More Witch Hat Atelier fanart in anticipation of the anime release that's coming sooooon! I'm so excited I can barely contain myself ahaha.
It's always such a challenge to mimic the lovely line art that Shirahama has perfected. My hand was hurting after just one drawing, I don't know how she does a whole manga like this. Pure magic ✨
Enjoy this animatic. I really think Hozier songs fit most of Sylus backstory. But 'In a Week' SCREAMS Beyond Cloudfall. (As Usual I added a Lil fanfic underneath because I think Sorceress MC POV is the most tragic there is. But I'm biased 🥀)
"I have never known sleep, like this slumber that creeps to me."
The horns broke through her skull, jagged, obsidian, cruel. She screamed, but not from the pain. Pain was an old companion, a constant shadow. Cast out, condemned, sacrificed as a witch, she had long since grown calloused to agony. The tearing of wings from her back, the shards blooming from her shoulders. None of it made her flinch.
No. What she could not endure was not the breaking of bone, nor the shedding of flesh.
What she could not endure was being left behind.
"I have never known colour, like this morning reveals to me."
Blood drowned her hands. Blood drowned the earth. Corpses sprawled across the altar, swords scattered among the ruins of the city, the air heavy with rot and burnt flesh. She stared, unblinking, unable to measure the weight of what she had done. These were the ones who named her witch. The ones who spat "fiend" when the dark grew restless beneath her skin. Monster, they cried, they cannot blame her if the monster answered.
Was this how he felt? Every moment of his cursed life?
"And you haven't moved an inch, such that I would not know."
His face was still. Too still. That voice, once sharp as flame, still echoed in her head.
You must press on.
Damn him. Damn his cruelty, damn his fire. He was always the fiend, not her. She had only followed. Followed him through skies, through endless fields of datura, across nations devoured by their hunger. Once, she believed it would always be the two of them. A single blaze against the world that wronged them.
"If you sleep always like this. The flesh calmly going cold."
She could not move anymore. Days...or was it weeks?... blurred into ash and silence. She only sat there, knees pulled close, staring at Sylus. At the sword driven through his chest. At the flowers blooming where steel had struck.
She waited for him to smirk again. To mock her grief. To open his eyes. She waited, striking out, whispering, cursing, begging, anything to wake him.
I FINALLY FINISHED IT!!! this was made and written before i finished chapter 3 of sylus event story (COUGH @blessdunrest yes i read it and will be adjusting part 3 of this mini comic accordingly COUGH) once again the 10 image limit on posts had me on a chokehold 😵💫
Unrelated note: im sorry if anyone feels annoyed with my update posts about delays or whatnot (like this post). If any yall feel like i should leave those posts untagged, please let me know 🙏 i just wanna vibe and exist making fat Mephisto content
This story happened in a galaxy, far, far away. It is already over. Nothing can be done to change it.
It is a story of love and loss, friendship and betrayal, survival and defiance. About what it means to be a Jedi, and what it means to leave that behind.
But this isn't quite the story you know or remember.
It isn't one told in grand council chambers or about legendary heroes, fallen or corrupt, but on the forgotten fringes — far from the battlefields that made history. Made canon.
A strange thing about stories—
Though this all happened so long ago and so far away that words cannot measure the time or the distance, it is also happening right now. Right here.
It is happening as you read these words.
The Jedi Order has fallen, darkness blankets the galaxy, you have somehow made it out alive to tell the tale.
The Force beckons.
Your choice starts now.
⸻ Adapted from Revenge of the Sith (2005), Matthew Stover
reader x zayne, xavier, caleb, rafayel, sylus (all separate)
warnings: slavery, death, mentions of suicide, master/padawan relationship (after that relationship is abolished bc. order 66 -- also, masters and padawans in canon are not characterized by age. a padawan can be older than 30. its not a traditional school), alternate dark endings that include yandere etc. abrupt tense change in rafayel's and sylus's i'm sorry, these were all written on different days and had some time inbetween them, so i slipped and wrote theirs in present tense 😭 also, in all of them, i wanted to keep it star wars lore accurate but don't go into it fully expecting 199% canon friendly, fanfiction is my oyster. i tried to explain but im sorry non-star wars gang you may not understand what the hell goes on in this one.... 💔
you have chosen...
Zayne, Your Jedi Master
Affiliation: Jedi Order (formerly, Council member) → Survivor in Exile
Homeworld: Coruscant
Species: Human
Force Alignment: Light Side (Jedi, Force Healing practitioner)
Weapon: Single green lightsaber
Era: Clone Wars → Empire
Character Inspiration: Obi-Wan Kenobi, Qui-Gon Jinn
Background
⟡ Zayne was once a legend in the making. From the moment his training began, it was clear he possessed an affinity for the Force unlike anything the Order had seen in a generation, supported by the unusual amounts of midichlorians in his blood. He passed his trials years ahead of his peers, and by his late twenties, he took his seat among the Jedi High Council — the youngest to do so in living memory. To his fellow Jedi, he became known as “the Healer,” a moniker earned not only for his rare and prodigious mastery of Force healing, but also for his willingness to cross battle lines to help planets and systems in need.
⟡ Yet Zayne was never truly at home in the chaos of conflict. He pulled his weight the Clone Wars with the serenity of someone determined to be a still point in a turning world. He avoided violence wherever possible, seeking peaceful resolution, sheltering the innocent, and healing rather than harming. Behind closed doors, he pushed back against the Jedi Council’s hardest edicts: the conscription of children, the acceptance of “acceptable” losses, the steady, shameful slide toward militarism that darkened the Order’s heart. He never rose to open rebellion, of course.
⟡ To the galaxy, Zayne projected unshakeable calm: eyes clear, wisdom measured, composure unbroken even as explosions rocked the hulls around him. But those closest to him saw the cost. Night after night, he wrestled with relentless insomnia and visions that left him gasping in the dark. These dreams, more like prophecies, showed him a future self cloaked in black, crimson blade drawn, committing unspeakable acts. Everyday, he meditated for hours, seeking solace in the Force, clinging desperately to the Light. The visions made him gentle to a fault, slow to anger, deliberate in all things, determined to shape a fate different from the one that haunted his sleep.
Relationship with You
⟡ You became Zayne’s Padawan in the early chaos of the Clone Wars, a last-minute assignment that left you standing, a little uncertain, beside a man who was barely older than you but already the Order’s rising star. The age gap was only a handful of years, but Zayne’s demeanor, the measured calm, the weight of sorrow in his eyes, the way he moved through the motions in the Temple as if he’d been haunting its halls for decades, often made him seem impossibly old. He could be gentle and patient, his instructions never harsh, but his expectations for you were unyielding. Because of the changing times, he instilled in you vigilance instead of serenity. You learned quickly that every lesson, every exhausting drill or meditation, was a form of protection, a way for him to armor you against a galaxy that was growing colder and more uncertain by the day.
⟡ Unlike many Masters, Zayne didn’t teach you by rote or force you to recite the Code until it lost its meaning, leading you through winding Temple gardens, down to silent meditation chambers, even out beneath unfamiliar stars on distant battlefields. He showed you how to listen — to the wind, to the pain of others, to the subtle current of the Force that connected all things. When you faltered, frustrated or afraid, he met you with steady patience, avoiding offering easy answers, only guiding questions.
⟡ In rare, vulnerable moments, he let you glimpse the cracks beneath his calm: his doubts about the Council’s decisions, his fears about the direction the Order was taking. These moments felt like precious secrets, small shards of trust passed quietly between you when the rest of the world was looking elsewhere.
⟡ The longer the war dragged on, the more you found solace in each other. You shared a language of coordinating through glances alone through battles, laughter in low voices as you patched up battered clones, silent moments side-by-side after difficult missions. The simple act of meditating together, or tending wounds in the medbay, became an anchor, something unbreakable and quietly sacred.
⟡ Every loss, every brush with death, thinned out the line between mentor and mentee. He let you see his grief, his exhaustion, the ache that came from trying to heal a galaxy bent on tearing itself apart. And in turn, you let yourself reach for him, not just as a Master, but as someone who understood your heart, your longing for peace, your unwillingness to become another blade in an endless war.
⟡ It was inevitable that affection would take root, hesitant and messy and tangled. When you realized your feelings had shifted into something deeper and more dangerous than loyalty or friendship, Zayne sensed it before you ever put it to words. He addressed it gently, with the same honesty and care that marked everything he did. “It will pass,” he told you in the hush after a battle in which you almost lost him and saw your feelings come to the surface, his tone tender, not dismissive. “You will outgrow this.”
⟡ But there was something in his eyes — something he never voiced, a flicker of regret — that told you the struggle was not yours alone.
Post-Order 66
⟡ When Order 66 tore through the galaxy, you were on different fronts, separated by light-years. As the Clones started attacking you instead of the Separatist droid army, communication channels went dark, panic, betrayal and the Jedi comrades you could feel in the Force going dark one after the other replaced clarity and purpose. In that confusion, you both felt the other’s presence snuffed out like a candle, as well.
⟡ Before any of you could return, no, retreat to back to the Temple on Coruscant, however, every surving Jedi received Master Kenobi's distress signal through the beacon: This is Master Obi-Wan Kenobi. I regret to report that both our Jedi Order and the Republic have fallen, with the dark shadow of the Empire rising to take their place. This message is a warning and a reminder for any surviving Jedi: trust in the Force. Do not return to the Temple. That time has passed, and our future is uncertain. Avoid Coruscant. Avoid detection. Be secret... but be strong. We will each be challenged: our trust, our faith, our friendships. But we must persevere and, in time, I believe a new hope will emerge. May the Force be with you, always.
⟡ You believed your Master had died. He believed his Padawan had been felled among countless others.
⟡ In the end Zayne, managing to get away by the skin of his teeth, was consumed by the unbearable belief that he had failed not only you, but everything he ever stood for. The Order was gone. He wasn't sure any Jedi remained in the galaxy. He, and the Council, were unable to sense the plot that had been unfolding right under their nose. The Clone army that had been given to them, fighting by their side, suddenly turning on them to eliminate them. None of them had been able to see it coming. He hadn't been able to. Because he'd been so self-obsessed, judgement clouded with his own visions.
⟡ And above all else, he mourned you. He replayed those final hours in his mind until they blurred — his own desperate flight, the deafening comm chatter, the endless stream of distress calls from Jedi scattered across a thousand systems. He hadn’t been there for you when you needed him most.
⟡ Had you called out to him, reaching through the Force for your Master, your friend? Had you believed he had abandoned you in the darkness, left you to die alone while clones turned on their commanders? The thought tore at him every time he closed his eyes to get some sleep: the possibility that your last moments were spent in fear, betrayed not just by the galaxy, but by him. He remembered every promise he’d ever made to protect you and be by your side, that you two were going to get through this together and build a better future. All of them were broken all in a single night.
⟡ Unable to reconcile his own role in bringing about the end of his own Order and the death of so many, Zayne abandoned the weapon that had defined him. It wasn't a decision he made as carrying a lightsaber out in the open would give out his identity. The simple fact was, holding a lightsaber triggered flashes of his nightmares, visceral and suffocating, the sight and sound of his blade igniting plunging him into memories of screams and death. Over time, he began fighting only when forced, reluctantly developing a martial arts-centered style, fluid and precise, leveraging agility and careful redirection of force rather than aggression. It was a practical necessity, but also a rejection born out of trauma.
⟡ Years passed quietly, far from Imperial eyes. In the hidden places of the Outer Rim, stories began to spread of a quiet, wandering healer who appeared without warning, treating injuries and illnesses no one else dared touch. Zayne asked nothing in return, trading meditation guidance or old Jedi wisdom for simple shelter or a meal. He helped farmers, refugees, runaways, and lost souls alike, moving on quickly to avoid leaving any lasting mark. But even kindness felt like penance, never enough to lift the burden he carried. Every life he saved felt like an apology whispered to you across the stars.
⟡ After the Purge, you learned quickly that survival depended on motion and discretion. You reinvented yourself as a wandering courier and occasional mechanic — skills you’d pieced together from years of battlefield repairs and resourceful improvisation in warzones. With a battered astromech droid and a starship patched from scrap, you traveled system to system hauling goods, offering occasional repairs, and delivering coded messages for desperate outlaws and small-time traders who couldn’t risk Imperial entanglements. Word of mouth and barter became your currency. You learned to slip through checkpoints, talk your way out of trouble, and vanish when danger grew too close.
⟡ Then, you tracked the rumors what you thought could be a Jedi survivor — bewildered conversations in a cantina, a half-remembered story from a Twi’lek child in a borderlands camp, the trail of a doctor who mended wounds without asking credits or names. The pattern felt familiar: kindness in the shadows, gone by dawn. Every so often you’d find a sign left behind, a meditation stone, a faint trace in the Force, the memory of someone gentle and haunted. Hope was painful, but it was all you had.
⟡ It took months to finally catch up to him, on a dust-choked world with no name, in a village battered by a recent Imperial raid. You found him at the edge of a makeshift medical tent, hunched over a wounded farmer, his once-careful long hair chopped short and streaked with grey that had nothing to with age, the lines on his face deeper, his robes patched and faded. He looked up, sensing you before you spoke, and in that silent instant the years folded away.
⟡ You just stared at each other, struggling to breathe, both searching the other’s face for some proof that this was real. Grief and relief mingled and ached together like an old, yellow bruise becoming red and purple again — the brittle shell of hope you’d carried for years cracking open with a single look.
⟡ He started to stumble over words he’d rehearsed a thousand times, but you shook your head, not ready for forgiveness, not ready for blame. There was too much between you. You asked him, simply, to let you help with the wounded. He nodded, wordless, hands shaking as he handed you bandages. Working side by side in tense silence, the two of you moved through the injured, falling into a ritual you’d once known so well.
⟡ Later, by the low fire of a crumbling barn, you called him "Master," but he corrected you that he was no longer that, and you were no longer his Padawan. There weren't any Jedi here in this room, and you couldn't disagree, heart aching that he didn't deserve that title anyways. The truth came out in fits and starts. You told each other how you’d survived, the running, the losses that had carved you down to the bone. Zayne confessed how he’d abandoned his saber, how the sight of it made his hands shake. You told him of the things you’d done, the people you couldn’t save, the guilt you both carried like another set of scars.
⟡ There were tears, and awkward hugs, and a slow, stumbling warmth that neither of you dared call hope. When you finally slept, it was side-by-side, shoulders brushing, neither of you willing to be the first to move away.
⟡ With the dawn, there was no grand decision. The Empire still hunted your kind; the galaxy was no less cruel. But it was easier to breathe with someone who understood. Despite him telling you that you could go, and that he wasn't your Master, that you had no reason to stay by his side, you traveled together, at first only to the next village, then the next. You weren't about to abandon this man who had fallen into such ruin and become a ghost of his former self propelled forward to survive only by the desire to punish himself for a failure that wasn't his.
⟡ You never called yourselves Jedi again. The word was a wound. But you developed a new purpose: wandering from system to system, healing quietly, teaching how to take care of themselves to refugees and children, slipping away before the Empire’s reach could catch up. He came along for the ride with your courier job and made a home in your starship. You were never quite safe, never quite whole, but the work gave meaning to your days and made the nights bearable.
⟡ You were not what you had been. You were not Master and Padawan. You were not the Order’s last hope. But you were alive, sticking together, finding a fragile peace in a galaxy that had tried to break you both.
⟡ Sometimes, in the hush before dawn, Zayne would look at you as if seeing you for the first time — hopeful, uncertain, almost ready to let himself believe that even after all this loss, love could endure.
Personality
⟡ Stillness, patience, and a quietly overwhelming presence. Zayne’s compassion is not weakness — it’s the steel at his core.
⟡ Lowkey, but never naïve; a subtle sense of humor emerges when least expected.
⟡ Prone to long silences, meditation, and questions that cut through your defenses.
⟡ Never lost his healer’s hands, but the war changed his voice. He’s older, heavier now, slow to trust, quick to forgive.
⟡ Struggles to accept joy, but can’t help reaching for it when you’re near.
Route Themes
⟡ Master/Padawan longing. Power imbalance, slow-burn respect, a connection built through survival and trust, not just rank, the student becoming the teacher in the end to the Master who has lost his way.
⟡ Detachment vs. Desire. Jedi teachings, forbidden love, the tension between duty and the simple, persistent truth of want.
⟡ Healing and Guilt. The question of whether survivors deserve happiness, and if the past can ever be left behind. "We have to do better" and "We have to be better" quotes come into play, and learning to apply them through a positive light stripped from burden, guilt and responsibility.
⟡ Redemption through Connection. Choosing one another, not as Jedi, but as people broken by war and remade by forgiveness.
Endings May Include
⟡ You and Zayne find a forgotten moon in the Unknown Regions, a quiet world where the Force is a gentle current and the Empire never looks. You build a life among forests and rain, tending to each other and the wounded wanderers who find their way to your door. Zayne finally lets himself rest, and the line between Master and Padawan fades into a partnership of equals. When he has healed enough, together, you and Zayne gather a handful of scattered Force-sensitives, rogue Jedi, lost Padawans, those failed by both Empire and Rebellion. You form a secret enclave, a new kind of Order where attachment isn’t forbidden, where the Force is honored in all its forms. Zayne becomes the quiet architect of something gentler, and you become his anchor — partners not just in the Force, but in hope. The galaxy never learns your names, but you have made sown the seeds for a tomorrow made by those you have saved.
⟡ The visions that haunted Zayne all his life finally come to pass. In a desperate stand against the Inquisitorius, you are struck down before his eyes, a casualty of the war neither of you chose. All the careful meditation, all the dogma of the Light, are cast aside by a grief so consuming it feels holy, and the Dark Side suddenly makes the most sense it ever has against a universe that allowed you to unjustly perish like this. It's not with rage that he embraces it, but clarity, a willingness to do what the Light never allowed. With chilling purpose, Zayne chooses to fall, and becomes the shadow in his own visions: he destroys the Inquisitorius from within in a matter of months, hunting them down one by one. When his vengeance is complete, he seeks you in the only way left — walking unflinching to his end, dying by his own hand at your grave, utterly unrepentant, having lost all his faith in the Light Side that failed you.
⟡ Gravely wounded shielding you from Imperial hunters, Zayne’s life flickers out with dawn painting the horizon. His final words are soft—a benediction in your ear, not a goodbye: “Keep the light in your heart. That’s where I’ll find you, always.” In the years that follow, he returns to you as a presence in the Force: a hush at your shoulder, a silhouette in the corner of your dreams, a gentle warmth guiding your hand when doubt creeps in. He teaches you to feel the living Force, to walk in both memory and hope. You grow old, carrying his love in every scar and every smile. He remains unchanged, a flicker, a guardian, the keeping of a promise never broken. When your time finally comes, your last breath finds him waiting — young, ageless, and radiant, his hand reaching for yours beneath a sky that never truly darkens. At last, you step into the Force together, luminous and at peace: love undimmed, reunited beyond the end.
you have chosen...
Xavier, the Empire's Prodigal Son
Weapon: Single white/silver-bladed lightsaber (purified from a Sith crystal)
Era: Clone Wars → Empire Era
Character Inspiration: Darth Revan, Din Djarin
Background
⟡ Xavier was born in secret on Naboo, his existence shielded from public record until his father, then-Senator future Emperor, carefully introduced him to the galaxy. Even as a child, Xavier learned to move quietly through the palatial halls of Theed, his every word, gesture, and silence monitored by eyes both loyal and treacherous. To the outside world, he was the model heir: pale, reserved, strikingly intelligent, and always a half-step behind his father, too perfectly mannered to seem real.
⟡ By the time he was old enough to sense the electric charge of the Force all around him, Xavier’s destiny was already set. Palpatine denied the Jedi’s polite requests to “evaluate” his son, using political leverage and bureaucratic obstruction to keep Xavier off Coruscant’s radar. Instead, the Emperor arranged for clandestine Sith instruction — using trusted agents, ancient holocrons, and even his own presence. Xavier’s days were spent mastering fencing and protocol, his nights, in shadowed chambers, learning the Sith arts. The curriculum was brutal: meditation in isolation, survival games, lessons in manipulation and the machinery of fear. Weakness, especially the weakness of compassion, was scorned. All mistakes, big and small, brought “correction.” Every act of cleverness was rewarded with a sliver of approval, always just out of reach.
⟡ Sidious's meteoric rise reshaped Xavier’s life into something scripted and suffocating. He became a living symbol, rarely allowed to speak unscripted, his education handled by the finest tutors in galactic history, languages, and philosophy. But beneath the silk and etiquette, he was isolated. Friendships were discouraged, affection was transactional, and loyalty to his father was enforced by unspoken threats and rewards.
⟡ During the tumult of the Clone Wars, Xavier is Palpatine’s carefully hidden ace, the apprentice whose existence the Jedi never suspect. While the galaxy sees him as a polite, reserved son to the Chancellor, he is steeped in Sith training behind closed doors. Outwardly, he attends Senate sessions, charity galas, and diplomatic banquets as the model aristocrat, always present but never quite at home.
⟡ Whenever the Supreme Chancellor needs a problem solved without drawing the Jedi’s attention, Xavier is quietly dispatched. He deals with inconveniences in the Senate, manipulates or eliminates Republic officials who sniff too close to the truth, and ensures Palpatine’s web of secrets remains untangled, carrying out assassinations, sabotage, and diplomatic manipulation, yet with each mission, the conflict inside him grows.
⟡ Though the Jedi sense a growing darkness, they never suspect Xavier—the Chancellor’s own son — of being the elusive shadow behind failed Separatist plots and vanished dissidents. He’s even been dispatched by his father to shadow Jedi missions, observe their tactics, and report back, all under the guise of “Republic security liaison.” At times, he is ordered to let his targets live, planting evidence or rumors that fuel discord between the Jedi and the Republic.
Relationship with You
⟡ You first met Xavier during a tense negotiation on Coruscant, both of you young and burdened with titles you never asked for. As a Jedi Padawan assigned to “diplomatic security,” you were expected to be vigilant but invisible, yet your instincts kept drawing your attention to the Chancellor’s silent son. He rarely spoke unless spoken to, had the posture of a prince and the presence of a ghost, eyes cold and unreadable. His politeness felt flawless, almost protocol droid-like, but every so often, you caught a flicker of exhaustion or distant pain in his dissociation.
⟡ When an assassin’s shot went astray during a senate summit, you threw yourself between him and the blaster’s path, taking a glancing hit meant for his heart. Xavier, in shock because this wasn't a part of the plan and paranoid if his father was trying to get rid of him for a new apprentice (as it was the rule of the Sith, everyone betrayed each other), tried to dismiss your pain with icy courtesy, but you ignored the droids and medics, tending to him with quiet stubbornness until he finally relented. It was the first time anyone had truly seen him beneath his layers of duty, a moment of raw vulnerability he’d never known. Your gentle insistence, your genuine concern, and the ease with which you offered comfort, without expectation or calculation, became a turning point. After that, he lingered after meetings, sometimes inventing excuses to cross your path, drawn by a need he didn’t yet understand.
⟡ Conversations in the corridors of power grew into secret moments. He was careful, never letting the galaxy see what you were to him, but in the quiet spaces between battles and banquets, he let himself be, asking about your training, your dreams, your doubts about the war. He shared memories of Naboo’s lakes, fragments of childhood lost, thoughts on the burden of legacy. With you, he laughed for the first time in years. You taught him to value small kindnesses, to question orders, to wonder what lay beyond his father's design. Contact with you in any occasion, an accidental brush of hands, a too-long glance, was a risk, an act of quiet rebellion against the role he was meant to play.
⟡ As the Republic faltered and Jedi found themselves isolated, Xavier’s position became untenable. He’d been raised to be the perfect tool, the heir of darkness—but you made him long for something different. Love, to him, was a dangerous and revolutionary force: to care for you was to betray everything he’d been taught, to risk the wrath of his father and the fury of the Sith. However, he couldn’t stop himself. Protecting you became his obsession and an expression of his independence, sometimes subtly, other times at great risk, using his influence to steer missions, tip off allies, or shield you from the worst horrors of war.
⟡ But the galaxy was spiraling toward catastrophe, and he knew—sooner or later—he would be commanded to turn against you. You were Jedi. You were meant to fall. Loving you was the first and only decision he’d ever made for himself, and if fate demanded your life, Xavier would have to choose: obedience or rebellion, darkness or the hope you awakened in him.
Post-Order 66/Empire Era
⟡ The night Order 66 shattered the galaxy, Xavier received a direct, unmistakable command from his father, now Emperor himself. He had known, perhaps from the start, about the quiet, forbidden feelings Xavier harbored for you, a Jedi, an enemy. This order was his final trial: a test not of strength, but of devotion. If he were truly loyal, he’d be the one to hunt you down, to end your life personally as proof of his dedication to the new Galactic Empire and the Sith way. Xavier’s father knew precisely how deep the blade would cut, and how thoroughly this betrayal would break his son’s humanity.
⟡ Xavier chose rebellion. Quietly, ruthlessly, he turned his extensive Sith training and shadowy connections toward a single purpose: saving you from the bloodbath of the Jedi Purge. He tracked you under the guise of a Sith assassin, using the terror of his red blade and Imperial authority as cover. When he finally caught you, cornered and desperate, he stunned you into unconsciousness, whispering apologies you would never hear.
⟡ You awoke days later, hidden in a secure, isolated safehouse deep within the Outer Rim, far from Imperial reach. It was only then you learned the truth that fractured your heart completely: Xavier, the reserved and gentle son of the Chancellor, the boy whose quiet affection you had come to cherish, was a Sith apprentice. His saber was crimson, just as it had appeared in your darkest visions, and everything he’d ever told you felt tainted by betrayal.
⟡ You ignited your saber and leveled it at him, demanding, through grit and unshed tears, that he pick up his weapon and fight. He was a Sith, he should kill you, right? He did not. Instead, he let his saber clatter to the floor, the light dying at his feet, leaving only your blade and the roaring anger in your heart.
⟡ You could have killed him. Should have, maybe, every rule, every instinct, every loss behind you screaming for retribution. But you couldn’t force your hand, not even as you pushed the tip of your blade against his chest and waited for his true nature. He only stood there, empty-handed, watching you with something shattered behind his silence.
⟡ Rage finally boiled over, then. You struck him, open-handed, slaps and fists, every accusation built over years of war and loss pouring out through your hands. The strikes landed with the sick satisfaction of impact, but they didn’t move him. He took each blow without protest, without even the dignity of flinching, as if he needed them, as if they could somehow absolve him for everything he’d done and everything you’d lost.
⟡ You hit him until your strength broke and your vision blurred. The saber you had turned off because the Jedi in you couldn't bring herself to kill, slipped from your grip and clattered to the floor. You screamed questions at him, about trust, about lies, about the friends you would never see again, about all the innocents that had died. Monster, he was a monster. You asked him why he didn't stop it. You asked him why he'd saved you and nobody else. He only answered with silence. A cruel one to you, but to him, there were no words that would give back what was lost.
⟡ And when there was nothing left but your sobs wrecking through the empty safehouse, he stooped to retrieve your saber, set it quietly beside you, advised you to keep your head down and that you had everything you could ever need in this house, and left. He didn’t ask forgiveness or try to explain. He simply walked away, bearing every wound you gave him and every one he could never name, leaving you alone with your anger and your heartbreak and the knowledge that nothing would ever be the same again.
⟡ From that moment onward, Xavier vanished from your sight, but never from your life. As you struggled alone in the lawless corners of the galaxy, constantly hunted by the Empire’s relentless Inquisitors and bounty hunters, you slowly became aware of a presence in the shadows. Imperial patrols disappeared, pursuers inexplicably vanished, surveillance records mysteriously corrupted. Xavier became your ghost, silently eliminating anyone who threatened you, always from a distance, always without ever revealing himself directly.
⟡ It infuriated you. His constant, silent watchfulness felt like both a comfort and a torment, a relentless haunting of what you’d lost. You never saw his face clearly, only glimpses of a pale figure at the edge of your vision, disappearing before you could call his name. Always close enough to protect you, always too far away to confront.
⟡ Gradually, Xavier shed his former identity, surfacing in whispered rumors of the galaxy’s darkest corners as Lumiere, a bounty hunter of unparalleled skill and ruthless efficiency. Lumiere took special interest in contracts on Imperials, corrupt officials, and traitorous Inquisitors. His reputation soared: an anonymous phantom sought to be hired by everyone. Secretly, each contract was chosen carefully — targets who threatened you or those like you, systematically erasing Imperial evidence of your existence and quietly dismantling the network meant to hunt Jedi survivors.
⟡ During these long, lonely years, Xavier underwent a transformation of his own, wrestling the darkness from his heart. Painstakingly, he purified his Sith kyber crystal, turning it from blood-red to a pale, brilliant white, a symbol of the redemption he sought not for himself, but to be worthy of your memory.
⟡ Years passed, and you, too, had adapted to survive, becoming a bounty hunter yourself. Your path occasionally overlapped with Lumiere’s work, technically making you colleagues within the vast, shadowy underworld. Though you knew who Lumiere was and the Empire was still looking for its lost prince, you were aware that he'd left you with the decision of taking the first step, whether you would kill him or confront him. He was waiting for you, a friend or an executioner, always.
Personality
⟡ Quietly intense, restrained. Speaks little, watches much, and rarely reveals his true intent.
⟡ Emotionally self-denying, but not heartless — his compassion emerges in dry humor and small acts of unexpected kindness.
⟡ Years of palace intrigue and Sith discipline have made him suspicious, strategic, and wary of trust, but yearning for something real.
⟡ Haunted by his father’s legacy, and determined never to become him.
⟡ Treats the Force as a burden — uses it only when absolutely necessary. The white blade is both weapon and warning: he cannot fully escape the darkness that made him.
Route Themes
⟡ Almost lovers to enemies, "I did it for you", and second chance romance
⟡ The burden of legacy and upbringing vs. the freedom of the real self
⟡ Mercy as rebellion x "My mercy prevails over my wrath"
⟡ You and Xavier as partners on the run — outlaws, fugitives, but never alone
⟡ Making peace with a future neither of you expected
Endings May Include
⟡ In the end, you cannot forgive Xavier. In a final confrontation, he refuses to fight you. “If this is justice, then let it be yours.” You strike him down. His last words are a plea for your future, not his own. The Empire loses its shadow before they can reclaim him, and you’re left with the heavy peace of vengeance, forever haunted by what was lost.
⟡ Together, you become the galaxy’s most wanted as a pair of legendary outlaws. Sometimes you’re partners in heists; sometimes you lay low as lovers in a nameless starport, always looking over your shoulders but always together, building a new code that belongs to no one but you two.
⟡ Xavier returns to the heart of the Empire, taking up his birthright as the Emperor’s son and the Sith's Apprentice. The cycle is complete. In the end, as all Sith do, Xavier — finally forced to choose between you and his father — kills the Emperor in a storm of power and fury, taking the throne for himself. The galaxy quakes as Xavier is crowned the new Emperor and secretly, the only Sith Lord, casting aside all pretense of hiding. He offers you a place at his side, not as a prisoner, but as his equal: his Empress, partner, and co-ruler of a reborn Empire. The two of you rule from the heart of Coruscant, your love as much a weapon as any saber. Together, you reshape the galaxy’s future, shrouded in legend, fear, and a twisted, immortal devotion. Whether you temper his darkness or revel in it by his side is a choice left to you, but one thing is certain: the galaxy will never be the same.
you have chosen...
Caleb, the Fallen Padawan
Affiliation: Jedi Order (Padawan, former youngling clan) → presumed dead → Imperial Inquisitorius (eventually becomes Grand Inquisitor)
Homeworld: Alderaan
Species: Human
Force Alignment: Light Side origins; walks a razor’s edge as a Dark Side user (never truly Sith)
Weapon: Double-bladed reddish orange lightsaber (Inquisitorius design, never bled, just looks like it was bled); formerly single blue saber
Era: Clone Wars → Empire Era
Character Inspiration: Anakin Skywalker, Trilla Suduri
Background
⟡ Caleb’s first memory was sunlight filtered through ancient stone — high arches, endless corridors humming with quiet, soft, serene presence and peace. He had been brought to the Jedi Temple as an infant, placed in the care of the Order before he’d learned to speak. If there was a family beyond the walls of Coruscant, he never remembered them; the Temple and its way became the shape of his entire world. Your friendship was woven into that world so deeply that he could not imagine a life without you beside him, the pin in his pinwheel through every trial and triumph..
⟡ He grew up in one of the Temple’s tightest clans, a group of younglings bound more by shared experience than blood. You were his shadow and his mirror, both of you learning the Jedi forms, the meditations, the ancient histories recited under the stern gaze of instructors. It was a childhood shaped by discipline and doctrine, but you and Caleb always found moments of laughter in the cracks: racing across the Temple gardens after curfew, sneaking extra portions in the refectory, daring each other to explore the forbidden nooks and unused archives.
⟡ Caleb was gifted from the start. Quick to master lightsaber sequences, even quicker to master the sunny grin that always helped in getting you out of trouble. And you always got in trouble. He was the model youngling any Master would want as a Padawan, and you were "the problem". Too rebellious, too hot-headed. He always believed in you and your abilities, though, and even though you didn't say it out loud, it got you through your worst. You would have ended up in the Service Corps if it wasn't for his support.
⟡ Fiercely loyal, quick-witted, and unafraid to bend the rules for the sake of a friend, Caleb was always the first to cover for your mischief. When you got caught slipping out after lights-out, he’d take the blame. In the training halls, he’d let you win just often enough to keep your spirits high, teasing you mercilessly when you didn’t notice the times he pulled his strikes. His laughter could chase away the sting of even the harshest reprimand from the Council, and his presence made every hardship bearable.
⟡ But beneath the supposed self-satisfaction and his brilliant performing status, he nursed secret dreams of the stars: late at night, he would whisper his hopes of flying starfighters, leading ExplorCorps squadrons after being knighted, chasing freedom beyond the Temple walls. It was a private ambition, shared only with you, the one person he trusted never to laugh or judge.
⟡ As Padawans, your bond only deepened. You became each other’s anchor, adversary and accountability partners in training and friendly rivalry, confidants in whispered late-night conversations, partners in every daring scheme. There was a tenderness between you, an apple growing out of the innocent flower of its tree that should have stayed as a flower.
⟡ The Jedi Code was clear, and you both learned to fear the Council’s watchful eyes. Lessons on attachment became lessons in concealment: to school your faces, temper your voices and eagerness, hide the simmering feelings that were ready to boil over behind a mask of calm.
⟡ For Caleb, those feelings were a fire he could never quite extinguish. He buried them deep, training harder, flying faster, throwing himself into missions with a hunger for distraction. But when he was alone with himself and there was nothing to numb and crowd his mind with, when the galaxy seemed too vast and the Temple too empty, he always found his thoughts turning back to you — the friend, the rival, the one person who made the Force feel less like a duty and more like home.
Order 66
⟡ You both were still Padawans when it happened. The Temple was a nightmare of red-lit corridors and echoing blaster fire. You and Caleb pressed on through the chaos, shepherding two terrified younglings named Kevi and Mia, one clutching your robe, the other barely keeping pace. The smell of smoke and scorched stone was unbearable, but you encouraged them through the Force as you hurried them through secret passageways and sealed corridors. It was a gamble, a wrong turn could mean death.
⟡ In the hangar, hope was almost within reach a surroundered ship clearly laid as a trap for any Jedi would come this way waiting. There was no time to think, only to act. It was then Caleb’s hand found your arm. In the Force, you felt the pulse of his decision, his love, his unspoken goodbye. You couldn't even react. Without a word, he stepped forward, drawing every eye and every blaster to himself. His saber flared blue in the smoke. He shouted — at you, at the children, at fate itself — urging you to run, to live, to save them when he could not.
⟡ You hesitated only a breath, then gathered the younglings and sprinted for the ship. Behind you, blaster bolts cracked through the air, the snap-hiss of Caleb’s blade the only thing holding chaos at bay. You shoved the children inside, the smallest sobbing into your tunic, the older one biting back terror for the sake of the younger. You looked back once, just in time to see Caleb’s silhouette wreathed in smoke, the only source of light amid the ruin. His blade whirled, a brief shield against the impossible, and then he was gone — lost in a hail of blaster fire and a wave of Force agony that nearly knocked you to your knees.
⟡ You slammed the hatch shut, hit the launch, and piloted the ship away from the Temple’s dying light, managing to outmaneuver the chasing ships only because of Caleb's piloting tips and tricks that had come handy through the Clone Wars. The children clung to each other as you drifted into the void, their soft cries the only sound. Your heart screamed to go back, to fight, to search the wreckage for any sign of him, but you couldn’t. He'd made his final wish clear. You had lives to protect.
⟡ Moving forward was the only choice left. The pain of leaving Caleb behind burned in you like a second sun, but it was that pain — and the small hands gripping yours — that drove you onward, into the darkness of survival.
Empire Era/Inquisitorius
⟡ Long before Order 66, Sidious had calculated that his purge would never be perfect. Of course some Jedi would slip through. He needed more than the Clones, he needed a new breed of hunter that knew the Jedi inside and out. The Inquisitorius Program began in secret: dossiers compiled, agents placed inside the Temple’s walls, their purpose simple: find Jedi who might bend, not break. Sidious paid special attention to Padawans and Knights who chafed under the Council’s rules, those whose grief or doubts made them vulnerable. He kept lists of those too close to the edge, and his spies, servants in the archives, instructors with secret debts, even healers in the medbay — watched, waited, and reported. Discontent was currency. Affection, a weakness to exploit.
⟡ Caleb had always seemed the perfect Jedi on paper. Skilled, charismatic, loyal to his friends. But there was a fault line running through his heart, and Sidious’s agents saw it clearly: the quiet way he watched you, the fire behind his eyes whenever the Code was invoked to shame or divide, the reckless, defiant streak that surfaced whenever love was threatened. What no one else knew, what even you hadn’t realized, as that Caleb’s faith in the Order had begun to rot. He’d grown tired of the secrecy, the emotional self-flagellation the Council demanded. Your bond became the wedge that Sidious’s spy needed. A single moment, a longing look shared when you thought themselves alone was all it took. His name was added to the Emperor’s list.
⟡ Instead of being killed on the spot during his last stand, Caleb was subdued, bound, and spirited away to an unknown Imperial black site. Induction into the Inquisitorius was never the same for any two candidates. For some, the Emperor promised power and survival if they’d turn. For others that were set on their Jedi ways, the way was paved with agony — torture, deprivation, mental and physical torment designed to break the will and flood the soul with hate and fear. Caleb was offered the former, but only on the understanding that if he refused, you and the children you’d saved would be hunted to extinction and he couldn't do anything about it. He agreed for leverage.
⟡ Sidious saw through the ruse. As punishment, Caleb was handed to Darth Vader, who subjected him to trials so merciless that the scars would never fade. His right arm was severed and replaced with cybernetics, a gift for his final rite of passage and of his “promotion.” He was given the name "First Brother".
⟡ Basically shooting through the ranks, Caleb became one of the Empire’s most efficient assets: the Grand Inquisitor. Outwardly, he was the Empire’s cold enforcer: mask, red blade, chilling reputation. Inwardly, he never stopped searching for you, never stopped trying to keep you safe. Secretly, he fed the Empire false leads, sabotaged hunts, and erased traces of your existence wherever he could. His mastery of the dark side was real, but never complete. His love for you was his final anchor, the line he refused to sever.
⟡ You became a ghost the day you left Coruscant. For a while, your only mission was survival: keeping yourself and the two younglings alive as you fled from system to system, never staying anywhere long. Every night, you told yourself it was only temporary, that the galaxy would right itself, that you could find the last survivors and rebuild something of what you’d lost. But the galaxy had no mercy for Jedi, least of all for a fugitive with children in tow. You forged new skills, slicing into Imperial records, blending in with smugglers, stealing ships and credits when there was no other choice.
⟡ Years passed in a cycle of pursuit and escape. The younglings you protected grew older, learning to blend, to hide, to survive, and you delivered them to safer hands. You never stopped looking for other Jedi, or for scraps of the old Order. Sometimes you found them scarred and embittered, and sometimes you found only graves. As the years went on, you became bolder. You sabotaged supply lines, orchestrated prison breaks, passed vital intelligence to the nascent Rebel cells. Your code was simple: the Empire would not hunt children if you could help it. For every Force-sensitive the Inquisitors tracked, you were there first, spiriting them away, buying time with bluffs and blaster fire.
⟡ Your refusal to die quietly, your reputation for rescuing Force-sensitive children, and your knack for evading the Empire made you infamous within the Inquisitorius. You became the obsession of more than one hunter, but only one ever seemed to truly find you.
⟡ The Grand Inquisitor developed a pattern. When he caught you, he’d back you into a corner, sometimes with a warning in the Force, and other times with a clashing of sabers, always with the sense that he was holding back.
⟡ At first you resented his persistence. Then you questioned his failures. How could the Emperor’s most ruthless hound be this inept? How did you keep slipping through his fingers when everyone else fell? It began to nag you how familiar his presence was, the way his duels with you always left you alive.
⟡ When the truth finally came out, when you struck down the Inquisitor’s mask to reveal lightless eyes and a half-broken smile with the same devotion as when you were kids — it was both a betrayal and a homecoming.
Personality
⟡ Caleb is all heat and ache beneath a soldier’s discipline. He laughs with his whole body, but rarely lets himself anymore.
⟡ Fiercely protective, self-sacrificing to a fault, he would take a blaster bolt for you without hesitation.
⟡ The Jedi taught him restraint, but it’s your friendship and your memory that have kept him from falling into true darkness.
⟡ As an Inquisitor, he’s sharp, commanding, almost cruel in battle, except with you. You’re the line he never crosses.
⟡ Haunted by guilt, convinced his hands are too stained for peace, but still hopes for redemption, if not for himself, then at least for you.
Route Themes
⟡ Friends to enemies to lovers. A bond forged in childhood, tested by war and loss, remade in the fires of Empire.
⟡ Sacrifice and moral ambiguity. What is the line between survival and betrayal? Can love survive the choices made to protect it?
⟡ Redemption, forgiveness, and agency. Your story is as much about forgiving yourself as it is about forgiving him.
⟡ Hope after devastation. Finding life — and love — where you thought nothing could grow again.
Endings May Include
⟡ You convince him to fake his death with you and leave the Empire behind. You take over an abandoned Inquisitor fortress together, transforming it into a hidden sanctuary for lost Force-sensitives, orphans, and runaways. Caleb leads as a protector from the shadows, and you create a home, your found family thriving in the ruins of what once was meant to destroy you. In the epilogue, he's a General in the Rebel Alliance and a Rebel Pilot.
⟡ Caleb chooses to remain Grand Inquisitor, but only if you become his “right hand” — his secret within the Empire. The two of you walk the knife edge: lovers by night, Imperial rivals by day, weaving coded messages and sabotaging the Empire from within, all the while dancing with danger and forbidden affection. No one in the Empire suspects a thing — except perhaps Vader.
⟡ Caleb arranges for you to be safely spirited away — never to meet again. Years later, when the Empire falls, you discover a hidden cache: a holorecording, a faded blue lightsaber, and the truth of everything Caleb did. He is long gone and has died as a villain, but he leaves you one last message: “Live free. That’s all I ever wanted for you.”
you've chosen...
Rafayel, the Senator of Lemuria
Affiliation: Lemuria (King → Senator)
Homeworld: Lemuria (hidden ocean world, Deep Core, neutral but occupied)
Species: Lemurian — amphibious, rare, long-lived; masters of illusion-based telepathy and underwater sign language
Force Alignment: Unaligned (Force-sensitive; specializes in psychic illusion, perception warping, mind tricks)
Weapon: Vibrodagger
Era: Clone Wars → Empire Era
Character Inspiration: Cassian Andor, Padmé Amidala, Leia Organa
Background
⟡ Young, reluctant King of Lemuria: burdened by a throne he never wanted, often skipping his own council meetings to wander the deep, but cares fiercely for his people and their traditions.
⟡ True power on Lemuria lies with its elder council; Rafayel’s role is more symbolic. Yet in crisis, he is the only one who can unite both the old and young of his species.
⟡ Lemuria is a legendary, nigh unreachable (surrounded by so many nebulae) ocean world in the Deep Core, protected by treacherous waters and the illusion abilities of its people; neutral during the war, but courted by both sides for its Force nexus.
⟡ The negotiations between Lemuria and the Republic are painful and protracted. The Jedi are polite, but Lemurians — Rafayel especially — see outsiders as a threat to their fragile peace.
⟡ You, as the Padawan diplomat sent there along with your Master, spend months navigating the labyrinthine currents of Lemurian court and council. Every meeting is a dance: sometimes you wait days for Rafayel to summon you, other times he vanishes to the deep with no warning, mocking you to learn Lemurian sign language if you want to come along with him, otherwise you'd be lost immediately, as you two wouldn't be able to communicate underwater.
⟡ The elder council is patient, but Rafayel is deliberately difficult: teasing, evasive, questioning your purpose. Sometimes he refuses outright to attend his own council’s meetings if it means dealing with Republic officials.
⟡ Yet, over time, a pattern emerges. Rafayel starts calling you to private meetings — ostensibly to discuss politics, but the conversations drift:
⟡ He asks why you care so much about a world that treats you as an outsider. He challenges your Jedi ideals, mocking the Code but also asking if it ever feels lonely to serve an order that demands you hold nothing for yourself. On rare, quiet nights, he offers to show you the bioluminescent reefs, teach you the sign language, Lemurian music, or the sunken temples that no outsider has ever seen, then vanishes again, leaving you wondering if you imagined the invitation.
⟡ When a Separatist plot unfolds and you’re gravely wounded defending Lemuria so it won't be forced to choose sides (as you want the decision to be natural, and they should be left alone if they want to remain neutral), it is Rafayel — not the council — who sits beside your bedside in the hidden medical sanctum. For days, he won’t let anyone else near.
⟡ The next time you can properly converse, he’s softer, his sarcasm gentler. “You bleed Lemurian colors for people who barely remember your name,” he says. “Why?”
⟡ You challenge him back: if he truly loves his people, why is he so willing to see them isolated, friendless, while the galaxy burns? You call him fatally indecisive — careful, but honest.
⟡ It is this confrontation, and your pain on Lemuria’s behalf, that finally moves him. For the first time, Rafayel attends the council in person, vouching for you and the Republic’s cause. His speech is short, dry, and biting: “If we must trust anyone, let it be the one who nearly drowned for us and still stayed.”
⟡ The alliance is formed on Lemuria’s terms, at Rafayel’s word. Trade, protection, and the bare minimum of galactic involvement. They are still not a part of the Republic, but they're on its side.
⟡ In the weeks and months that follow, your roles shift. You are no longer adversaries but confidants, forced together in the liminal hours between council business, planetary crises, and the constant threat of Separatist retaliation.
⟡ Rafayel grows to trust you, bit by bit. He confides in you about his loneliness, his duty, and his terror that he will fail everyone if he ever truly opens his heart. You share your own doubts, the way the Jedi Code feels both sacred and suffocating.
⟡ The bond between you forms slowly, but once acknowledged, it is fierce: glances held too long during council debates, late-night swims where you speak only in Lemurian sign, safe beneath the waves, shared silences where the Force hums with the tension neither of you can speak.
⟡ Finally, when peace feels possible — when Lemuria’s future seems safe, at least for now, and when word comes that you might be reassigned — Rafayel asks you, quietly, if one day you can stay. He respects the Jedi path you're on, because it's been chosen by you, so he will never ask you to leave it. But he does proclaim how he's come to adore you, and wants nothing more than to keep you in his ocean forever.
⟡ There has been nothing that made you feel you've belonged somewhere more than the Lemurian mission has. As an average Padawan that has been questioning your place and morals during wartime when your kin weren't the Peacemakers they were supposed to be, striving and succeeding to protect Lemuria and becoming beloved here has been equivalent to heaven's fullfillment.
⟡ You admit you would stay forever, if the galaxy allowed it.
⟡ Your eventual secret marriage is a Lemurian ceremony: you exchange tokens, each carving a piece of memory into the other’s palm — a small cut, a pressed thumb, a flash of the Force. The vow is spoken underwater, sealed by a moment of shared breath. Only the sea and bears witness.
Order 66 & Aftermath
⟡ When Order 66 begins, you are offworld. Even before news travels to Lemuria, Rafayel feels your agony through the Force as the bond you share is violently severed. He feels you die.
⟡ And at the same time, his world is crumbling: the Republic collapses, the Empire rises, and Lemuria, even though never a true Republic member, finds itself under sudden, hostile Imperial occupation. He can't leave his planet, he can't look for you, isn't given anything other than a supposed Jedi treason that led to them being dealt with.
⟡ Rafayel, grief-stricken and enraged, cannot function as king, the more he can't get off the planet, the more he spirals. But he's told to get it together by his aunt. For the sake of his people.
Empire Era/Insurgency
⟡ He makes an impossible choice: he steps down as king, leaving Lemuria in the hands of his formidable aunt, someone trusted by the elder council, strong enough to hold the world together under threat. Outwardly, he claims it’s to better serve Lemuria’s future, privately, it’s a calculated move. Only as a senator in the Imperial Senate can he gather intelligence, build alliances, and play the long game. The title shields his true work, even as it puts him under constant Imperial scrutiny.
⟡ Life on Coruscant becomes a kind of exile for Rafayel, a daily parade of verbal chess, false smiles, and endless, suffocating luxury. In every gilded hall, senators and dignitaries vy for the Emperor’s approval, trading rumors and slander as if it were currency. Lemuria, in their eyes, was a curiosity: a world to be mined, its former king a symbol, its senator a pawn to be wined and dined, never trusted.
⟡ But it was the talk of the Jedi — your name, spoken with sneering contempt or careless condescension — that truly tested his composure. The very senators who toasted the Empire’s “peace” never tire of spinning stories about traitorous Jedi, about how the Order’s “foolish idealism” brought ruin, or about how “it was a mercy” they were purged. Each time, Rafayel endures in silence, face blank and pleasant. No one knows that every word spoken against the Jedi was an insult to the only home he’d ever found offworld. He becomes a master of deflection, his smile as sharp as a knife, feigning ignorance or offering a barbed joke, never betraying the grief and fury that wants to kill everyone in the room for slandering your name.
⟡ Behind the facade, Rafayel becomes a node in the nascent Rebellion’s network. He passes coded messages through art, encrypted sculpture, or Lemurian song. Senators like Bail Organa and Mon Mothma become his cautious allies — aware of his true loyalties, respecting his boundaries, but relying on his connections in the Deep Core and his planet’s unique resources. Under the surface, Lemuria itself becomes a hotbed of quiet resistance, protected by its illusions and treacherous seas, with Rafayel’s reports and smuggled supplies making the difference for both local insurgents and the wider Rebel cause.
⟡ The summons comes cloaked in bureaucracy, as most Imperial orders do: a string of new relief missions, all carefully designed to burnish Lemuria’s “cooperation” and pacify restless systems at the edge of the Empire’s reach. For months, Rafayel has made these forays into the Outer Rim under the flag of humanitarian aid, distributing medicine, surveying the wounded, offering platitudes to Imperial governors while passing coded messages to rebels. This time, the destination is a bleak planet whose name barely registers on Senate rosters, another world left threadbare by the Empire’s justice.
⟡ The Lemurian council praises his service; the Emperor’s sycophants applaud his diplomacy. Only his most trusted allies understand the true value of these missions. Rafayel’s hands deliver aid and solace, but they also work the knots of rebellion, smuggling hope where none is meant to grow.
⟡ Still, this time feels different. In the weeks leading up to departure, Rafayel finds himself stalked by visions, dreams where the sea sings with a voice he can’t quite reach. On the ground, the relief effort unfolds as expected: supplies distributed, officials placated, children soothed by the gentle, foreign cadence of Lemurian.
⟡ He finds himself returning to field, day after day, making excuses — checking on water purification, inspecting field medics, searching for nothing in particular, drawn in by something in the Force that grows stronger.
⟡ Thinking he might have found a surviving Jedi, Rafayel investigates in disguise, keeping to the shadows. He sees you first from a distance: hunched in a tattered cloak, weathered hands clutching a worn satchel, moving with the wary caution of someone who’s been hunted too long. You barter for supplies in awkward, clipped gestures — your voice never rising above a whisper, if at all. He follows you, keeping his distance. It’s not caution that holds him back, but terror: the Force hums with recognition, but your posture, your hair, even the way you walk is unfamiliar. He fears it’s a trick, his own longing conjuring ghosts. Then he catches a glimpse of your face in the firelight — just for a heartbeat, the same eyes he loved beneath Lemuria’s oceans. He almost calls out, but the word catches in his throat.
⟡ At night, you work late by lanternlight, grinding herbs and sorting vials. He sees the townsfolk at your door, taking your medicine, leaving you with broken belongings in exchange. No gratitude. They are swiftly dealt with that he has a long window to get close to you, alone.
⟡ Rafayel tries to speak to you in Basic, at first, a gentle greeting, a question about his “ailments,” an attempt to spark some distant recognition. You freeze, staring at him with suspicion, and when a neighbor steps into view you slip away, vanishing with the ease of someone who has learned to survive by running. He tries again. And again. Each day, he finds reasons to cross your path, sometimes under the guise of needing supplies, sometimes just to watch from a distance as you work. He leaves small gifts at your door: herbs that you use for your medicine, flowers, pretty stones sometimes inscribed with Lemurian symbols to see if you recognize them. It’s only when a storm floods the town and you find yourself stranded outside, struggling with your heavy basket, that he steps close enough for you to see the sign language he uses, the swift, fluid movements of Lemurian hands, a language you should not know. You respond excitedly, hands shaking.
⟡ For the first time, you truly look at him. There is something just beneath the surface, confusion and longing and a grief you do not understand. That night, you dream of a warm ocean, of hands twined in yours, of a promise made in a language without sound.
⟡ Rafayel is gentle but persistent. He visits every day, never asking for more than you can give. He helps repair your roof, fetches water, sits nearby in silence while you work, never crossing the line between presence and intrusion.
⟡ He notices the scars, old and new, the way you sleep with a dagger beneath your pillow, the way your shoulders tense at every loud voice. He realizes just how much you’ve suffered, how deep the wounds go, learns that your voice is gone and it's trauma related, not a physical injury. You mouth words, but nothing comes. In dreams, you flinch from touch, reliving old terrors you can’t name.
⟡ When the townspeople harass you, accusing you of curses, theft, or crimes you never committed because of your warnings that come real through Force visions no doubt, interpreted as a bad omen by people, Rafayel is the one who stands in their way. At first, he uses illusion to confuse and misdirect them. When that fails, he makes examples of the worst, ensuring they will never threaten you again. Rumors spread: the witch has a demon for a protector now. Nobody dares to cross you again.
⟡ As weeks pass, you become less afraid. You start to wait for him at your garden gate, to leave out a second cup of tea. You laugh, a small, rusty sound, at one of his jokes. Some days, you sign stories to him, simple things: a strange dream, a memory of swimming, a favorite flower from a childhood you cannot place.
⟡ One night, after you’ve had a nightmare so severe you nearly break the door trying to escape, he collapses in front of you, tears rolling down his face, saying, "I'm sorry, I'm so sorry I couldn't protect you, I'm sorry I wasn't there. Come back to me, please come back to me. I would have done anything. I’ll do anything now."
⟡ He wants to take you away from here, but at the same time, the life he leads isn't the most perfect or desirable one. The time is ticking until he has to get back to the Insurgency again, and he has to choose what to do.
Personality
⟡ Sardonic, irreverent, fiercely loyal; prefers teasing and humor to direct confrontation, unless someone threatens those he loves.
⟡ Introspective, old beyond his years, yet startlingly youthful and impulsive when he lets himself feel.
⟡ Has the soul of a poet but the heart of a survivor. Expresses grief through action, love through devotion, and fear through stubbornness.
Route Themes
⟡ Healing from trauma, reclaiming self and voice
⟡ Survival, exile, and the forging of new legacies
⟡ The burden and power of the crown versus personal happiness
⟡ "What happened to you? Who did this to you?"
⟡ Love as a force stronger than memory or violence
⟡ Hope returning, even after everything is lost
Endings May Include
⟡ Unable to bear the thought of you suffering any more because of the Empire, Rafayel asks for your help to utilize your Force Bond, and calls upon the deepest reserves of Lemurian magic. He weaves an impossible shroud across the stars, a living illusion seeded into the HoloNet itself. Lemuria slips quietly from galactic memory. The change is subtle but absolute: star-charts and navigation relays begin to rewrite themselves, records fading or fragmenting, travelers forgetting the very route that brought them close. Even seasoned cartographers, navigators, hyperspace scouts, astrogation droids, traders, fleet dispatchers, find their plotted courses inexplicably rerouted, sensors slipping past the nebulae as if guided by a gentle, unseen hand. Astrogation archives in the Senate, bounty hunter records, even black market smugglers’ maps all reflect the new “truth”: Lemuria simply does not exist anymore. Every Imperial bureaucrat tasked with monitoring Lemuria is subtly repurposed, memories blurring at the edges until they move on to new assignments. The small garrison left behind in Lemuria is quietly absorbed and digested. Any who try to report the truth find their words faltering, their data corrupted, their minds turning gently away from the memory as if waking from a dream. Only a handful in the galaxy remain aware of Lemuria’s existence: those trusted few sworn to secrecy, and those rare souls the Force itself chooses to guide across the shifting tides. You and Rafayel remain at the center of this lost paradise, ghost royals in a world forgotten by all but destiny. The violence of the past recedes, and in the soft embrace of Lemuria’s sun and sea, your memories slowly knit back together. There are no more wars to fight or vengeance to pursue — only days of healing, gentle laughter, and peace. Rafayel’s vengeance fades to memory, replaced by a quiet, abiding joy: the victory of keeping you safe and whole, hidden from a galaxy that once devoured everything he loved. In the end, obscurity is freedom, and the two of you are legend, living proof that love can rewrite even the stars themselves.
⟡ Rafayel cannot bear to lose you — not to the Empire, not to your mind, not to the cold tide of fate. When gentle methods fail, he uses every secret of Lemurian Force teachings, every desperate scrap of his power, trying to force the pieces of you back into place. He tells himself he’s helping you, healing you, loving you the way he always promised. He breaks your mind, utterly, irreversibly, and you end up losing your sense of self completely, docile, beoming childlike with not one thought behind your eyes anymore. You don't recognize him. You don't recognize yourself. In his terror and guilt, Rafayel cannot let you go or entrust you to anyone else. He removes you from the outside world, taking you with him back to Coruscant. The meaner senators call you his "little bird" or "child bride" due to your deteriorated state, interested in the little pet he's decided to keep after coming back from his humanitarian mission. He doesn't parade you around, however, hiding you from all the curious eyes. When Lemuria is finally reclaimed after the Rebellion triumphs, Rafayel installs you in the highest room of the restored palace. You live in luxury and comfort, but you are kept isolated from the world for your “safety.” Rafayel becomes deeply reclusive, devoting his life to caring for you. From this point forward, you exist as a gentle, obedient presence, no longer able to make decisions or express independent will. Rafayel never remarries or takes another partner. The people of Lemuria come to refer to you as “the moon in the cage” — a figure both mourned and revered, their queen that never was.
⟡ Rafayel quietly arranges for you to be smuggled, under diplomatic pretenses, to a safe location: one of the hidden bases used by Lemuria’s insurgency network. This base is remote, protected by being underwater, populated by loyal Lemurian agents, and sympathetic outsiders. Here, you have time to recover, away from the Empire’s gaze. You spend weeks, then months, among the Lemurian resistance: healing physically and mentally, learning again who you are, surrounded by gentle security and practical help. Rafayel visits as often as he can, bringing small comforts from what once was 'home' for you two, and arranges for discreet healers, trusted rebel psychologists, and Lemurian artists to help with the trauma that still lingers. During this time, you begin to remember: small flashes at first, then dreams, then names and faces. With Rafayel's patience and the Lemurians’ rehabilitation, your speech returns, though you still prefer Lemurian sign. You slowly reclaim old skills — meditation, connection back to the Force, self-defense, the delicate art of moving unseen and helping others in small, vital ways. Sometimes, resistance members ask for your help with coded messages, triage, or strategy from a Jedi who has fought in the Clone Wars and survived. Piece by piece, your sense of agency grows stronger. Rafayel ensures you are never pressured into fighting, only invited to contribute as you wish. One day, when your memory and purpose are fully returned, Rafayel sits with you and asks what you want — truly want — for the first time since he found you. You tell him: you need to fight for the galaxy, not just for Lemuria. All the Jedi can't have died for nothing. You can't have gone through so much just to sit back and watch. The Empire has to be defeated. The Rebellion is rising, and while Lemuria’s people need him, your path is to work more directly, for yourself and all your fallen comrades. Rafayel understands, even though it pains him, he will not be the man who cages you, even out of love. With contacts from Lemurian intelligence and his blessing, you make the leap from recovered refugee to covert agent for the Rebellion, becoming a "Fulcrum", which is a title used by agents and spies early in the Galactic Civil War, with the purpose was to gather and distribute intelligence, and recruit new members to the rebel cause. Meanwhile, Rafayel returns to Coruscant and his double life, never revealing your survival and continuing his own work. Through coded communications, secret rendezvous, and rare, precious meetings, you remain each other’s anchor. Your love endures. When the Rebellion finally declares itself, when Lemuria’s flag joins the Alliance and open war against the Empire begins, you and Rafayel are at last reunited in public as spouses in crime, having reclaimed what was lost.
you've chosen...
Sylus, the Pirate King of Onychinus
Affiliation: Onychinus Syndicate (rules from the shadows of Nar Shaddaa and the Outer Rim underworld, pirate fleet leader)
Homeworld: Unknown (claims several; his records are always forged)
Species: Human (rumors say otherwise, no one’s sure)
Force Alignment: Dark Side user, unaffiliated with Sith or Jedi, walks his own path
Weapon: Red lightsaber (custom hilt, single blade; used as a symbol more than a tool)
Era: Empire Era (crimelord ascendant)
Character Inspiration: Darth Maul, the Stranger, Nightsisters
Background
⟡ Born to unknown parentage in the lawless fringes of the Outer Rim, Sylus spent his earliest years traded from hand to hand as property — first as a street rat in the slave quarters of Nar Shaddaa, then as a gladiatorial combatant in Hutt-run blood pits. As a child, he was forced to fight for the amusement of his masters, surviving only through a vicious cunning and a knack for reading opponents’ moves before they made them. His first brush with the Force was entirely instinct, a predator’s sixth sense honed under the pitmaster’s whip.
⟡ By adolescence, having experimented a lot and with more mastery over the Force, Sylus had gained notoriety as a prodigy in the arenas, known for impossible victories and a savage refusal to die. In the chaos of a slave uprising orchestrated in secret, he killed the Hutt who owned him, rallied fellow slaves, and vanished into the night with a handful of survivors. Over the next decade, whispered stories of a pirate leader began to circulate: a ghost who struck at slaver convoys, melted into the void, and left nothing but carnage in his wake.
⟡ Allegedly, this happened eons ago that people in the Underworld regard Sylus as an immortal. Everyone speculates about what he is. Perhaps, he lived during the times when the Sith were a species.
⟡ Sylus is the architect and undisputed ruler of the Onychinus Syndicate — the largest, most elusive criminal network in Hutt Space, butting heads with other crime lords daily. The Syndicate spans dozens of Outer Rim systems, running smuggling operations, pirate fleets, information brokering rings, and a shadow economy fueled by vice and secrets. His flagship, the Voracious, is crewed by liberated slaves and outcasts from every corner of the galaxy, loyal to Sylus above all else.
⟡ He wields the Force in ways that defy Jedi and Sith traditions: his abilities are brutal, raw, improvisational, and patchworked by every text and information he could get about just what he was wielding, shaped by years of survival and defiance. If asked by Jedi, he would say "I'm what you would call a Sith," able to cloud minds, sense lies, tear through mental defenses, and even manipulate technology through the Force, shorting out holonets, frying droid circuits, and twisting security systems to his will. Rumors swirl of darker talents: Force-driven rage in combat, uncanny luck, and an ability to vanish from sight or mind.
⟡ Information is his sharpest blade. Sylus is a legendary slicer, adept at breaking the tightest encryptions and weaponizing data. He trades in blackmail, holonet manipulation, and psychological warfare, toppling rivals or governments without ever firing a blaster. His network of spies and informants reaches into the Imperial bureaucracy, criminal underworld, and even the rebel cells struggling to stay hidden.
⟡ While his methods are ruthless and his motives hard to decipher, Sylus is infamous for dismantling slaver syndicates and sabotaging Hutt power wherever he finds it. He’s the one who burned Jabba’s palace to the ground, who “abolished” Hutt rule on Tatooine by pitting the planet’s syndicates against each other and arming the enslaved. For many, he’s a terror; for the desperate, a legend whispered about in hope.
Empire Rule, or Ruline the Empire
⟡ You, once a Jedi Padawan, now fallen into slavery after Order 66 as you were unable to navigate the crime cesspool of the Outer Rim, end up sold to a Hutt, stripped of your name, and any possibility for a future. Which, your survivor's guilt tells you that you fully deserved.
⟡ When cornered by the Hutt for refusing to break, you let loose the Dark Side in a raw, stunning display, strangling the Hutt with the Force, killing him in full view of his court, knowing you’ve signed your own death warrant.
⟡ As chaos erupts, Sylus enters the scene, captivated, intrigued, and utterly fascinated. He was coming to kill the Hutt himself, but finds you there: surrounded by chaos, blood on your hands, wild-eyed and radiant with raw, untempered power. You are fascinating, the most exquisite contradiction: a Jedi losing herself, all the more beautiful for her ruin.
⟡ Rather than allow you to be killed in the crossfire or let your transmitter chip be activated by any of the Hutt's court, Sylus “claims” you — publicly declaring you his, liberating you and saving your life but throwing you into the heart of his pirate domain.
Relationship with You
⟡ But Sylus is not your savior. He’s your captor, benefactor, and tempter — all at once. You've fallen from the hands of one evil to the pit of another. He says you can leave any time, but also warns you the only safest place for your kind in this galaxy is right here in his territory. If you don't want to be caught by Inquisitorius, your best bet is sticking to Onychinus for a new life. Sticking to Sylus.
⟡ For a long time, you mistake him for a Sith. The truth is more complicated: Sylus mocks both Jedi and Sith, wielding the Force as his weapon, with no faith in “codes” or “orders.”
⟡ He overtakes the role of rehabilitating a Jedi as a personal project, showing you the galaxy’s underbelly, the thrill of being unbound by any code but your own. He offers a dangerous education: using the Force to its fullest as liberation. Not the path of the Sith, but his path — pleasure without shame, strength without apology, cunning without cruelty (unless warranted).
⟡ He wants to see you fall, but not into misery, he wants you to choose yourself for once, to savor every want you ever denied. Rather than punish your outbursts about right or wrong, he celebrates it, pushing you to embrace your passions, desires, and the power you’ve always been told to fear.
⟡ He surrounds you with luxury but never lets you forget your debt, freedom in exchange for your trust and your greed. Endlessly pleased when you refuse to work for him, but would accept to work with him. But you still have a long way to go, starting soft as a 'freelance shipping redistributor'. But he's certain you'll come around from a smuggler to a pirate, eventually.
Personality
⟡ Sylus is all effortless charisma and impossible confidence; nothing frightens him, and he’s rarely interested in anything. You happen to casually break that last rule. He's curious about everything regarding you, even what the most, that includes him once, would regard as boring.
⟡ He mocks both Jedi and Sith, calls them children fighting over scraps while he rewrites the rules.
⟡ Morally ambiguous to the bone: capable of unspeakable cruelty, but also strange, ferocious loyalty for those he claims as “his.”
⟡ Sees your darkness not as corruption, but as potential, and is endlessly patient in drawing it out.
⟡ Teaches through provocation, seduction, and challenge: “What if your anger and greed are holy? What if pleasure is a lesson? What if you never belonged in a cage at all?”
Route Themes
⟡ Seduction to darkness, but with a twist: freedom, not corruption, is the goal.
⟡ Survival and self-ownership: reclaiming agency in a world that chews up the good.
⟡ The thrill of being wanted for everything you are, including your flaws.
⟡ Outlaw romance: partnership in crime, mutual obsession, the danger of becoming the legend you once feared.
⟡ The Jedi Code, re-examined: what if the rules were made to keep you weak?
⟡ Falling together. Or rising apart.
Endings May Include
⟡ Throughout your time together, hints drop about your missing memories and strange flashes of Imperial interrogation rooms and red-bladed Inquisitors. You experience gaps in time, unexplained reactions to Imperial agents, and an occasional, unsettling sense of déjà vu whenever you hear certain code phrases. Unbeknownst to both you and Sylus, you were captured and forcibly reconditioned by the Empire after Order 66. They implanted a behavioral trigger, your “Jedi” survival was allowed solely to infiltrate and dismantle criminal threats to Imperial control. As you rise in Sylus’s organization, the Inquisitorius activates your sleeper protocol using a trigger phrase broadcast across the HoloNet. Your demeanor shifts overnight: you betray hidden Syndicate strongholds, sabotage Sylus’s fleet, and leak his operations to the Empire. Sylus realizes the truth too late — he recognizes the signs of brainwashing, understanding you were a tool made to destroy him. But it's too late. It's love that brings about his downfall, not any enemy. The Empire seizes Sylus, parading his defeat as a victory. You’re rewarded with a high-ranking position and public recognition, but privately haunted by memories that begin to return — flashes of your time with Sylus, your real feelings, and what you’ve lost. The ending closes with Sylus imprisoned in a high-security Imperial facility, hinting that Sylus still believes in you, waiting for the day you’ll break free from Imperial control and choose your own fate, maybe even to bring the Empire down from within.
⟡ When the Rebel Alliance is fully operating, your guilt and stubborn hope pushes you to aid them from the shadows, smuggling intel, sheltering fugitives, and daring Sylus to care about something beyond survival. He mocked your faith, but when the Alliance needed help most, you choose their cause openly. Sylus only follows because you did, risking everything to see your hope burn bright — just once. And that’s all it takes to put the entire Onychinus Syndicate, its guns, its ships, its secrets, behind the rebels’ desperate mission. But when the Empire’s new superweapon, the Death Star, targets your rebel base, there’s nowhere left to run. The Syndicate fleet is decimated. You and Sylus make it to the surface, battered and bleeding, side by side as the sky turns white-hot above you. You’re the one who wanted to change the galaxy. Sylus is the one who followed, simply because he loved you more than freedom or infamy. He murmurs against your hair that he wouldn’t trade a single choice — that dying with you, on your terms, is a curtain call grander than anything that could have brought about his death in his world. Your last moments are tangled together: you and Sylus, locked together on a black-sand shore as the sky splits open, the arc of the Death Star’s superlaser lighting the horizon. His head pressed to yours, your fingers twined, silhouetted against the last dawn.
⟡ As Sylus’s teachings take hold, you recognize both your passion for him and the moral boundaries you cannot erase. Your love burns bright, fierce, and complicated, but his ruthless pragmatism clashes with your lingering sense of justice, and you decide to go your own way. He doesn’t chase you, decision to let you go coming frustratingly easy to him. You don't understand where that comes from at the time. Years later, your paths cross again as rival Syndicates — your crew fighting tyranny, Sylus’s empire growing ever stronger. When you see him again, the spark remains, bittersweet and unresolved. Smiling faintly, he says with pride and quiet longing: “I always knew you would find your own way. Come back when you tire of playing hero.” You never do, but are occasionally reunited with him through midnight trysts, an illicit affair you two always come back to even though your ideals never truly align.
⟡ Eventually, no one in Hutt Space remembers your birth name. They speak only of the Pirate King and his infamous “Shadow,” his First Hand, a force-wielder whose presence chills the bone and ignites rebellion in the desperate. Every syndicate who once hunted you now pays tribute, every Imperial patrol that crosses your border learns terror in the dark. You and Sylus, side by side at the heart of a black-flag fleet, have become the chaos that remakes the rules. He taught you to break every chain — first the ones around your wrists, then the ones wound tight in your mind. You taught him to believe in something more than vengeance and the cold pleasure of power: you made him believe in us, in a future unruly and untamed. The galaxy calls you criminals, devils, folk heroes. Depending on whose fortunes you’ve broken. Worlds freed from slavery whisper your names as a promise, and nowhere is your legend more fiercely protected than in the shadows of the Onychinus Syndicate. No vow, no code, no empire will ever lay claim to you again. You make your own justice, your own pleasure, your own legacy — two outlaws standing together, sovereign in the dark, answering only to each other. And in the hush between the stars, you realize: this is what freedom feels like.
have you read or seen Dune? in its desert planet setting, if you thump on the ground, you'll summon these ginormous sandworms that gobble you up. nayway THAT'S WHAT'S HAPPENED TO THIS THING HERE i swear it was meant to be a quick summary blurb but it got away from me dear lord. This turned out to be a functional partial outline for a prologue, completely unrefined, but imma just let it hang out here as is.
in this au, every "version" of them - dragon sylus, onychinus boss sylus, master of fate, foreseer, dr zayne, dawnbreaker - would exist in the same universe but in different, sometimes overlapping timelines, similar to canon. Their souls trapped in an endless cycle where one is always doomed to die, the wheels of fate turning against their will. While their existing lore provides a loooot of scaffolding, here's part of a potential alternate scenario for their first meeting based on the setting of Sylus' myth.
Ancient Philos, the beginning of it all. Zayne is a wandering healer who comes across a heavily wounded dragon while seeking a flower that grows in the remote forests between the Ivory City and Tarus. Deep scuffs in the bloodied earth, toppled trees, suggesting a rough and sudden landing. He's hesitant to approach at first until it pierces his mind. Help me. Its voice is how he's always imagined dragons to sound, noble and resonant, but this desperate plea catches him off guard. Startlingly reminiscent of the children in the neglected outskirts of the Ivory City he's treated, their grasping hands at his coat, seeking warmth and care that they've been denied time and again.
He sets up camp beside it, stokes a fire, mortar and pestle retrieved from his pack, as well as his entire stock of healing herbs; he'll need all he has for a creature of this size. The night is whittled away as he tends to its injuries: sealing blade punctures, applying ointment on the raw indent of chains around its neck and the infected patches around its belly, akin to bedsores from patients who've laid in one position for too long. The dragon doesn't so much as emit a sound other than rasping, laboured breaths, content to watch him with an exquisite ruby eye. Zayne is exhausted by the time dawn comes, but packs up to leave when he's done all he can to help, unwilling to take his rest anywhere near it. As he walks away it enters his mind once again, a caress at the edges rather than the intrusion it made earlier. Stayrus, it says. A word he's never heard before. Something in the language of dragons? Or its name? Though he's not sure if it can read his thoughts, he silently thinks of his own name in parting.
During his travels over the following months, spanning a vast continent, he wakes to find objects next to his bedroll that weren't there the previous night. Messily carved bone charms, gritty to the touch, surface licked clean by a rough tongue. Fragments of broken pottery with pictographs of animals that live in the area scratched onto them. Gleaming coins from forgotten currencies, jewellery beset with gemstones. He has no doubts about the origin of these mysterious gifts, but he does wonder about its intentions. If this is a dragon's expression of gratitude. As it becomes a steady preoccupation in the long stretches of his journey where he has nothing to do but muse on the matter, he contemplates what it might take for Stayrus to reveal itself.
Perhaps a gift of his own?
He leaves a lock of his hair before going to sleep, tied into a bundle with a long strand of grass. As he hoped, it's gone in the morning. In its place, a pristine obsidian scale. A piece of me for a piece of you. This he can recognise well enough: the dragon understands the principle of trade and equivalent exchange. He writes his observation in the back of his leatherbound journal, alongside a growing catalogue of the dragon's gifts and other foraged clues.
One of the early entries, a sketch of its footprint obtained on a night he slept on soft earth which would retain the shape of its approach. Much smaller than he'd remembered. Wedged between some other pages, folded in a leaf, a strand of silken white hair which he noticed entirely on accident, a bewildering discovery. There had been no hair on the beast either, last he saw. In the margins of his records he muses on whether it may have a different form to the massive, four legged beast he met—it would certainly explain why it could follow and leave its gifts without waking him.
Unseen dragon companion or not, Zayne's work doesn't stop. He traverses the treacherous expanse of Philos to far-reaching settlements, providing aid wherever it is needed, whether as a temporary resident at a clinic for a town of hundreds or stopping to assist a nomadic encampment he meets on the road. The gifts don't come on the nights spent at inns or huts, near other humans. He begins to anticipate the day he embarks on the road again, to set up his bedroll in a clearing somewhere under the stars and open sky, no longer eyeing the shadowed treeline with wariness. He rests with a fragile and honest sense of anticipation, or would he dare - a certain comfort, of not being quite alone.
Zayne also continues to test their common ground of trade. Stimulus and response.
Once more, a lock of his hair, for a scale. He writes: it'll give the same item in return for the same.
A loaf of bread from his dinner ration, for a dead deer a few paces from his head, neck snapped, still warm. He writes: Its diet is in line with expectations.
A rusted copper brooch he found on the wayside for a glittering silver bracelet embedded with emeralds and sapphires. He writes, bemused: It is rather generous with adornments and precious accessories, will accept unequal value in the exchange.
Eventually he runs out of trinkets to offer it. He doesn't retain much in his possessions. However, his curiosity is far from sated, and so he digs into his personal belongings, parting with what he can afford to give. He becomes a little greedier, too, in his efforts to glean more about this elusive creature.
Written at the top of a new page one day: Experiment - grooming. He pulls out a spare comb. On his numerous rest breaks, he demonstrates its use, brushing through his long hair til it's free of knots. His objective was twofold; to determine how closely he was being watched while the sun was out, and to learn what it might do to groom itself.
He wakes the next morning with the comb gone. Nothing is left in its place. Instead, his face is wet and sticky, covered with a thick and clear substance, and somewhat chafed. Still on his back, he swipes the liquid onto his pointer and middle finger, scrutinising it in the light.
Undeniably, it is spit. Dragon's spit.
The excess dribbles down the sides of his face as he stares up into the blue. It - it had come close enough to lean down over him, extend its tongue, stroke it all over him. Cleaning him, how it would for itself or its kin. He tries to imagine what it would've looked like, hovering over him. He hasn't even seen this other form. A haze in his strained imagination. Head of white hair, spiraled horns, a long and rough tongue telling by the rawness of his skin, black scales.
Worse and less novel things than being licked by a dragon and living to tell the tale had happened on his travels, and he doesn't feel disgust so much as small wonder at the experience. Ever the rigorous scientist, he collects the spittle in a glass vial, and writes down: It may be willing to trade services as well. To do… investigate any unique properties of its saliva.
He wanders off the path to find a running stream, and thankfully does come across one, even deep enough to wash his body clean as well. He wonders if it may find the act insulting. As he bathes, Zayne comes to a decision. He must see this dragon with its own eyes, speak with it, for he knows it is capable. This most recent trade was rather too intimate, considering he still didn't know what the beast looked like.
By the time he dries himself and is on the way again, the seeds of a plan have already begun to germinate in his head.
Duality of a girl fr (Because I can't decide in between of edgy and soft aesthetics of being Sylus wife)
This Wedding Banner has been the most fun things to do in LADS since forever for me. The new events and the (very fucking generous) Unicorn Ops had been so fun and helpful like hhhhh I thank infold
NOT TO MENTION THE CALL BACK TO THE LORE. THE MOMENT I SAW THAT BACKGROUND CATHEDRAL IN THE FIRST 10 SECONDS. I WANT TO SHOOT MYSELF
Young Luke and Kieran AU, Sylus x nonMC!Reader | fem reader, not proofread | 909 words | based on this idea! | Crow Family masterlist
author’s note: so so excited for the wedding banner (I’m about to start pulling) and ahkdjskfhsmgmd the new update is so cute but omg updating that game is so anxiety inducing for some reason. I wish everyone good luck on their pulls! <3
anyways, i’m going to write some more drabbles/ficlets for this because it’s too damn cute >_< this was so much fun to write, i love little luke and kieran. feel free to send some requests for Crow Family shenanigans! <3
Wrangling a set of six-year old twins was no easy task, Sylus was learning.
Getting Luke and Kieran to come with him to the mall was a feat in itself, but they needed new clothes and Sylus couldn't leave them alone. Call it paranoia, but Sylus didn't trust anyone but himself to take care of the twins. If someone he hired to watch them turned out to be an enemy, well... Sylus would only find out when it was too late.
That was why, when he lost sight of the two little boys in a crowded shop, a panic unlike any other shot through Sylus.
His pace picked up, steps becoming shakier the longer he couldn't find his boys. Sylus backtracked to stores they'd been, shops they'd pointed out. The cookie shop they'd demanded they stop at. The toy store they spent twenty minutes in as the twins tried to decide which ball was bounciest.
No sign of them, and Sylus was beginning to fear the worst.
The boys, meanwhile, were trailing a woman they had seen twice before. The first time, she was leaving the cookie shop as they came in, offering a sweet smile and small wave. When they saw her again, this time a few people in front of them in line for the cash register at a clothing store, they'd only exchanged brief nods before silently slipping away from Sylus's side.
And here they were on a pursuit mission, wondering what the best way to approach the target would be.
Luke took a tentative step forward, reaching to tug on the fabric of your pants. "I like your keychain,” he said, looking up at you with wide eyes.
"Thank you!" You grinned, your own eyes widening as you watched an identical boy walk up next to the one still holding onto your pant leg. You crouched down in front of them, glancing around for a parent. Seeing none, you looked back to the boys, not letting your smile waver. "And what are your names, my loves?"
"I’m Luke!" the first boy announced proudly.
"And I'm Kieran," the second added.
“Well, Luke and Kieran, where are your parents?” you asked.
“We don’t have any parents,” Luke said, tilting his head.
You stared at them, unable to keep the smile plastered on. “Oh…” you mumbled.
“We do have a Sylus, though!” he said cheerfully.
You nodded along. “Right, a Sylus…” You cleared your throat. “Do you know where Sylus is?”
Kieran shook his head. “No idea.”
“Can’t we just come home with you?” Luke grabbed a hold of your hand.
“I don’t know about that,” you chuckled. “How about you stick with me until we can find Sylus, hm?” You smiled, holding onto the boys’ hands.
A few stores down, panic was beginning to settle deep in Sylus’s bones. He’d never been this long without his boys in a public space. He’d never been in the dark about their location.
He hadn’t been this worried about them since the night he took them in.
When he just barely heard, “Can I get the red one?” in a tone he’d recognize even in sleep, Sylus nearly cried out of relief.
Following the voice, he found himself in a candy shop, staring at a young woman holding his two boys by their hands while their tongues turned red and blue from their lollipops.
“Sylus!” They called out in near unison, rushing forwards towards the man as he dropped to his knees, arms wide to hold them.
“I was so worried about you two,” Sylus breathed, pulling them closer against his chest.
“Sorry, Sylus…” Kieran muttered.
“Oh! You have to come meet our new friend!” Luke tugged on Sylus’s hand.
Sylus raised an eyebrow. “New friend?”
“Uh-huh!” Kieran nodded triumphantly. “This is the super nice lady that spent time with us while we waited for you.”
Rising to his full height, Sylus gave you a polite smile. “It seems I should thank you then, miss. I know they can be a lot to deal with.”
You shook your head. “It was really no problem! They’re such sweethearts, really.”
“Can she come with us, Sylus?” Kieran asked.
“I don’t think so, buddy…” Sylus frowned.
“Let her come with us, Sylus! Please? She’s nice and she smells good and she’s pretty and she bought us lollipops!” Luke quickly exclaimed.
“How about this,” you proposed, holding back a giggle. “I’ll give you my phone number, and you can just let me know if you want to meet each other again. I’d be happy to spend more time with you boys.” You smiled.
Sylus nodded hesitantly. “…Alright. Thank you again,” he said, taking the paper with your number on it before grabbing onto the twins.
“Bye-bye!” Luke yelled.
“Bye—!” Kieran called out.
You laughed, waving them off. “Goodbye, my loves!”
An hour later, you received a text from an unknown number.
I can’t thank you enough for taking care of the twins today.
They haven’t stopped talking about you since we left.
You grinned as a picture came through, two little boys proudly showing off their red and blue tongues through toothy grins. You quickly typed back a response.
I’m so glad I got to spend time with them! I hope we can meet again soon :)
Staring at your message, Sylus felt a quiet peace settle in his chest. “Maybe that would be a good idea,” he muttered, a smiling pulling at his lips.
comments and reblogs appreciated and asks open! <3
Hnnnn I'm thinking about an AU where Dragon!Sylus meets Sea God!Rafayel. The young dragon has never seen a Lemurian before. He knows nothing about the Sea God. Upon meeting him, Sylus attempts to eat Rafayel (and is nearly drowned in response).
R: "A dragon hath not passed through these waters in over a thousand cycles. Have dragonkin forgotten about Lemuria?"
S: "My 'kin' are long gone. I am the last."
R: "Yikes. Thou hast my pity."
For this AU, Rafayel is older than Sylus and is sure to critique Sylus' ignorance about dragon-related topics.
R: "Thou hast never sharpened thine scales? How strange."
S: "Scales sharpen? How?"
R: "Art thou aware that thou art a dragon? Thou should already know!"
Sylus just wanting Mc to take from him and ask/want for different things puts things in a different perspective.
Mc wouldn't care about gems and clothing, unless Sylus wants her to. Because he wants her to dress and match him. He wants her to want to be beside him, and for the leader of the N109 Zone, he can't have his gf looking cheaper than him. So Mc looks into the latest fashions, trying to make him proud as she stands beside him, not asking him to buy a lot, but enough to make him feel wanted bc the man's love language does include gift giving. Mc wants to make Sylus happy, she wants to see him walking over and giving his card. Bc he's so snarky and dramatic when he does it, she loves the look of him taking care of her sm 🥰
He'd genuinely want Mc to be possessive (not obsessed). He'd want her to bite him, for her to kiss him when they're alone. Mc is equally as ravenous as Sylus in bed, and doesn't stop telling him how she wants him and how much she can't stand when he's not touching her. He uses his evol when they have sex half the time, just bc Mc goes crazy when he transforms
Mc wants everything Sylus has. His clothes, his side of the bed, his attention, even his snacks. And he just gives them to her, while calling her kitten and telling her how greedy she is. But he smiles when he does it
Mc choosing to love Sylus, even though it's not supposed happen. Mc wanting to love Sylus and wanting him to want her. This is something Sylus can't even begin to imagine until it happens. And that's when he realizes how badly he wants Mc to WANT him. His eye, his bad dreams, his terrible humming. Even the blood on his hands. He wants Mc to want him so badly, not even needing him. Just genuinely wanting him for who he is and who he wants to be for her ✨️
Naur I was drawing this yesterday and I KNOW Sylus would have a love hate relationship with Hadestown.
So much so I wrote his reaction to it down below
The theatre doors had long since shut behind them, sealing in the golden haze of the final bow, the echo of the chorus, the stunned applause. Outside, the world felt too still. The streets glimmered under recent rain, every puddle mirroring neon signs and taxi lights that drifted like ghosts through the evening.
Sylus walked quietly beside Lizzie and she didn't speak. At least not yet.
He could feel it, her joy had not dulled, only settled, like embers after a blaze. But him? He was quiet in a way that felt unfamiliar, even to himself. Not brooding. Not thoughtful. No calculated silence like he often wore as armor.
This quiet was… raw.
Hadestown had struck a part of him he hadn’t known was still vulnerable. Not just the myth of it, the elegance of the songs or the beauty of the actors. It was the loop. The futility. The truth of love being held together by hope and undone by fear.
And he hated how much he saw himself in Hades. In the way Hades clung too tightly. In the way love turned into a fortress. The way trust was something so brittle it shattered under the pressure of protection.
He hadn’t said any of this. Not out loud. But he hadn’t needed to. Lizzie, perceptive in her quiet, had noticed.
Of course she does.
They stopped in a quiet street not far from the venue. The air smelled of wet pavement and warm pretzels from a late-night cart. A thin layer of mist hung like memory, and Sylus leaned against the alley wall, slipping his hands into the deep pockets of his coat. He stared up at the sky as if trying to shake something loose.
That’s when he noticed Lizzie pull out her phone.
He tilted his head. “Trying to preserve the memory already?”
Her thumb swiped across the screen, not answering him yet. Her face was half-shadowed beneath the strands of her hair and the reflection of her glasses. She looked different like this, softer almost. Or maybe that was just the lighting. Or maybe that was just the way she held joy in her own way: quiet, tender, but full.
Then he saw the Hadestown album cover on her screen. Sylus blinked, then scoffed with a crooked smirk. “You’re not gonna tell me to sing, are you?”
Lizzie lifted her head slowly, finally looking him in the eye.
“Nope. Not today,” she replied, her voice light but tinged with warmth. “Your heart’s already damaged enough.”
He gave a quiet, breathy laugh, the kind that wasn’t quite joy but wasn’t nothing. “And you say I’m the dramatic one.”
She smiled before hitting play.
And the moment the soft instrumental of “They Dance” drifted out from her phone speaker. Barely loud enough for anyone else to hear it was like something in the air shifted. Time slowed. Or maybe it folded in on itself.
Sylus inhaled. The music was… haunting. The kind of tune you hear in a dream and wake up trying to remember.
He lifted an eyebrow, “Do you even know the steps?”
Lizzie stepped toward him, her old worn shoes gently brushing his boots.
“Well, there’s one way to find out,” she said, eyes shining under her lenses. She didn’t reach for him, not directly, but the invitation was in her posture, in the way her fingers hovered near his.
He didn’t hesitate long.
Sylus pushed away from the wall, his coat falling open slightly, the night breeze tousling strands of his silver-white hair. He stepped across from her. They were close now. Close enough he could see the way her pupils dilated in the low light, how her breath caught as he mirrored her position.
No choreography. No perfection. Just presence. He let his hands hover near her waist, not touching unless she said yes with her body first. She responded with a small, near-imperceptible lean forward. And that was enough. He touched her, lightly.
One hand at her waist, the other gently holding her fingers not long Lizzie began to move.
A simple sway at first. Back and forth. It wasn’t about dancing, really. It was about staying in step. About staying. Still staying. After all the metaphors. After all the songs and past lives and broken things.
Sylus watched her. Carefully. As he always did. She was humming along the music under her breath now barely audible, but it was there. Her voice slipped between notes like it belonged there. Like she’d always been part of the story.
To know how it ends and still began to sing it again.
That line echoed in his mind. He had always thought himself above sentimentality. But there was something about this. The two of them, in a quiet alley post-tragedy, dancing to the ghosts of a love story that hurt too much to name, that cracked him open.
He murmured low, “You memorized every step, didn’t you?”
She tilted her head, pressing her temple near his chest. “Of course. I told you it’d get you.”
Sylus chuckled, the sound uneven. “You didn’t warn me it’d feel like being dragged through glass with a smile.”
Lizzie grinned. “Now you know what it’s like being me every time I revisit it.”
They turned slowly beneath the amber streetlamp, their reflections blurred in the puddle below. Sylus whispered, almost absently.
“Do you think… the next time they’ll get it right? ...Orpheus and Eurydice”
Lizzie didn’t answer at first. She just pulled back enough to look up at him.
“I don’t know,” she said honestly. “But I think the point is… they tried again”
He stared at her and suddenly, everything ached less. Not because it hurt any less but because she was here. And she saw it. Saw him.
They danced until the song faded, and the city forgot them. And in the stillness after, when Sylus leaned in just enough to let his forehead touch hers, she whispered, “Even if we’ve danced this before in other lives… I’m glad we’re here now.”
He closed his eyes with a stiffened yet genuine smile, “... It's one sad song"
She hummed, resting her head lightly on his chest, where the music now stopped.
“Yeah. Its one fucking tragedy” she murmured, letting her face get lost in his shoulders, “but we sing it anyway.”