Object
Sovereign Marouk's Bottle of Acamarian Brandy
A handled glass bottle containing Acamarian brandy, carried and presented within formal social rituals. Text places the bottle in Yuta's hands when she pours and at Marouk's side when offered; characters lift or receive it as a ceremonial libation that punctuates negotiation and intimate Ten-Forward exchanges. The container functions as a served consumable and a visible cultural token during tense diplomatic moments.
7 appearances
Purpose
To hold and serve Acamarian brandy for drinking during social, ceremonial, and diplomatic gatherings.
Significance
Acts as a ceremonial offering and cultural token: Marouk presents the brandy alongside amnesty to signal reconciliation, and Yuta's pouring of it marks attempts at intimacy and tests social boundaries. The bottle frames trust, ritual hospitality, and the fragility of rapprochement across multiple scenes.
Appearances in the Narrative
When this object appears and how it's used