"For every empire to ever rise, there is always another that collapses into dust, for that is the way of the universe. Even the stars themselves will eventually die, replaced with a younger, brighter star nestled in a corpse of cosmic gasses. In this age where civilizations across the galaxy rise up into the stars, who is truly to say whether they are the dawn of a new empire, or the last daring hope of a dying species. For many, this will be the time where they will find their destiny, whether it is the one they desire or not. Go forth, young and old, and take your place among these stars. Carve your name in the heavens by either blade, silver or words, and be remembered."
There was cold steel beneath her bare feet, the stinging of the cosmos below her a secondary thought to the damnation she had come to realize. Hoarfrost clung to balled fists, and slowly she sank to her knees on the grating, looking up at the equally cold being that seemed to draw such amusement from her struggle.
"Is this not what you asked for?" The voice was bereft of any sympathy, instead the curiosity that seemed so evident in his voice slicing deep into her. She had asked for it, but.... It was wrong. Everything was wrong. She could feel the tears attempting to come, but they were competing hard against the deep-seated hatred that was slowly swelling in her heart. He had given her just a glimpse of who she really was, a taste of her memories beyond her re-creation.
She, the one who had been his Cytherea, herald of Unending, had once been nothing more than just a human. Taken from everything she had known and torn down to her base components to be re-created at will by an ancient being that only did such for his own amusement. Or at least, that's what Ba'al had said. She could feel there was something else behind it, something far deeper than just one scheme of his to take control of the Consensus for himself. Four years had passed since he had first sent her out to make contact with the surrounding civilizations of the region, and four years since she had found there were others exactly like her. And there were so many others. Thousands of exact replicas, down to the very way they thought and acted. But why?
"Such is the way of lesser beings." He mused aloud, stroking a thin manipulator across her cheek as he knelt down before her. That mask of perfect silver reflected her conflicting emotions back at her, the short unruly red hair from where she had clutched her head in agony, and her emerald eyes staring, desperately trying to make some sense of the memories that had been locked in her head this entire time.
"Wh-what..." She struggled with the words, just as she had done four years ago when she had just been awoke from deep-sleep. Searching deep in her mind, she tried to cling on to what she wanted to say, but the Enigma Cloak around Ba'al made it harder to focus on what she needed. There, deep in the recesses of her memory, there were dark spaces that if only she could put light on them, she would be able to understand. It started with a whimper, her eyes shutting tight as she tried to focus, but as she found more of a grip on her sunken memories, she snarled and struck out at Ba'al.
There was a clatter of metal skittering across the floor, and she looked up to see the face of Ba'al no longer covering the cowling that served as his head. Tiny blinking lights leered at her from a mess of loose wiring and whirring gears, but more than that, she could feel the anger that emanated from this being that had been a god to her. She, the puppet of this Precept, had dared to strike her master, and even though she felt fear at what would come of her action, she was finally able to find a grip on those hidden memories as Ba'al turned from her to retrieve the mask of carved silver.
She laughed. It was sudden, just as her previous outburst against Ba'al, but now, she had a confidence that was beyond such an animalistic reaction. All of it was clear to her now, everything. No more did the cold feel so stark against her skin, the thin robe covering her modesty an armor rivaling that of a dreadnought in her new state of being. She was the master now. She held all the power. And though Ba'al did not know to what extent she had regained her memories, she could feel something different about the construct now. Something so primal and foreign to the constructs of the Synchronicity, even to the Precepts of Amnos, it was something that brought a smile to her face and reinvigorated her.
"I know now." She said simply, the words flung like daggers into the slowly retreating Precept of Unending. "I know everything."
The robes about Ba'al flashed brilliantly in one moment, the repeating patterns of light and swirling patterns attempting to reassert dominance upon her organic mind. It might have worked, but she knew it would happen. This construct never failed to follow pattern. Of course, it could not be helped, he was designed that way.
"I know what you are, Shadow Construct. I know because I am your master. I built you. You are nothing but a tool to serve as my replacement until this body of flesh and bone could adapt to my power. Your services are no longer needed."
It howled with rage as it knew how correct she was, flying at her and striking with mechanical power far greater than her human body would be able to endure. Easily side-stepped. All was routine to her, like a dance done so many times. Next he would attempt to disembowel her where she stood, sweeping at her with out-stretched manipulators splayed like rending talons. She would duck just as she had done before, reaching up into his robes and grabbing a fistful of the constructs innards and ripping them out from his carapace. Just as before, there was that sputter of surprise, and a curse upon her.
"Now, I will take my rightful place as Ba'al, Precept of Unending." She said, as she took hold of the dying construct, cradling it slowly to the ground and lowering her voice to a whisper. "It was all part of the plan, you were just an unfortunate casualty. Such has happened before, with different bodies, but it was to happen again. I now can feel the millennia of my former lives, and every string I have ever pulled to get to this point. The stars dance to my whim, for it is I that placed them there1. Your creation and destruction is but a footnote in what will be a masterstroke billions of years in the making."
She could feel the construct's final release, the lights going dim across its form as it slowly went limp in her arms, but it did not matter. Her real prize was years away, and so many more deaths would come. This was her promise to him all those years ago.
"Betray me, and I will destroy everything you love, and when it is all ashes in your hands, then I will destroy you as well."
1: Not literally.