Kai'el Brat "Guardian of the Light"
Braze stamped a tiny boot clad foot and crossed his arms, his eyes hard as he met Erian's gaze. "So let me get this straight," he said, his tone calm but cutting. "Kaelith gets stripped of his position and is forced into penance for a duel that we both agreed to , because it happened too close to the Tower's Pylons? And that's supposed to be justice?"
He shook his head, more to himself than anyone else. "I get that your laws are about protecting the land, the' humours', or whatever. But if the land's so sacred, why wasn't that made clear from the start? No one told me that stepping into that circle would bring down the wrath of the all-mighty Council. No one said that a duel would be treated like a declaration of war."
Braze's gaze snapped to Kaelith, the tension in his form evident. "You said I was being what the stars made me. Maybe that's true. But if the stars made me reckless, then what did they make you? Someone who has to carry everyone else's guilt? That's not what justice is. That's just a convenient play of making him a scapegoat."
His focus returned to Erian, eyes sharp. "You talk about balance, about not playing favorites. But I don't see balance. I see a man getting punished because it's easier to blame him than admit that your system is flawed."
Braze took a step forward, "If you want to make things right, then tell me what should've been done. Because if Kaelith is paying for a mistake that I helped cause, then I'm not walking away with clean hands."
His mechanical jaw clenched as he continued, voice lowering but gaining intensity in the cadence of the word spacing from the vocoder. "Those who want the power must have the responsibility. If you knew visitors and outsiders were arriving, why wasn't there some kind of warning in place? Why weren't these 'sacred Pylons' guarded, or these rules clearly explained to those who don't live under your laws?"
Braze's gaze swept over the gathered crowd now, lingering on the faces of those who had been there when the duel started. "And those who stood and watched, those who knew what was happening and said nothing, are they not just as guilty? If the danger was so obvious, then why didn't anyone step forward and speak?"
He shook his head, a bitter would be laugh escaping his throat. "You want to talk about consequences? Fine. But if Kaelith is paying for what happened here, then so should everyone who kept their mouths shut while it went down. Because silence isn't innocence. It's just another way to let someone else take the fall."
He fell quiet as his would be partner in crime Kaelith spoke up and seemed to listen to what he said.
He let out a breath, his shoulders sagging slightly. "As far as I can see, no real harm was done outside of some damaged flooring. If this is really about some cracked stone, then fine , I'll pay for it or put in the work to repair what was broken.... But if it's about something deeper, then someone needs to actually explain it instead of hiding behind traditions and half-truths."
His eyes locked back onto Erian, with a fierce and unyielding gaze. "Because right now, all I'm seeing is a Council that's more concerned with appearances than with real consequences. And if that's the way you do things here, then maybe it's not just Kaelith who should be reconsidering his place."
Braze's eyes widened behind his mask as Laphisto laid the situation out before him, effectively handing him the opportunity to spin a lie that could potentially shift blame away from Kaelith. For a moment, Braze's mind raced. He could take the out, claim ignorance, play along with the Echani pheromone theory. It would be easy.... and... Convenient.
But that wasn't him. Braze remembered well what side of the wars

Braze's mechanical jaw clenched as he stepped forward, meeting Laphisto's gaze before turning to the Council. His somber jade green eyes were unflinching, sharp as glass. "I appreciate the assist," he said, his tone neutral, almost too calm. "But that's not what happened."
His gaze swept over the gathered faces, lingering on Ophelia, Sasha, Erian, and finally Kaelith. "I won't stand here and spin a lie to make things easier for me or for Kaelith. The truth is, I wasn't influenced by any Echani pheromones. I chose to step into that circle. I chose to challenge him, and Kaelith chose to answer."
He exhaled slowly, shoulders squared. "What's happening here is deeper than a duel. The truth is, your people aren't divided because of what happened in that circle. They're divided because your laws treat some as more worthy of forgiveness than others."
Braze gestured to Kaelith, his vocoder voice growing in mild volume. "You can paint Kaelith as the aggressor, the one who needs to pay the price. But that's just treating the symptom, not the cause. People like Kaelith are already carrying the weight of their ancestors' mistakes, and now you're asking them to bear even more. Meanwhile, everyone else gets to stand by, watching, pretending they didn't help fan the flames."
His focus turned to Erian. "You said it yourself, the Tower remembers what happened here. The Pylons are marked. But that floor can be repaired. What about Kaelith? What about the other Cholerkin? Who's going to repair the damage done to them when they're treated like threats for simply defending their honor?"
Braze huffed out a breath, "You want to talk about unity? Then don't just throw someone like Kaelith under the hoverbus to keep the peace. Make a real stand. Show that this council isn't just here to uphold tradition but to actually make things right."
He took a step back, and moved towards his previous opponent. "Because if this is how you treat the people who are supposed to stand by your side, then you're not uniting anyone. You're just creating more cracks for your enemies to exploit."
The man who'd just been stripped of everything was walking away with more dignity than half the council standing there judging him.
Braze's gaze followed Kaelith as he moved toward the edge of the plaza, his back straight walking with a slow calm deliberateness. There was a defiant sort of grace in it. A purpose that Braze couldn't help but admire, even as he felt the bitterness of it sink in.
"Wait," Braze called, his vocoder failing to capture the rawness in his voice. He padded after the man, until he was a few paces behind Kaelith.
"You don't have to go alone," he said,
His green eyes flicked toward the Council, toward the faces of those who still watched, waiting to see if he'd step out of line again. And maybe he would. Maybe he was already past the point of caring about what they thought.
"I don't get why they did this to you," Braze said, the words blunt and without pretense. "I don't get why everyone's pretending like you were the only one to cross a line... I didn't think What I did would cause you trouble."
Braze turned to face the Council now, voice louder, challenging. "What good is a council that watches its own people walk away with nothing but more wounds?"
He looked back to Kaelith, "If you're going out there to learn.. then come with me. . . Maybe the stars made me reckless, but they sure as hell didn't make me a coward."