Senator of Vandelhelm
"Democracy flatters sentient beings with the illusion that their collective will is something noble, something enlightened. But gather any crowd and you will find the truth: minds multiply their fears faster than their virtues. A thousand voices do not refine wisdom — they drown it. Real progress has never begun in assemblies. It begins with a single will sharp enough to cut through the noise, and a vision ruthless enough to drag the unwilling safely into the future."
OPEN
So it was unusual—almost decadent—for Senator Veyran to live outside such a schedule. Naboo, for all its beauty, had proven a surprisingly busy posting; most of her days were spent drifting from chamber to chamber, courting minor senators and smoothing alliances before her presence grew too noticeable. It was politics as performance, all velvet words and quiet maneuvering. And yet, for all its bustle, it lacked the iron weight of Vandelhelm. Nothing on Naboo had demanded of her what her homeworld did. In truth, she found the Republic's soft pace almost dull—pleasant, yes, but boring in the way a blade grows bored sitting sheathed.
The galaxy moved at its own relentless pace, and Elara often felt as though she had stepped outside its current—much like a traveler who moves too quickly and finds time slipping from their grasp. In periods of crisis she felt strangely at ease, and in moments of galactic calm she found herself unsettled. It was an irony she had grown accustomed to. Part of her longed to reset this "Galactic Clock," to align herself once more with the tempo of events. Yet being removed from that constant churn had its advantages. A gear rarely understands the engine it drives, and Elara suspected she was no different; perhaps she did not truly understand the galaxy she walked through. If so, were her efforts always doomed to fall short—small, precise movements swallowed by a machine too vast to feel them?
Perhaps such questions were the province of Jedi—those who spent their lives untangling the threads of philosophy and cosmic purpose. Theology and wisdom had never been Elara's strengths, yet she still found herself reaching for them, trying to make sense of her place in the galaxy's turning. Understanding these matters would serve her well. They might reveal whether the galaxy genuinely had a claim upon her… or whether she was simply forcing her own claim upon it.
Such matters could be set aside, at least for now. Elara had a schedule to keep and a modest trade negotiation awaiting her arrival—nothing pivotal, but important enough to justify her presence. It gave her the perfect excuse to finally wander through Naboo as she had long intended. This time, she would let herself drift beyond the polished boulevards and curated facades, toward the quieter, less flattering corners of the world. Some senators pretended such places did not exist. Elara preferred honesty in her surroundings.
Not that she minded the unsavoury bits. In truth, she found them refreshing.