K I N G

SUNDARI PALACE, MANDALORE
"Some carry banners. Others carry blades.
And some carry both while pretending to do neither."
The Court was quiet.
Not silent—quiet. The kind of quiet that came when warriors listened, measured, and weighed words not for their volume, but for the threat they carried. For Aether Verd, each voice in his court was a piece of a larger weapon. He listened to them all. Heard the grain in the blade. The weight. The balance.
And when Serina Calis spoke, it was like watching someone place their hand on the hilt.
Not yet drawn.
But the intent was there.
Aether’s gaze found her, unmoving beneath his helm. He studied not just her words, but the choices she made in speaking them. The deliberate calm. The clinical detachment. The invocation of the Dark Council as if they were gods to be appeased with political offerings.
She said she flew no banner. But even in the shadows, he could see the red of the Sith bleeding through her words.
His voice cut the air with the precision of an ax to bark.
“You speak of flames, Serina Calis. I wonder how aflame the minds of your Dark Council will be when they learn you’ve earned the ire of Mandalore.”
There was no threat in the words.
Only truth. The kind that sat heavy in the chest and didn’t leave.
“You say you hold no alliance. But your words carry the weight of an empire. You speak of neutrality while carving out authority on a Mandalorian world. That makes you something far worse than an enemy. It makes you a pretender.”
He let the silence breathe, unafraid to let the weight of it linger.
“Taris is Mandalorian. Its people. Its holdings. Its sky. That is not a declaration. It is a fact. One the galaxy will come to understand.”
And with that—
He moved on.
Not because Serina was dismissed, but because her place had been set. The Court would remember her, and so would he.
His attention turned to the man who had entered with poise rather than provocation.
Aether’s gaze swept toward Imperius—the one who bore the sigil of Zakuul. His armor was regal, his posture proud, and his words carried intention without insult. It was the first time in this chamber that someone spoke with the tone of a potential partner, not a vulture eyeing the carcass of war.
“Zakuul has watched the rise and fall of many banners. And still, you arrive in peace. That speaks louder than any oath.”
He leaned forward slightly, one gauntlet resting on the arm of the Iron Throne.
“I make no promises in first meetings, Imperius. But impressions matter. You’ve made yours.”
And then—something lighter.
His gaze flicked to the side, toward the crimson-skinned Twi’lek whose presence had not gone unnoticed. She stood near his uncle, and Aether knew the look in Talohn’s eyes when he glanced her way. He chuckled once, low and warm, for his father's word's leapt to the front of his mind.
‘You’ll never find a Verd with an ugly partner.’
Talohn's choice in partner was living proof of this saying.
But the time for mirth, however brief, was gone as quickly as it arrived. Aether leaned back once more, posture ironclad and at ease.
The Court remained open. And now, it knew exactly where he stood.