R E P U B L I C
The doors of the chamber whispered open, admitting Senator Ravion Corvalis into the inner sanctum of the Royal Palace. He paused before those doors of green filigree, taking in the artistic decoration that had sat there for generations, that had seen so much change in this galaxy and his smiled. Not a deferential smile, never that, but respectful in the way a man acknowledges the presence of a force greater than himself.
He crossed the marble floor without hurry, boots tapping lightly against inlaid patterns of crescent-cut gold. Morning light spilled through the tall windows, painting him in a wash of warm golds, the sort of glow that made his features seem softer, his eyes gentler.
He stopped several paces before the dais and lowered his head, his cloak of Republic gold and red flowed majestically around him as if asked to perform.
“Your Majesty.” He allowed a pause. Just long enough to be ornate, not long enough to be theatrical. Then he lifted his gaze; it was steady, warm, and with the faint smile he reserved only for allies he valued. Allies he needed. “Lady Abrantes, it has been far too long. I do however regret that as much as I would love to sit and discuss the private collection I come on Senate Business.”
He lifted a smooth silver datapad from the crook of his arm, offering it to one of her handmaidens rather than presuming to ascend the steps himself. His eyes locked with the girl, and he avoided any facial change; the eyes of Bastila Sal-Soren had become known throughout the Republic as the final stage of getting anything to Sibylla, the young Jedi, noble, iron cham…what ever she called herself was as much a pain in Ravion’s plans as she could be. What he would give for ten minutes without that nosy brat peering into everything placed before Sibylla. The pad he handed her contained the newly consolidated Articles of Magistration, the legal backbone that would allow, by public image, allow Naboo to reclaim its elected ruler and the stand ins of forced positions reset.
“If you will permit…” He smiled.
“The language has been refined,” Ravion said, spreading his hands slightly as the pad was carried to her. “Ensured precedent is airtight, and the citations to the Old Charter stand uncontested. No legalist from Corellia to Coruscant could mount an effective objection… it has been combed for anything that could be considered unjust for the parties involved. It’s just pure reset legislation allowing for the senate to regain its democratic electives.”
He let the room breathe. Ravion was always good at that, allowing the silence to do what pressure could not, letting anticipation fill the air like incense. Then he smiled a little wider, the kind of smile that felt like shared confidence.
“I remember telling you, back before all these dark times,” he said softly, “that wearing the crown was beneath your talents.” It was not an insult, just a tiny echo. A reminder. A hook set gently.
“You have proven me right.” A small inclination of his head. “The kingdom survived because you and Aurelian have made sure that you are a team capable of anything. But the truth remains: His chosen place is upon that throne and your mind is wasted on ceremony. You are far more dangerous when unbound.” He shifted his stance, hands folding behind his back in a casual clasp.
“And now… now the Republic requires precisely that version of the two of you, we are beset by enemies on all sides and we need the two of you in your most advantageous positions.”
Ravion paced a single step to the side, it did not appear to be restless, but it was deliberate. One move allowed himself to frame his form in the morning light. Speaking as though the words weren’t persuasion at all, but simply the truth between old colleagues.
“The Senate, the house of Democracy, has no elected leader. The Crown, the symbol of Naboo’s choice of its own traditions is suspended over your head while voices say it should be over his. We have a Chancellor who cannot lift his hand without half the Assembly accusing him of overreach, and the other half accusing him of hesitancy. A situation which benefits only those who live between shadows. Those who do not have our strongest interests first and foremost.”
The implication hung unsaid; The Black Sun, the Ryloth Separatist Movement, the Imperial Core. Choose any poison and you could find it seeping into the senate.
“It is time,” he said, voice deepening, calm but certain, “for the elected throne to be restored and his Voice to step back onto her position of power.”
He gestured lightly toward the datapad.
“These Articles would compel the Senate to take its rightful action: declare Magistration, trigger the succession protocols, and return the speakership of the throne to its intended place. It would allow Aurelian Veruna to reclaim his elected authority…” His eyes lifted to Sibylla. He made sure he was offering understanding there. Yes, and something else, something like a promise he’d never made but that she had to realise he was keeping. “...and allow you to return to being the Voice of Naboo. Where you are needed. Where your words carry the weight of a scalpel, not the weight of a sceptre.”
Ravion allowed himself to exhale, a rare flicker of genuine feeling softening the edges of his features.
“You have borne a burden that was never meant to fall on your shoulders,” he said quietly. “Both of you stepped into the breach because no one else had the strength.”
Again that pause, so quiet, so meaningful.
“But it is time to step out of it.”
He approached no closer, but his presence seemed to; his voice was warming, his natural charisma like a steady current.
“The Senate respects you. I’d even say they fear you in the correct way. They will follow your guidance if you present the Articles. They trust you to act without self-interest.” A faint, rueful quirk of his mouth. “Something I, admittedly, have had to work much harder to convince them of.” There was a glimmer of humour that softened the admission.
“But together; your clarity and influence, Aurelian’s insurance and standing along with my support and the systems in agreement; we can end this instability. We can return Naboo to what it is meant to be: a world ruled by its elected sovereign, and advised by its finest mind.”
He dipped his chin toward her, earnest now…absolute and complete deadly earnest.
“All I ask is that you read the Articles with the same incisive care you bring to every problem. And if you find them worthy… lend them your voice.” Ravion’s tone eased then, softer but no less intent. “Naboo has suffered in these last few months. The Senate has stalled with whispers of false corruption and overreach that was necessary yet unwelcome. The galaxy is watching. We need stability before someone else decides to offer theirs.”
His hands spread slightly.
“And you, Your Majesty, are the only one with the legitimacy to set this in motion. I say this as a friend of you and your family, with respect that you have built over the years.” He straightened; calm, controlled, resolute. “Say the word, and I will make sure the Senate will act.”
He crossed the marble floor without hurry, boots tapping lightly against inlaid patterns of crescent-cut gold. Morning light spilled through the tall windows, painting him in a wash of warm golds, the sort of glow that made his features seem softer, his eyes gentler.
He stopped several paces before the dais and lowered his head, his cloak of Republic gold and red flowed majestically around him as if asked to perform.
“Your Majesty.” He allowed a pause. Just long enough to be ornate, not long enough to be theatrical. Then he lifted his gaze; it was steady, warm, and with the faint smile he reserved only for allies he valued. Allies he needed. “Lady Abrantes, it has been far too long. I do however regret that as much as I would love to sit and discuss the private collection I come on Senate Business.”
He lifted a smooth silver datapad from the crook of his arm, offering it to one of her handmaidens rather than presuming to ascend the steps himself. His eyes locked with the girl, and he avoided any facial change; the eyes of Bastila Sal-Soren had become known throughout the Republic as the final stage of getting anything to Sibylla, the young Jedi, noble, iron cham…what ever she called herself was as much a pain in Ravion’s plans as she could be. What he would give for ten minutes without that nosy brat peering into everything placed before Sibylla. The pad he handed her contained the newly consolidated Articles of Magistration, the legal backbone that would allow, by public image, allow Naboo to reclaim its elected ruler and the stand ins of forced positions reset.
“If you will permit…” He smiled.
“The language has been refined,” Ravion said, spreading his hands slightly as the pad was carried to her. “Ensured precedent is airtight, and the citations to the Old Charter stand uncontested. No legalist from Corellia to Coruscant could mount an effective objection… it has been combed for anything that could be considered unjust for the parties involved. It’s just pure reset legislation allowing for the senate to regain its democratic electives.”
He let the room breathe. Ravion was always good at that, allowing the silence to do what pressure could not, letting anticipation fill the air like incense. Then he smiled a little wider, the kind of smile that felt like shared confidence.
“I remember telling you, back before all these dark times,” he said softly, “that wearing the crown was beneath your talents.” It was not an insult, just a tiny echo. A reminder. A hook set gently.
“You have proven me right.” A small inclination of his head. “The kingdom survived because you and Aurelian have made sure that you are a team capable of anything. But the truth remains: His chosen place is upon that throne and your mind is wasted on ceremony. You are far more dangerous when unbound.” He shifted his stance, hands folding behind his back in a casual clasp.
“And now… now the Republic requires precisely that version of the two of you, we are beset by enemies on all sides and we need the two of you in your most advantageous positions.”
Ravion paced a single step to the side, it did not appear to be restless, but it was deliberate. One move allowed himself to frame his form in the morning light. Speaking as though the words weren’t persuasion at all, but simply the truth between old colleagues.
“The Senate, the house of Democracy, has no elected leader. The Crown, the symbol of Naboo’s choice of its own traditions is suspended over your head while voices say it should be over his. We have a Chancellor who cannot lift his hand without half the Assembly accusing him of overreach, and the other half accusing him of hesitancy. A situation which benefits only those who live between shadows. Those who do not have our strongest interests first and foremost.”
The implication hung unsaid; The Black Sun, the Ryloth Separatist Movement, the Imperial Core. Choose any poison and you could find it seeping into the senate.
“It is time,” he said, voice deepening, calm but certain, “for the elected throne to be restored and his Voice to step back onto her position of power.”
He gestured lightly toward the datapad.
“These Articles would compel the Senate to take its rightful action: declare Magistration, trigger the succession protocols, and return the speakership of the throne to its intended place. It would allow Aurelian Veruna to reclaim his elected authority…” His eyes lifted to Sibylla. He made sure he was offering understanding there. Yes, and something else, something like a promise he’d never made but that she had to realise he was keeping. “...and allow you to return to being the Voice of Naboo. Where you are needed. Where your words carry the weight of a scalpel, not the weight of a sceptre.”
Ravion allowed himself to exhale, a rare flicker of genuine feeling softening the edges of his features.
“You have borne a burden that was never meant to fall on your shoulders,” he said quietly. “Both of you stepped into the breach because no one else had the strength.”
Again that pause, so quiet, so meaningful.
“But it is time to step out of it.”
He approached no closer, but his presence seemed to; his voice was warming, his natural charisma like a steady current.
“The Senate respects you. I’d even say they fear you in the correct way. They will follow your guidance if you present the Articles. They trust you to act without self-interest.” A faint, rueful quirk of his mouth. “Something I, admittedly, have had to work much harder to convince them of.” There was a glimmer of humour that softened the admission.
“But together; your clarity and influence, Aurelian’s insurance and standing along with my support and the systems in agreement; we can end this instability. We can return Naboo to what it is meant to be: a world ruled by its elected sovereign, and advised by its finest mind.”
He dipped his chin toward her, earnest now…absolute and complete deadly earnest.
“All I ask is that you read the Articles with the same incisive care you bring to every problem. And if you find them worthy… lend them your voice.” Ravion’s tone eased then, softer but no less intent. “Naboo has suffered in these last few months. The Senate has stalled with whispers of false corruption and overreach that was necessary yet unwelcome. The galaxy is watching. We need stability before someone else decides to offer theirs.”
His hands spread slightly.
“And you, Your Majesty, are the only one with the legitimacy to set this in motion. I say this as a friend of you and your family, with respect that you have built over the years.” He straightened; calm, controlled, resolute. “Say the word, and I will make sure the Senate will act.”