Nyra’s boots clicked against the polished stone floor of the Grand Hall, a space so vast it seemed to breathe. Pillars of obsidian spiraled upward into the vaulted ceiling, encased in ever-flowing streams of molten luminescence—a phenomenon of the Dominion Era’s advanced energy manipulation. Her long black coat billowed behind her with each stride, the leather straps of her ensemble gleaming under the faint light cast by translucent orbs that floated eerily overhead. Her fiery red hair, cascading down her back in waves, was the only disruption to the monochrome symmetry of her attire. Beside her, Nero, her doberman-like Wardenhound, padded silently, its metallic sheen glinting faintly under the floating globes of light.
“Kneel,” she commanded, her voice slicing through the still air like a blade. The twenty or so prisoners before her—a blend of terrified rebellion ringleaders and eager informants—stiffened as if the sharp tone carried physical weight. They stood on a dais encircled by iridescent veins of energy, bound not with shackles but by invisible restraints from the Dominion’s neural dampening arrays.
No one dared to resist for long. Slowly, one by one, they fell to their knees, heads bowed, their figures dwarfed further by her towering presence. Nyra’s amber eyes, as sharp and unyielding as a hawk’s, surveyed them coldly. The glow from the floating orbs above caught the faint traces of scar tissue snaking down to her collarbone—a remnant of the purge wars decades earlier where she’d carved her empire from the corpse of Old Earth.
“You sought chaos,” she began, her tone icy. Her gloved hand came to rest on Nero’s head, the creature’s crimson eyes narrowing eerily in tandem with hers. “And chaos was promised to you.”
The largest of the prisoners, a burly man whose arms bore the faded sigils of the remnants he’d tried to lead, dared to look up. His face, cracked and weathered by years of battle, showed defiance even through his pain. “You think you rule us because you wear black and your toys obey,” he spat, attempting bravery. “But systems crumble, Sovereign. You’ll crumble, too.”
Nyra tilted her head with a practiced elegance, her lips curling into a phantom of a smile that carried no warmth, only the predatory promise of retribution. She extended her black-gloved hand. Nero growled low, its metallic fur rippling as energy coursed through its body. The man’s face drained of blood. “Please don’t,” he choked, his earlier bravado smothered by the realization that his life was measured now in seconds.
But Nyra didn’t choose cruelty outright. Not here. Not yet. She lowered her hand and gestured to one of the robed attendants standing obediently at the edge of the dais. “Take the rebellious one to Rehabilitation,” she said, the words rolling from her lips in honeyed venom. “When even his mind is mine, release him to the colonies. Use him as a reminder of what happens when ants believe they may topple the sun.”
The attendant nodded and stepped toward the prisoner, who roared and struggled against unseen bonds as the air shimmered with neural pulses. His body was lifted effortlessly, floating as though gravity itself had forsaken him. The man’s curses faded as he was carried away, his fate sealed.
The Price of Ascension
As the hall emptied and the remaining prisoners were escorted to regions unknown, Nyra ascended the spiral staircase at the far end of the chamber. Each step was a calculated effort of sound and grace, an echo of authority. The top of the stairs opened to a platform bathed in starlight filtered through the semi-transparent dome that covered the Citadel’s apex. Beyond the dome, the ruins of Old Earth sprawled beneath her—ghost cities illuminated only by the neon glow of reclamation bots that worked tirelessly to repurpose the waste of the past into tools for the future.
She walked toward the edge of the platform, where an ornate console hummed faintly. Nyra brushed a strand of crimson hair away from her face and gazed down at the landscapes below. Her thoughts spiraled to the etched scars on her body, the trenches of pain she’d endured, the friends she had betrayed, and the empires she had devoured to reach this moment—only to feel its weight settle heavily on her shoulders like chains of gold.
“Your gaze lingers too long, Sovereign,” hissed a voice from the shadows. With a flick of her wrist, Nyra drew a blade from her coat—a dagger of shimmering obsidian that glowed faintly as she pointed it toward the source of the voice.
A tall figure emerged—cloaked, wiry, with a half-metallic face gleaming under the faint starlight. An intruder. “Your rule must be exhausting. Power suits you…but so would mortality.”
Nero was instantly at her side, snarling as energy coiled into its teeth. Nyra’s lips curled into a storm of fury just as the dome’s light flickered imperceptibly. “Who sent you?” she asked, her voice as calm and steady as the void—a true ruler’s voice.
The assassin’s smile was brittle, yet full of venom. “Wouldn’t you like to know?”
The air seemed to collapse as the assassin lunged, but with one fluid motion, Nyra sidestepped and slammed her blade into the figure’s arm. Sparks exploded—synthetic blood sprayed across her boots. Nero lunged for the kill, but Nyra was faster. She grabbed the assassin by their cloak and forced them to their knees, the blade at their throat.
“Speak,” she demanded, though part of her already knew. This wasn’t random. Power bred rebellion, and some corners of her Dominion still dreamed of revolt.
“Your reign is already over,” the assassin whispered, defiant to the end.
Nyra thrust her dagger into the Dome’s console behind her, triggering a short-range alarm. Guards surged into the space moments later, seizing the would-be murderer. She sheathed her blade and turned away, the fire of her hair catching the dawnlight breaking across the ruined horizon.
For now, her Dominion endured. But she knew well—nothing unchallenged ever lasted for long.
“Clean the mess,” she muttered, gesturing to the blood on the floor. Nero let out a low snarl, as though agreeing with her disdain. “And find me the ones who sent them. Every. Last. One.”
Genre
Dystopian Epic
The Source…check out the article that inspired this amazing short story: Command Authority with Edgy Black and Red Makima Cosplay Ideas
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