Board Thread:Roleplay/@comment-26517142-20170106142830/@comment-28358106-20170416074445

"Captain Revayne to you, you presumptuous little twit!" Kashvi snarls, baring her sharpened teeth, her tentacles suddenly springing into view. "If you think you're getting out of this just by being taught 'a lesson,' you're -"

Adelaide raises her hand, and Kashvi goes silent, her oddly colored eye never leaving Jeiel. Adelaide puts her hands on the desk in front of her, and continues to speak.

"We will get to your friend Septius presently. We are in no rush, because I am informed that time is on our side.  Now, then..."

She leans forward slightly, her head cocked to the side. "Kashvi tells me that you managed to escape her custody. How you did it is beside the point.  However, I am told that this is but a very brief example of the various crimes of which you are guilty.  Namely, it is no stretch of logic to understand that Septius was here in the realm because he was following you.  You are a well-known associate of his.  Septius, having the ability to summon extraplanar weapons at his whim, capable of such devestation, is a horrid thing to consider.  Weapons that, as I understand it, come from your plane of origin.  Had the Doctor not been there, the losses would have been catastrophic indeed."

"I am also aware that an indelible evil that exists within you. One that others crave, and will go to great lengths to obtain, and have attempted to do so before.  I am told that this power within you has made the Doctor's life...quite complicated.  Now, then..."

A cold, hard feeling washes over Jeiel. "Before we continue, would you care to elucidate me on why such trouble seems to follow you so? Because I do so wish to hear of why.  Why, in fact, that given what you are capable of, and what intrigues that surround you, why I should be so inclined to consider any leniency whatsoever.  Because while regicide is the...least desirable outcome of this whole affair, it is certainly not the least pleasant."

Jeiel is suddenly aware that he is witness to an incredibly rare sight. Adelaide is no longer smiling. Her face is a mask of cold, terrifying calculus, her black gaze predatory and keen.