Zesiro
High Lady of Kesh
The shuttle descended through Kaer's endless sea of clouds, the city emerging slowly from the golden atmosphere until it seemed less like a structure and more like a dream suspended between sky and stars.
Zesiro sat quietly beside the viewport, one hand resting against the armrest as she watched the sprawling metropolis grow larger beneath them. She had reviewed reports about Kaer 1 before arriving. She knew the statistics. The population figures. The economic output. The endless lists of attractions designed to lure visitors from across Confederacy space. None of that had prepared her for the reality of it.
The city seemed alive.
Skyhooks stretched upward toward the orbital station above like silver threads connecting heaven and earth. Traffic moved between platforms in orderly streams. Sunlight reflected from towers, gardens, promenades, and observation decks that floated impossibly above the cloud layer. Somewhere below were casinos, theaters, restaurants, schools, homes, parks, and countless ordinary aspects of life that transformed a collection of structures into a community.
For reasons she could not entirely explain, she found herself smiling, not because it was beautiful, though it certainly was, nor because it was wealthy, though it clearly was that as well, but because she kept finding evidence of people actually living here.
Children would be attending school somewhere beneath those towers. Families would be eating dinner together. Workers would be finishing shifts. Friends would be meeting for drinks. Ordinary lives unfolded here every day, largely unaware of how extraordinary their surroundings truly were.
It reminded her that cities were never really built from durasteel and transparisteel. They were built by people.
As the shuttle banked toward its assigned landing platform, her gaze lingered on a residential district visible farther down the station. Parks dotted the landscape between habitation towers. Recreational complexes occupied several levels. A school complex stood near one of the larger green spaces.
Without meaning to, she found herself wondering whether Hannah would have liked growing up here, and the thought drew a quiet laugh from her; some things never changed, and even halfway across the galaxy, she was still a mother. The shuttle settled smoothly onto the platform, and moments later, Zesiro stepped into the warm air of Kaer 1, where the city greeted her with movement.
Visitors hurried toward hotels and entertainment districts. Workers moved with the confidence of people who knew exactly where they were going. Overhead, transports crossed between levels in carefully managed streams while distant music drifted from somewhere farther along the promenade.
For a moment, she simply stood there. It had been years since Muad had first decided she was family.
Years since he had adopted her in the peculiar, entirely Muad way of simply deciding something was true and refusing to entertain arguments to the contrary.
A faint smile touched her lips at the memory. Family. The word still felt strange sometimes—not unwelcome, merely unfamiliar. For most of her life, belonging had been something temporary, conditional, tied to duty or circumstance. Yet somehow Muad had ignored all of that. He had simply decided she was family and never once treated it as a question open for debate.
Adjusting the strap of her travel bag, Zesiro stepped into the flow of the city and headed toward its heart. She wasn't here as a bodyguard, a diplomat, or because anyone needed saving. For perhaps the first time in years, she had come with no purpose beyond seeing the people she cared about. It felt oddly liberating. Somewhere amid the towers and promenades was the man who had given her a place to belong when she had never expected to find one, and for once, there was no urgency in reaching him.
Muad Dib
Zesiro sat quietly beside the viewport, one hand resting against the armrest as she watched the sprawling metropolis grow larger beneath them. She had reviewed reports about Kaer 1 before arriving. She knew the statistics. The population figures. The economic output. The endless lists of attractions designed to lure visitors from across Confederacy space. None of that had prepared her for the reality of it.
The city seemed alive.
Skyhooks stretched upward toward the orbital station above like silver threads connecting heaven and earth. Traffic moved between platforms in orderly streams. Sunlight reflected from towers, gardens, promenades, and observation decks that floated impossibly above the cloud layer. Somewhere below were casinos, theaters, restaurants, schools, homes, parks, and countless ordinary aspects of life that transformed a collection of structures into a community.
For reasons she could not entirely explain, she found herself smiling, not because it was beautiful, though it certainly was, nor because it was wealthy, though it clearly was that as well, but because she kept finding evidence of people actually living here.
Children would be attending school somewhere beneath those towers. Families would be eating dinner together. Workers would be finishing shifts. Friends would be meeting for drinks. Ordinary lives unfolded here every day, largely unaware of how extraordinary their surroundings truly were.
It reminded her that cities were never really built from durasteel and transparisteel. They were built by people.
As the shuttle banked toward its assigned landing platform, her gaze lingered on a residential district visible farther down the station. Parks dotted the landscape between habitation towers. Recreational complexes occupied several levels. A school complex stood near one of the larger green spaces.
Without meaning to, she found herself wondering whether Hannah would have liked growing up here, and the thought drew a quiet laugh from her; some things never changed, and even halfway across the galaxy, she was still a mother. The shuttle settled smoothly onto the platform, and moments later, Zesiro stepped into the warm air of Kaer 1, where the city greeted her with movement.
Visitors hurried toward hotels and entertainment districts. Workers moved with the confidence of people who knew exactly where they were going. Overhead, transports crossed between levels in carefully managed streams while distant music drifted from somewhere farther along the promenade.
For a moment, she simply stood there. It had been years since Muad had first decided she was family.
Years since he had adopted her in the peculiar, entirely Muad way of simply deciding something was true and refusing to entertain arguments to the contrary.
A faint smile touched her lips at the memory. Family. The word still felt strange sometimes—not unwelcome, merely unfamiliar. For most of her life, belonging had been something temporary, conditional, tied to duty or circumstance. Yet somehow Muad had ignored all of that. He had simply decided she was family and never once treated it as a question open for debate.
Adjusting the strap of her travel bag, Zesiro stepped into the flow of the city and headed toward its heart. She wasn't here as a bodyguard, a diplomat, or because anyone needed saving. For perhaps the first time in years, she had come with no purpose beyond seeing the people she cared about. It felt oddly liberating. Somewhere amid the towers and promenades was the man who had given her a place to belong when she had never expected to find one, and for once, there was no urgency in reaching him.