Voice of Naboo
Kaadara Estate, Naboo
Directly Interacting with:
Nearby:
Wearing: Dress | x x
The evening had, thankfully, calmed.
Well, as much as it could. Murmurs still threaded through the hall, but Sibylla's interjection had smoothed the ripples of tension left in the wake of the earlier exchanges. That had been her intent all along, to bring the focus back to what mattered: Naboo, their survival, and, in turn, the Republic.
Amid the quiet shuffle of attendants refilling glasses, Sibylla caught
Truth be told, Bastila's speech was well crafted. Surprisingly so. Enough to make Sibylla consider speaking with her afterward, in a setting better suited for dialogue. If Bastila truly wished to step into politics, she would need more than declarations. She would need to know what it meant to stake her heart to a platform, and where she stood within the different currents of governance.
Once Bastila concluded, Sibylla took another sip of her whiskey. The Corellian spirit burned a path down her throat, though with each drink it grew smoother. Aurelian had been right, it did get easier the more one needed it.
The dinner quieted again. Quills scratched across ballots. Low voices traded predictions over who would rise as Naboo's Sovereign. To be expected, Sibylla mused. Still, for the first time that night, she thought the outcome might yet turn toward the better.
At least until the brisk arrival of
It wasn't the boldness of her entrance that struck Sibylla most, but Aurelian's reaction to it. The mask he so often wore, the polished veneer of overconfidence and performance, slipped away all at once. What replaced it wasn't even the man Sibylla had seen in his quiet office, stripped of theatrics. No, this was something else entirely. And it concerned her.
Her hazel eyes found his, her own expression composed though her gaze betrayed the question behind it: what is happening?
Her attention shifted to the woman in mourning cloth, the one Aurelian had given his seat to without hesitation, as if the command had been ingrained in him since boyhood.
"I beg your pardon," Sibylla said evenly, her voice cordial but firm as she addressed Thessaly directly.
"May I ask who you are?"