Ascending Legend
The scent of spice-rub and slow-burning wood coals drifted through the courtyard long before Kallous stepped into view.
Iandre stood at the stone pit, sleeves rolled neatly past her elbows, the long braid of ink-black hair resting over one shoulder—sleek, precise, and bound tightly enough that not a strand escaped. Her grey eyes, calm and steady as winter steel, reflected the subtle orange glow rising from the grill beside her.
No chaos.
No roaring flames.
Just controlled heat—exactly the way she preferred everything in her life.
On the table beside her, vegetables and marinated cuts of meat were arranged with military precision. The quiet discipline of the space made it obvious this was not the casual hobby of someone who "liked cooking." This was a skill. A craft. A martial art of its own.
She looked up at the sound of approaching footsteps—measured but unmistakably confident.
Kallous.
When he reached the edge of the courtyard, she greeted him with a composed, measured smile.
"Kallous, I presume."
No bow. No stiff formality. Just a respectful tilt of her head as she stepped aside, inviting him into the warm circle of firelight.
"You wanted a lesson."
"So—I'm going to teach you properly."
She lifted the grill lid with smooth ease, checking the coals beneath. Her braid shifted with the motion, catching the faint glow like a stroke of dark glass under flame.
"Most people think grilling is about fire," she said, voice even and almost instructional.
"They chase heat the way inexperienced duelists chase an opponent—loud, reckless, trying to overpower instead of understand."
Her grey eyes flicked up to meet his—direct, steady, and with a subtle spark of amusement.
"Uncontrolled flame is a weapon."
"And I don't teach anyone to use weapons by accident."
She gestured for him to join her at the workstation—an invitation, not a suggestion.
"Come here."
"First lesson: heat control."
She extended a hand over the grate, feeling the heat radiating upward, mapping the temperature the way a Force-sensitive maps a battlefield.
"Tell me," she said, gaze unwavering,
"when you grill…do you rely on instinct?"
A beat.
"Or improvisation?"
She already suspected the answer.
But it mattered that he said it.
Kallous
Iandre stood at the stone pit, sleeves rolled neatly past her elbows, the long braid of ink-black hair resting over one shoulder—sleek, precise, and bound tightly enough that not a strand escaped. Her grey eyes, calm and steady as winter steel, reflected the subtle orange glow rising from the grill beside her.
No chaos.
No roaring flames.
Just controlled heat—exactly the way she preferred everything in her life.
On the table beside her, vegetables and marinated cuts of meat were arranged with military precision. The quiet discipline of the space made it obvious this was not the casual hobby of someone who "liked cooking." This was a skill. A craft. A martial art of its own.
She looked up at the sound of approaching footsteps—measured but unmistakably confident.
Kallous.
When he reached the edge of the courtyard, she greeted him with a composed, measured smile.
"Kallous, I presume."
No bow. No stiff formality. Just a respectful tilt of her head as she stepped aside, inviting him into the warm circle of firelight.
"You wanted a lesson."
"So—I'm going to teach you properly."
She lifted the grill lid with smooth ease, checking the coals beneath. Her braid shifted with the motion, catching the faint glow like a stroke of dark glass under flame.
"Most people think grilling is about fire," she said, voice even and almost instructional.
"They chase heat the way inexperienced duelists chase an opponent—loud, reckless, trying to overpower instead of understand."
Her grey eyes flicked up to meet his—direct, steady, and with a subtle spark of amusement.
"Uncontrolled flame is a weapon."
"And I don't teach anyone to use weapons by accident."
She gestured for him to join her at the workstation—an invitation, not a suggestion.
"Come here."
"First lesson: heat control."
She extended a hand over the grate, feeling the heat radiating upward, mapping the temperature the way a Force-sensitive maps a battlefield.
"Tell me," she said, gaze unwavering,
"when you grill…do you rely on instinct?"
A beat.
"Or improvisation?"
She already suspected the answer.
But it mattered that he said it.