Sword of Shiraya
Lorn sat alone at a back table in Veeda's, the kind of bar that whispered old money and political discretion. Polished stone walls. Gold fixtures dimmed to dusk. The place smelled like floral cologne, stale cigarras, and regret.
He hadn't meant to come here. Not here. Not to Theed. Not to this bar where the servers poured brandy like liquid silk and the nobles sipped it like it cost them nothing. He wanted quiet. Anonymity. A break from the Vanguard, from the Order, from his responsibilities. He was off duty, or at least pretending well enough to fool himself for an hour.
That was before he saw her.
Blaire.
Her silhouette stood out in the mirror behind the bar before her actual form even registered. She was perched on a high stool, cradling a glass of something, untouched. Her eyes scanned nothing.
Lorn knew that look.
It was the look of someone halfway between the present and the past, stuck in the pause between thoughts that hurt too much to finish. He'd worn that look after battlefields. After funerals. After Sunkiller.
His stomach turned.
He could leave. She hadn't seen him. Not yet. He could slide out through the back and disappear into the Theed night, and no one would know.
But he didn't. He stayed.
His hand tightened around the edge of his glass, not drinking. Just... grounding.
Their first meeting had been chaotic. Loud party. Life Day. Too many voices, too much pressure to be social. He hadn't been ready. She'd said something, he barely remembered what, and he'd panicked, leaving in a rush that probably landed somewhere between confused and offended.
She must think he was cold. Or worse, arrogant. The idea twisted in his chest.
But now, here she was. Same woman. New silence. He knew now, because the reports from Sunkiller that he himself had filed, hadn't lied: her kids were part of it. Stuck in the twisted ruin of a warped reality, and his team had just confirmed it.
They were going in soon. Blaire probably had no idea how close help was.
He stood. Not smoothly. Not like some holodrama hero. He hesitated halfway up like he might sit again. But he didn't.
Crossing the bar felt like walking through fog. He passed tables of senators, traders, admirals in dress uniform.
He stopped a few paces behind her. Cleared his throat softly, but she didn't turn.
"Blaire." he said, voice low. Just enough to reach her over the strings of some Naboo quartet drifting through the speakers. Lorn didn't smile. He wasn't good at that. But he tried not to frown.
"Do you mind if I sit?" he asked, nodding to the empty stool beside her.