Zesiro
High Lady of Kesh
The private room felt like a sanctuary carved out of the noise of the bar—warm lantern-light drifting in soft amber pools across dark wooden walls and polished stone. A low-burning incense stick added a subtle note of spice to the air, curling faint ribbons of smoke toward the ceiling. It was the sort of space designed for quiet conversation, for deals forged away from prying eyes, and for truths too delicate to survive the chaos of the public floor outside. Zesiro had chosen it not for comfort, though it offered plenty, but for the rare luxury of discretion. Even as High Lady of Kesh, she knew well that titles did not shield someone bearing dangerous information. Only care did. Only caution.
She sat with her back against the wall, the vantage point granting her a full view of the door and anyone who might cross its threshold. Her posture was flawless, a blend of elegance and coiled readiness shaped by courts, crises, and the quiet, unseen dangers woven between them. A glass of deep ruby wine rested before her, its surface undisturbed, though she traced the rim with a slow, controlled movement of her fingertip. She had not taken a sip—not yet. Her blue eyes, cool and striking even in the soft lighting, remained fixed on the door with an intensity hidden behind her calm expression. Despite the serenity of the room, a faint thread of tension hummed beneath her composure. Approaching foreign governments was never simple. Approaching them alone was almost unthinkable.
She had learned long ago that regard for her title varied wildly from world to world, and even allies could become opportunists when given the right incentive. Zesiro had been manipulated before, dismissed before, even threatened outright in the past—none of which she intended to repeat tonight. That was why she had not sought an audience in an official hall or sent a formal request. She needed someone who could carry information without broadcasting her involvement, someone with enough independence to judge her words fairly. That was why she had reached out to Rath Nihro, hoping her name would be recognized, hoping he would see the gravity of her request rather than the risk.
A soft knock at the door disrupted her thoughts, firm enough to announce presence yet controlled enough to betray discipline. Her breath stilled for a heartbeat, and she straightened just slightly, every sense sharpening.
"Enter," she called, her voice smooth and steady, though a subtle undercurrent of anticipation threaded through it.
Rath Nihro stepped inside with the measured confidence she had expected—broad-shouldered, sure-footed, a man who carried authority without needing to brandish it. The ambient lantern light caught the sharp lines of his frame and the alertness in his eyes, revealing someone accustomed to navigating complicated terrain—political, military, or otherwise. He closed the door behind him with quiet precision, sealing away the muffled clatter of glasses and distant laughter outside. For the first time that evening, Zesiro allowed a small breath to escape her chest—controlled, discreet, but genuine.
She inclined her head in greeting, offering a gesture that straddled nobility and personal respect. "Rath Nihro," she said, her voice low but carrying easily in the intimate space. "You have my gratitude for agreeing to meet me like this. I wasn't certain the request would reach you at all… and even less certain it would be deemed worth your time." She let the words hang for a moment—not as a ploy, but as an acknowledgment of the vulnerability required to reach out at all.
Her hand hovered briefly above the wineglass, as if debating whether to take its comfort, but instead she allowed it to rest neatly on the table. With a graceful motion, she gestured to the seat opposite her. "Please—sit. I would rather we speak as equals, without the pretense that titles demand."
Her blue eyes followed him as he approached, not with distrust but with the careful assessment of a woman who had lived long enough to know that safety often came down to the subtleties of a first encounter. "What I bring to you tonight is information your government must have," she continued, tone level and deliberate. "But for reasons I will explain, I cannot step into one of your official chambers and present it myself. Doing so would place me at risk… and perhaps place you in a difficult position as well."
A brief pause stretched between them, quiet but heavy with intention.
"And so," she added softly, folding her hands neatly before her, "I thought it wiser to speak here—where the walls are thick, the lighting forgiving, and the audience nonexistent."
Her gaze held his, steady and unflinching.
"Shall we begin?"
Rath Nihro
She sat with her back against the wall, the vantage point granting her a full view of the door and anyone who might cross its threshold. Her posture was flawless, a blend of elegance and coiled readiness shaped by courts, crises, and the quiet, unseen dangers woven between them. A glass of deep ruby wine rested before her, its surface undisturbed, though she traced the rim with a slow, controlled movement of her fingertip. She had not taken a sip—not yet. Her blue eyes, cool and striking even in the soft lighting, remained fixed on the door with an intensity hidden behind her calm expression. Despite the serenity of the room, a faint thread of tension hummed beneath her composure. Approaching foreign governments was never simple. Approaching them alone was almost unthinkable.
She had learned long ago that regard for her title varied wildly from world to world, and even allies could become opportunists when given the right incentive. Zesiro had been manipulated before, dismissed before, even threatened outright in the past—none of which she intended to repeat tonight. That was why she had not sought an audience in an official hall or sent a formal request. She needed someone who could carry information without broadcasting her involvement, someone with enough independence to judge her words fairly. That was why she had reached out to Rath Nihro, hoping her name would be recognized, hoping he would see the gravity of her request rather than the risk.
A soft knock at the door disrupted her thoughts, firm enough to announce presence yet controlled enough to betray discipline. Her breath stilled for a heartbeat, and she straightened just slightly, every sense sharpening.
"Enter," she called, her voice smooth and steady, though a subtle undercurrent of anticipation threaded through it.
Rath Nihro stepped inside with the measured confidence she had expected—broad-shouldered, sure-footed, a man who carried authority without needing to brandish it. The ambient lantern light caught the sharp lines of his frame and the alertness in his eyes, revealing someone accustomed to navigating complicated terrain—political, military, or otherwise. He closed the door behind him with quiet precision, sealing away the muffled clatter of glasses and distant laughter outside. For the first time that evening, Zesiro allowed a small breath to escape her chest—controlled, discreet, but genuine.
She inclined her head in greeting, offering a gesture that straddled nobility and personal respect. "Rath Nihro," she said, her voice low but carrying easily in the intimate space. "You have my gratitude for agreeing to meet me like this. I wasn't certain the request would reach you at all… and even less certain it would be deemed worth your time." She let the words hang for a moment—not as a ploy, but as an acknowledgment of the vulnerability required to reach out at all.
Her hand hovered briefly above the wineglass, as if debating whether to take its comfort, but instead she allowed it to rest neatly on the table. With a graceful motion, she gestured to the seat opposite her. "Please—sit. I would rather we speak as equals, without the pretense that titles demand."
Her blue eyes followed him as he approached, not with distrust but with the careful assessment of a woman who had lived long enough to know that safety often came down to the subtleties of a first encounter. "What I bring to you tonight is information your government must have," she continued, tone level and deliberate. "But for reasons I will explain, I cannot step into one of your official chambers and present it myself. Doing so would place me at risk… and perhaps place you in a difficult position as well."
A brief pause stretched between them, quiet but heavy with intention.
"And so," she added softly, folding her hands neatly before her, "I thought it wiser to speak here—where the walls are thick, the lighting forgiving, and the audience nonexistent."
Her gaze held his, steady and unflinching.
"Shall we begin?"