Silver Star

Outfit: Robes
Equipment: Lightsaber, Bracelet, Earrings
Companion: Isari
Tag:


The city was humming. Not the kind of noise Eve had never quite grown used to on Coruscant — not the roar of repulsors or flashing lights or endless vertical layers of motion — but something sweeter, older. Traditional music rang through the crowds. Children laughed as they weaved between vendors. Streamers were strung across white stone streets, and handwoven flags flapped proudly in the breeze.
It was a festival. A real one. The kind Mariana used to tell stories about when Eve was little, curled up at her feet during long winters. She never thought she’d be here to see one again. Not like this. Not with her mother beside her.
The capital city was larger than Eve remembered. Cleaner, too. Its sun-kissed buildings curved in the old Echani style: soft and elegant and strong, made to stand the test of time. Everything smelled of cinnamon and sweet spice, of fried breads and crushed petals. Musicians played on every corner. Girls with flower crowns in their hair passed cups of chilled juice to strangers, laughing and twirling barefoot on white stone. And reunited family members sparred openly on the streets with joy, reconnecting with their loved ones in the way that mattered most to the Echani. All unfolded beneath the glistening gaze of the royal palace that stood proud and magnificent, looming above as a monument of Echani pride and power.
Eve grinned, her hand brushing against her mother’s as they walked.
"I thought you said you didn’t like crowds," she teased gently. Mariana gave her a look.
"I don’t. But I couldn't miss this, I've waited all my life to see the royals. And to be able to experience it with you? What a blessing."
Eve beamed, and for a moment, she didn’t feel like a Jedi at all. She felt like a daughter. Like someone’s little girl, standing in the middle of her people’s capital city, wrapped in festival joy. He wrapped her arm around her mother's as they walked. Trotting just ahead, Isari watched the unfolding festival with wide-eyed wonder, a mix of excitement and quiet awe. Her silvery fur and luminous eyes drew curious glances from those who recognised the old Miralune legends — whispers of fox spirits and omens, now walking among them.
They stopped at a food stall tucked into a narrow archway. The old Echani man behind it served up spiced flatbreads folded with honeyed figs and soft white cheese. Eve took two and passed one to her mother. The scent alone made her stomach growl. Mariana gave a nostalgic smile as they munched.
"Last time I had one of these, your father still had a beard." Eve blinked.
"He had a beard?"
"Briefly. Just before you were born. It looked awful."
They laughed. It felt easy.
Then — a soft shift in the wind. The music faded, replaced by distant drums and the faint sound of horns. Excitement rippled through the crowd.
"They’re coming," someone whispered.
Eve turned toward the procession route, eyes scanning the path ahead. She slipped her hand gently into her mother’s again, guiding her through the crowd with careful steps until they found a place near the front. Isari followed close behind. Children sat on the stone edge of a flower-lined terrace; older women leaned from balconies above, tossing pale petals into the street.
The royal procession was drawing close.
Eve could feel the weight of it, not through the Force, but in the air, in the hush that fell over the crowd like a held breath. Flags stirred. The drums grew louder. She looked up, lips parted slightly, as if she were still that farm girl from the silver fields.
"Come on," she whispered to her mother, eye alight. "You don’t want to miss this."
And for a moment, she forgot everything else.