Interim Chancellor
Location: The Big Dee'ja Peak
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Aurelian had not had a good nights sleep in weeks, but his exhaustion had started long before that. It lay in the subtle slump of his shoulders, in the dull ache behind his eyes, and in the way even his fierce smile felt too heavy to raise. The starship hummed around him, a low, constant sound as it cut through hyperspace toward Naboo, back from helping refugees on Ukatis. He was heading toward her, but even that simple comfort struggled to break through the haze.
He reclined in a chair, boots kicked out, head tipped back as the holo-feed crackled to life. There she appeared... Sibylla, framed in soft blues and gold light, her expression a mix of amusement and worry.
"By all the stars," Aurelian groaned dramatically, dragging a hand down his face. "Sib, you have no idea what kind of week I've had."
She arched a brow, which he took as full permission to begin. "The Galactic Alliance is dissolving," he started, gesturing broadly, "which apparently means I'm the one who must soothe every panicking bureaucrat. Refugees are flooding from every border system, Ukatis is still burning itself back into shape, and my sister has decided to haunt me like a vengeful spirit in Parrlay."
He didn't stop. He couldn't. "And my houses business interests? Tanking. And do not get me started on that pathetic Senator from Malastare who keeps insisting I hold 'too much consolidated influence,' as if I asked to pick up the Chancellor's duties when everyone else scattered like frightened birds."
His voice cracked, just lightly, just enough that Sibylla softened. Aurelian's jaw clenched, the angles of his face tightening. He looked carved from fatigue and stubborn fire. His dark, tousled hair fell messily across his forehead. His eyes were the worst giveaway: tired gold dimmed by responsibility, by too many worlds pressing in at once.
"Far gone," he murmured, "are the days when all I wanted was to be the king Naboo deserved." A humorless note curled in his throat. "Now I'm apparently the leader of the Republic… and they hate me for stepping up."
Silence stretched. He let out a long, slow breath as if leaking out the last of his fury. His gaze lifted to hers again. "I'm complaining too much." He scrubbed the heel of his hand over his eyes. "I'm sorry. I miss you."
Her smile, small and warm, undid something in him. "I'll be there shortly," he promised. He ended the call before he could linger and grow pathetic.
The landing sequence began, the ship banking low over Naboo's rolling mist and glimmering lakes. Dee'ja Peak rose in the distance, mountains crowned with morning light, waterfalls threading down their sides. Near the Abrantes estate, terraces carved from marble steps caught the glow like mirrors.
Aurelian stood, catching his reflection in the polished metal paneling. He paused, then stepped closer. His hair definitely needed fixing. He pushed it back, then immediately regretted it and let it fall in that artful, wicked disarray Sibylla always accused him of cultivating. He straightened his collar next and tried to smooth the shadows under his eyes with sheer willpower.
He wanted to look good for her. Not as the Chancellor-by-accident, not as a tired knight of Naboo burdened by galaxies. Just… her Aurelian.
The starship touched down on a mountain platform, repulsors sighing. The ramp lowered with a hiss of cool alpine air. He swallowed, nerves pricking his spine. This was her home. Her people. The legacy she came from.
Would they accept him? Would they see who he was in the past? He didn't know. But he knew he wanted to try.
He descended the ramp.
Then he saw her. Sibylla stood framed by the morning light, her eyes bright as the lakes below, her expression soft in that rare way she saved only for him.
Every worry in him; Malastare, Parrlay, Ukatis, the collapsing Alliance, the weight of a galaxy tearing at his spine, evaporated like mist in sunlight. His smile returned at last, slow and genuine. Aurelian breathed. She was enough to bring him home.
In that moment, right there at the foot of the ramp, he remembered why he carried all that weight in the first place. He remembered why he fought and kept stepping forward even when it broke him. For her. For them. For what they might yet build.