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NEW ALDERAAN
Siv Kryze remained still.
Stillness was armor, and he wore it better than most.
Aether's elbow nudged him lightly, a signal more than a gesture. A tray passed, absurdly regal, carrying bacon-wrapped shrimp nestled atop crackers like polished medallions. Aether's grin was unspoken, but clear.
You seeing this?
Siv didn't look away from the crowd, but the corner of his mouth tugged.
"War's changed," he murmured, just low enough for Aether to hear.
"Used to fight for beskar. Now it's shrimp on parade."
That was all the indulgence he'd give to the moment.
Eyes were on them. The kind that smiled too much. The kind that took notes in real time. Some sizing up. Some already deciding.
And then—her.
Velvet moved like shadow, and her voice carried that deliberate cadence common among people used to shaping outcomes. Vanessa Vantai. She carried titles like medals, but wore them like options.
Siv didn't need to run the name. He already had.
She brought up Isley Verd. Of course she did. Old ghosts were a favorite game among Imperials—relics reanimated when convenient, forgotten when not. She spoke of the Sith, of alliances lost, of lessons learned too late.
And now, with a flick of the wrist and a diplomat's smile:
"What role do I play to you?"
Siv said nothing. She wasn't talking to him anyway.
He let Aether handle it. That was his role: the face, the voice, the handshake.
Siv's was different.
He scanned the room again. Conversations coiled like cables. Too many uniforms in one place. Too many agendas dressed as protocol. His visor pinged Narantuyaa's voice in the background. Cold. Efficient. The kind of tone used by people who'd already drawn contingency plans for everyone in the room.
Including them.
Another voice entered, smoother, stranger. A woman in a dress, speaking like she wasn't one. No armor. No insignia. Siv marked her anyway.
Onrai
, if the data-tag was right. She approached with words about mistakes, about guilt, and the Sith's failure to hold Mandalorian loyalty.
Siv heard her just fine.
So did every other tactician in the room pretending to sip wine while recalculating fleet movement.
He said nothing.
Let the others play diplomat.
He was here for one reason.
To see.
To judge the metal beneath the polish.
To decide if this Confederation was made of steel—or if it would buckle the first time real weight leaned on it.
And if it did?
He'd already made peace with that.A subtle shift in his stance, barely noticeable to anyone but Aether. He activated their private comm channel.
"Circling the room," he said, his modulated voice low.
"Need to get a read on the rest of these players."
He didn't wait for acknowledgment. Didn't need to. Their understanding ran deeper than words. But protocol demanded he add:
"Comm if you need extraction. Or better snacks."
The last part carried the barest hint of dry humor - just enough to take the edge off the warning beneath it. Because while this might be a gala, Siv never forgot what they truly were here: warriors in a den of wolves.
With that, he melted into the crowd, his movements precise and purposeful. Not fleeing the conversation, but strategically repositioning. The iron spike at his throat caught the light as he turned, a dull gleam against polished beskar - a silent promise that he wasn't going far, and that his vigilance remained unbroken.
Let Aether handle the politics. Siv would handle the rest - the unspoken threats, the hidden alliances, the real pulse of this gathering beneath its glittering surface. And if the night turned, if blades came out from under velvet gloves? Well.
That was when Mandalorians worked best anyway.