“Tell me what you regard as your greatest strength, so I will know best what to undermine you. Tell me of your greatest fear, so I will know what I must force you to face. Tell me what you cherish most, so I will know what to take from you. And tell me what you crave, so that I might deny you.” – Darth Plagueis
The Force is a common thread that unites us all.
The Force binds us.
The Force creates us. The Force sustains us. And in the Force, the Jedi found salvation. They found ever lasting life.
But what if…
What if the Sith could live forever, as the Jedi live always, but unlike those frail apparitions, would remain eternal – their bodies everlasting?
Others had come close, become ghostly spirits haunting the vestiges of their lives… but what if, just what if, one could live forever? Would that not be the ultimate achievement?
And if it could be done… who, who would make it reality?
Maim.
Silk.
Dacian.
Gods forgive us our arrogance.
Wake up.
Symbol, Home of the Crusade – Palestar
“Sith…”
Upon an open plain they stood, upon a broken plain torn asunder by the ravages of the machine, of the war machine. Hooded, black, their heads bobbed in time with their chanting and their chanting in time with their heads. Dark, brooding, they radiated hate, the would always dwell within a fountain of anger.
They chanted.
“Fear leads to anger.
Anger leads to hate.
Hatred leads to power.
Power leads to victory.
Let your anger flow through you.
Your hate will make you strong.
True power is only achieved through testing the limits of one's anger, passing through unscathed.
Rage channeled through anger is unstoppable.
The dark side of the Force offers unimaginable power.
The dark side is stronger than the light.
The weak deserve their fate.”
A dozen if one, they stood in the driving rain, the blood rain, their robes saturated through and bonding with the forming mud below. Faces black with soot, heads bowed against the sheer force of nature as it assailed them, they remained indistinct from one another. All around them were the cries of a planet doomed, lost in the throws of death, and like a beast of unyielding proportions, refused to go silently in to that dark night.
Even the sky was streaked red between the wandering giants, the black plumes of smoldering ash once cities and forests, towns and farms, now burnt in offering to the unspoken demons of hell.
“Sith…”
An army broke around them. Thick, hundreds of thousands of souls in parade, the campaign had claimed them and made of them servants of the machine, children of the crusade, doomed and bleeding crimson. Like nightmarish ghouls they decorated themselves in steel and leather, adorned their armor with the blood and skulls of their foes and painted their faces in the grime that was their work. With skin of sickening green and eyes sunken in burning sockets their jutting tusks climbed high above their jaws gnashing as they grunted along. They wore upon their faces their fates.
They chanted, a hundred thousand roaring, booming voices joined with the paltry few around whom they broke with respective distance.
They chanted…
“Peace is a lie, there is only passion.
Through passion, I gain strength.
Through strength, I gain power.
Through power, I gain victory.
Through victory, my chains are broken.
The Force shall set me free.”
“Sith…”
From a hundred miles away he watched, his lips moving in time. Sequestered in his chamber, a sphere of onyx stone bisected by an obelisk of the same, Lord Silk sat with knees crossed before the monolithic totem.
This was a meditation chamber, a space devoted to focus. This was Lord Silk, a man of crusaders spirit and this was the vision that haunted his dreams – a world of contrivances not his own and yet bestowed upon him.
Dacian…
He remembered…
Dacian, the student now long surpassed of his master in many ways, if not most, had confronted Silk, had faced the parts of himself that Silk could not face. The boy turned man, perhaps born more man then any had ever grown to become, had shattered his illusions. Illusions – he had thought himself a master of the force before, had considered himself the dominant force despite the facts, in spite of the future that Dacian would unfold for them all, but that illusion was long gone. The Palestar had stripped it from him and in so doing had allowed Silk to achieve the status that had long escaped him. It was ironic, he supposed, that the student should be the one to crown a master but it was well known, an adage among Sith and Jedi; with great comings there comes great change. For a time he had fought this simple realization; where Dacian shaped the Force, shaped his fate, he could not for Silk was and forever would be cut from a different cloth.
The name had taunted him, once. That time was long past and yet part of him remained that still harbored a deep and brooding yet undefined resentment. Since their confrontation on the planes of the ethereal upon which they had done battle Silk had meditated on this aspect of him attempting to explore it but for every examination he attempted it became more elusive and harder to grasp. For a time he suspected a thread, a thin line leading back to the earliest days of the Crusade at the height of his illusions during which Dacian had seemed to him dismissive.
Maim…
It had been in the guise of his old master, the Dark Lord Maim, that Dacian had faced Silk. Psychological warfare – it was the hallmark of all true Sith. The trenchant, fastidious approach he had employed against the others… he should have suspected it, anticipated it and plotted accordingly but in his mirth had become fixed, his vision tunneled, leaving Silk exposed. Thinking himself the superior, Dacian the student and submissive, Silk had bestowed upon the young man great powers at great expense to himself.
Power…
What was power but a means to an end? Was it the ability to shape reality, to bend destiny to ones own will? Or was it something else…
The flame that burns the brightest…
Dioan Silk turned his eyes, orbs consumed of onyx, over the gothic appointments that dominated his focusing chamber. Buried deep within the bowels of his ship, the Crimson Emperor, it was here that he found solitude, here that he had sequestered himself for many long weeks dwelling upon the providential changes that had been inspired within him. Initially, following their cataclysmic confrontation in the Force, Dacian had needed Silk frequently by his side leaving the elder Sith unable to allocate time for mediation. Recently, however, that had changed.
Symbol…
The planet below heaved. It was doomed. In a few centuries it would succumb to its wounds. But for now it was home to the Crusade, it was the seat of power for Dacian Palestar and a more fitting symbol there could not be. It had been named accordingly. Like some space borne fruit, it had been fed upon by a great force, a planet-eater, a god of the heavens, and now spewed it’s life blood, brilliant plumes of liquid hot magma spouting forth in to the abyss from mountains shorn up, tens of thousands of kilometers of concentric ridges thrust up against the crater torn deep to the planets very soul. It was poetry.
And that great force, the terrible power which did rend the celestial body asunder, was his to command, was the reward for his guidance – The Crimson Emperor had been commissioned by Dacian Palestar and bestowed upon Lord Dioan Silk in tribute for his assistance in making real the youth’s vision of conquest, of crusade. It was a testament to their power and a declaration. Kilometers long, kilometers deep, it was a monstrous creation inspired by a gothic aesthetic and while, in his career, Silk had commanded larger vessels at the head of bristling armadas this, the Crimson Emperor, was his own. Even this, however; was not enough to completely satiate his unease and had, in fact, caused that elusive feeling to somehow redouble itself, for he knew that in the mind of his once-student, Dacian, the ship was not a reward for guidance, but a payment for service rendered.
The word had acquired a disdainful taste. His life, his long life, had been one of service and devotion to powers greater then himself and though for much of it this had satisfied him he no longer took the same pleasure in it. Exile had changed him. On Yinchorr he had become a new man, a different man – he had developed in to a leader of men for it was by his resolve and his alone that they had endured their exile. He had learned lessons there, on that lifeless and blasted rock, which had only become crystal clear recently. Silk would have no masters any longer nor would he allow himself to be the servant of any man – only the Force, only the Dark Side would direct him now. On Yinchorr they had endured. His men, though fewer now then those glorious days, had persevered because of him and those that remained pledged to him not only their lives but their eternal souls. There was nothing they would not do for him; there was no questioning their loyalty. They had served him well, as he had served others, but they were too few to meet their new demands.
The Crimson Emperor was massive. A behemoth in the fashion of the oldest Sith lords, it did not incorporate the modern accoutrements common to modern warships. One of these shortfalls was in automation. Monumental were the manpower requirements alone. Within the Crusade there were millions, millions on the planet below alone, far more then he would ever need to crew the warship but none, not one of these broken and shattered souls would he allow aboard his personal property. They were bent, the subjects of the will of another.
Fortunately the Crimson Brotherhood was not alone in the galaxy. Under the banner of the Crimson Empire millions had obeyed the word of Lord Maim and by extension, his Hand, the Sovereign Protector Lord Silk. With the demise of that entity, inglorious though it was, Silk had been abandoned on the planet Yinchorr along a cohort of his Royal Guard but, and this had been key, others remained. Under Palpatine the Royal Guard had been numerous but their exact numbers were a closely guarded secret and had remained such for a very long time. Dark Lord Maim had sought to continue that tradition. Many, but not most, of the men loyal to Silk had been imprisoned on Yinchorr to assure they would not run rip shod across the galaxy. It had not been a simple matter to recall those men, but he had done it. His ship, partially crewed, was functionally mobile.
But he was not satisfied. Thousands more were needed. Worse still, while the loyalty of his fellow exiles was absolute, he could not be assured that those he had recalled were above reproach and for once he understood Dacian, understood the Void Knights and their maiden. He needed answers outside of the Crusade, outside of Dacian Palestar…
The Force was an ever present ally and he turned to it often but since the early days of the Crusade he had been withdrawn, less a presence in the dark side then once before. The reason for this was plain. Palestar had required vast amounts of power, power beyond his own grasp, power that Silk had been forced to supply. Hidden well, he kept his weakness cloaked in a veil of anger and deception. Even drawing strength from his men had not fully relieved his exhaustion. Only meditation, deep and thorough, granted him any reprieve.
He was, as they said, feeling his age.
Agelessness escaped him as it escaped so many. He had been a young man once, a virile and passionate. But that was long, long ago. With the rise of the Empire and the demise of the Republic, he was among the first Stormtrooper regiments formed up of raw recruits. Trained under the 101st, he had met first hand the clone troopers responsible for the Jedi Purge. That was where he had distinguished himself above all others, where the Force first touched his life. Emperor Palpatine himself had signed the orders that saw him become one of the elite, a member of the Imperial Royal Guard.
And then, Palpatine had died.
History is unkind to likes of the Royal Guard. Its own nature is even more unkind. Names like Jax and Kanos will live on in infamy.
Dark Lord Maim had sought to change that desperate fate but for all his efforts it had proved, by and large, futile. The Empire lived on. It deemed him and his Royal Guard bastards under a pretenders banner and reformed the Imperial Guard, the Royal Guard and the Imperial Royal Guard under various commanders all at various times. And though they would doubtless deem him the same, Silk clung to a tradition of his own.
He was a Sith Lord, a Dark Lord in his own right. He was the Sovereign Protector of a culture, a way of life. He was a crusader in crimson…
He closed his eyes and called upon the Force.
Wisps of unearthly fog drifted across the intangible infinity that was the Force.
In to it the spectral extension of himself was placed. Born of the Dark Side, he emerged from nothingness.
It washed over him like the concussive waves of a star gone supernova. It destroyed him, shattered his flesh as though it were glass, caused his being to flake away in the force of the onslaught. But he would not be put down. Welling up from within himself he met the destructive battering with increased resolve and for ever bit of himself it blew away he focused on re-growing it ten fold.
Pushing against it, he started forward.
This, he realized, was a vision.
Towards it he moved. His immaterial self ploughed through the tumult in the non-direction which, he perceived, was its epicenter. Slowly, inexorably forward, he pressed on.
Stars shot by him at light speed. He was moving through hyperspace against great pressure.
There, in the distance, a planet. A frozen husk, an orb of ice turning on a lazy axis, rotating about a distant half-dead star stared back at him. It blinked. It studied him, unspoken. It examined him, unspoken.
Unspoken…
Silk opened his eyes, black orbs of drifting dark, and studied his focusing chamber. Something was different, something had changed. He felt as though he were being watched. He felt… old.
On the floor before him, written in blood spilled from his own palm, were coordinates. Unsure, he formed them in his memory before wiping it all in to one bloody streak while still clutching in his left hand the dagger that had split his flesh.
It was watching him, waiting for him.
“Tell me what you regard as your greatest strength, so I will know best what to undermine you. Tell me of your greatest fear, so I will know what I must force you to face. Tell me what you cherish most, so I will know what to take from you. And tell me what you crave, so that I might deny you.” – Darth Plagueis
