek as something hits the ship. The Defiance, yes, is meant for galactic battles, but not ones like these. The shields can't be holding up much better than the flagship's are.
"Lexi, you'd better come home." He says, an offhanded beg nearly. And that is it, the thrusters sound in the background and it all goes to a deafening static once they presumably hit hyperspace. Relief washes over her, they've gotten safely away. Anxiety still holds her dear as she stops, trying to breathe. Now it's just her, and whatever the blazes is out here.
"The enemy has breached the engineering deck--they're after the primary generator. I'm on my way now--meet me there." Marr's voice crackles to life, and she acknowledges him somehow. She's thankful, glad that at least Marr was still alive and here with her. Maybe later she does wonder how the Empire would go on without him. Without two of the Dark Council's Elites, she could only imagine how things would crumble. There'd be vying for the seats, surely. It'd be a bloody next few years.
Things get fuzzy from there as she fights through each mob of droids, indiscriminate to how much power she puts behind each one as she comes to her realization. Lightning arcs from her hands, the force is one with her as she stalks her way down the halls of the flagship, lightsaber ignited and slashing a path through everything that even moves to stop her.
Lexulle Kallig knows she isn't isn't going home. She's made an empty promise to the people she loves.
She meets with Marr minutes later. It's a trying fight to the engineering deck, as she tries not to let the man see her cry. Lexulle isn't even entirely sure he has a family, whether he has people that care about him somewhere else in the galaxy.
Now her son is going without a mother, without his biological father. At least she could give him a stable home while she was still with them. Now without her, her small family is surely without the Defiance as soon as they enter Imperial space, without the apartment she provided them with. She's failed them, she's failed Malcom.
With that rage, she tears apart whatever stands in their way to the engineering deck. It seems even Marr is surprised that she's still going, with as many injuries as she's sustained. Thinking this was only a meeting, she'd only been wearing a set of light armor. Her forearms are bleeding profusely, bruises surely growing on her back from where she'd fallen earlier in the day. They make it through the larger droid that was protecting the generator, as she tears it apart with the Force. The creaking would be so undesirable as the durasteel tears underneath the strain, but she doesn't care. Whoever sent them is the reason she won't celebrate her son's fourth birthday with him. They won't mind if she reminds them why she fights.
"The power core is strained to the breaking point. We can recharge the shields, but they still won't last long." She says, after viewing the screens at the holocomputers that blink red in time with the alarms blaring over her. Nothing looks particularly good from where they are, not to mention how bad the ship is falling apart around them. It's a death trap, and if the droids don't kill them, then the ship will.
"The hyperdrive has been completely burnt out." Marr deadpans, adding to the figurative fire. Any hope she had left sinks out of her. She's truly stuck here now. There's no logical way out of here, and exhaustion is prickling at the back of her consciouness. She's fought to the best of her ability, and now for what?
For nothing.
Maybe as a twisted consolation prize, a holo comes to life before them. Captain Fora's bent over form greets them. Her hair is falling out of her delicate hairstyle, a blaster in her hands and peering out from behind whatever. Turning to them, she shouts, "Enemies on the bridge! I repeat, enemies on--"
Just as she appears, it's gone, accompanied by an explosion that even she can hear, all the way away from the bridge. The crew must be entirely gone by now, Fora included. She can only imagine the political backlash this would get, how the war would rage up again around them.
"There are rudimentary backup controls here, but the enemy ships have us surrounded. We have few options left." Marr snaps her out of her thoughts. Sweeping over what she has available at her disposal, she thinks. Time slows, and she's tired. Tired and frustrated and upset and terrified. She already knows she isn't going home, so logically her first thought is to ram the oncoming ships with the flagship. It's what Marr would want her to do, and it's what her first thought is. Yet hope flickers at the back of her consciousness. Abandoning the ship entirely would get them at least out. To where, she doesn't know, but anywhere is better than this flying fireball at this very moment.
"Then we let people have a fighting chance." Lexulle responds, pressing the com button the databank. Announcing herself to whoever's left on the ship, she takes a breath before answering, "Attention! Shields are failing, and the enemy has us surrounded. Evacuate now, while you still can."
Though there's no audible response, she hopes someone heard her. If there's anyone left, that is.
Marr says nothing.
Lexulle doesn't have to wait long. Just as she lifts her head from the holocomputer, she can hear a deafening explosion from further down the ship. The guns from the opposing ships must have finally burned down the shields just as she had given the warning. Turning towards Marr, she nods in acknowledgement, as he does the same. This is the end of the road, the end of the line.
Everything goes dark.
-
17 ATC. ZAKUUL. 17:00.
Lexulle wonders if this is what death really feels like. Instead of being all white and fluffy like described in children's story books (she would know, she's been through the Empire's extended list of children's books), it's just darkness, no sound, just her and the universe. Alone with her thoughts, alone in her suffering.
She's reassured that she's very much not dead as she cracks an eye open, biting her bottom lip to keep from screaming. Her entire body hurts, just trying to shift anything shoots pain up every single one of her joints. The lights are low above her, but somehow much too bright as she tries to take in her surroundings. Not Marr's flagship, as she realize she's lying down on a cot of some sort. Maybe she is dead, and she's dreaming.
Forgetting that thought for just a moment, getting out of here is her first thought. Moving her arms is an entirely different story. She has cuffs on them that look rather heavy, but allow her some range of motion. Attempting to remove them with her own lightning proves unfruitful as sparks come from her fingers but don't come to her as easily as they should. All she manages to do is add to the barely visible lightning scars on her fingers, the ends of her hair fluffing up at the touch of electricity running through her system. So then the Force has been dampened within her with these cuffs.
Not dead. Definitely not dead.
Still in more pain than any Dark Council member should be allowed.
Blazes, if she's in Republic custody she's going to have quite a few words with whoever's in charge -- Saresh if she remembers correctly. If the Treaty of Coruscant hadn't been in pieces before, it is now.
That question is answered rather quickly as two figures step out of the shadows, and she pushes herself up into a sitting position. Her eyes dart around, it's much too dark for her to feel around for her lightsaber. For some reason she doubts that it's even in here, as she throws out a feel for it's specific presence. No matter, if they're here to threaten her, she still has her training on her side. No Sith would ever be held down, not by the Republic and not by anyone else.
"You've awakened. I trust you can walk," A deep, gravelly voice states. It's not a question, and surely one he intends for her to answer. Her legs still feel like jelly underneath her, pins and needles eating away at her consciousness as she tries to focus. He clearly isn't Republic, but not Sith either. A single eye that she can see has a crimson tint to it. Corrupted, in one way or another. The other and his lower jaw is covered by a black mask with yellow replacing the other. Scarring is evident, reminiscent of ones that she has seen on Sith. Lexulle holds back a dry chuckle. Whether she's supposed to be scared, is another question entirely.
He's force sensitive though. She can feel his presence as she reaches out, and it is absolutely stifling as she recoils. Powerful in the force, yet his alignment remains unclear.
"Unlock these shackles and I'll show you exactly what I'm capable of." She says, her voice dry. As not to seem weak, she tries not cough though the words sting her throat. Lexulle is guessing he isn't as scared of her as he should be, and she can think of quite a few things she could do to remedy that rather quickly.
"You are in the heart of our Empire, now. I assure you, escape is impossible, even if you could make it past me." The way he stresses our, she wonders where in the blazes she's gotten off to. Another group of cultists, maybe? With everything Revan managed, she could only imagine how many more people wished to follow his example. His gaze leaves her after this thought, "Come along."
She considers refusing, until another figure steps out of the shadows and prods her with a rifle. She tries not to make her struggling evident, trying to stay steady on her feet as pain shoots up her leg like electricity. Stifling a stumble, she follows after both of them. The architecture is nothing like either faction's, dim and with white light. Lexulle has some reason to believe the man may be telling the truth and she really isn't among any friends or past allies. A shiver runs through her body, it's freezing here.
Marr steps out with another of the odd figures, also held in restraints. Some relief is given, knowing that she has an ally here anyways. He's just as tall as the man, if not taller as he steps in front of him. Where others would've quivered in fear, the man simply remains in place, as if this were a daily occurence, "What 'empire' have we entered?" he asks.
"The Eternal Empire. Zakuul." The man responds. Zakuul, then. An Eternal Empire? Remnants of people who believed in the Emperor, if she can make any guesses. But this, this seems much too far advanced to only be three years old. This isn't the work of any startup. He turns away without another word, wordlessly beckoning them to follow him further into the depths. Looking to Marr, before back at him, he stops in his tracks, "You didn't even know whose territory you were invading?"
As if he's surprised. No one in the Core knew anything about Zakuul, about any Eternal Empire. If Intelligence did, that was below her pay grade. Where was he from, really? Yavin maybe? There were always rumors of the oddest Force beings inhabiting the planet, she wouldn't put it past anyone not to notice their existence, "We didn't 'invade' anything. We were looking for someone." There's still a bite in her tone, to remind him of just who he's dealing with. Not any petty pirate, a Sith Lord who very much would like to return to her home. He's disrupted her entire life just by this one act.
She has every right to be pissed.
"In an armed warship?" He asks quizzically. Well, she could see what he meant, but they attacked first. With an entire armada no less. He was very much inaccurate here.
Something clicks in her mind, memories spilling back from surely only hours earlier. This man was the reason she was ripped away from her crew, her son. He was the one who was responsible for this bloody mess. And all he could do were give them orders and ask questions with obvious answers.
Oh if she got her hands on him, he would be begging for mercy, screw his stupid facade of being all powerful and whatnot. He'd surely never seen a mother's rage enacted on someone who deserved it. His scars would extend much further than just what was under his mask when she was done with him.
"We weren't looking for a friend." She deadpans, glancing to Marr. He's as irritated as she is, she can feel it prickling at the edges of his presence, but is better at hiding it. Masks were never her style, and probably never would be, but she can only imagine the grimace on his face.
"What do you hope to achieve by taking us prisoner?" He questions. As angry as she is, Lexulle is curious. How is she alive right now? Had someone come to retrieve her after the ship exploded? Is she dreaming right now, maybe of an omen. She wishes she were still on the Defiance, sleeping with her son next to her.
This can not be real.
"I have questions. You will provide the answers." The man responds sternly, the light reflecting ominously over his mask. She can't figure what answers he would ever need, what answers he could ever want.
"We will tell you nothing." Marr's voice airs that of finality. There is no question to be asked, that is the voice that says you are done.
Yet again, the man doesn't flinch where others would turn and run. He simply raises an eyebrow at the statement, as if he were expecting it, "You won't have to speak to give me the answers I need." With that, he turns on his heel and continues onward. Without pause, the armored soldiers behind them prod them to follow after him. Unwilling, yes. But she'd play along for now, if not to keep her life.
They enter of ship of some sort. A transport, she believes. It's a short ride though, as they're under the watch of these two soldiers and the man himself. A feminine voice comes over the com as the ship shudder, attaching itself to another structure, "Prince Arcann. Final docking sequence."
Arcann.
Among all the other things wrong with this, he had the audacity to make himself royalty.
"We recovered the records from your ship's computers. Or what was left of them. Fascinating reading." Arcann states as they walk down a hall. The view out the viewport is unsettling, she's never seen the planet below them before. Silent, gold armored force users stand guard with blue lightsabers in their hands. She isn't entirely following this entire charade yet either -- how did he recover the records? Much less them from a burning fireball that they shot down. Agents crosses her mind, but she's sure she would've noticed anyone odd among the corpses that littered the ship's floor as she ran by, "You Sith are apparently quite formidable. You most of all. To alter the course of galactic events as you have...quite impressive."
He's complimenting her then. Or at least, in a different tone and different circumstance, she would've taken it as one. With all the uncertainties, she takes it as a mild threat, "I sense your connection to the Force. You have great strength...but do you know how to use it?" She questions. For now, being docile seems like it is the key to her survival. Keep him busy, long enough for her to take in her surroundings properly and report back to Intelligence.
If she got back.
"You are not here to educate." He states. He's not amused, nor willing to answer her question. She's pressed a few buttons then. Good, she'll see what makes him snap while she's at it.
The white eyes of another man who storms up to their small party reminds her of those she encountered on Ziost. Though, he's clearly under his own will. Dressed much like Arcann himself, though in a robe that is accented with black and gold, "Prince Arcann." He bows in respect, and she raises an eyebrow. He had everyone under his metaphorical thumb then.
"Heskal. Still waiting for the catastrophe that you and your Scions foretold?" This must be a very old argument, because Arcann sounds oddly frustrated by the man's interruption. Possibly something he'd been bothered about for ages. Who knew.
"You may close your ears to the whispers of fate, my prince, but they can not be silenced." Another cultist then. No one simply spoke that normally about fate and destiny and didn't believe in a higher power that controlled what they did. Had they stumbled upon this Empire that worshipped someone like their Emperor? It wouldn't be impossible, she supposes.
"I wonder if silencing you might suffice. Take your superstitions elsewhere, Heskal. You are not needed here." Arcann deadpans. Good, Lexulle isn't interested in hearing much of the mess that goes on here on the daily anyways. She'd had her fill of that mess on Yavin, and it was far from entertaining. She remains quiet for now, more interested in how he would react should she stay entirely quiet. The questions are still burning the tip of her tongue, her curiousity will surely get the better of her at some point or another.
"Is this why you brought us here? To hear you bicker with soothsayers?" Marr questions, airing her own concern.
"Come along." Is all he says, skirting the question entirely and ignoring the rest of whatever Heskal intended to tell him. How did anyone ever follow him as a leader, as frustrating as he was within the few minutes Lexulle had known him?
"You're taking us to your master." Marr deadpans. Master? What made him think that? The Prince title makes sense once she thinks about it. Of course, the person in charge wouldn't come looking for them. Arcann's master wanted them for something, thought it was unclear now, Lexulle didn't want any part of it. Unless he could send her home, she'd sooner kill the man than listen to anything he had to say to her.
"I'm taking you to my father, Valkorion. The Immortal Emperor of Zakuul." Arcann responds, turning away from Heskal to the pair of Sith. So she was right. He wasn't the head of these operations, most likely not by a long shot. Maybe he could skirt the blame for now, but this Valkorion would be the one to have hell to pay for what had happened to her.
"An Emperor. Just what we were looking for." Marr responds, a glance to her as she flickers her gaze to the armored male. Still, yet to be any form of argumentative. Lexulle is getting antsy, by now any battle would've broken out and here they were, reasoning with a man who would be rather happy to just see them dead. Or had another, unseen purpose for them that she decidedly did not want to stick around for. Yet, if Marr was this quiet on the issue, then she figured she had a good reason to remain that way.
"You will not find what you wanted here." Arcann answers. It seems he isn't looking for a fight either, even if he has no idea what he's talking about. Fine then, she'll stay her tongue. He turns away from them, and continues moving down the hall towards a larger door. Outside, is unfamiliar. She hasn't ever seen a planet like this, with skyscrapers outside of the atmosphere. Or at least, she assumes they're skyscrapers. The architecture just around them has an air of regality to it, the force sensitives next to them wear armor she's never seen before, lightsaber models that seem normal to them but a completely new idea to her.
Zakuul, then.
The door opens once they reach it, and it takes all her willpower not to gawk at her new surroundings. It's wide open, a dome over them that's accented with gold. Underneath her feet, darker, but also gold. It's odd, to say the least, that this was hiding out in Wild Space. Why no one had been able to find it before is anyone's guess -- surely not her's. More of the force sensitives line the path way, lightsabers still lit with an ominous blue all the way up to a throne.
A throne.
If only she knew how many times she'd see this one in her future, oh she would've averted her eyes instead of staring in hidden awe. One man sat upon it, aged, tired. Donning the same white-styled tunic that Arcann had, his son if looks were anything to go upon, he was in a position of thinking as the two were herded in by the two soldiers behind then. Once they grow close enough, Arcann lowers himself to a knee and the man leans back on his throne. She sets her face in a dead glare, whatever proposition he has for them, she does't want to hear it.
Malcom's young face flashes through her mind again. His quiet shrieks as the Defiance hit hyperspace and she couldn't hear anything from her ship anymore. She hopes Nik isn't out here, about to do something stupid to bring her back. It would've been in character, but if he died trying to save her, blast it she'd never forgive the damn pirate for being so stupidly heroic at the best of times.
"His Glorious Majesty, Immortal Master and Protector of Zakuul: Emperor Valkorion." Arcann's voice bellows in introduction, as she rivets her gaze upwards. A man with that many titles, she didn't even want to begin to understand how he'd gone about getting everyone under him to regard him in such a way.
"Welcome." He says, his tone much too soft to be any sort of welcome. A tingling fills her, trying to get a read on him as she reaches out in the Force. It only takes a moment, but the presence is all the same. The man who sits before them is no one other than the Emperor. It's odd, a different look, yes, but why go through the trouble of possessing someone out in Wild Space -- Zakuul if you would? But, Valkorion doesn't look possessed, his deep red eyes are his own, his actions his own. Even his voice is different than that of Vitiate's.
"A new name, a new face...these are not enough to hide from us." Marr makes the connection before she does, stating their findings before she can even get a single word out.
"The Sith Emperor...your presence is unmistakable." She keeps her tone dark, stern, though chooses her words carefully. At such a point with her Force powers dampened, it would be unwise to begin a fight with the Emperor himself.
Even if she did want to stab him through and shock him for what he'd done -- not just to her but to the entire Imperial populace. To Ziost.
"Oh, I think a mistake has been made...but by whom?" He asks, though surely he already knows the answer. If one more person gave her another open-ended question again, that would bring up her body count a couple more people. The soldiers around her, she's sure she could take in a heartbeat.
"Do these people have any idea who you really are? The kinds of things you're capable of?" Lexulle asks. Her frustration only grows, as many times as she's cursed the Emperor in the past for the things he's done, here he was, in front of her and so tantilizingly out of reach for her to do anything, "Do they know what you've done to the galaxy in your path to domination?"
"Do you?" Valkorion quizzes her, a laugh underneath his words. He's taunting her then, he knows what she's asking. Though she's curious, these people who are so oddly quiet, they've just accepted the things that have happened outside their little bubble of Zakuul?
Or do they simply not know of what their Emperor is truly capable of, what sins he's committed against the entirely galaxy? Ignorance was bliss, yes, but only when your ruler wasn't a dictator with a penchant for death.
"Your constant silence across our history...this was your distraction?" Marr asks, disbelief in his voice. She considers it for a moment, Valkorion -- Vitiate may have been here on this Zakuul. It made sense, considering he'd been little more than what most dubbed an absentee landlord. If he'd been overseeing things here...
"This was my focus," He admits, "Everything else...the means to an end."
He seems almost in thought, his voice softer than it had been. Arcann moves out of their view, maybe to allow Valkorion to acknowledge them properly. No wonder their Empire was slowly falling apart from the inside out. He hadn't been anywhere near the Core in years because he was instead cultivating their Eternal Empire.
Then why Ziost? Why move so far back into the galaxy, if only to destroy a planet that held little to no value, military or otherwise?
"You claim to have come all this way to find me. Here I am. What do you want?" He asks, very matter-of-fact as he stands from his throne. She considers, there are plenty of things she wants to blame him for, but it isn't time to play games. She throws out the bait, and wonders if he'll take it.
"To destroy you, once and for all." She responds, changing her stance as he begins his descent down the stairs, "You've done nothing but destroy everything you touch. Why bother even creating our Empire if you intended to watch it fall from your throne, Vitiate?" She wants him gone from her life, all the Emperor -- Vitiate has done is cause trouble. To get rid of him entirely, finish him off for good...that's a good wish to have, isn't it?
He chuckles darkly, brushing off her question, "You say you know me -- if that is true, then you know the depths of my power. Whatever you hoped to achieve here, you know -- deep inside -- that you cannot succeed." He responds. He's trying to break her down, break her spirit by denying her.
Well, he has another thing coming. Any slave has an unbreakable will. And a mother's will when her child is threatened on top of that, he may as well be hoping to destroy the entire Citadel bare handed.
That, that was impossible.
"But you do not have to stand against me. Instead...you can kneel." He states. Not a request, but instead one with a fire behind it. He snaps off Marr's cuffs with a wave of his hands, as they fall to the ground with a heavy metallic sound against the floor.
There's no pause for thought before Marr acts, "I will never again kneel to you."
Arcann turns to wordlessly ask his father a question, surely whether he was allowed to attack Marr. She steadies herself, ready to fight if she has to, cuffs or otherwise. Valkorion waves a hand to stop him, and she pauses. This was an odd development, "You would rather die than acknowledge my superiority?"
"It is you who fears death, 'Valkorion'. I do not. I will not kneel." He turns, using the Force to push a soldier backwards over the edge. The lightsaber drops from his hands, and he summons it to his own. The other gold plated soldiers rush him, shields raised before Marr throws his newly acquired weapon directly back at them, knocking the small party backwards. Another soldier goes flying off the side as static builds in Lexulle's hands again. Stronger this time as she pulls at the Force, the dark side to give her strength. Still, not big enough to do anything significant.
It ends.
Valkorion shoots a massive arc of lightning back at Marr, and Lexulle's eyes widen in fear. She bites back a yell as he flies backwards, electricity surely racing throws his veins at a dangerous speed. Electricity is still coming off him in waves as she raises her head from his corpse to the woman who's entered the room, dressed in black and gold as her allies are.
Marr doesn't even twitch.
He's dead. Darth Marr is really dead right before her eyes, killed by the man -- the entity that he swore to destroy.
Her glare returns, before the woman speaks up, "Clear the room! Everyone out!"
The soldiers follow her orders dilligently, quickly leaving in rapid succession. She instead turns back to Valkorion, stepping closer. She's not a threat, not in her cuffs and held back without the Force. But if he believes that he's brought her down a peg by killing someone she trusted, that she'll roll over and take the punches, he's got another thing coming.
"Why send your new followers away? Something you don't want them to hear?" She asks him sarcastically, though fully intending to receive an actual answer. What was it that the couldn't hear that he so desperately needed her to?
"They are not like us." She shudders, she was not an 'us' to Valkorion of all people, but continues to listen either way, "In all my centuries, you alone have merited my full attention. You leave your mark upon the galaxy wherever you act, just as I do.
"Look around you. Zakuul is poised to become the greatest civilization in the history of the galaxy. I have forged this empire to surmount all of my previous works. To span eternity." He's a little hopeful on that on, especially if he intends for Zakuul to take over the rest of the galaxy. Him destroying Marr's flagship, didn't bode well for her belief in him, "The Eternal Throne commands a fleet more vast than any ever built. It has the power to reshape the galaxy into any image that I choose. That we choose."
Beyond her immediate distaste at the idea of working with him (which is nauseating, really), out of the corner of her eye, she can see Arcann's expression change for only a moment. Dissent within the ranks, especially seeing her as an outsider to their little perfect kingdom, "I will share all of this with you...if only you will kneel."
"'Share'? You don't share anything...you enslave. You devour. I will never be a part of that." Her eyes narrow as she grimaces. Static jumps at her fingers as her rage rises within her, "You destroy the things your Empire holds dear, and then expect us to still respect you. I am not one of your pawns, Vitiate, and I never will be."
"So be it." He responds, not an ounce of disappointment in his voice. He moves, holding up a hand to his son. He strides forward, and Lexulle tries to calm her beating heart. So this is how it ended, to an insolent child with a lightsaber. Fitting, really. The title had been applied to her plenty of times before. She tries not to show him she's scared, fixing her posture and still pulling at the force to override the cuffs, lightning playing with the tips of her braids. This was how she fell, and no one would know. She was alone, Marr's corpse just behind her.
The Empire would surely fall if this was who was after it.
Malcom would surely never see his teenage years if this was the case. Lexulle isn't arrogant enough to think that the Empire would simply bounce back from this. She wasn't stupid enough to think that the fallout wouldn't affect everyone she knew and cares about.
Arcann lights his saber, the kyber crystal gold.
He takes his stance in front of her. She quivers, he doesn't acknowledge it. She steels her eyes on him, entirely prepared to be stabbed through, choked, pushed off the edge with the Force. If death wanted her, then so be it.
His vision darts from her to his father, before back to her, "You came here to defeat him -- this is your chance!"
Instead of attacking her, he slices away her cuffs. They fall away, leaving some scratches, yet he turns on his father instead. A tad bit still in awe, she stealths herself anyways. She'd wait for an opening, for her lightsaber is still nowhere to be found. Yet the Force has returned, and her head feels clearer, her senses sharper. Her electricity dances at her fingertips with practiced ease, and she circles the father-son pair with a wide berth.
"First your brother, now your father?" Valkorion asks, though still remaining calm and throwing out defenses with practiced ease. Arcann is strong, she can see that, but he's so angry he's simply throwing his lightsaber around with little concern for whether he's actually doing any damage.
"Does my ambition truly surprise you?" Arcann questions, his voice grizzly. Another few hits, all deflected as they move closer to the base of the stairs.
"You do not have ambition. Only jealousy." Valkorion rebutts. Another old argument then. He seems bored with his son's antics, as if he's dimly aware that there's an assassination attempt before him.
Arcann is strong-willed, she'll grant him that. He doesn't seem to care, maybe thinking he can simply tire him out, maybe that if he continues attacking he can just get him while he's distracted.
Maybe he'd never fought a galactic superpower before, but that wasn't typically how these things went.
Another arc of lightning shot from Valkorion's fingertips, this time towards his own son. Arcann flies backwards, skidding to the ground without even a sound of pain coming from him. He's motionless, still sparking from the attack, "I know you're there. I suggest you come out, unless you wish to find yourself with the same fate my son did."
She pulls for Arcann's now discarded lightsaber with the Force, once in her hands she manages to spin so that she's right behind him and shoves the plasma blade through his chest, "You should've killed me when you had the chance." She says darkly, hearing his expression of surprise in the breath of air he manages within that moment.
Yanking it right back out of him, he remains standing though with a hand over the saber hole. Satisfyingly, nearly.
"So be it." He responds, maybe accepting his fate. Yet, he begins to glow with a purple aura, spiraling around him. Lexulle isn't immediately sure what to do, air whipping around her as it pulls into him. Backing up further towards where they'd just come from, she can hear a low chuckle over the wind.
It's silent. She thinks she may have beat him, finally.
Instead, an explosion knocks her prone. Her ears ringing, her mouth tasting of blood as she hears something crack. Her heart is pounding, and her whole body is throbbing with pain. Through cotton-filled ears, she can hear someone coming and Arcann speaking, "The Outlander has assassinated our Emperor. Take her away."
Someone yanks her up, and she doesn't even have the power to scream before she blacks out from the pain. Her eyelids flutter for just a moment, lights invading her senses before she loses consciousness.
Now it wasn't just Theron who would never see her again.
The rest of the galaxy wouldn't either.
Her last, conscious thought for five years is the safety of her son. All she can do is pray that he survives the onslaught that is surely headed for the rest of the galaxy.
She loves him, so, so much.
#swtor#star wars the old republic#star wars#theron shan#female sith inquisitor#lexulle kallig#malcom ngani kallig#malcom ngani shan#andronikos revel#female sith inquisitor/theron shan#female sith inquisitor/andronikos revel#swtor oc#oc#original character#swtor fanfiction#fanfic: shan
7 notes
·
View notes
Text
What's My Type? Socionics Version
[QUOTE=HBIC;34789314]About four years ago I discovered personality typing, which I’ve somehow never heard of before, and decided to give it a shot since I started to go through a lot of changes at that time and wanted to make sense of myself. I took every MBTI test available and came out ENTP in all of them. I also took many Enneagram tests and came out as a type 8 every time. It all fit me so perfectly at the time, I felt a mixture of elation, giddiness and weirdly fear, because it was so accurate. But very soon after I became active in forums and started to interact with other ENTPs I realized I couldn’t be one, since every single interaction with xNTPs left me either enraged, disgusted or bored. In all these years I’ve come to understand the Enneagram really well and confidently find my tritype and instinctual variants, but never got to find my MBTI type. I then moved to Socionics which I find to be much more interesting, but also confusing and even contradictory in some aspects. I have no idea why this is so important to me, being that I’m fully aware that neither theory is nowhere near perfect. I justify it to others when they ask as being because I want to work on my weak spots and utilize my strong ones to its full potentials which is true, but I don’t think that’s the only reason. I try to tell myself that these letters mean nothing (which they actually don’t), but I’m still obsessed I just need this to end once and for all so I can move on, otherwise my one track mind won’t let me concentrate on other issues. If it helps, my Enneagram tritype is 8w7-7w8-3w4 sx/sp/so. I feel like I need to include this because it makes me very confused since I never know if I'm mistaking my Enneagram traits for Socionics aspects. I can't post any pictures of myself for professional reasons, so we'll have to skip the visual identification. So now onto the questionnaire: Part I: General to specific, specific to general – what does it mean? Big Picture >Details, Details >Big Picture. For example I’ll sintetize what a person’s personality is, and then if anyone asks “What do you mean?” or “Why do you think so?” I’ll explain in detail. Then people will ask (it happens every time so I’m used to it, not only when I’m “explaining” a person, but any subject really) “But HOW do you know that?!” and I’ll give out very specific details and episodes (I have a great memory). What does "logical" mean? What is your understanding? Do you think that it correlates with the common view? To me is something that makes sense and can be explained and understood based on certain principles that any intelligent person could follow, even if they disagree. I have a big disregard for common sense, which in general is so near sighted is almost blind, so no, it doesn’t always correlates to it. How do you explain fractions on the dial of the clock? I don’t see why I would have to do that unless the person is a child in which case I’d say that each fraction is a minute, that an hour has sixty of them ...you know what nevermind. I really don’t have the patience or the ability to explain things to children. What is a rule? What rules do you have to follow? A procedure or a law, depending on the situation. Never really cared for them, but if it makes sense to me I’ll follow then and make sure others do to, unless their actions won’t impact me or others in any way. What is hierarchy? Do you need to follow it? Why or why not? A system of organizing people based on ranks. I’ve Always been acutely aware of them even (and perhaps mostly) when they are hidden or unconsciously existent by the individuals in it. If I’m just “passing through” the system (I don’t have to join it) then I’ll entertain myself by observing it but if I’m forced to join this hierarchical system, then I’ll make sure to get to the top ASAP. But this is just the thoughts I have about it, because weirdly I actually never had to “get to the top”, somehow it has always been handed to me without me (as I perceive) doing anything. It has actually been a very disconcerting occurrence that followed me all my life,because I can’t figure out why the people in the power seem to always want me to be there without proving myself or something like it. In the past it made me really anxious, because I don’t know what they expect from me and because I suffered many witch hunts due to the envy it causes in other people. I don’t see how there’s anything and specially anyone higher than me, that’s why authority is foreign concept to me, except if we’re talking abou the police. I am the only authority in my life, that’s probably because of my Enneagram. What do you think of instructions? Do you use them? Could you write an instruction manual? If so, what type of instruction manual would you most likely write? I read them so I have a general concept of what I’m dealing with, but my past experience proves that following them always results in disaster or mediocrity in my case. I only cook by myself for example, because I know that if i had people with me they’d be shocked with my methods of doing thins and I don’t want to stand their questioning it when they always prize the results so much. I hate this kind of thing really, it’s a hypocrisy. Not, I could never write a manual, I’d never have the patience. I also have bad experiences with it, because whenever I left my mom (IEI) instructions to do anything she would either don’t follow them and things wrong or follow then but get things wrong anyway. So why bother? Please explain: "Freedom is in complying with the laws, but not in ignoring the laws"? Do you agree with the statement? Why? This is an absolutely ridiculous statement. Freedom is a state of mind, which is why a man can be in jail and still be free, because it is something partaking the spirit, not the body. There is no greater freedom than total unconditional self love and acceptance. Also not feeling like you need anyone else to complete you or inspire you etc. In terms of actions, freedom is doing what you want because it makes you happy and makes sense to you according to your life philosophy. Tell us how consistent you are. I don’t know because I hear different things? People tell me I have a very strong and defined personality, but at the same time people (frequently the same ones!) tell I’m unpredictable and mysterious? So I don’t know really, I believe I might be consistent in my principles, in who I am but inconsistent in how I am. What is a "standard"? Why do people need it? Is the minimal requirements for something. You need to put your home library in order. How do you feel about this activity? How will you approach this task? Oh my God, it’d easily take me the whole day because I would end up opening the books and rereading them, and then after I realized how late it was I’d just stuff them onto the shelves without no criteria whatsoever. What is work in your opinion? Labor of some sort. Why do people go to work? Mostly because they have no choice but. Others are lucky and do it for their personal enjoyment and fulfillment. Are there any parameters where you can distinguish whether you can do this work or not? Yes. Is it fun/interesting? Is it comfortable (not only physically, but mentally and ethically)? Does it pay well compared tom my efforts? Am I good enough at it? Is there any correlation between quality and quantity? Not necessarily, but I do love having a lot of something, and many options. Tell us if or how the price depends on quality? Obviously not, it’s scam after scam everywhere. How do people determine the quality of work? It’s largely subjective. But of course most people won’t admit to it. How do you determine such quality? If it meets my standards, then it has high quality vem if it doesn’t suit my tastes. How well you can determine the quality of any purchase, do you pay any attention to it? If buying the thing makes sense to me, then what else is there to consider? I don’t shop on impulse, I pay attention to what I buy, be it food or designer clothes. How do you feel if you didn't finish some work? Does it ever happen? What are the reasons? Well it depends on why I didn’t finish it, doesn’t it? I rarely feel guilty even when I don’t have a good reason for it not being finished, I might get anxious to make up for the lost time though. Now if I tried really hard but couldn’t finish it then I’d feel frustrated and mad. What is "interesting work" for you? Please explain in detail. Something I’d do for hours, for free. Something satisfying. You go to the store and see something you're interested in buying; there is a price tag on it. What parameters are you going to use to understand if it's overpriced, underpriced, or priced correctly? Is it in season? Is it beautiful/attractive? Is it good quality? Is it unique? When you work and someone tells you: "You don't do it right." What is your reaction? I’ll usually feel irritated at first, but my reaction from then on depends on how they said it (tone of voice) and who is this person. Do they have any right to meddle in my business without me given then the permission to? There is a professional right next to you. You always see that you can't perform the way they do. Your feelings, thoughts and actions? It depends on whether I feel like I’d want to or should measure up to them or beat them at it. I don’t expect or desire to be better at baking than Buddy Valastro for example, but when it comes tom my area of expertise, I do HATE when someone is obviously better than me. I don’’t hate the person though, ever. My compliments era genuine, but I do Always thing I have to beat them. Part II: When you have to ask someone else to help you with the task, how do you feel? Normal, unless the person is a considered enemy, in which case I’d only ask if it’s between that and death. You need to build a pyramid exactly like in Egypt. Your thoughts, feelings and actions? Why would I have to do that? I don’t have to do anything. I have zero interest in construction or mimicry either, so that’s it. What is beauty? It’s something incredible because it’s an individual experience, but one which we may share. Beauty is the biggest currency we have because it’s so powerful it makes time stops in its tracks even if just for a second, is capable of elevating our spirits and can leave such a strong impression you don’t forget that something/someone for years, or perhaps ever. Do you change your opinion about beauty? Does your understanding correlate with the generally accepted notion? What goes beyond the generally accepted notion? No, what’s beautiful to me today will be tomorrow and probably forever. True beauty comes with grace, though. People might find a certain celebrity beautiful for example, but I’ll never agree with it if my eyes see only plastic beauty but nothing attractive in it. Please describe your understanding of a beautifully dressed person. What is the core of beauty? How do you explain what is beautiful to a person who has never heard about beauty before? I am a true believer in personal seasonal analysis, so if the person is using her designed palette correctly and is dressed in her correct lines (I also believe in David Kibbe) then he/she will be beautiful. I used to believe not everyone could be beautiful, but that was before I saw the light of Sci-Art. I would say that if something’/someone’s can make them emote in a positive way, that’s beauty. Is there a template of understanding what beautiful means for everyone to use? No. Is there such a term as "classical beauty"? Absolutely. In David Kibbe’s system for example they are people who have this symmetrical balanced features like Grace Kelly, Gwyneth Paltrow and Dianna Agron. It has a lot to do with a certain poise and class, na elegante air, maybe even regal. What is comfort? Feeling good and safe. What is coziness? Feeling like you could stay there forever. How do you create your comfort and coziness? I surround myself with my favorite sensory things. How do others evaluate your skill in doing so? Do you agree with them? I don’t do it for others. But they do it for me, I don’t even have to ask, it’s funny. How do you pick your own clothes? I choose something that reflect my mood or will fulfill my intentions, always staying inside my rules of styling (color palette and designs). Do you follow fashion? Why? Do you mean trends? If so, then not, I abhor them. I do subscribe to a lot of fashion magazines, though. And I like to attend runaway shows and things like that. Do you know how to select clothes for different types of figures? Yes, I’m a fairy godmother. How do you cook? Do you follow recipes? Chaotically, but the results are always good, even when according to me, I failed. No, I just do my own thing and it works, so I’m obviously talented. What do others think of your skill? Love it to death and always eat too much, I’ve been accused of being the cause for their extra fat many times. Which is ridiculous, of course, they’re fat because they don’t exercise and eat all the wrong things for them. Are you good at color patterns and mixing them and matching? Yes, it comes easily and I honestly don’t know how it can be difficult. Some things are a matter of taste, but color can make your eyes hurt. If someone is telling you what is beautiful and what is not, what goes with what color and what is not, do you agree with this person? If they are correct, yes. Most people in fashion have no clue though, which is why people think fashion is irrelevant and silly. They taint the art with their incompetence and total lack of talent, they should be doing something else. Tell us how you'd design any room, house or an office. Do you do it yourself or trust someone else to do it? Why? I wouldn’t, Id should them some ideas (like a visual board) and give them information on my tastes and demands. The rest is up to them, I’m paying them for it. How do you know if a person has bad taste? Could you give us an example? Do you always trust your own taste or do you seek opinions from others? If the person can’t dress according to their coloring and body, then they have bad taste because they are making others uncomfortable by looking at them. Also, there are things that era so ugly you can’t justify their use no matter what arguments you come up with. Like neon fur vests, for example. Also, Beyonce’s general fashion choices. I don’t usually ask for input, only when it’s something rather risky and bold. But in the end I’ll go with y opinion. Can you line up human resources and make them do things? Yes, since I was a little kid. What methods do you use? I tell them what to do and they do it. If not it depends on the situation. I might take them out of the equation or force them to do what I want by any means necessary. It very rarely has escalated to that point, though. Can you press people? If so, how does it happen? Sure, I’ll demand why they haven’t done the thing yet or demand they give me the information I want. I’ told I’m very intimidating when I do it. What is incursion? How do you deal with this? When somebody thinks they can invade my territory. I’ll teach them anew and make sure they don’t forget. What does "my people" and "strangers" mean? When do "my people" become "strangers" and why? I don’t think in those terms (the “my people” part), at least not consciously. I guess it’d be my inner circle (close friends) vs people I don’t know a lot or care about. Are there strategies of attack? Can you use them? When is it justified? But of course, how else would the world work? It’s a stupid question. Of course I’ll use them, they are always justified in principle. If there is a threat or something to be obtained, a war begins, it’s only natural. Do you think it's ok to occupy someone else's territory? In what situations? If the person it’s not making good use of it then either they don’t care about it enough or are really incompetent. So I’ll make my move, they might defend their position or yield. What are the methods of volitional force? When is it most effective and in what situations? It’s not a method, it’s something that resides inside of you. You either have it, or you don’t, it’s not something you do. It should be effective all the time, that’s what means to be a powerful individual. How do you protect yourself and your interests? Ruthlessly. You’re not taking anything from me and then walking away, at least not alive. Describe your behavior in the situations of opposition and if you have to use some force? It depends, this is such a vague question. Opposition to what, by whom, where, am I alone or with others...A strategy depends on certain elements. . I’m decente in that I don’t play with my food. If it comes to that then I go for the kill, by striking my enemy’s weakest spot swiftly and preferentially, in public. He’ll be an example, then. Do others think of you as a strong person? Do you think you are a strong person? Yes and yes. But I get tired and feel weak too, like any human. How do you understand if a person is strong? Are there any signs of a strong person? You just know when you meet them. It has zero to do with external factors like physical power or financial and social influence. It’s something inside but that you pick up on immediately, a force. What is the core of any force? Will. Why do people listen to one person, but not the other? Because one person is credible (this has nothing to do with titles) or irresistible and the other is not. It’s as simple as that, it’s all psychological even i f people try to justify it and explain it later. What is boorishness? The worse thing in the world and whoever posee it are among the most disgusting “human beings”. I don’t deal with that kind of trash. Does your understanding of it correlate with the generally accepted notion? Decent people agree with me, unless they are that kind of people who never want to judge anyone, no matter what absurd things they might say or do. No kind of person can be more irritating to me than these supposed “non judgemental” people. How would you explain what boorishness mean to a 10 year old child? Again with the child thing? But a 10 year old knows how to read, I’ll give him the dictionary otherwise he’ll become one of those teenagers that expect you to be their personal Google. How would you explain the same to an adult who does not behave ethically? I’ll tell him/her they’re being despicable since that sort of behaviour is beneath a human being and therefore they deserve no respect. How would you improve the moral of the society? I dythingo not believe in moral, I believe in ethics, which are individual. That is the cause of the global social collapse. The world is filled with human like creatures which are only human in body, but which possess no spirit. Therefore there is no use trying to teach them anything, for they era no capable of understanding ethical problems since they have no conscience. Can you justify somebody's bad behavior by thinking that he/she wasn't taught how to do so? Only if said person is a small child or if they have lived their whole lives into some kind of tribe or other vastly different cultural setting with no contact to what we call “civilization”. Give us your understanding of love. Can you love and punish at the same time? Love is simply the most powerful force in the world which cannot be explained in words but I’ll say what it means to me: it’s what makes something special and precious to you. It’s the difference between my mom and any other woman, she is more valuable than all of them because I love her. When you love something you attribute value to it, which is why we all want to be loved so much. Of course this is an oversimplified explanation of only one of love’s facets, but it’s nonetheless true. Have you heard about the Southern hospitality? Everything is for the guest. There is also a German hospitality – the master of the house is always right. What method is the right one? Try to evaluate without the weight of any cultural aspects, traditions, nations etc. Yes it’s all very nice when you are the guest, but I operate things differently in my house. I actually identify 100% with Germans etiquette and personal ethics, I would never show up unannounced on someone else's house or show up before or after the decided time o four meeting. I expect the same and have no qualms in letting the person whom infringed these rules know that I will not tolerate it. What is sympathy? When do you need to express it? When is it advised not to? It’s akin to pity, you feel bad for them but in this case the person is not seen/felt as weak/pathetic because that could happen to anyone. I will not show sympathy when I don’t feel it because I hate hypocrisy. If I think a person deserved something then I’ll keep my mouth shut even if I do offer help. It happens when a person I love receives the consequences of their bad actions, for example. Are there any norms of behavior in the society? Do you follow them? Do people always have to follow them? Why? Obviously there are and yes, I follow them like any civilized person would. But they depend on culture partially, in my country people are not expected to behave like they do in America for example. I think these rules should be followed if you are in a public setting, but only as far as it doesn’t conflict with his/hers personal values. This way of thinking has caused me many problems since it goes against our traditions. http://www.typologycentral.com/forums/socionics/89279-whats-type-socionics-version-new-post.html?utm_source=dlvr.it&utm_medium=tumblr
1 note
·
View note
Text
Some Final Thoughts...
It’s been just over a month since I left India. And before the last exotic memories are fully flooded out by the everyday humdrum of home, I wanted to get down a few more impressions of the place and its people.
Mainly anecdotes, pet peeves and things that I just can’t shake that need to be written down so I don’t have to carry them around. There are myriad frustrations in India, alongside a jubiliation of positive things, people and experiences, but if you’re not ready to face the challenges of life there, it will make for an eternally stressful visit.
Security guards, standing around and seven steps to buy tea
India is a country of security guards. I’ve never seen so many anywhere. I’ve also never seen so many that look so profoundly unsecure. Most restaurants, bars, hotels, monuments, fancy shops, homes and laneways in India have security guards. Young, old, uniformed, usually thin with a pot belly, security guards across India, are as we speak, opening doors, sleeping on plastic chairs and probably wondering what they would do if their security services were actually required.
They occupy make-believe jobs in a very real world. I can’t imagine their individual level of productivity being any lower. The Indian security guard industry, which probably makes up a few percentage points of GDP, is representative of the all-too-Indian combination of inefficiency, cheap labor and loads of folks needing jobs. Squandered resources.
It’s not only security guards either. There are probably as many personal drivers in India as security guards. Low-skilled, not particularly satisfying employment that may have made sense 50 years ago, but is not part of the wave of the future. Otherwise, there are huge groups of people in India mostly just standing around on the job.
It’s not uncommon to walk into an empty restaurant in India to find 12 people standing around. And it still somehow requires four of them to take your order and 45 minutes for it to arrive. On my first weeked in Delhi, I ordered a kebab from a streetside restaurant – three people took my order and five others watched while the sixth prepared it. I was astonished but thought I might just be imagining the scene still in my jetlagged state. Not to be, this was Indian entrepreneurship mixed with mass scale job training, all while the end user salivates for 20 minutes and considers just buying a bag of chips instead.
I’ll end my mostly superficial overview of Indan economic inefficiency with an instructive anecdote from our last day, and also provide an answer to the age old question: How many people (in India) does it take to sell you a bag of tea? Seven.
Across the street from our hotel was a multi-level government run souvenir emporium. Everything from carpets to life-sized peacocks, all the way down to speciality tea packages. These proved a perfect souvenir for a half-dozen people remaining on our list. A few masala chais, darjeelings and green teas with ginger, some in elephant boxes, others in cozy decorative sachets.
I approached one of three available cashiers to pay for my order. He waved me over to another. She then signalled towards two men hovering over a register at the far end of the row. I made my way over and get this, handed over my tea in exchange for a receipt ticket, with no money involved. I stood perplexed. He then waved me back to where I just was. I started with the lady, busy. Went back to the first guy, also apparently busy. Three cashiers, two seemingly available but not currently taking customers so I got in line behind another patron for the sole cashier appearing to do what cashiers usually do. Person 5 or so. I handed over my paper ticket, he calculated, I paid and he subsequently printed off two more receipts, in addition to the visa machine payment receipt.
I again stood baffled, not having seen the tea I had just paid for in over five minutes! The cashier directed me (with my receipt in hand) to yet another counter, the pick-up counter, 15 feet behind me where I handed my purchase receipt to one of three men standing around, who called for a fourth to summon my tea back to reality. He also stamped my receipt with a medieval red stamp and an equally medieval red stamping oomph that would make this jos the envy of every five year old on earth. Tea finally back in hand, ten minutes later and, of course, one last security guard to check the receipt and purchase before opening the door.
Just for comparison, in Canada, with two available cashiers, the interaction would have looked like this. Hello, is that all today?, ok that’ll be $25, thank you have a nice day. One interaction with one person for one minute. In India, seven participants, five observers, ten minutes, five stops and one exasperated tea-buying couple.
The cost and surcharge of spending your money
Another peculiar aspect of spending money in the Indian economy is the plethora of hidden costs for what might be called ‘luxury goods.’ Even though many of the goods are somewhere between unavoidable and nice to have.
On my first Friday night in India, I went to a local sports bar in the neighbourhood of my hotel. Young people drank, cricket matches blared and I joyfully celebrated my first full week in the country. I ordered chicken wings and a glass of kingfisher beer. The total came to about seven Canadian dollars, five for the wings and two for the beer. I gleefully imagined how fun and cheap my six week sojourn in India was about to be.
Buoyed by my find, I decided to visit another bar on the way back to the hotel. This beer list was far less friendly. In a fit of nostalgia and lushness, I ordered a Stella Artois from the ‘pints’ section of the menu. I can’t entirely remember if it was $7 or $9 but I figured that’s a fairly common price for a pint of the Belgian brew at home. Imagine my surprise when a bottle appeared instead of a pint and then the bill included a 20% VAT tax, 10% service charge and two other taxes of 4% each. My bottle of Stella set me back almost $15. My fun was ruined. I tucked tail and went to bed.
After my wife arrived a week later, we would play a game called ‘guess the extra taxes’ whenever we ordered out. Oddly enough the racked on charges usually only appeared when we were at a restaurant that was modern, or upscale, or westernish. In short, those places that cosmopolitan Indians and foreigners patronized. Besides a very odd feeling that the Indian state and media still demonize alcohol consumption (much like North America does with cigarettes), I couldn’t quite figure out why having a drink or two in India was so intentionally and prohibitively expensive. It’s painful enough that it changes your behaviour, makes you look for options with low or no taxes.
The absurd taxation model was most saliently on display when I settled my portion of the hotel bill. As I was travelling for work, my hotel was paid for but I did have to cover the additional occupancy of my wife for one month. Our beautiful hotel charged a very reasonable fee for a second occupant but other colleagues had warned about the stunning tax portion unleashed at checkout, so I held out on the unpleasant experience until the last few hours of our stay.
All in all, I wish I had a forensic accountant by my side to double check (and explain) the bizarre escalating cost of staying at one of Delhi’s most storied hotels. And then a psychologist and a monk to help de-escalate my annoyance.
The initial tax for the second guest was 18%, already not an amount to scoff at, almost a one-fifth levy. Then at some secret threshold of the total, the tax jumps to 28%, close to one-third of the bill. And then the true kicker, according to some formula by which we can surely transport butter chicken to the moon, the grand total increased past some level beyond what the bill would have been for me staying solo, and the tax on my employer’s portion jumped beyond the threshold but of course, they weren’t covering it so it fell to me. To clarify for the stumped layperson, it cost $30 a night for my wife to join me, plus $25 in tax. That’s a whopping 83%!
India charges you heavily for being wealthy (by Indian standards) and charges you more and more the more you spend. It’s bizarre and backwards and feels almost personally insulting. The surcharge for fees at tourist sites is understandable and quite appropriately proportionate. But God forbid you choose to leave any disposable income in India’s creative, comfortable or casual sectors, you will be burned and may think twice in future. I don’t know much about investment and couldn’t tell you if this is macroeconomics or micro or neither but I’m pretty sure it’s not smart.
It goes without say that the visibility of this tax base out in daily India isn’t always clear either. The public sector, health and education in the country are not only substandard but truly from another era. I really did love the country but you can’t leave with too much optimism about its development with absurd financial management like this from the most mundane level on up.
Gendered life
I can’t say much about India without touching on gender and gender roles. Not because I have any particularly profound insights, but more because it’s one of the things India is infamously known for these days, one of the main challenges a visitor and his wife prepare to expect when planning a trip. And on this one I can only conclude that a few weeks is only enough time to see the surface and make one or two limp scratches into it. But coming from a country like Canada, progressive by almost any measure, the contrast to a decidedly more traditional one like India is inescapable, in ways both large and small.
The headlines in Indian newspapers are horrific on a daily basis when it comes to women and girls. Partially, sensationalism sells, but the daily stories would be truly historic (awful) one-offs in most western countries, and yet they’re everyday in India. In a country of over a billion people, it’s important to remember proportionality but these are also ‘ one is too many’ type incidences.
Life out and about in Delhi was far less fearful than the headlines. But for a woman (according to my wife) they are never far from mind. Is a tuk-tuk taking a shortcut or taking you for a ride? How do you interpret an invitation from a friendly salesman to come see more scarves in the backroom? My wife eventually became quite comfortable going out and about in our neighbourhood but it took a few weeks and then a few more to de-program her mind from being overly cautious upon return to Canada.
As for me, my lessons in gender came mostly from my female Indians co-workers. Asking if mind was a love marriage. Wistfully complaining about their weekend workload of cleaning, washing and cooking. Waking up early to prepare meals for their family and their husbands’ families, before their own full workday. Joking with their husbands that if they emigrate, they might have to learn how to cook, iron, take care of themselves. And these were educated, successful women.
These situations left me stifled, silent and awkward. Not really having a ready reaction at hand. Acknowledging, trying to be empathetic, but not judgemental. I still don’t quite know what to make of these experiences. In my own contemporary world, we’re empowering people to express their gender along a varied spectrum and for the most part society is accommodating. In India, the reality that women move in with their husband’s family, in-laws and all, after marriage remains unquestionable. These are vastly different places and mental spaces and travelling between the two is slightly surreal.
The posture of power
In a country as big as India, with so many people, such diversity and a relative lack of development, wealth, stuff, there are many non-commodified status indicators that lubricate interactions and act to place people in the societal hierarchy. Some of visible and well-known like language, skin colour and gender, others like caste, powerful but largely invisible to foreigners, and still others more subtle but perhaps even more informative. I tend to denote these somewhere on the spectrum of posturing for power.
To watch any given Indian oscillate roles throughout their interactions is almost awe-inspiring. In one moment, deferent and sir-ing and ma’am-ing to a perceived superior, in the next abrupt and dismissive to someone perceptibly in their service. This is most obvious amongst the elite and elitely obnoxious, who seem to live life waiting to deride a hapless worker for a too foamy latte or poor understanding of English. It is the outsized persona and flippancy of the popular, the political, the posh. Status wars are often played on the battlefield of the symbolic and it’s been a while since I’ve witnessed it quite as fiercely as in India.
The currency of confidence or just as often, false confidence, might actually be the most valuable in India. Typically aligned pretty well with its financial complement, but also exchanged outside of any financial transaction. Collected, earned, stolen, spent, wasted, splurged, demeaning, appreciating. There is a rawness and honesty to people’s self-realization of their strata within Indian society. And it gives you a lot to consider as a temporary foreigner falling in for a visit, mostly oblivious to the oh-so-obvious rules.
0 notes