Selika stole a glance up at the dais, her narrowed eyes seeking out the Grand Master. Pravus could be so very infuriating at times. On the one hand, her performance while setting the prisoners free had been convincing enough for Pravus to swallow. On the other hand, he had then acted on that belief in the ham fisted manner that most in possession of absolute power often did. In shooting down the prisoners, Selika had been deprived of the tools that she required for her aims. The sentients who Turel had been desperate to protect had offered avenues to inflict pain more lasting than what could be inflicted by a lightsaber. Now, however, they were gone. Yes, Pravus’s action probably restored the protection offered by the rules he had imposed, but those benefits were far outweighed by the wrench thrown into Selika’s plans.
Worse yet, Pravus had now taken her place in Turel’s mind as the evil to be fought. Pravus was the grand, cliched evil that was easy for the Jedi to fight in a way that fit within his precious moral code. It wasn’t the visceral, personal anger that Selika created in him. It was, most importantly, not a path to the dark side. Although Selika would not admit it, even to herself, her mind trick sending Turel against the Grand Master was probably at least partially motivated by wanting to inconvenience Pravus in retaliation for his meddling. The lie she told herself was that it was more about witnessing Turel being thoroughly manhandled.
Selika’s eyes returned to watch Turel as he made his way through the arena towards his new target. She smiled at his gait, akin to that of one of Nar Shaddaa’s most accomplished drunkards. Then, as if the ancient gods themselves were speaking, a sharp voice reverberated through the Force.
“FOCUS!”
V’yr Vorsa’s sharp command was loud and clear in the Force, traveling along the bond that joined her and Turel. Selika only heard it clearly due to how physically close she was to the intended recipient, but most of the Force sensitives within the arena felt something even if they could not discern the words.
“Your true enemy stands behind you,” Vorsa continued, her eyes closed and mouth unmoving. “It is not Pravus’s time, yet.”
Selika had just the barest of moments to reignite her lightsaber before Turel’s weapon swung around as he spun to face her. The blades clashed together once more before Selika disengaged her block and slashed at his legs. As Turel parried her strike and followed with one of his own, Selika began to silently berate herself. She’d had the man at her mercy, battered in spirit if not in body. Instead of taking the simple path towards victory in the struggle that Pravus had placed before them, she’d instead sought out another way to achieve her goal of bringing about the Odanite Councilor’s downfall. She had also underestimated the strength of the bond between the Neti and Human.
As the two fought, they slashed gouges in the arena’s obstacles, their weapons finding metal or stone but never flesh. The twin amethyst blades refracted their light through the sheen of falling rain, appearing like an expressionist reimagining of the great Mon Calamari ballets. The crowd, many having returned to their seats regardless of the rain, watched with rapt attention. Their cheers rose with every grand blow and fell as each in turn was blocked or pushed aside by the combatants, the tension rising along with their bloodlust. Selika knew that she and Turel were nearly equal in the form both of them favored, but she could feel Turel beginning to slow as the combat began to wear on him.
Let him wear down, she thought. Just what you always do - let him tire and then you can strike.
Just as Selika had decided on a final strategy, the rug was quite literally pulled out from under her feet. Taking a step backwards to avoid one of Turel’s slashes, Selika’s left foot encountered rain-slicked metal instead of the more stable arena floor. As opposed to a firm step, her boot slipped across the metal surface and she toppled to the ground. Selika dropped her weapon in an effort to try to shield her head with her arms. Even with that, stars seemed to burst momentarily before her vision upon impact. Rolling over onto her back as her vision cleared, she found Turel standing over her with his blade pointed down at her. Selika’s hand, held palm upwards before her face to shield it from the rain, was inches away from the blade’s tip.
“I would suggest that you capitulate,” Turel said, his voice still a bit unsteady.
Selika’s mind raced as she searched for some sort of stratagem to turn the tables back in her favor. Her eyes looked to Turel, then darted to the crowd. She saw Darth Pravus sitting forward in his chair, watching with interest to see the conclusion of the match. Her eyes moved again to those seated near the Grand Master and then stopped suddenly. There: that was the face that promised her a way to victory, and perhaps to her ultimate goal as well.
“Well?” Turel asked.
Selika said nothing, drawing the Force to her. With a few seconds’ worth of concentration, she was ready to act. As Turel shrugged his shoulders and moved to make a disabling strike, Selika squeezed her eyes shut and released the energy held within her. A flash of light erupted from her palm like a solar flare, blinding all those looking towards it. Turel’s vision was no different, momentarily given over to featureless white. Selika rolled aside as Turel’s wild blow slashed through the ground she had lain upon, picking up her discarded weapon as she did so. Getting to her feet, she ran quickly towards the Grand Master’s dais while projecting her most potent Force command into the mind of her new target.
“Climb down to me. Use the obstacles nearest you.”
Turel’s vision cleared and revealed that Selika was gone. He still felt her presence in the arena, moving somewhere along the edge of the pit. He could just sense that someone else was now with her, but he could not make out the details amidst the roiling emotions of the crowd.
“So, you finally showed me your weakness,” Selika’s telepathically amplified voice echoed through both the arena and his mind as he moved towards her. “I should have known. Your weakness and my true adversary.”
Turel said nothing, instead closing the distance that separated them.
“Why do you think Pravus forced her to place me on her staff, hmm? It was so that at some later time, I could do this.”
Turel stepped around a stone pillar into a sheltered, open space surrounded by metal and stone obstacles. Within it, he saw what appeared to be his enemy holding her saber blade to Vorsa’s throat. His mind confused from being jerked first one way and then another, his link to Vorsa muddied, Turel now let loose his chained inner dragon and charged, his weapon leading the way. Only one thought now filled his mind.
Monsters like you don’t deserve to live!
Turel buried his saber into the torso of his target nearly to the hilt. All Selika could do was smile.
“Oh, honey…” she mocked him as she allowed the momentary illusion to fade.
Selika had not been holding her blade on Vorsa. She had taken a different hostage, a boy charitably appearing to be nearly twenty years old. The illusion she’d projected had mirrored their positions, so Turel now found his blade impaled into the chest of an innocent instead of his enemy. And worse, an innocent he knew.
“Walsh,” he whispered.
Brin Walsh, only son of Keth Walsh, had come to see Turel beat the woman who had killed his father in their small inn near the center of Menat Ombo’s Visulu Marketplace. The boy had been devastated by the death of his father, the first death that Turel had witnessed at Selika’s hand, the first Turel had allowed to happen. Selika had used her mental trickery to coerce Brin down into the arena and set him up as a target for Turel’s rage. The shocked expression on the boy’s face reflected the utter horror on Turel’s like a funhouse mirror. Selika released her grip on the boy, allowing him to drop to the ground in a heap. Turel fell to his knees along with him, the tears streaming down his face hidden by the rain.
Walking out from the small theater-like enclosure where she had staged the final drama of the evening, Selika saw a determined Vorsa hurrying to her apprentice.
Selika smirked. “I wonder if you’ll be able to put him back together again,” she chided Vorsa, the Herald glaring angrily as she passed.
I see what you did there. Approved.
This is a mouthful and could have been broken up better for easier reading.
I absolutely love this opening post. It is filled with emotion and backstory, but keeps the story moving towards the spark of conflict. It hits a nice stride in the final paragraphs, and you set up the stakes and direction for the rest of the fight and why it will be happening. I love that you personified the NPCs that would serve as a chess piece and how you leave your opponent with so much to work with creatively.