Shelzais Sek wrote:"Natural selection might be the word you're looking for. Adapt, or die." Shelzais smiled again, but it was a sardonic one. "Or I really ought to say it as they drilled us there, you know: Through strength, I gain power. Through power, I gain victory."
'Through victory, my chains are broken.' And another set clapped right on. Something of this unvoiced train of thought might have shown in her expression as she leaned back into the fine leather of the couch and watched Ilar'Shala by the bar.
Shelzais Sek wrote:"Is that really what you want?" The question was light and casual, apparently un-weighted by any prejudgement, but her voice had shed--at least briefly--some of the lush, almost exaggerated playfulness of the earlier part of their conversation.
Shelzais Sek wrote:"You're a slave," her free hand fluttered open, distancing herself from the ugly words even as she said them, "an alien, a wild sensitive. A Dark Councillor's pet...if your Lord Ausar is fortunate. Korriban can be hell for aspirants who come from low places--slaves and proles and aliens."
Shelzais Sek wrote:Her full lips quirked bitterly. "It has different dangers for the well-connected. I'd show you the scar, but... this whole thing would have to come off," she gestured nonchalantly up and down her one-piece jumpsuit, "and I'd hate to find out the hard way if Lord Ausar has a jealous side."
"Anyway," she chuckled, her humor perhaps somewhat restored, "you'd be both. Lucky you."
Shelzais Sek wrote:"There's a lot you can't see from the bottom, darling... and nearly as much you can't see from the top. Of course we Sith talk sooo endlessly about the strong rising and prospering and all that--" she raised her glass in a sort of toast, or salute--the first two drinks didn't seem to be having an especially strong effect, apart from possibly making her more expansive.
Shelzais Sek wrote:"Your mother..." Her voice became a little gentler, perhaps slightly... uncomfortable? "Is she living?" That, perhaps, might explain why he'd be inclined to stay and try to carve out a niche. Maybe. Shel's relationship with her own mother didn't offer a very useful analogy.
Ilar'Shala wrote:Ilar shook his head as a small tug at his heart strings played visibly across his face. "I was young when I was sold by my father, but I was old enough to remember the reason. He couldn't afford to feed me or my brother after our mother was killed. She was a talented dancer and the only source of creds for our family."
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