“The flame that was cast aside still burns — but now it burns through steel.”
Once born into a noble line in the Amarrian Empire — the secretive Uchiha bloodline, guardians of old traditions and vessels of forgotten power — Ahri Uchiha was raised in ritual, shadow, and silence. Her clan was famed for its singular focus, discipline, and spiritual power — but as the Empire turned its eye outward, the Uchihas were deemed too insular, too proud, and too dangerous.
Her clan was shattered by internal treachery, its name struck from the records, its remnants hunted or exiled. Ahri was a child when the purge came — not spared, but overlooked.
She has not forgotten.
She took to the stars not as a refugee, but as a reckoner. With blood-red sails and corrupted Amarrian hulls, she flies the Ashimmu, a vampire ship known for draining the life from its enemies. Her vessel — Mokutan (木炭) — is as much a tomb as it is a weapon: coal-black, ember-red, unyielding.
Each engagement is a silent liturgy, a ritual act. She doesn’t taunt. She doesn’t rage. She drains, entraps, and extinguishes — then vanishes into the stars. A killmail signed not in words, but in silence and scorch marks.
Those who speak of her now — whispered among pirates, warclones, and scouts — call her many things:
The Last Uchiha
The Red Thread
The Weaver of Fire
The Wraith of Manatirid
But her name, if you catch it on comms before the static takes you, is simple:
Ahri. Uchiha.
And she remembers everything.