Character
Time: Evening
Location: Nubia StarDrives Exhibition Hall
City: Theed, Naboo
The exhibition hall had been transformed into a display of polished Naboo elegance.
Soft light shimmered across the vaulted chamber, reflecting from curved chrome surfaces and polished marble inlays that seemed designed as much for aesthetic beauty as structural grace. Nubia StarDrives had spared little expense in presenting their vision of refinement. Suspended holographic displays hovered throughout the hall, each projecting rotating models of their most celebrated propulsion systems—sleek hyperdrive assemblies, stabilizer rings, and precision-engineered components rendered in luminous detail. Faint blue light from the projections washed across nearby guests as the displays turned slowly in the air, their quiet hum barely audible beneath the room's conversation.
Servers moved quietly among the gathered guests carrying trays of wine and crystal flutes, the delicate glass chiming softly when lifted from silver platters. The scent of Naboo citrus wine and warm spiced hors d'oeuvres drifted through the hall, mingling with the faint metallic tang of polished starship components on display. The low murmur of conversation carried across the chamber in overlapping currents of quiet diplomacy while subdued orchestral music drifted from somewhere deeper within the hall, the gentle strings rising and falling like distant tidewater.
Tonight's gathering served two purposes.
Officially, it was a fundraiser for the reelection campaign of Naboo's sitting senator,
Dominic Praxon
—an evening of polite speeches, quiet endorsements, and generous donations from those who understood the value of political goodwill. Nubia StarDrives had graciously opened its halls for the occasion, lending both its prestige and its engineering marvels to the evening's display.
Unofficially, it had become what such gatherings always did: a convergence of influence.
Corporate representatives, wealthy patrons, starship captains, diplomats, and a handful of carefully invited outsiders moved through the room in slow conversational currents, the soft brush of fabric and the muted clink of jewelry occasionally punctuating the steady flow of voices. Some paused beneath the hovering engine displays, their reflections gliding across polished floors while others spoke in quieter clusters near the hall's curved balconies. Somewhere deeper in the chamber, a small gathering had formed near the senator himself, though the room's shifting conversations made it difficult to discern whether politics or industry had captured the greater share of attention.
Each guest seemed to evaluate the others with the subtle attentiveness common to rooms where power and opportunity shared the same air.
Emberlyn Kislo entered with the quiet composure expected of someone accustomed to such gatherings.
Her posture was effortless, her movements measured and confident as she allowed herself a brief moment to take in the room. The smooth marble beneath her steps reflected the glow of the suspended displays above, and the faint warmth of the hall's lighting brushed across her shoulders as she moved forward.
She had chosen her attire with deliberate restraint.
A gown of deep midnight blue flowed in clean Naboo lines, the fabric catching the light in soft shifting highlights as she moved. The cut was elegant but practical—fitted through the waist before falling freely enough to allow easy movement. It was the sort of design that favored quiet confidence over spectacle.
Her dark hair had been drawn up into a refined arrangement at the back of her head, secured neatly while a few softened strands framed her face. The style was understated, polished without appearing overly elaborate.
Her makeup followed the same philosophy.
A light touch across her features allowed the natural warmth of her complexion to remain visible, the faint constellation of soft freckles across the bridge of her nose left unhidden. Only her eyes carried deliberate emphasis—subtle shading and liner drawing attention to their unusual violet-gold color beneath the ambient light.
The result was neither ostentatious nor austere.
Simply composed.
Years spent among Naboo's aristocratic circles had taught her the language of events like this—how to move through them without appearing hurried, how to acknowledge a host with a glance, how to observe without being observed too closely in return.
But while many guests admired the décor, Emberlyn's attention drifted elsewhere.
Her gaze lingered on the propulsion displays.
One holographic assembly rotated slowly nearby, revealing the intricate geometry of a Nubia hyperdrive stabilizer housing. The projection shifted to expose the internal alignment lattice, its delicate engineering suspended in glowing cross-section while soft streams of data scrolled quietly along the edges of the display. The light from the projection shimmered faintly across the polished floor as the assembly turned in steady silence.
She tilted her head slightly.
Interesting.
Nubia engineers had altered the stabilizer geometry—subtle, but deliberate. The change would distribute hyperspace stress more evenly along the mount points. Elegant design… though she wondered how the system behaved when a pilot demanded something less elegant from it.
Her eyes traced the alignment points automatically, the same way a pilot studies a cockpit panel before takeoff, following the structural pathways as if she could feel the vibration of a hyperdrive spinning to life beneath them.
If the tolerances were as precise as they appeared, the drive would hold beautifully during a standard jump.
But how would it respond to a hard correction?
Emberlyn allowed herself a small, thoughtful smile.
Now that was a question worth asking.
And somewhere in this room, she suspected, stood the engineers who might have the answer.
She stepped closer to the display, the projection's cool blue light reflecting faintly in her eyes as the stabilizer assembly rotated once more above its pedestal. A small cluster of guests lingered nearby—some admiring the craftsmanship, others discussing performance specifications in the careful tones of people who understood at least a little of what they were looking at.
She studied the alignment ring again, her attention narrowing slightly as another set of data points flickered across the edge of the hologram.
"Interesting choice," she murmured quietly, more to the display than anyone in particular.
Her gaze drifted toward the gathered guests beside the pedestal, curious now whether any of them were responsible for the elegant piece of engineering turning slowly in the air before her.
Location: Nubia StarDrives Exhibition Hall
City: Theed, Naboo
The exhibition hall had been transformed into a display of polished Naboo elegance.
Soft light shimmered across the vaulted chamber, reflecting from curved chrome surfaces and polished marble inlays that seemed designed as much for aesthetic beauty as structural grace. Nubia StarDrives had spared little expense in presenting their vision of refinement. Suspended holographic displays hovered throughout the hall, each projecting rotating models of their most celebrated propulsion systems—sleek hyperdrive assemblies, stabilizer rings, and precision-engineered components rendered in luminous detail. Faint blue light from the projections washed across nearby guests as the displays turned slowly in the air, their quiet hum barely audible beneath the room's conversation.
Servers moved quietly among the gathered guests carrying trays of wine and crystal flutes, the delicate glass chiming softly when lifted from silver platters. The scent of Naboo citrus wine and warm spiced hors d'oeuvres drifted through the hall, mingling with the faint metallic tang of polished starship components on display. The low murmur of conversation carried across the chamber in overlapping currents of quiet diplomacy while subdued orchestral music drifted from somewhere deeper within the hall, the gentle strings rising and falling like distant tidewater.
Tonight's gathering served two purposes.
Officially, it was a fundraiser for the reelection campaign of Naboo's sitting senator,
Unofficially, it had become what such gatherings always did: a convergence of influence.
Corporate representatives, wealthy patrons, starship captains, diplomats, and a handful of carefully invited outsiders moved through the room in slow conversational currents, the soft brush of fabric and the muted clink of jewelry occasionally punctuating the steady flow of voices. Some paused beneath the hovering engine displays, their reflections gliding across polished floors while others spoke in quieter clusters near the hall's curved balconies. Somewhere deeper in the chamber, a small gathering had formed near the senator himself, though the room's shifting conversations made it difficult to discern whether politics or industry had captured the greater share of attention.
Each guest seemed to evaluate the others with the subtle attentiveness common to rooms where power and opportunity shared the same air.
Emberlyn Kislo entered with the quiet composure expected of someone accustomed to such gatherings.
Her posture was effortless, her movements measured and confident as she allowed herself a brief moment to take in the room. The smooth marble beneath her steps reflected the glow of the suspended displays above, and the faint warmth of the hall's lighting brushed across her shoulders as she moved forward.
She had chosen her attire with deliberate restraint.
A gown of deep midnight blue flowed in clean Naboo lines, the fabric catching the light in soft shifting highlights as she moved. The cut was elegant but practical—fitted through the waist before falling freely enough to allow easy movement. It was the sort of design that favored quiet confidence over spectacle.
Her dark hair had been drawn up into a refined arrangement at the back of her head, secured neatly while a few softened strands framed her face. The style was understated, polished without appearing overly elaborate.
Her makeup followed the same philosophy.
A light touch across her features allowed the natural warmth of her complexion to remain visible, the faint constellation of soft freckles across the bridge of her nose left unhidden. Only her eyes carried deliberate emphasis—subtle shading and liner drawing attention to their unusual violet-gold color beneath the ambient light.
The result was neither ostentatious nor austere.
Simply composed.
Years spent among Naboo's aristocratic circles had taught her the language of events like this—how to move through them without appearing hurried, how to acknowledge a host with a glance, how to observe without being observed too closely in return.
But while many guests admired the décor, Emberlyn's attention drifted elsewhere.
Her gaze lingered on the propulsion displays.
One holographic assembly rotated slowly nearby, revealing the intricate geometry of a Nubia hyperdrive stabilizer housing. The projection shifted to expose the internal alignment lattice, its delicate engineering suspended in glowing cross-section while soft streams of data scrolled quietly along the edges of the display. The light from the projection shimmered faintly across the polished floor as the assembly turned in steady silence.
She tilted her head slightly.
Interesting.
Nubia engineers had altered the stabilizer geometry—subtle, but deliberate. The change would distribute hyperspace stress more evenly along the mount points. Elegant design… though she wondered how the system behaved when a pilot demanded something less elegant from it.
Her eyes traced the alignment points automatically, the same way a pilot studies a cockpit panel before takeoff, following the structural pathways as if she could feel the vibration of a hyperdrive spinning to life beneath them.
If the tolerances were as precise as they appeared, the drive would hold beautifully during a standard jump.
But how would it respond to a hard correction?
Emberlyn allowed herself a small, thoughtful smile.
Now that was a question worth asking.
And somewhere in this room, she suspected, stood the engineers who might have the answer.
She stepped closer to the display, the projection's cool blue light reflecting faintly in her eyes as the stabilizer assembly rotated once more above its pedestal. A small cluster of guests lingered nearby—some admiring the craftsmanship, others discussing performance specifications in the careful tones of people who understood at least a little of what they were looking at.
She studied the alignment ring again, her attention narrowing slightly as another set of data points flickered across the edge of the hologram.
"Interesting choice," she murmured quietly, more to the display than anyone in particular.
Her gaze drifted toward the gathered guests beside the pedestal, curious now whether any of them were responsible for the elegant piece of engineering turning slowly in the air before her.
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