Veyla did not announce herself when she entered the courtyard, slipping into the space with the practiced ease of someone who preferred to observe the world before becoming a part of it. She never felt the need for grand entrances, finding far more value in the quiet truth of a moment than in the clamor of attention.
The celebration rolled and surged around her in waves of laughter, thick smoke, and the flickering orange glow of firelight that danced against the surrounding stone. Warriors clustered together around makeshift tables and overturned crates, their voices rising in a boisterous chorus as bottles passed freely from hand to hand. Victory clung to the air as thickly as the scent of ash and lingering heat, a heavy reminder of the cost they had all paid. It was loud, chaotic, and fundamentally imperfect, yet it was vibrantly alive in a way that only those who have faced death can truly appreciate.
It was exactly as it should be.
She paused near the outer edge of the gathering at first, simply taking it all in and letting the energy of the victory wash over her.
Athena's arrival had not gone unnoticed, for a dragon rider always drew the eyes of the curious, even among a people as hardened as the Mandalorians. Veyla caught sight of her easily enough through the crowd, her dark armor still radiating the faint warmth of recent flight. With a bottle already gripped in her hand, Athena's posture seemed loose and relaxed, yet she still carried the faint, lingering edge of someone who felt they had arrived just a moment too late to the heart of the storm.
Nearby, Korda sat tucked half in shadow, his body bandaged and bare-chested as he picked at a ration pack. Laughter touched him occasionally from the nearby groups, yet it never quite seemed to pull him fully into the revelry. He was still here, still standing against the weight of the world, and still carrying the invisible burdens of everything the day had taken from them.
Veyla began her approach without any sense of hurry, her footsteps light against the uneven ground.
She stopped first near Athena, positioned close enough to be heard clearly without forcing a formal interaction or disrupting the woman's thoughts.
"You made it back to us," she said quietly, her voice carrying a faint, genuine warmth that cut through the surrounding noise.
"That presence counts for far more than you might think right now."
Her gaze flicked briefly toward the bottle in Athena's hand, then traveled back up to meet the rider's face with a steady look.
"Drink your fill," she added, her tone softening even further.
"Laugh with your kin, and simply let yourself be present here tonight."
She offered no judgment and exerted no pressure. She simply gave her friend the permission she seemed to be seeking.
Then, Veyla moved on toward her next destination.
Korda noticed her presence long before she actually reached his side, his instincts remaining sharp despite his exhaustion. Veyla stopped beside the crate he used as a seat, resting one hand lightly against the rough, weathered wood in a gesture that was steady and entirely unintrusive.
She looked at the white of his bandages first, acknowledging the physical toll, before shifting her gaze to the reality written across his face.
"By all rights, you should be lying down in a proper bed," she said mildly, though there was no real edge of a command in her voice.
A heavy beat of silence passed between them.
"But I know your spirit well enough to know that you won't leave this spot."
The corner of her mouth curved upward just enough to signal a shared understanding of his stubbornness.
She lowered herself onto the edge of a nearby crate, so she was sitting level with him, placing herself close enough to be considered part of his circle without ever attempting to claim its center. The nearby firelight painted soft, flickering copper highlights along her hair and the plates of her armor.
"They're still telling stories over there," she murmured, nodding her head toward the larger group of celebrating warriors.
"They are speaking about you and your courage. You know that, right?"
Then, her voice dropped even quieter, carrying the weight of the fallen.
"They are telling stories about all of them, ensuring the dead aren't forgotten in the noise."
Her eyes lifted, sweeping once across the courtyard to take in the living, the wounded, and the glaringly empty spaces where others should have been sitting. She looked across everything that remained of their force.
She drew in a slow, grounding breath that seemed to expand her chest.
"No one sits alone tonight," Veyla said, presenting the statement not as an order or a demand, but as an undeniable truth of their culture.
She looked from Korda back toward Athena, then let her gaze drift out toward the wider gathering of their people.
"We remember those we lost, we drink to their names, and we stand together so that we may carry their memory with us into the future."
A long pause followed as the gravity of her words settled.
Then, she spoke the final, simple truth:
"This is the Way."
There was no need for grand ceremony or empty dramatics. It was just a moment of shared, silent understanding between survivors.
Around them, the laughter rose again in a sudden swell, a bottle was passed to a new hand, and someone clapped a fellow warrior firmly on the shoulder. Athena shifted herself a bit closer to the nearest group, finding her place, while Korda leaned back a fraction more comfortably against his crate.
The night went on into the small hours, fueled by fire and fellowship.
They did not celebrate because they had forgotten the cost of the day. They celebrated because they remembered it all too well.
Korda Veydran
Athena Faar