Palliative...
Soothing...
Palms pressed against the cold stone altar, Lord Silk swam in the reflecting-glass, the transitory mists, the force.
Watched over by the stone faced statues of long dead Sith, practitioners of the darkest arts, the Lord Silk found solace in their unseeing gaze. Alone, save for the omnipresent power which was the dark side, his consciousness expanded to fill the length and breadth of the grand hall. Upon the altar rested a cylinder of matte-black steel woven of and wrapped in carbon fiber. At its base, clasped between mechanical claws, a gemstone carved of onyx seemed to contain a swirling, writing haze while atop the cylinder and slightly below its outer-most edge a crimson-tinted, concave disc.
Silk, his eyes shut, ran his fingers over its length never touching its surface yet detecting each minute contour and detail. Deeper, his focus intensified, he pushed his awareness beneath its outer shell and found beneath it the complex workings, the myriad of electronics which gave it power and there, nestled at its core, a perfectly cut, perfectly perfect crystal of the deepest, consuming red. A high-power, high-intensity bulb encased in tightly wound, incredibly durable glass pressed against the crystal and below that a battery/power-core combination. Keeping its contents secure and in place, a fibrous substance filled the voids and crevasses which might otherwise allow the guts of the tube be shaken and jarred with use.
Slowly, as if the act my unbalance the very fabric of time and space, Silk parted his lids and looked upon the cylinder with his own, pure black, eyes.
A smile, slight and subtle, creased his face and he allowed himself a moment of self satisfaction.
It was everything he had planned it to be; simple, uncluttered and in harmony with how Silk perceived the force and his place in it. Bits of unused equipment and tools of various description were scattered around the edges of the altar, surrounding the cylinder with a ring of chaos while it, at the center of such unaccounted debris, remained the undisturbed epicenter.
Spreading his fingers, his right hand hovering over its length, he exhaled a long held breath and, closing his fingers around the shaft, hefted its not inconsiderable weight. Hand upturned, again opening his fingers, the cylinder balanced neatly upon the heel of his palm. He felt its girth, considered its weight, and found its balance point exactly where he had planned. Then, with an almost imperceptible motion he flicked his wrist setting the cylinder to spinning evenly. One, two, three rotations passed before he clasped his fingers shut ceasing the spinning abruptly. With his right hand, and still holding it in his left, Silk found he was able to fit a palm and a half along its length comfortably.
“At last...”
Silk breathed, his words a mere whisper.
“The final test...”
His thumb, moving of its own accord, traced the last two fingers of his right hand resting, at length, upon an area of the cylinder innocuously subtle and finding there an indent obvious only to its creator. Moments passed and the the black, emptiness of the hall, stretched off in to infinity.
“No time like the present...”
And with a click, the culmination of his achievement became obvious.
In a flash of radiant crimson the oppressive darkness which, aside for a small work light, permeated the grand hall receded in the glowing, thrumming, humming brilliance of a red-shafted lightsaber blade.
His trepidation faded away at the speed of light, his doubt and concern that all of his efforts might have been for naught dispersed like the cowering shadows. His pride and self satisfaction, like the crimson glow which played across the stony features of the numerous Sith statues, spread out around him. He looked upon it, the shimmering shaft of cohesive energy and its intricately crafted heft, as a singular whole and found it good.
Moving with abrupt swiftness he speedily moved the lightsaber through the air and the tangy sting of ozone filled his nostrils. One motion followed another and then two and three more, he danced through the sword Kata as though combat was the farthest thing from his mind. This, he reflected, was art. Through the various forms he passed, through the countless poses and parries he twisted and spun. The youth flowing through his veins, the youth which filled his bones, gave him the freedom to move in ways which had been painful, restrictive in years passed. His eyes fell shut and a trance-like state overwhelmed him. He remembered himself as a young man, training with firearms, explosives and artillery. He remembered himself as a solider of the Empire and remembered himself in those days dreaming that there had to be more to combat, more to warfare then the crude weapons he and his peers practiced with. Years passed, he reflections shifted, and he remembered himself as a member of the Imperial Royal Guard and a loyal servant of the Emperor Palpatine. He could feel the cold steel length of his force-pike in his hands; the weapon which all guardsmen were instructed in. And then he was something more, Palpatine was dead and the Empire in shambles, yet salvation came to him in the form of Lord Maim. Reborn as the Sovereign Protector of Maims empire, the Crimson Empire, his training continued and while Palpatine had introduced him to the ways of the Force it was Maim who truly brought Silk in to the darkness of the dark side. His life changed once more; the Crimson Empire dwindled after the supposed death of Lord Maim resulting in his exile, alongside his brothers of the guard, on the barren world of Yinchorr. Life continued on that desolate rock and it was here that his understanding began to blossom under its own momentum. Liberation, a glowing moment in his memory, bloomed. A brief stint with the Sith Order passed as a blink and then we was with Dacian Palestar, teaching the youngster how to spread his will across the stars. And then he was here, on Xa Fel, and the Empire was knocking at his door.
His eyes opened again. Silk was sweating.
He was unsure how much time had elapsed, he did not care.
With a click he closed the lightsaber down and, looking upon it once last time, slipped it beneath his robes.
Days, at least, had gone by while he toiled to create his lightsaber. The ironic part; he had only embarked upon its creation to delay dealing with the Viscount. Something, some tugging of the Force, had inclined him towards delay. For his part Viscount del Forza had seemed equally inclined to allow such a delay which seemed odd to Silk until it occurred to him that perhaps the Inquisitor was planning some plot of his own.
And so, while he worked, the news continued to filter in. Bits and pieces of information, heralded by his attendants, reached his ears and the news was grim... at least for the Empire and the rest of the galaxy. While he had worked, delaying still, his impressions of the Force grew stronger. He felt, no... he knew that every moment he prolonged the inevitable the stronger his position would become. However, in his arrogance, Silk had failed to consider that the same might also be true of the Viscount and while, thinking upon it now, he could see no obvious advantage for the Inquisitor as far as Xa Fel was concerned he began to realize that his adversary, del Forza, likely had ambitions well beyond Xa Fel and was only using Silk and his Crusade splinter-group as a distraction while his plans played out.
These thoughts and so many more moved, like the swirling mists, through his awareness as he ascended the spiral stairs towards the upper levels of the temple. Caught mid-stride, a voice called out for him from above. Silhouetted in the stairwell door, the figure of a Xa Fel menial stopped Silk in his tracks.
“My Lord,” spoke the physically ravaged Xa Fel, a near-human species the victims of rampant pollution and toxic atmosphere, bowed his head. “The Grand Inquisitor has just returned from his vessel and he...”
The Xa Fel swallowed hard.
“... demands an audience.”
To both their surprise Silk did not react in anger or aggravation. Instead, resuming his patient climb up the winding stairs, he only nodded.
“Bring me a freshening bowl and towel. I will remove some of the days grime before I meet with the Inquisitor. You may instruct your fellows to welcome our guest, see that he has all he wants. I will be along shortly.”
The Xa Fel bowed again and vanished.
Silk, contemplative, prepared for their meeting.
Across a long, stone-cut table the two men studied each other in serene, subdued silence.
The Inquisitor, upon his initial arrival, had gained only a moments face-to-face meeting with Silk and in that moment had, by mistake or on purpose, called him by the name of his former master, Lord Maim. And Silk, for his part, had not corrected the other. Instead, quick to dismiss the Imperial envoy, Silk had offered up a paltry excuse that, given his unannounced arrival, the Viscount could not expect a properly prepared discussion of the pertinent matters and had further lied that, Sith mystic he was, Silk (in the guise of Maim) was deeply invested in an ongoing process which, if interrupted now, could have disastrous results. Then, much to his surprise, the Viscount had conceded and that attitude should have raised alarms, should have warned Silk that everything was not as it appeared. It did not. Silk had been thankful for the respite, had bid the Viscount good day and watched as the Imperial returned to his own ship to allow Silk (aka Maim) a few days to better prepare himself.
Xoverus and the others had, once the Viscount was safely out of earshot, begun to petition Silk. They, administrators and power grabbers themselves, wanted to know what their Lord planned. The impertinence of it infuriated Silk and he found himself lamenting the duties of governance. The catalyst, Xoverus and the others pushing him to explain himself, for his withdrawal to the depths of the temple was met.
And so, looking across the long table at Viscount del Forza, Silk found himself wondering how to proceed and yet not truly caring what the outcome might be.
“When first we met,” began the Viscount icily. “You were informed that I had come to talk, and for you to listen.”
Silk, glibly, cut in, “And I should answer, if necessary.”
“Yes,” answered del Forza curtly. “And on that note; you sit within the territory of the Empire upon a holding which rightly does not belong to you.”
Silk only nodded. His eyes, those pools of blackness, watched the Viscount with disinterest.
“You have further displaced the Sith Order, which being loyal to the Empire provided us, which is to say the people of the Empire, with valuable resources. What you have done here could easily be construed as an act of outright war perpetrated by yourself against the Empire.”
He let the threat linger.
“However, I see in this development an opportunity...”
He paused deliberately.
“The planet you have claimed has long exhausted itself as an asset to the Empire, in truth the last and only thing of value on this toxic rock was the Sith Order. As should be aware, the Sith Order has long held a place in the Empire, a place which many of the modern school of thought consider to be outdated and to be of compromise to the reputation of the Empire proper. The Regent Hyfe, as an example, has connections to that body and as such represents a desire to continue along the same lines.”
The Viscount was clearly not a fool. For all his carefully chosen words and eloquent manner it was obvious that beneath his collected exterior the man was capable of great and terrible things. This would have been a problem for most men. Silk, however; had spent his life with such men. Lord Maim was such a man. Emperor Palpatine was such a man. Even Dacian Palestar was such a man. Long ago Silk had learned that such men would always exist and that everything he took for granted, everything he dared to care about could be taken away in a flash and so had, long ago, learned that living in fear of such events was pointless, a waste of time and energy.
This is why, faced with the might of the Empire and its Viscount of the Inquisition, Silk seemed totally passive and removed. The same could not be said of Xoverus, nor could it be said of the Crone or Nocturnal. They represented a weakness, the chink in Silks armor. But to his mind Silk did not think del Forza the kind of man to both with such subterfuge, rather the sort of man to strap another to a table and torture him endlessly until finally getting what he wants.
“I propose, quite simply, that you agree Lord Maim to take the place of the Sith Order. I propose that you fill their position, the one which by force you have taken. I propose you do exactly as you are instructed to avoid having this planet, one which I remind you has no quantitative value to the Empire, razed to the point of removal from the star-charts.”
A long moment of tense silence passed between them.
The Viscount had to know that it was well within Silks power to obliterate the Imperial envoy, to bring the Crimson Emperor to bare and knock his paltry ship from the sky. He had to know this, which meant that he also knew something else; that doing so would surely spell the end for Silk and his splinter faction.
So far, he had not hurt the Empire. The Sith were an asset, but one which could be replaced. So far he had not done anything to warrant the wrath of the Empire. Attacking the Viscount would change all that and then Silk would be fighting a war he could not win.
The Viscount was offering him a way out, one which would allow both parties to chalk up a win, a victory. It was then Silk realized why del Forza had allowed the delay – he had no desire to fight for survival here, nor did he have any wish to return to his masters with anything less then the victory they all expected. He had allowed Silk the delay so ensure that Silk, whom he still regarded as Maim, would make the right choice...
... for both of them.
A moment passed. In that moment Silk considered; he could reveal the depth of his knowledge of the Empires current tribulations which, thinking, brought him to the conclusion that the Viscount knew this, knew exactly what Silk could say and that gave him further pause. Perhaps the Viscount had plans of his own for survival in whatever form the Empire might continue. Whatever the case, breaking such news probably would not gain Silk any higher ground. He then considered revealing the Inquisitors mistake, naming himself not as Maim but as himself. But that idea was quickly dismissed as he realized that such confusion could play to his advantage in the days, weeks or months to come.
He considered and he contemplated and then he said, “You have an agreement.”
“I will provide your Empire with what the Sith used to provide and expect in return the same as you offered them.”
The Viscount nodded, “Agreed. You will exist within the Empire though not as a part of it providing utter deniability should events transpire.”
“Fair,” Silk said. “What I provide to you will be repaid in kind. For our exports, you will provide imports.”
“Also agreed,” the Inquisitor nodded. “I believe we have an agreement.”
“I believe we do,” Silk agreed.
For the next hour the two men, having dismissed their aides, discussed the finer details of their arrangement but it was obvious to both that neither mans heart was in it. Silk, a man of the mystic force, was growing increasingly weary of the duties pressed upon him as ruler of Xa Fel and master of the crimson tide. The Viscount, an inquisitor, was not a bureaucrat and it was obvious that his attention was elsewhere in the galaxy. Regardless of their individual conflicts, the two achieved an agreement which was satisfactory for both parties and in most cases Silk deferred to the Viscount.
Another hour later and the Viscount was gone. His ship, pulled out of orbit, had blasted off to hyperspace.
Xoverus, joining Silk, sat down across from his liege.
“So now we are pawns of the Empire?” He asked.
“I doubt we will ever hear from the Empire again.” Silk countered. “If contact is kept at all, I believe it will be through their Viscount. The sensation was that he wanted an ace in the hole, a card in his pocket.”
“If you were thinking to spread the will of the Unspoken to the Empire,” Silk sneered at Xoverus, “you can forget about that.”
Xoverus shrugged. “The will of the Unspoken does as it wishes.”
Silk, standing, scoffed, “Of course it does.”
And then, exiting the chamber, he added sarcastically, “Priests...”
So, the people of Xa Fel under the rule of the crimson tide, were left largely to their own devices which suited Lord Silk just fine. The Empire was a distant neighbor fighting its own war against an enemy which threatened to utterly change the Empire forever. Whatever the outcome of that war, Silk chose not to worry as to how it might affect him. The Sith were gone and had shown no intention of retaking the Temple. On the other side of the galaxy the Crusade pushed on, fighting the Empire on yet another front while its master, young Dacian Palestar continued his quest and how this new arrangement might affect their relationship was of little concern to Silk.
Whatever the future might hold, Silk was not going to fear it.
The Force would always provide.