He hated that boy.
That small, lanky, weak child, no better than the vermin that scuttled across the dry, dusty surface of Korriban. He was the pure example of pathetic – barely spoke, or ate, or drank, for the fear and dread that constantly gripped him; had forgotten himself almost completely, even his own name lost with the methods his mind used to cope, to survive – the irony, of how crucial his continued survival was.
Phrixos stared down at the near-human boy, watched him squint his feebled eyes in the sharp sunlight of the red planet. It had been two years, though he'd barely grown an inch, whilst most of the students at the Academy his age towered above him. He would not last a single day, in those halls – Korriban was swift with its eradication of the weak.
What had he done so wrong? What had he not given the child? How was it that his lessons had gone unheeded, that the boy repelled and deflected anything the Sith tried to force upon him? How was he helpless to mental suggestion, yet still not following the path laid out so plainly before him? With a surge of anger, Phrixos grabbed him by the front of his tunic, lurching him forward and off his feet, his massive red face leaning in with a snarl.
“You will not embarrass me and mine this day. The Navras name is old, and for us to tolerate weakness is to be weak. For your own sake, strive to be less witless... otherwise, the acolytes will tear you to shreds, and they will do so slowly.” He traced a nail along pale skin, feeling goosebumps rise beneath his touch.
“Strip... by strip. With less grace than I.”The white eyes met his furious yellow gaze blandly, before slowly sliding away to examine the ground.
“Is this where I will train...?” he asked softly.
He asked stupid questions. He knew his fate, already. As well, the lord was not beyond hearing the touch of hopefulness in the enquiry. His lips curled, coldly. The boy hoped to be rid of him.
“You already know the answer to that. I have business here; whilst I am occupied you will attend classes to define your better uses. Then, we shall return to Ziost.”He released the boy, who then nodded, lowering his head to continue his stare at the ground. Waited a few moments – just enough for the child to assume their exchange was done, to lure him into that false sense of relief that he, for now, had escaped any form of punishment for entertaining the thoughts and desire to get away from the one who had given him
so much. Just long enough, Phrixos waited, before pulling the metal cord from his utility belt. The boy's head snapped around, his eyes already widening with dread, for he knew that sound all too well, that
sneee-click! the winding mechanism on his master's belt made. One hand rushed to his neck where deep, angry-red lines were already cut into his flesh, countless times, some still healing and some old and already scarring over.
Their eyes met again. Phrixos held the cord out, extended about a metre from his belt, but the punishment never came. This time it was merely a warning – to drink in the fear, and allow the boy to know that whatever the acolytes did to him here, there would be worse for him back on Ziost if he proved to be a humiliation. Then, the message recieved and understood, he nodded towards the towering academy, and they continued on their way.
*
[Later]The day had stretched on, meeting through meeting, dull and political and practised. Phrixos cared not, had never cared, for the play of words and niceties built over threats that his fellow Sith insisted on consecutively going through. Dull motions, easily seen through, and unbecoming. The wheels and cogs of the great machine turned, and they planned and they planned, and they threatened, and they spoke in large, long words of overthrowing the Republic, and wiping the Jedi venomously out of existence once and for all, and at the end of the day, words and threats were still only puffs of hot air and promises yet to be fulfilled. When action was ready to be taken, Lord Phrixos would be there, ready to crush Jedi neck underfoot. Until then, as always, he would allow the others to talk, and weave their elaborate plans, and fancy themselves powerful... whilst he played to the tune of that which he believed held the true power.
Frowning, sick to death of the scent of the place already, he checked the chrono. The boy was twenty minutes late to their meeting spot. Not dead, for they were bonded, and he would have felt the passing of that tiny life like sand through his fingers. No, not dead, simply.. useless and errant, as was usual. At the very least, tardy. Phrixos hissed out air through his teeth.
Then the dark side moved, and heaved, and whispered to him of something he would like to see, retching with anger and bloodlust. The dark lord lifted his head, tilting it curiously towards the direction the sensations rippled from, and moved swiftly. Round the crumpling corner of the tomb entrance, with the late afternoon shadow bathing them in darkness, two students were in a scuffle on the rocky ground – kicking up the reddish dust as though encircled with a mist of blood.
A flash of white eyes and gritted teeth – the boy, his boy. And he appeared to be
winning.
The other – an acolyte given by his age, and a pureblood at that – grabbed at the boy by his hair and neck in an attempt to thrown him down and get on top of him, and the near-human's response was to swiftly, delightfully, thrust the Force upon him and throw them apart. Smaller and lighter on his feet, the boy pushed up from his hand and tossed a glance towards a discarded vibroblade on the ground. He summoned it to his hands, and whilst the pureblood child was still trying to rise, brought it down on his back. The sword's power sung to life, flesh sizzled, a yelp of pain. It was a cruel thing, to hold it there, and let the blade sting and burn.
Phrixos did not approach, though it was frowned upon to allow acolytes to destroy each other when the Sith were trying to grow their numbers... no he hung back, in the shadows of the ruin, and watched with an odd sort of curiosity, and something close to excitement.
The boy stood over the acolyte, his body trembling with pure rage that rolled off his aura like a bittersweet, beautiful scent. There was blood, Phrixos could now see – on his knuckles, smeared across his chin and clothes, assumingly from when the two had been grappling.
“Don't touch me again.” the boy warned, quietly, discarding the vibroblade with a toss to the side.
“If you touch me again, you'll pay.” “A... A-acolytes aren't allowed... to kill one another...” the pureblood teen gasped, fingernails grinding against the red soil towards the boy's feet,
“you wouldn't... dare...”“I'm not an acolyte here. And I won't kill you,” his near-white eyes flared in the afternoon sun,
“I'll just hurt you.”He took a slow, deliberate step forward with one foot, rolling the toe of his boot over the acolyte's advancing hand, causing him to wince.
“I know how to hurt people.”“Boy,” Phrixos called to him, not moving from his position. As much as he wanted to see what could possibly follow, there was no possible political or intimidating manoeuvre that would save a near-human bought as a slave, from a brutal death for beating on the child of a prominent pureblood family.
He looked up, eyes widening slightly at the sight of his master's form standing casually to the side, a brief flicker of fear passing through the gaze, his previous zeal and cold cruelty melting away as though they never were, leaving him young and innocent to the eye once more. Clearly expecting to be punished for his boldness.
The lord raised his hand, slowly, enjoying the dreading anticipation on the child's face, before he simply made a gesture.
“Come. We are leaving.” He turned, hearing the boy step quickly over the acolyte and scamper to his side, struggling to keep up with his master's long stride. Phrixos smiled absently to himself. Watched him out of the corner of his eye.
He was learning, after all.