K I N G

GAROS IV
The wind outside howled like a beast with no teeth—loud, but harmless. Dust peeled off the cracked terrain in lazy spirals, carried into the corners of the saloon like ghosts without homes.
Aether stood near the bar, helmet on, cloak hanging heavy from his shoulders, the mud and grit of a long ride still clinging to the hem. Beside him, two of the Mandalorian Protectors flanked the room like statues carved from old iron. They didn’t speak. Didn’t need to. Their sigils spoke loud enough.
This was not a place of ceremony or spectacle. It was a bar. A watering hole. A dim-lit crossroads of stories both true and tall—where folks drank cheap liquor and nursed quieter regrets. And now, it was a recruitment site.
Across from him stood Carter Flinn—cocky posture, calloused hands, and a grin that looked like it had gotten him into more trouble than out of it.
Aether regarded him in silence.
PING.
His HUD flickered to life. The tracer in his visor outlined Flinn’s profile. A dozen petty crimes in Hutt Space. Nothing major. Smuggling. Reckless discharge. A barfight that left someone with a limp and a grudge.
“According to my sources,” Aether said evenly, “you’re a wanted man.”
The room shifted slightly. Conversations dipped. Someone set their glass down, slowly.
“You sure you can wear the mark of the Protectors? Represent the law?”
Flinn didn’t blink. “I’ve done my runnin’, Mand’alor. Swear on the dust beneath my boots—I ain’t that man anymore.”
Aether didn’t answer. Not right away.
Because his gut—trained by war, by betrayal, by too many close calls—was telling him something else.
Not everyone in this room was here for justice.
And some weren’t here to join anything at all.
Aether stood near the bar, helmet on, cloak hanging heavy from his shoulders, the mud and grit of a long ride still clinging to the hem. Beside him, two of the Mandalorian Protectors flanked the room like statues carved from old iron. They didn’t speak. Didn’t need to. Their sigils spoke loud enough.
This was not a place of ceremony or spectacle. It was a bar. A watering hole. A dim-lit crossroads of stories both true and tall—where folks drank cheap liquor and nursed quieter regrets. And now, it was a recruitment site.
Across from him stood Carter Flinn—cocky posture, calloused hands, and a grin that looked like it had gotten him into more trouble than out of it.
Aether regarded him in silence.
PING.
His HUD flickered to life. The tracer in his visor outlined Flinn’s profile. A dozen petty crimes in Hutt Space. Nothing major. Smuggling. Reckless discharge. A barfight that left someone with a limp and a grudge.
“According to my sources,” Aether said evenly, “you’re a wanted man.”
The room shifted slightly. Conversations dipped. Someone set their glass down, slowly.
“You sure you can wear the mark of the Protectors? Represent the law?”
Flinn didn’t blink. “I’ve done my runnin’, Mand’alor. Swear on the dust beneath my boots—I ain’t that man anymore.”
Aether didn’t answer. Not right away.
Because his gut—trained by war, by betrayal, by too many close calls—was telling him something else.
Not everyone in this room was here for justice.
And some weren’t here to join anything at all.