Seren Gwyn
White Star
Bastion announced itself long before Seren set foot on its surface.
Not with noise or spectacle, but with order—the precise alignment of traffic lanes, the disciplined cadence of patrols, the way the city seemed to breathe in measured intervals. Even the air felt regulated, filtered through systems designed to deny chaos its foothold. It was a world built on control rather than reverence, on function rather than myth.
She emerged from the transport without ceremony, dark coat settling neatly around her frame as the ramp lowered. The lights of the spaceport caught faintly in her amber eyes, reflecting a city that did not pretend to be anything other than what it was: a capital of survival after collapse.
Seren paused at the foot of the ramp, allowing the moment to stretch. She did not bow. She did not hurry. Bastion could wait. Her gaze swept the platform once—security placements, exits, overlapping lines of sight. Efficient. Predictable. Comforting, in its own way.
Then she turned her attention to the man assigned to her. Kallous. The name had reached her before the orders did. A functionary with teeth. A survivor who understood both obedience and discretion—rare qualities to find in equal measure. The kind the Diarchy trusted not because he was invisible, but because he knew when to be.
Seren inclined her head just enough to acknowledge him, her expression calm, unreadable. "I appreciate the courtesy of an escort," she said evenly, voice carrying without effort. "Bastion is… less forgiving to visitors who wander without context."
Her eyes flicked briefly toward the skyline beyond the port—clean lines, layered defenses, a city built to endure rather than inspire.
"You may consider me cooperative," she continued, tone mild, almost reassuring. "I am here by invitation, not curiosity. I have no interest in disrupting your order." A pause. The faintest hint of something knowing touched her gaze.
"Only in understanding it." She stepped forward at last, closing the distance between them until she stood comfortably at his side, not ahead, not behind—an intentional choice. "Lead on, Commander," Seren said quietly. "I am told Bastion rewards those who pay attention."
And with that, the Shadow of Malachor entered the heart of the Diarchy—not as a threat, not as a guest, but as something far more dangerous—an observer.
Kallous
Not with noise or spectacle, but with order—the precise alignment of traffic lanes, the disciplined cadence of patrols, the way the city seemed to breathe in measured intervals. Even the air felt regulated, filtered through systems designed to deny chaos its foothold. It was a world built on control rather than reverence, on function rather than myth.
She emerged from the transport without ceremony, dark coat settling neatly around her frame as the ramp lowered. The lights of the spaceport caught faintly in her amber eyes, reflecting a city that did not pretend to be anything other than what it was: a capital of survival after collapse.
Seren paused at the foot of the ramp, allowing the moment to stretch. She did not bow. She did not hurry. Bastion could wait. Her gaze swept the platform once—security placements, exits, overlapping lines of sight. Efficient. Predictable. Comforting, in its own way.
Then she turned her attention to the man assigned to her. Kallous. The name had reached her before the orders did. A functionary with teeth. A survivor who understood both obedience and discretion—rare qualities to find in equal measure. The kind the Diarchy trusted not because he was invisible, but because he knew when to be.
Seren inclined her head just enough to acknowledge him, her expression calm, unreadable. "I appreciate the courtesy of an escort," she said evenly, voice carrying without effort. "Bastion is… less forgiving to visitors who wander without context."
Her eyes flicked briefly toward the skyline beyond the port—clean lines, layered defenses, a city built to endure rather than inspire.
"You may consider me cooperative," she continued, tone mild, almost reassuring. "I am here by invitation, not curiosity. I have no interest in disrupting your order." A pause. The faintest hint of something knowing touched her gaze.
"Only in understanding it." She stepped forward at last, closing the distance between them until she stood comfortably at his side, not ahead, not behind—an intentional choice. "Lead on, Commander," Seren said quietly. "I am told Bastion rewards those who pay attention."
And with that, the Shadow of Malachor entered the heart of the Diarchy—not as a threat, not as a guest, but as something far more dangerous—an observer.