Factory Judge
P R I N C E
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Naboo’s morning light carried a softness Renn rarely found elsewhere in the galaxy. It slid over the marble towers like warm breath on steel, gilding every archway and garden terrace in a pale gold that felt too gentle for a warrior raised under harsher suns. Yet it suited this world, refined, proud, and deceptively peaceful.
He fastened the last clasp of his cuirass with a muted click. Beskar did not gleam the way Naboo’s gilded armor did; his plate drank the light instead, blue-steel and brushed silver absorbing the dawn like an old predator awakening. The palace attendants had offered him a more “court-appropriate” training uniform. He had declined with a smile. The Prince of Naboo would learn to face a Mandalorian, not a court ornament.
Renn adjusted the leather wraps at his wrists, then reached for the duffel resting at the edge of the guest chamber. It held practice gear, training sabers, shock-batons, weighted gauntlets, tools chosen carefully for a youth with courage but not yet the discipline to match it. Elian reminded him of many young Mandalorians he had overseen on Roon: sharp, restless, eager to prove himself despite not yet knowing what, exactly, he wanted to become.
And
That mattered.
Renn stepped from the chamber into the palace corridor, his boots clicking against polished stone mosaics depicting Naboo’s ancient victories. Courtiers moved aside instinctively; some bowed, some stared, a few whispered behind gloved fingers. Mandalorians were still an uncommon sight in Theed, let alone within the upper halls of Varynth Court. Renn took the scrutiny in stride. He had endured far worse crowds and far bloodier arenas than this.
A pair of Royal Guards shadowed him at a respectful distance as he descended the grand stairway. Outside, manicured gardens opened into a broad, open-air terrace overlooking the river. Ahead, the training grounds waited: a sand-floored arena bordered by marble balustrades, ringed with aging statues of long-dead kings and warriors. Sunlight poured over the space as though the Force itself meant to shine a spotlight on today’s lesson.
Renn paused at the threshold, taking in a slow breath. Naboo’s air was cleaner, gentler. It reminded him, uncomfortably, of what peace was supposed to feel like.
Fitting, he thought. A boy should learn strength here, where it is not needed, before life demands it of him elsewhere.
He set the duffel down at the edge of the arena and began laying out the training implements in neat, orderly lines. The prince would arrive soon, bright-eyed, a little overconfident, too quick to speak before thinking. Renn found himself almost looking forward to it.
Almost.
He straightened, hands resting loosely on the rim of his belt.
“Come on then, young prince,” he murmured under his breath, the faintest hint of amusement threading his voice. “Let’s see what spirit Naboo has forged in you.”
Time to Learn.