Laphisto was in his office aboard Aurora Station when the message arrived from
Zara Saga
. The invitation was… strange. His name was unmistakably on the recipient list a name not so easily mistyped but the location? The Crucible Arena? He frowned, leaning over the holocomputer to skim the last few weeks of logs and messages. A graduation ceremony? did he promise to sponsor a student or train one? Some oversight on his part? But no nothing. Just Zara's message: petty, precise, and dripping with challenge.
It made no sense. Until the door slid open and Commander Tarain stepped in "
Sir," the man said crisply, "
word's begun to spread on Bastion that you and Archion Zara are fighting. I'm not sure who started it, but it's drawn a crowd to the arena." Laphisto's lone ear flicked up. The Force brushed across his sight only to recoil as he hit the quiet, unreadable void that was Tarain's presence. A wince. A blink. He shook the vision clear.
So that was it. The message finally clicked into place, each line of text taking on new weight. A challenge not hidden in metaphor or protocol. Just blatant, theatrical provocation. He exhaled slowly, rising to his full height. "
It seems she's challenged me to some sort of duel. I can't say for what reason... but I suppose it's best not to keep the girl waiting." He turned toward the corridor without hesitation. "
Prep my shuttle. I'll be heading to the Crucible."
The flight to the Crucible took just over half an hour. The walk from the landing pad to the inner chamber added another ten minutes ten minutes Laphisto imagined Zara pacing like a caged nexu, raving to the crowd about punctuality, cowardice, or whatever slight she'd cooked up to mask her own anticipation. He stifled a quiet chuckle at the thought, a low rumble escaping his throat as he shook his head. Whatever this was, she'd made it public and dramatic. Of course she had.
The wide doors to the Crucible's main chamber parted with a low hiss, spilling golden light across the stonework floor. The scent of scorched duracrete and old ozone clung to the air residue from countless past duels. A faint breeze drifted through the open dome above, stirring dust motes like drifting embers in the air.
Laphisto stepped through with Commander Tarain at his right and five Lilaste Order guards flanking behind. The guards peeled off as they entered, taking silent posts at the periphery without command. He continued forward alone, each footstep deliberate, echoing softly beneath the growing murmur of the assembled crowd.
At first, it had seemed like just students and a handful of instructors. But as he walked further in, he saw the unmistakable shapes of Lilaste Order soldiers filtering in from the upper tiers off-duty infantry, technicians, even a few armored officers. Word had traveled quickly. And now they were here. Not because he ordered them, but because they assumed he'd accepted the duel. he wandered how long untill
Diarch Reign
or
Diarch Rellik
got word of this
And perhaps... because they wanted to see how he handled it. He scanned the tiers with a practiced eye dark orange shoulder stripes of Tarain's Sword here and there, familiar unit patches across rows of armor. No one spoke above a whisper. But their presence lent the moment a weight it didn't have before.
He came to a halt a few paces from Zara, folding his arms slowly across his chest. His expression, as always, was calm still as stone beneath pressure. The Force moved quietly within him, stirred not to aggression, but awareness. "
So," he said, voice low but unwavering, "
what is this all about, Zara?"
His lone ear shifted backward slightly, a subtle tell. She was tense. Her stance was measured, controlled but the Force around her shimmered with heat and purpose. This wasn't a joke to her. Not a performance, either. Whatever spurred this challenge was rooted deep. He let his gaze drift across the crowd once more. The murmurs. The quiet tension. Instructors were sipping from oversized thermoses; soldiers whispered in the back rows, nudging one another as bets silently changed hands.
"
You've gathered quite the audience," he added, dry as stone. "
I assume you have a point beyond theater." He turned his eyes back to her and studied her in silence. Even without reaching through the Force, he could read it in her eyes this was personal. Not a political stunt. Not a temper tantrum. well maybe partially. But it was also something more. Though what he couldn't say