I R O N
DATHOMIR
Dathomir rose beneath a bruised sky, its red earth exhaling mist and memory, a world where shadow was not feared but understood. For generations, the Witches of this planet had stood in quiet comradeship with the Mandalorians, not bound by conquest or oath, but by respect forged through shared wars and older understandings. That balance had endured until the Mandalorian Empire’s ascent stirred old conversations anew, and a younger generation of witches began to press for distance, for autonomy sharpened into separation, their voices colliding with the elders over what place Mandalore should hold in Dathomir’s future.
It was in answer to that tension that Aether Verd had chosen restraint where others would have chosen presence. No Mandalorian boots occupied Dathomir’s soil beyond necessity, no garrisons cast long shadows over coven lands, and no banners flew where they were not invited. Only a light patrol lingered in the system, sufficient to protect borders without suffocating sovereignty. The burden of mediation fell instead upon one trusted voice. Vytal Noctura, Warden of Dathomir, bore the responsibility of carrying her world’s will to Mandalore and returning with the Empire’s answer, maintaining a fragile peace built on mutual respect rather than force.
Tonight, that arrangement was given form.
The Kom'rk-type Fighter/Transport descended through the cloud cover with measured precision, engines murmuring as it settled upon the landing platform near the Sanctuary. The ramp lowered with a soft hydraulic hiss, and Aether disembarked in unhurried order, his armored silhouette framed by crimson stone and drifting mist. He moved with the calm certainty of a ruler who had learned that authority need not announce itself loudly, coming to rest at the base of the ramp where durasteel met sacred ground.
There he waited.
No weapon was drawn, no helm removed, no gesture made to claim the space as his own. He stood as a guest, posture composed and deliberate, gaze lifted toward the Sanctuary’s twisted spires where ritual lights burned against the dark. The planet seemed to watch him in return, the air heavy with old power and older judgment, as if Dathomir itself weighed the meaning of his presence.
This visit had been scheduled with care, its timing communicated clearly so that no coven mistook it for intrusion or threat. Aether remained still at the foot of the ramp, neither advancing nor retreating, a living acknowledgment that some worlds demanded patience before dialogue.
The Nightmother would arrive in her own time, and when she did, the future of Dathomir’s place within the Mandalorian Empire would begin not with words spoken too soon, but with silence respected.