Zesiro
High Lady of Kesh
The worst of the chaos had passed by the time Zesiro reached the damaged district of Carida, but the aftermath clung to the air like a second atmosphere. Fires had been extinguished, yet the scent of smoke lingered beneath the drifting haze of dust that turned the late afternoon sunlight into muted gold. The frantic shouting of emergency teams had faded into something quieter and heavier, the kind of silence that followed only after adrenaline had burned itself out and people kept moving because stopping would mean feeling everything at once.
Cleanup crews worked with the slow, exhausted determination of those who had already seen more than they could process. Scorched walls, fractured transparisteel, makeshift medical stations assembled from cargo crates, the district bore all the familiar signs of catastrophe. Sections of roadway had peeled apart, exposing conduits and twisted support beams, and somewhere farther down the avenue, a loader groaned as workers tried to clear a buried transit entrance. The entire place felt bruised.
Zesiro moved through it with measured calm, dressed not for ceremony but for work: dark, fitted trousers tucked into dust-coated boots, a structured charcoal jacket reinforced at the shoulders, lighter combat weave beneath. The clean lines of her clothing suggested professionalism, but the way she wore them, practical, unadorned, unselfconscious, made her look less like nobility and more like someone accustomed to walking directly into difficult situations. A datapad rested at her hip beside a compact utility kit, and her blonde hair had been pulled back simply to keep it out of the drifting grit.
Her blue eyes swept over the exhausted crews and displaced civilians gathered beneath temporary shelters. Some sat wrapped in blankets, staring at nothing. Others spoke quietly with medics or engineers. The district carried that strange, muted stillness shared trauma always left behind, where even conversation felt like an intrusion on the weight of what had happened.
And then she saw him.
Not because he stood out, in truth, it was the opposite. He blended into the scene with the unremarkable ease of someone used to being overlooked: lean, without looking fragile, dressed in worn, practical layers marked with dust and ash, moving with the steady rhythm of a relief worker who had been at this for hours. But there was something about the way he worked that immediately drew her attention.
Nothing rushed. Nothing careless.
He adjusted a blanket over one of the covered bodies with quiet precision, smoothing the fabric as though it mattered that the dead be treated gently. Personal belongings were gathered separately instead of tossed into general recovery crates. Identification tags rested near a datapad alongside handwritten notes rather than sterile numerical markers.
It wasn't a procedure. It was care.
Zesiro slowed, watching him through the drifting haze of dust and late sunlight, her expression softening into something thoughtful. Around him, the district still looked exhausted and fractured, but he moved with the patient reverence of someone who believed dignity did not end with breath, someone who refused to let the dead become just another part of the debris.
That alone caught her.
And so, instead of continuing toward the command shelters ahead, Zesiro quietly altered her course, drawn toward the one person in the ruins who seemed to understand that compassion was not a resource to be rationed.
Malach Orren
Cleanup crews worked with the slow, exhausted determination of those who had already seen more than they could process. Scorched walls, fractured transparisteel, makeshift medical stations assembled from cargo crates, the district bore all the familiar signs of catastrophe. Sections of roadway had peeled apart, exposing conduits and twisted support beams, and somewhere farther down the avenue, a loader groaned as workers tried to clear a buried transit entrance. The entire place felt bruised.
Zesiro moved through it with measured calm, dressed not for ceremony but for work: dark, fitted trousers tucked into dust-coated boots, a structured charcoal jacket reinforced at the shoulders, lighter combat weave beneath. The clean lines of her clothing suggested professionalism, but the way she wore them, practical, unadorned, unselfconscious, made her look less like nobility and more like someone accustomed to walking directly into difficult situations. A datapad rested at her hip beside a compact utility kit, and her blonde hair had been pulled back simply to keep it out of the drifting grit.
Her blue eyes swept over the exhausted crews and displaced civilians gathered beneath temporary shelters. Some sat wrapped in blankets, staring at nothing. Others spoke quietly with medics or engineers. The district carried that strange, muted stillness shared trauma always left behind, where even conversation felt like an intrusion on the weight of what had happened.
And then she saw him.
Not because he stood out, in truth, it was the opposite. He blended into the scene with the unremarkable ease of someone used to being overlooked: lean, without looking fragile, dressed in worn, practical layers marked with dust and ash, moving with the steady rhythm of a relief worker who had been at this for hours. But there was something about the way he worked that immediately drew her attention.
Nothing rushed. Nothing careless.
He adjusted a blanket over one of the covered bodies with quiet precision, smoothing the fabric as though it mattered that the dead be treated gently. Personal belongings were gathered separately instead of tossed into general recovery crates. Identification tags rested near a datapad alongside handwritten notes rather than sterile numerical markers.
It wasn't a procedure. It was care.
Zesiro slowed, watching him through the drifting haze of dust and late sunlight, her expression softening into something thoughtful. Around him, the district still looked exhausted and fractured, but he moved with the patient reverence of someone who believed dignity did not end with breath, someone who refused to let the dead become just another part of the debris.
That alone caught her.
And so, instead of continuing toward the command shelters ahead, Zesiro quietly altered her course, drawn toward the one person in the ruins who seemed to understand that compassion was not a resource to be rationed.