K I N G

SUNDARI PALACE - FIRING RANGE
"Titles don’t make empires. People do."
The crack of blaster fire echoed down the length of the range—sharp, rhythmic bursts that left trails of ozone and scorched durasteel in their wake.
The lower levels of Sundari Palace weren’t built for politics. No thrones. No stained-glass windows. Just iron, fire, and purpose. Here, under the weight of the old city’s bones, Mandalorians came to train. To bleed. To perfect their craft.
Aether Verd stood near the far end of the range, one arm resting across the stock of his favored pulse rifle. Black and crimson armor dulled by dust and carbon scoring. His helmet was clipped to his belt, hair still damp from a morning spar, eyes sharp but not hostile. This wasn’t a battlefield.
It was a proving ground.
He turned as the visitor approached—Imperius, as styled. A man of station and influence in his own right. Not Mandalorian, but someone worth meeting outside the veil of titles.
Aether nodded once, gesturing with his free hand to the long, wall-mounted display of weapons: disruptors, repeaters, slugthrowers, scatterguns, even ancient beskad-forged rifles made centuries ago and refurbished for modern use.
“Pick your poison,” he said simply, the faintest smirk tugging at the edge of his mouth. “Everything on the wall’s live, but the shield-belts’ll keep you in one piece.” Probably.
He lifted his own rifle slightly, just enough for it to catch the light. “This one’s mine. Pulse rifle. Three-shot bursts. Enough kick to knock sense into the cocky ones, not enough to cook the walls. Feels honest.”
There was a pause as he turned toward the range, eyeing the fresh set of static and moving targets that flickered to life with a flick of a nearby panel.
But his voice came steady—not casual, not aggressive. Just real.
“Tell me something, Imperius.” His head tilted, gaze tracking the man beside him. “How many Empires are there, right now?”