Laphisto
High Commander of the Lilaste Order
Laphisto had summoned
Cora
for this journey with deliberate intent. He had not forgotten her little escapade during the funeral rites after Daro an act that had, at first, left him seething with fury. But time had tempered that anger. In the quiet days that followed, he had turned the matter over in his mind, reflecting on her history and her losses. Perhaps she did not feel as though she truly belonged among them. Perhaps she was running from grief, seeking escape rather than remembrance. If that was the case, then he could show her why the Lilaste Order stood so firm on the matter of their dead why the fallen must stand beyond their own lives, their memory eternal.
He had given her a dossier of the world they were bound for: Kiev'ara. A dead planet, and yet not empty. He had outlined the risks, the strange phenomena, and the chilling truths of what could happen the moment she set foot upon its frozen surface. Yet he offered no explanation for why she had been chosen. Only that she was to come. During the descent, silence reigned in the shuttle's cabin. Laphisto sat motionless, hands folded across his lap, his presence calm and unyielding. He offered her no reassurance, no warning, no hint of the destination's purpose beyond the datachip he had pressed into her hand. When she arrived in the shuttle bay earlier, his only instruction had been simple: "Take a seat."
The rest she had to endure in silence.Only when the shuttle touched down on the barren surface did his voice finally break the stillness."There is no atmosphere here," he said evenly, his tone more instruction than conversation. "Seal your suit. Lock your helmet." Without hesitation, he drew his own helmet down, the seals hissing as they engaged. The sound echoed faintly inside the shuttle, sharp in the quiet. He watched her with patient stillness, waiting until her own armor hissed shut before moving. At last, he reached for the ramp control, pressing the release. With a hydraulic groan, the boarding ramp lowered, a blinding wash of pale light spilling into the shuttle's interior. The dead world of Kiev'ara lay beyond.
Laphisto turned without another word and descended. His first step onto the planet's surface made his entire frame shudder, as though the ground itself pushed back against him. For a brief moment he seemed to falter, his balance threatened by something unseen. It was not weakness more like the weight of a memory pressing down on his body. His head bowed slightly, breath catching inside the sealed helmet, before he steadied himself and moved forward onto the frozen wasteland.
He had given her a dossier of the world they were bound for: Kiev'ara. A dead planet, and yet not empty. He had outlined the risks, the strange phenomena, and the chilling truths of what could happen the moment she set foot upon its frozen surface. Yet he offered no explanation for why she had been chosen. Only that she was to come. During the descent, silence reigned in the shuttle's cabin. Laphisto sat motionless, hands folded across his lap, his presence calm and unyielding. He offered her no reassurance, no warning, no hint of the destination's purpose beyond the datachip he had pressed into her hand. When she arrived in the shuttle bay earlier, his only instruction had been simple: "Take a seat."
The rest she had to endure in silence.Only when the shuttle touched down on the barren surface did his voice finally break the stillness."There is no atmosphere here," he said evenly, his tone more instruction than conversation. "Seal your suit. Lock your helmet." Without hesitation, he drew his own helmet down, the seals hissing as they engaged. The sound echoed faintly inside the shuttle, sharp in the quiet. He watched her with patient stillness, waiting until her own armor hissed shut before moving. At last, he reached for the ramp control, pressing the release. With a hydraulic groan, the boarding ramp lowered, a blinding wash of pale light spilling into the shuttle's interior. The dead world of Kiev'ara lay beyond.
Laphisto turned without another word and descended. His first step onto the planet's surface made his entire frame shudder, as though the ground itself pushed back against him. For a brief moment he seemed to falter, his balance threatened by something unseen. It was not weakness more like the weight of a memory pressing down on his body. His head bowed slightly, breath catching inside the sealed helmet, before he steadied himself and moved forward onto the frozen wasteland.