Ascending Legend
The restaurant overlooked one of Bastion's quieter skyline corridors, where traffic lanes curved in gentle arcs, and the glow of transit lights reflected off polished transparisteel. It was not one of the capital's grand political venues, nor one of its heavily trafficked social hubs, but rather a space that existed in the careful middle ground between privacy and legitimacy. This specific balance was exactly why Iandre had chosen it for their meeting.
She arrived a few minutes early, not out of any sense of impatience, but out of a long-standing habit that demanded she understand her surroundings before an engagement began. The hostess recognized her without comment and guided her to a semi-secluded terrace table, partially screened by living greenery and soft light panels tuned to simulate the gradient of a fading sunset. Beyond the railing, Bastion stretched outward in ordered layers of architecture and motion, looking clean and precise in a way few worlds ever managed to sustain for long.
She paused briefly before sitting to take a small breath in and a small breath out, centering herself before she finally settled into the chair and folded her hands loosely in her lap. Her attire was understated yet deliberate: a deep-blue civilian coat over a charcoal tunic, tailored simply, with no insignia or visible markers of rank. With her hair tied back in a neat, practical braid, nothing about her appearance suggested authority, which was an entirely intentional choice for the evening.
Tonight was not about politics, at least not in any official capacity.
When a server approached quietly to offer water and a menu, she accepted both with a polite nod, though she glanced over the options without much interest before setting the booklet aside. Her attention drifted outward, toward the city and the persistent pull of memory. She had met Judah once before, briefly, amid the dust and ration crates of a relief deployment where exhausted medics worked tirelessly around them. It had been the sort of encounter that could easily have vanished into the noise of crisis work—two people doing their jobs before moving on—and yet, it had not faded.
In the months since that day, his name had surfaced more than once in reports, briefings, and those specific conversations that tended to stop whenever she entered the room. Then there had been the matter of Senator Monaray Dod, a political death wrapped in uncertainty and speculation that was quietly reshaping conversations across the Diarchy and beyond. While that event was officially unrelated to this dinner, Iandre was not naïve enough to pretend that such a heavy context did not make every interaction more complicated.
Even so, she did not intend to interrogate him or extract information; she simply reached for her glass, took a small sip of water, and let the coolness ground her in the present moment. This was supposed to be a simple shared meal. And a continuation of a conversation that had never properly begun, and an opportunity to learn who Judah Dashiell was when he was not surrounded by crisis.
As footsteps approached along the terrace, she looked up and saw him, rising smoothly to her feet with a small, genuine smile touching her lips.
"Judah," she said warmly, her voice sounding calm and unguarded as she gestured lightly toward the seat opposite her. "I am glad you could make it, and I want to thank you for agreeing to meet me, especially since I know time is not always easy to find after everything that has happened lately."
There was no hint of accusation in her tone, only a blend of sincerity and curiosity, and a quiet sense that this evening might matter more than either of them yet realized.
Judah Dashiell
She arrived a few minutes early, not out of any sense of impatience, but out of a long-standing habit that demanded she understand her surroundings before an engagement began. The hostess recognized her without comment and guided her to a semi-secluded terrace table, partially screened by living greenery and soft light panels tuned to simulate the gradient of a fading sunset. Beyond the railing, Bastion stretched outward in ordered layers of architecture and motion, looking clean and precise in a way few worlds ever managed to sustain for long.
She paused briefly before sitting to take a small breath in and a small breath out, centering herself before she finally settled into the chair and folded her hands loosely in her lap. Her attire was understated yet deliberate: a deep-blue civilian coat over a charcoal tunic, tailored simply, with no insignia or visible markers of rank. With her hair tied back in a neat, practical braid, nothing about her appearance suggested authority, which was an entirely intentional choice for the evening.
Tonight was not about politics, at least not in any official capacity.
When a server approached quietly to offer water and a menu, she accepted both with a polite nod, though she glanced over the options without much interest before setting the booklet aside. Her attention drifted outward, toward the city and the persistent pull of memory. She had met Judah once before, briefly, amid the dust and ration crates of a relief deployment where exhausted medics worked tirelessly around them. It had been the sort of encounter that could easily have vanished into the noise of crisis work—two people doing their jobs before moving on—and yet, it had not faded.
In the months since that day, his name had surfaced more than once in reports, briefings, and those specific conversations that tended to stop whenever she entered the room. Then there had been the matter of Senator Monaray Dod, a political death wrapped in uncertainty and speculation that was quietly reshaping conversations across the Diarchy and beyond. While that event was officially unrelated to this dinner, Iandre was not naïve enough to pretend that such a heavy context did not make every interaction more complicated.
Even so, she did not intend to interrogate him or extract information; she simply reached for her glass, took a small sip of water, and let the coolness ground her in the present moment. This was supposed to be a simple shared meal. And a continuation of a conversation that had never properly begun, and an opportunity to learn who Judah Dashiell was when he was not surrounded by crisis.
As footsteps approached along the terrace, she looked up and saw him, rising smoothly to her feet with a small, genuine smile touching her lips.
"Judah," she said warmly, her voice sounding calm and unguarded as she gestured lightly toward the seat opposite her. "I am glad you could make it, and I want to thank you for agreeing to meet me, especially since I know time is not always easy to find after everything that has happened lately."
There was no hint of accusation in her tone, only a blend of sincerity and curiosity, and a quiet sense that this evening might matter more than either of them yet realized.