Sovereign Echoes
Character
The boats came in one by one in the late morning, the golden reflection along the sea, made it feel as if one had been brought across a sea of gold.
That was the thing about Gilaria at this hour, the way the light didn't so much fall as pour, thick and warm as honey, across the black-sand shallows and the long wooden jetty that reached out from the Vaimana's shoulder into the bright water. The Waihokai sun hung low and unhurried, and everything it touched it gilded: the lacquered hulls of the outriggers ferrying guests in from the orbital shuttles, the brass fittings of the resort rising terraced and pale-gold behind the palms, the foam where the tide turned over itself against the pilings. Somewhere a reef bird called. Closer, the water knocked gently at the dock, patient as a heartbeat.
It had been made easy to come here. That was the Commonwealth's way, and more particularly it was her way the Grand Vizier did not extend an invitation so much as remove every reason to decline one. Passage had been arranged. Codes had been issued, quiet and discreet, so that no guest need trouble themselves with the tedium of how they had come to be standing on a jetty, on a world at the edge of the Unknown Regions with sand already working its way into expensive shoes. They had simply been brought, as if they had been lifted from wherever they'd come from and set down here, in the warm, in the gold, with a cool drink finding its way into their hands before they'd quite found their footing. And for some, the ones who knew who they were, even the drink and the suite and the long bright days to come had been seen to entirely. Their expenses had been covered, and for those select few they'd see no bill for the week. That, too, was the point: hospitality so complete it became a kind of statement, generosity worn as lightly as the linen.
Down the shore, where the jetty gave way to the black-sand beach proper, the music had already started.
It came up under everything else, bright and buoyant, a tropical pulse that seemed to rise off the warm sand itself, bead-strung head-tresses catching the light behind a gold-trimmed booth, a Nautolan grin flashing as he leaned into the mix. DJ Koa Rel, Namadii's own, reading the shore like a tide table and finding it ready. The track he'd opened on was an old Gilari favorite given new shine, all sunlit synth and a chorus that didn't bother with cleverness because it didn't need to, a simple, stubborn, joyful insistence that whatever the galaxy took, this remained: the warm water, the good company, the light. A world that had been broken and rebuilt more times than it cared to count knew the value of a day like this one. So did the woman who'd arranged it.
The beach was filling. Loungers and cabanas in cream and coral stood open along the sand; the Reef Bar's lanterns waited, unlit, for a dusk still hours off. Servers moved through the gathering crowd with trays of something cold and bright and faintly impossible-looking. The day stretched ahead, long and golden and entirely without obligation, and beyond it, when the light finally turned, the terraces above promised lanterns, an orchestra, and an evening of an altogether finer sort.
But that was later. For now there was only the jetty, the gold on the water, the music on the wind, and the warm and open invitation in it:
Come ashore. Stay a while. You're among friends here.
The Grand Vizier would receive her guests presently.
For now, Gilaria simply welcomed them.
DJ Koa Rel is spinning up some of the Commonwealth's favorite tunes!