Sword of Shiraya

The Naboo lake country shimmered, a vast expanse of green breathing with the gentle sway of its grasses under the late morning sun. A constant, patient murmur of distant waterfalls wove through the air, a natural symphony accompanied by the cheerful chirping of birds and the occasional, low thrum of a repulsorlift from the valley below.
Lorn sat quietly, a solitary figure against the verdant landscape. He wasn't perfectly still even though that wasn't his way, but the gnawing tension in his shoulders had finally begun to ease. His hands lay open on his knees, his gaze closed, his face tilted skyward as if trying to drink in the sunlight.
He used to resent these moments. Meditation. Stillness. It felt like a betrayal, a surrender to inaction when there was always some crisis burning somewhere, demanding his attention.
But here, surrounded by the vibrant landscape of wildflowers, kissed by the breeze, with the low hum of construction droids working diligently behind him, it felt different.
Tucked into the gentle incline of the hill was the nascent shape of a home. Warm stone and polished wood, still rough around the edges, but already alive with the promise of a life he was painstakingly building, brick by brick, for himself and for Isla. He'd been pouring weeks into this place, stealing moments between patrols, between missions, between the endless excuses he'd given himself for not building something real. It wasn't just about shelter, it was about planting roots, about daring to believe that perhaps, this fragile peace could last.
And yet… the image of her was an unshakeable ghost every time his eyes closed. Whether in these quiet moments or in the restless grip of sleep, the vision returned, the one Isla had shared, the one that still refused to make sense.
Ala. Or… Indra. Her face, etched with a profound inner conflict. The sudden, fierce glow of her lightsaber. A fleeting glimpse of sorrow, then betrayal. And then, a searing flash of him, falling.
He hadn't told Ala everything. Not yet. And since "The Final Light," their conversations had been sparse. The galaxy, as it always did, had pulled them in opposing directions, scattering them to new emergencies, to the demands of being Jedi, to the harsh realities of life. It was a struggle to determine which was the heavier burden.
But they had a plan. A quiet, unspoken agreement. Meet here, talk, feel.
So he sat, breathing in rhythm with the whispering grasses, the timeless song of the waterfall, the gentle caress of the wind. He waited for the woman who could embody both the fury of a storm and the serenity of a calm sea, all within a single breath.