Jyn Erso (
nextchance) wrote2017-02-23 02:35 am
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Though Jyn doesn't think, at first, that she'll be able to sleep at all, after what was apparently days of it, it turns out that that part comes easily enough. It's what comes after that that doesn't. When she sleeps, she dreams, and when she dreams, she's back on Scarif, Cassian growing weaker beside her, the bodies on the ground now those of their comrades, their friends. In person, she never actually saw them die to get confirmation of it, but their silence over the comms had spoken for itself. She sees them now, Bodhi and Chirrut and Baze, bloody and burned and broken because they were stupid enough to follow her, because her father built a monstrosity for the Empire, because all those years ago, he tried to run and they found him again.
She's sitting in a bunker, waiting and waiting, but light shines through the hatch, splits it into pieces, and she knows it's the Death Star, that they've found her, too. This time, there's no peace in it, no warm body against hers, because Cassian is already dead. All of them, gone because of her. Everyone she's ever cared about and plenty more besides. Galen Erso built a planet killer, but what is she?
Her father's creation swallows her whole, and this time, every inch of her is on fire, burning her to ashes. My Stardust, she hears in her head. It's me, she'd told Cassian, the two things her father made inextricably intertwined, she and the Death Star both causing nothing but destruction.
She wakes with a start, remembering that she isn't alone before she's even processed where she is. In one swift, sudden movement, she tugs the pillow out from under her head and presses it to her face instead, using it to muffle the gasps of air she has to force into her lungs. The instinct is an old childhood one, going back to her days with Saw and not wanting to admit to the weakness of nightmares among his company of soldiers.
Only when her breathing levels out and her pulse slows does she move the pillow again, letting it rest against her abdomen as she lies flat on her back on the thin mattress, staring up at the ceiling and taking everything in all over again. The room is still dark, the hallway outside nearly silent. If she had to guess, she'd say it's still probably the middle of the night, no light coming in from behind the re-closed shades. It's a relief and it isn't. She doesn't want to face any doctors or nurses, but the dark and the quiet are about as oppressive as her own thoughts, and she can't stop trembling. There won't be any getting back to sleep tonight, not for her. Even if she thought she could manage it, she'd be too afraid of what she would see this time.
When she speaks, it's on a whim, the impulse acted on before she can try to talk herself out of it, which she too easily could. Even then, she's cautious, her voice not rising above a whisper so she doesn't wake him up, in case he is asleep. If he can get the rest she couldn't, he deserves it. "Cassian?" she asks, still staring straight up, not sparing so much as a glance in his direction. "Are you awake?"
She's sitting in a bunker, waiting and waiting, but light shines through the hatch, splits it into pieces, and she knows it's the Death Star, that they've found her, too. This time, there's no peace in it, no warm body against hers, because Cassian is already dead. All of them, gone because of her. Everyone she's ever cared about and plenty more besides. Galen Erso built a planet killer, but what is she?
Her father's creation swallows her whole, and this time, every inch of her is on fire, burning her to ashes. My Stardust, she hears in her head. It's me, she'd told Cassian, the two things her father made inextricably intertwined, she and the Death Star both causing nothing but destruction.
She wakes with a start, remembering that she isn't alone before she's even processed where she is. In one swift, sudden movement, she tugs the pillow out from under her head and presses it to her face instead, using it to muffle the gasps of air she has to force into her lungs. The instinct is an old childhood one, going back to her days with Saw and not wanting to admit to the weakness of nightmares among his company of soldiers.
Only when her breathing levels out and her pulse slows does she move the pillow again, letting it rest against her abdomen as she lies flat on her back on the thin mattress, staring up at the ceiling and taking everything in all over again. The room is still dark, the hallway outside nearly silent. If she had to guess, she'd say it's still probably the middle of the night, no light coming in from behind the re-closed shades. It's a relief and it isn't. She doesn't want to face any doctors or nurses, but the dark and the quiet are about as oppressive as her own thoughts, and she can't stop trembling. There won't be any getting back to sleep tonight, not for her. Even if she thought she could manage it, she'd be too afraid of what she would see this time.
When she speaks, it's on a whim, the impulse acted on before she can try to talk herself out of it, which she too easily could. Even then, she's cautious, her voice not rising above a whisper so she doesn't wake him up, in case he is asleep. If he can get the rest she couldn't, he deserves it. "Cassian?" she asks, still staring straight up, not sparing so much as a glance in his direction. "Are you awake?"
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When she agrees, it allows him to continue thinking of them as a unit, a 'we.' It doesn't do much for their numbers but it's better than fighting through this alone.
Jyn looks small in his arms. Not delicate or fragile, just small enough to be precious, something he wants to protect. It's a big change from only a few days ago when it had seemed perfectly reasonable to leave her in a crumbling temple outside of Jedha City. Practical but not acceptable. It had been a new and difficult perspective for someone who didn't allow himself to form attachments because he might have to kill them later.
"Saw didn't trust much of anything," Cassian says, thinking of the bags over their heads. He isn't sure, at the end, if he'd entirely trusted Jyn.
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He'd trusted her, though, she thinks. All these years later, and he said she'd been the best soldier he had, and she never knew him to be one to throw around hollow untruths. If anything, he was more of a father to her than Galen Erso ever was, but that, she keeps carefully guarded, close to her chest, not in the habit of giving away more of herself than is strictly necessary. Just being here in Cassian's arms breaks that rule; it's all the more reason why she needs to continue following it where she can.
She thinks again that Saw would be so, so disappointed in her for all of this, maybe even more so than he must have been when she collapsed watching the hologram, for all that she barely remembers doing so now.
"No, he didn't," she allows, smiling faintly at the thought as if recalling a rare fond memory, turning her head enough that the expression is hidden in Cassian's shoulder. "But especially not anything that seemed like it might be a good thing. There's always a catch." The same must be true of this, being here. She won't let herself believe otherwise. She can, though, let herself put off dealing with it for a little while longer.
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Cassian turns his head and looks at the television. Thinking about what kind of person Jyn might have become if life had been a little kinder to her is not a good path to take. It leaves Cassian envisioning a woman who is softer, happier and it's a disservice to the person next to him now. Whatever Jyn might have had–deserved even–she didn't get it, nor did Cassian. imagining otherwise was a cruel game.
"He trusted you more than the rest, at least," he says. It's a fact that they had abused to try and get a message that Cassian had almost been willing to disregard.
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"He raised me," she says with a shrug, as if it's as simple as that, as if there weren't plenty of others her own age or close to it among his cadre. Still, it's a far cry from the last time she said those words, a defense to what might as well have been his accusation regarding her connection to Saw. So much has changed, she thinks, in such a short time. Certainly, when she first met Cassian, she could never have imagined that she would be climbing into his bed in the middle of the night the way she has, or that she would take such comfort from his presence.
With that in mind, she supposes she can add just a little more than she did then, surrounded by people she had no reason to trust. She has one — several, really — now with him. "Saw's the one who got us off Coruscant when I was young. Then he came for me when my parents... after I lost them." It's still just facts, none of the feelings, and it still doesn't touch on how much she'd come to see him as a father or the way he abandoned her, but it's more than she's told anyone in a long time, maybe ever. Lying in the dark like this, it's easier than it might otherwise be, especially when it's in lieu of speaking about more painful truths, like her dream or what happened to them. Being swallowed by the Death Star's blast again seems safer than talking about it. Besides, there's a strange satisfaction in the idea of telling Cassian something he doesn't already know, details about her that the Alliance might not have learned, a way of regaining the upper hand even this long after the fact.
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It's hard to say if that makes Jyn luckier than him. More loved, perhaps, if the way Galen had looked at her is anything to go by, but he doubts that Jyn Erso grew up any happier or safer than he had. War, no matter what side you're on, is a devourer of childhoods.
"I was born on Fest," he says, because it seems like he ought to tell her something of himself too. It's not a particularly remarkable planet by any stretch of the imagination, cold and mountainous and densely populated. Or it had been. Cassian avoided going back if he could, despite its proximity to Yavin. It never seemed worth it.
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This is different, though, truths offered willingly, slowly, in whatever fragments they can manage. She doesn't need to know more than she already does to get the sense that he keeps himself about as carefully guarded as she does. It makes it easier that way. At least he's probably not expecting her to just open up and tell him everything that wasn't in whatever dossier they compiled on her now that they have the time and the opportunity for it.
There are a few things, though, that she can still give without crossing the lines she's set for herself, like a trade of sorts, a fact for a fact. "I don't know where I was born," she admits. "I think we might've lived somewhere else for a while, but I don't remember it, and we never talked about it."
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"Is Coruscant the first place you remember?" he asks. Is it the first place she thought of as home? He knows that at some point, they came to Lah'mu, where the Empire sent Krennic to extract Galen. The details on her file are fuzzier after that. Time spent with Saw Gerrera obviously, various aliases, and then Wobani prison camp. It's an unfair advantage for two people who live by secrecy and survival.
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The droid who took care of her, her favorite holodrama, the toys she had to abandon, the conversations her parents would have with the man in white that she never understood but was often upset by, those are things seared into her memory, that she would see in her sleep even if she tried to shut them out. Before that, though, it's a blur, and then a blank.
Still looking up at him, she asks, "Do you remember Fest? Did you live there long?"
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"After I joined the Alliance, I lived on their bases." As Draven had dragged him up the ranks, Cassian had shifted through so many Rebel bases, moving with the Alliance and dispatched hither and yon to gather information. If he thinks about how young he was when he first killed someone he might need to grab that bedpan from the side table.
"I wandered a lot. Made it easy to adjust when I was sent somewhere new."
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She doesn't lie and say she left him. She doesn't tell the truth of it, either, that Saw cast her aside without so much as a word. That much is still too raw, especially after having seen him again and leaving him to die as Jedha collapsed. For all her secrets, she's not sure there's any she keeps such tight hold of as the way she's been abandoned time and time again. She'd rather just be the one to leave before she can be left by someone else. Easy as it would be, though, to get up and go back over to her own bed and pretend like she never let herself be this openly vulnerable, she stays put.
"Guess there's nowhere to wander now."
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"I wonder what it'll be like. Having a home in one place." He's trying to spin it into something positive but he thinks Jyn is smart enough to recognize what it is. There's no polishing up a terrible situation, not with even the warmest and brightest belief, and Cassian lacks that on a good day.
He may as well adopt an alias. Say he's someone else. It's better than figuring out who Cassian Andor is now.
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She's not so sure that's the case, though. At least, that isn't what it's meant to her, what made warmth bloom in her chest at the sound of those words. The Alliance, she could take or leave, especially after the Council wouldn't listen to her. Cassian, though, who came back for her time and again?
Whatever planet they're on and however out of options they might be, she thinks she's as much at home here as she was in the hangar on Yavin 4. She thinks, she could be that for him, if he wanted.
With no reason to believe that he would want that, though, Jyn dismisses the thought as quickly as she can, only hoping the hitch in her breath hasn't been too apparent, or at least easily written off as relating to something else. "I couldn't tell you," she says, wry, lighter than the subject should call for. "The longest I've spent in any one place in years was a prison."
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Cassian likes to think that that's what it gave him, before Draven made him into something worse.
"Maybe it'll be an adventure. I'll learn how to match curtains to a sofa," he says, the domestic fantasy wasted on them. He can't remember if he ever had a room with curtains. All the homes he remembers are gray, utilitarian things for storing people like weapons.
He could cook again, Cassian thinks. He hasn't cooked in a long time, at least nothing more complicated than packet rations. He's missed that.
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It's been so long since she had a home that she doesn't know how to have one anymore, and the second she settles will be the same instant something goes wrong. The apartment that's been promised to her will be a place to stay and nothing more. Right now, the very idea of it hardly even seems real, as if nothing could exist outside of this room, though she's seen out the window and stumbled down the hospital's hallway.
"You'll need matching throw pillows. For the sofa."
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"For all I know, the apartment they give me will be Naboo marble and hardwood from Endor." He laughs then, a low chuckle that disappears into Jyn's hair.
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It's a silly dream, nothing more, the sort of thing she can play along with simply because she knows that. Truthfully, as long as her bed is more comfortable than the one in her cell on Wobani and there's no leak over it, she'll be satisfied with anything.
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"I'm sure you'll get an apartment with a better view anyway."
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"If I do, you can have it. Any view would be better than my last."
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"You may not want me around in your apartment. I'll lower the property values."
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"Keep your expectations of me low, anyway."
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She can't maintain that teasing edge forever, though, not after something like that, and her expression is a little softer when she exhales, mouth curving into a slight frown. "You should do the same," she tells him, quieter, barely more than a whisper an inch or two from his jaw. She'll disappoint him otherwise, in some way or another, and he'll leave her, just like everyone does.
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"But I'll do my best." Maybe he means low expectations (he doesn't) and maybe he means that he will try to be better. They've set a low bar for each other, at least. His voice is soft, almost drowsy. "You should rest."
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A soft sound of protest escapes Jyn's throat when he says she should rest, her fingers curling in his hospital gown again. She doesn't want to risk sleeping and what she might see when she does. He's not wrong, though, that she should, and it wouldn't be fair to keep him awake when she might well have woken him in the first place. Swallowing hard, she braces herself for the only answer she can expect when she asks, "Should I go? I can if you want me to."
It's the closest she'll let herself get to asking if she can stay.
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Cassian's hands mimic hers and he squeezes her shoulders. It's not a possessive gesture, just one that makes the request. She doesn't have to explain herself but he knows the weight of coming sleep and how dear it is to take real rest when it comes.
"If you get up now, the cords will just get tangled," he says, providing the excuse.
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