D E S T I N E D

The Amidala House Awards Gala, Naboo
Naboo often held the scent of lakewater and lilacs, especially during the evenings while the sunlight cast it’s last efforts across the landscape; but tonight it was tempered by the smell of formality; silver-polished, rose-scented, and the ever consistent humming beneath chandeliers. The Amidala House Awards Gala was not a military ceremony, nor was it a noble court function, but it had all the trappings of both. Held by a council of Noble Houses in the ageless vaulted atrium of a former palace wing in Theed, the building now repurposed for cultural gatherings and youth investitures, it was the kind of event designed less to inspire and more to confirm. To reassure and investigate who mattered. Who belonged to the inner circles of the Naboo Nobility.
Bastila Sal-Soren stood near the tall glass walls that overlooked the river. Her posture, as ever, was precise, rigid in the right way. The bruises along her ribs from the recent scuffle in the Ch’hala Grove made sure that she had to work for it however. She inhaled shallowly, careful not to tug at the healing skin beneath her side, letting the cool Naboo air sweep in through the open terrace doors and catch the fabric of her gown and cool her face, the mid-summer heat still present in the evening air.
The dress was a new commission, something both modest and powerful, fit for someone who’d politely declined most other offers of attention in the last year. Clean Ivory and white, drawn from the hues of the water lilies that grew around the Sal-Soren Estate ponds at this time of year, the gown had clean lines that echoed a senator’s robe but was softened for her youth and elegance. A high collar framed her throat without swallowing it, open just slightly at the collarbones, and long sleeves tapered into delicate cuffs over her bare hands. The fabric shimmered subtly in movement, it wasn’t sequined, but threaded with fine filaments of silksteel, catching the light in ways that whispered rather than sang. It was a Sal-Soren piece through and through and yet again allowed Bastila to steal the show even if her body was wishing she wouldn’t.
Her dark hair had been gathered into a low twist at the nape of her neck, pinned in place with fine golden combs shaped like the Naboo crest. A few strands curled loose near her temples, softened by the humidity. She hid no lightsaber and she wore no armor, today she was just the polished daughter of House Sal-Soren, here to receive a medallion for “outstanding civic support and preservation efforts in Republic-aligned territories.”
She wondered, not for the first time, who had submitted the nomination. Certainly not her.
A steward passed with a tray of tall crystal flutes, each full of Naboo blossom cider a faintly pink and brilliant looking liquid. Bastila accepted one, and although she held it as one should at such events she didn’t drink. She could feel the murmurs of conversation behind her. Youth awardees mingled with minor royals and House representatives. Older senators clapped backs, teachers clasped hands, and courtly types lined up to speak to the event’s patrons. Somewhere nearby, a pair of musicians tuned their instruments ready for the presentation march.
It all felt… civil. She didn’t feel detached but it certainly felt like just another layer of paint over the cracks.
Bastila turned slightly, letting her gaze sweep the room. She was careful not to wince as she shifted. The bruises were mostly hidden, but every movement reminded her they hadn’t faded. Neither had the memories from Cularin — the shouts in the grove, the pain that had followed.
She caught sight of herself in one of the mirrored panels between the columns: She stood so tall and composed like a distant stranger. It was not her really, or maybe it was more her then any other Bastila she put on display. That was what tonight demanded.
Somewhere across the room, a door opened. The sound of new arrivals stirred a brief wave of motion through the gathered crowd. Bastila didn’t look immediately, but among those voices she heard him and something in her spine told her to stand up straight.
“Bastila I thought you’d be inside.” The voice wasn’t his, but it was part of the group and suddenly they were heading upon her, encircling like wild dogs.
Game Face.
Don’t turn. Not yet. But soon.