Lady of Juniper
Jairdain did not answer him right away.
She let the space breathe, let the music and the murmur of the ballroom settle around them, because the question he had asked was not one that benefited from immediacy. When she did speak, her voice was gentle, thoughtful, and entirely unhurried.
"It is rarely hubris when someone is willing to doubt themselves," she said softly. "Hubris announces certainty. What you are describing sounds more like attentiveness."
She turned her head slightly toward Malcolm, not to look at him in the way others might, but to face him—an unmistakable sign of presence rather than inspection.
"The Force does not usually speak in declarations," Jairdain continued. "It speaks in pressure. In invitations. In moments where the path ahead feels heavier or more alive than the ones beside it." A faint, knowing curve touched her mouth. "If tonight feels charged to you, that does not mean it has one purpose. It means you are standing at a point where more than one future can be reached."
Her hand rested briefly over her abdomen again, a quiet, grounding gesture, before returning to Jax's arm.
"Love and service are not separate callings," she added. "They often arrive together, or one prepares you for the other. And neither requires youth to begin. Purpose does not diminish with age—it clarifies."
She paused, then offered him something steadier than reassurance.
"If the Force has something in mind for you tonight," Jairdain said calmly, "it will not demand that you name it yet. It will ask only that you remain open, and that you choose with care when the moment arrives."
A softer note entered her voice, almost fond.
"And if all you find tonight is the courage to admit you are still searching," she finished, "then you are exactly where you should be."
Malcolm Ironmaster
Vulpesen
Jax Thio
She let the space breathe, let the music and the murmur of the ballroom settle around them, because the question he had asked was not one that benefited from immediacy. When she did speak, her voice was gentle, thoughtful, and entirely unhurried.
"It is rarely hubris when someone is willing to doubt themselves," she said softly. "Hubris announces certainty. What you are describing sounds more like attentiveness."
She turned her head slightly toward Malcolm, not to look at him in the way others might, but to face him—an unmistakable sign of presence rather than inspection.
"The Force does not usually speak in declarations," Jairdain continued. "It speaks in pressure. In invitations. In moments where the path ahead feels heavier or more alive than the ones beside it." A faint, knowing curve touched her mouth. "If tonight feels charged to you, that does not mean it has one purpose. It means you are standing at a point where more than one future can be reached."
Her hand rested briefly over her abdomen again, a quiet, grounding gesture, before returning to Jax's arm.
"Love and service are not separate callings," she added. "They often arrive together, or one prepares you for the other. And neither requires youth to begin. Purpose does not diminish with age—it clarifies."
She paused, then offered him something steadier than reassurance.
"If the Force has something in mind for you tonight," Jairdain said calmly, "it will not demand that you name it yet. It will ask only that you remain open, and that you choose with care when the moment arrives."
A softer note entered her voice, almost fond.
"And if all you find tonight is the courage to admit you are still searching," she finished, "then you are exactly where you should be."