Cassian's barb hit its mark, as it
always did.
Never known for poor aim, he'd said.
Sibylla's lips tightened. True, her aim with a blaster had improved, but the memory of family jests still stung, the endless remarks that she could deliver a speech in Junior Assembly with precision but could not hit a target worth her life.
She flashed him a look that warned he was treading on thin ice. Yet when her gaze met his, she faltered. Those green eyes of his, the same eyes that had watched over her since childhood, seemed to peel back her composure with ease. They had shared everything growing up, and
of course, he could read her better than anyone else. Which only aggravated her more.
So instead of answering, Sibylla lifted the rifle. Three disks flew into the sky. Sibylla narrowed her eyes, exhaled, and squeezed the trigger.
One, two, three. All struck.
Finally.
Her chest swelled with triumph and she was ready to flaunt it, until Cassian stepped into her space, the breadth of him crowding her, his presence like a moving wall of quiet scrutiny. That low remark about not wasting her temper on ghosts pricked straight into a sore place, and her lips pressed into a stubborn line.
"It would be no different than the times you trudged up the steps at home soaked to the bone," she shot back, bristling as she tried to claw back her composure.
Leave it to her philosopher soldier of a brother to drop wisdom disguised as adages. She almost wished Elian were here instead of at the academy to distract him, he would make the
perfect foil for Cassian's probing attention.
She watched with narrowed eyes as Cassian raised his rifle and struck three more marks without fail, the practiced precision of a former general on full display. It only made her eyes tighten further in concern, recalling what he had told her their father tasked him to do. Suddenly, her own turmoil seemed foolish beside the heavier burdens he carried.
However, the query on her lips regarding the task their father had assigned Cassian was halted when he mentioned Aurelian had summoned him for a meeting tomorrow.
Sibylla blinked slowly at that news, then drew a slow breath, her eyes drifting toward the horizon. She let the view steady her, the mountains, the waterfalls, the paths she had memorized since youth.
When a summons by a recently crowned monarch was presented to a Royal House, it could mean one of many things, but the most pressing matter of course, was the one ability that truly affected every noble house and commoner alike -- the ability for the Monarch to assign stewardship to transitioning worlds coming into the republic.
A path that could equally elevate a House as much as be considered banishment.
Her brows furrowed, and as she let the beauty of Dee'ja Peak distract her for a moment, she thought back to Aurelian. Of the man he was when she first met him, and the man he was now.
No. She couldn't picture him abusing such power with her brother after the near desperate concern he had shown regarding the safety of Cassien and her House against
Thessaly Veruna
's potential conspiring plotting.
So what did that leave then?
Sibylla gave a shake of her head, her thick braid swaying as she indicated her lack of information, reloading her rifle. The click of the round sliding into place steadied her, layering composure back over her face.
"I do not. He has not informed me of any offical matters of state concerning House Abrantes directly." The exhale that followed left her lungs in a quiet rush.
"The last we spoke… it was of Thessaly." Her voice dipped, memory stirring.
"He was concerned about her return. He said she is fully invested in the old feud between our families. He warned me to tell you to stay away from her. He believes she would do anything to see House Abrantes extinguished."
The words hung in the air, but her thoughts had already drifted further, to that night, to the moment she had tried to ease his fears. She had told him Thessaly held no power over him anymore. That he had nothing to fear. That she believed he was the man meant to sit on the throne, and that together they could make something better for Naboo.
And then… how it had all unraveled thereafter.
Shiraya, they had played their roles well enough through the Coronation and Gala. But the memory of what had followed between them still unsettled her.
How was she supposed to face him in private again?