Interim Chancellor
Location: The Rainspire, Parrlay
Tags:
Parrlay in winter felt like a contradiction, both in its landscape and its spirit. While the rest of Naboo put on its seasonal best; Dee'ja Peak dusted white with snow, Theed enjoying a mild chill, and Kadaara basking in warm breezes, Parrlay hunkered down beneath a solid curtain of slate-gray clouds. A relentless rain steadily drummed across the stone streets, soaking the entire town in a damp, persistent gloom.
Despite the weather, the people refused to surrender to it. Dockworkers strung cheerful lights between the warehouses. Laborers painted vivid color onto their doors. Families pinned bright garlands against weather-beaten walls, determined to conjure a bright season through sheer force of will. Towering above the town stood the Rainspire, the ancestral seat of House Veruna, its high windows glowing with gold and green light. It was a beacon that let every child look up and believe the season was magical.
Aurelian had always admired that about Parrlay; its defiance, its pride, its insistence on finding joy. Returning home from Ukatis with Sibylla today, he felt that same bright insistence thrumming through his own heart. They had just celebrated Life Day on Ukatis, along with the baby shower for the Dowager Princess, but now, the world had shrunk down to just the two of them. It was the quiet thrill of their first holiday as a pair who no longer had to dance around the truth. They had said the words. They had made their choice. They would were in love.
The long flight back had been devoted to work, by unspoken mutual agreement. They had saved their personal celebration for here, in the quiet halls of the Rainspire, away from all obligations and audiences.
Aurelian guided her down the long corridor now, taking careful steps on the polished stone floor. His hands covered her eyes, and he walked just behind her, half-laughing at the awkward shuffle of the movement. The decorations he'd ordered shimmered around them: soft lantern-light, hints of fragrant evergreen, and gold ribbons catching the faint light from the high arched windows. At the end of the hall waited his unfinished gift, something he'd started up when he visited Dee'ja Peak and had been working on in stolen hours ever since. It wasn't perfect yet, but he knew she would understand what it meant. She always did.
"Careful there," he murmured, easily guiding her around a stone pedestal. "If you walk into a statue, I'll never hear the end of it." He paused, letting a familiar spark of mischief slide into his mind, deepening his smile. "You know," he drawled, his voice low and utterly shameless, "when I imagined you blindfolded, I didn't think it would be because I was trying to surprise you. A pleasant twist on expectations, really."