Jyn Erso (
nextchance) wrote2025-05-14 12:09 am
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crash sites keep me up at night
In the dream — and it was a dream, although she didn't know that —
Jyn was a little girl in the cave on Lah'mu, not knowing when it was or how long she had been there, only that she was waiting, always waiting, always left alone. The lantern was burned out, the small space dark and damp, somehow seeming to get smaller still, a grave and a prison cell and the only home she had. When, at last, the door swung open overhead, it was an unfamiliar figure overhead (a new variation on an old theme), a young boy with dark hair and eyes, and Jyn didn't really know him except that she felt like she did anyway. Wordless, he held out a hand, and she began to climb.
She climbed, and climbed, and climbed, until her bad shoulder ached and her hands slipped on the ladder's rungs, but she had to keep going, even as she got nowhere, the cave getting deeper now, except it wasn't a cave at all. It was the data tower, getting taller, not deeper, and no longer a little girl, she kept climbing, desperate to reach the top where no one was waiting for her anymore, because when she looked down — so far down, it hadn't really been that far, had it? — Cassian's body lay bent and broken at the bottom, and she knew he wasn't getting back up. Stupid, to think she could reach him, that she might be able to hold onto him this time.
Finally she stepped up and out of the cave that was also the data tower and onto the beach, alone again, except for all of the dead. It had been a while since she'd dreamed of Scarif, and somehow there were more bodies now, her father's weapon overhead, her inescapable legacy. Past the shoreline was forest, and she knew it to be Yavin 4's even though she had barely seen it while she was there, and knew that it held the house she'd once lived in. The house burned — the fire she'd set — and the forest burned with it. The world glowed green with the Death Star's kyber-light, only it wasn't coming from the sky above but from her. Surrounded by bodies, she sat on the sand and waited for a death that didn't come, one which would have been, she supposed, too kind. Hard as she'd always fought to survive, a death that meant something in the arms of someone who cared about her was worlds better than surviving alone, left to bear the weight of so much destruction.
She looked up at the weapon that shared her name, a grim mirror in the sky, and with the fire and the dead around her, she knew that they were one and the same, and this was always going to be where she wound up.
— With a sharp gasp, Jyn lurched awake in the dark, her limbs clammy with sweat and her face damp with tears. Nightmares were nothing new to her, but it had been a long time since one had rattled her this badly. In her addled state, trying and mostly failing to get air into her lungs, she couldn't think of what might have caused it... Until the sound of breath that wasn't her own reminded her that she wasn't alone in the room. Through the haze of everything else, the events of the last day began coming back to her.
It should have been reassuring to remember that Cassian was here and alive and safe. At any other time, it would have been. Instead, in the moment, her panic intensified, her chest painfully tight. It was a good thing, not being alone anymore, except that she still felt like she was and knew she would be again. Close as he was, he felt impossibly far away, and yet he was too close, too. The last thing she wanted was to be seen like this, a panic-stricken, crying mess, unable to calm herself down after just a stupid dream. All she could do — one of the only coherent thoughts she could hold onto — was try to stay as quiet as possible, pressing a fistful of blanket against her mouth to try to stifle any gasps or sobs, and hope she hadn't made enough noise to wake him. He needed the rest. She needed to pull herself together, shoulders shaking in the dark as she tried to breathe.
Jyn was a little girl in the cave on Lah'mu, not knowing when it was or how long she had been there, only that she was waiting, always waiting, always left alone. The lantern was burned out, the small space dark and damp, somehow seeming to get smaller still, a grave and a prison cell and the only home she had. When, at last, the door swung open overhead, it was an unfamiliar figure overhead (a new variation on an old theme), a young boy with dark hair and eyes, and Jyn didn't really know him except that she felt like she did anyway. Wordless, he held out a hand, and she began to climb.
She climbed, and climbed, and climbed, until her bad shoulder ached and her hands slipped on the ladder's rungs, but she had to keep going, even as she got nowhere, the cave getting deeper now, except it wasn't a cave at all. It was the data tower, getting taller, not deeper, and no longer a little girl, she kept climbing, desperate to reach the top where no one was waiting for her anymore, because when she looked down — so far down, it hadn't really been that far, had it? — Cassian's body lay bent and broken at the bottom, and she knew he wasn't getting back up. Stupid, to think she could reach him, that she might be able to hold onto him this time.
Finally she stepped up and out of the cave that was also the data tower and onto the beach, alone again, except for all of the dead. It had been a while since she'd dreamed of Scarif, and somehow there were more bodies now, her father's weapon overhead, her inescapable legacy. Past the shoreline was forest, and she knew it to be Yavin 4's even though she had barely seen it while she was there, and knew that it held the house she'd once lived in. The house burned — the fire she'd set — and the forest burned with it. The world glowed green with the Death Star's kyber-light, only it wasn't coming from the sky above but from her. Surrounded by bodies, she sat on the sand and waited for a death that didn't come, one which would have been, she supposed, too kind. Hard as she'd always fought to survive, a death that meant something in the arms of someone who cared about her was worlds better than surviving alone, left to bear the weight of so much destruction.
She looked up at the weapon that shared her name, a grim mirror in the sky, and with the fire and the dead around her, she knew that they were one and the same, and this was always going to be where she wound up.
— With a sharp gasp, Jyn lurched awake in the dark, her limbs clammy with sweat and her face damp with tears. Nightmares were nothing new to her, but it had been a long time since one had rattled her this badly. In her addled state, trying and mostly failing to get air into her lungs, she couldn't think of what might have caused it... Until the sound of breath that wasn't her own reminded her that she wasn't alone in the room. Through the haze of everything else, the events of the last day began coming back to her.
It should have been reassuring to remember that Cassian was here and alive and safe. At any other time, it would have been. Instead, in the moment, her panic intensified, her chest painfully tight. It was a good thing, not being alone anymore, except that she still felt like she was and knew she would be again. Close as he was, he felt impossibly far away, and yet he was too close, too. The last thing she wanted was to be seen like this, a panic-stricken, crying mess, unable to calm herself down after just a stupid dream. All she could do — one of the only coherent thoughts she could hold onto — was try to stay as quiet as possible, pressing a fistful of blanket against her mouth to try to stifle any gasps or sobs, and hope she hadn't made enough noise to wake him. He needed the rest. She needed to pull herself together, shoulders shaking in the dark as she tried to breathe.
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She was a little girl in a cave, alone in the dark again. Cassian was at the hatch holding a hand out to her, but she wasn't sure if she had it in her to claw her way out just to wind up back where she started.
"Just a bad dream," she said, trying, at least, to give him something without revealing too much of herself. She let the blanket drop, her face flushed and tear-streaked. "I was trying not to wake you."
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The solution, of course, was his own apartment. But that was just pain.
He considered his bunk for a moment. Then with a quick, "May I?" he took hold of the mat and dragged it from the berth to the deck.
"Kay did this," he explained, sitting on the mat now on the floor. "Once when he had to carry me back to the ship and had a hard time laying me in the bunk. I dunno. It's stupid but I found it… a little less… like there was a little less pressure on my mind." He indicated the empty deck space between his mat and her bunk, where her mat could fit. "I can move over if you want to try it."
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As she waited, watched, she turned those words over: I hope you get not to feel that way. She knew what he meant, and yet, in the dark and with so much weighing on her, there was something staggering about it all the same.
"Yeah," she said quietly, clearing her throat to try to at least sound a little less wrecked than she was. "Okay." Anything would be worth a try, even as it struck her as entirely too dangerous to sleep in even closer proximity than they already were. Careful, moving slowly, she got to her feet so she could start to pull her mat down beside his. "Sorry," she added, not looking at him. "I should've... Are you all right?"
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"I knew I'd dream," he said by way of answer. "It was selfish to sleep in the same room as you, knowing that. I don't usually make noise. But I really will be fine. Or, you know. As fine as we get. …We did good. Like, truly good. Not everything I've done has been so… clear. That does help. A lot."
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Her mat now on the floor, she sat on top of it, knees drawn up to her chest. She didn't have the right to ask about whatever he'd dreamed, and yet: "Was it... You called out my name."
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Trying to force a deeper breath into her lungs, she set one hand between them, the motion hesitant, an invitation and a reassurance.
"Usually when I dream about Scarif, you fall and don't get back up," she admitted. "All this time, and I can still see it."
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Softly, Cassian reached out and took her hand. His pounding heartbeat immediately slowed and gentled at the touch. Don't let yourself rely… but oh breathing was harder without her.
It was a moment of shared openness, like they'd had before… and he abruptly hurt so badly at the thought of it passing again, into veiled eyes and aborted sentences, the words just came.
"I feel like I don't know the right questions," he said quietly. "But even if I did, maybe I shouldn't ask them. I want to know more about our… my… time here. But maybe it's none of my business. If that was someone else. Or if it was me… I shouldn't try to… recreate, without building, or earning, or… Either way, I shouldn't put it on you. But then I see you bite so much back and I wish… I miss… I just don't know."
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This was backwards, after all, in a way that she would have struggled to articulate. What to tell him and what not to, what she could even want from him, in her mind, those ought to have been her worries, not his. Not knowing how to say that, though, she started with something she could say, that she knew to be true.
"When we were on Jedha," she murmured, her breathing at least a little easier now. "You shot one of Saw's people to protect me. He was behind me with a grenade and I hadn't seen him. I think... that was when I first knew I could trust you. And then when we were on Yavin 4 and you came to volunteer... and you showed up on top of that tower and saved my life, again..."
She knew what she was trying to say, but not how to say it. Whatever they'd had here started back there. He wasn't the same person now, without the same history between them, but he was, too, in the ways that mattered most. She'd loved him, or started to, or something like it, before she ever wound up here at all, even if she would never have known to put that word to it.
Too tired and wrung out to be properly frustrated with herself, she exhaled slowly. "I guess all I mean is... Anything you want to know, I'd tell you. I just don't want you to think that... that I'd expect anything, or ask it, or... I don't know."
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"I've never trusted anyone the way I trust you," he said at last. "Not just how you'll speak and behave toward me, but at all; your judgment, your actions, your… everything. It makes me not worry about you because I know you can take care of yourself. That doesn't mean I don't want to help. I do. Just because you can go it alone doesn't mean you have to. But I know you can. Instead of making me feel like I have to help, it makes me grateful to.
"I've never really had that before. I can't think of anyone I didn't spend more time worried about. My ma, my friends, my… wife… I think our relationship was more built on worry than anything else. There were good reasons, but I think, now, that worry is a kind of distrust.
"I won't ask more tonight. It's not fair of me, when we're both… well, I can't speak for you. Thank you for listening.
"I guess I'm asking… next time you don't say something because you're worried how it'll affect me… go ahead and say it? As it is now… I know it wasn't for long, but I'm missing that friendship we had, with that trust."
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She focused instead on his hand in hers, grateful for that one small point of contact. There was some kind of metaphor to it, that maybe she couldn't have what she'd had before, but that wouldn't make her appreciate any less what she did have. And whatever else happened, there was something here. He'd just said it himself: that friendship, with that trust.
That, at least, gave her a thought, and reminded her that they were, in a way, starting over. There were things she'd said before that she would probably have to say again, which did actually give her a place to start.
"I'm not always... good at saying what I'm thinking or feeling," she told him. There was, of course, one constant, I love you still lurking somewhere, buried deep but too true to ignore, but that wasn't hers to offer now. "Not used to it, I guess. Even now. But." She bit her lip again. "I've never trusted anyone the way I trust you, either. And that goes back before this place. I've missed that, too. Anything I haven't said... It's not because I don't trust you."
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"I really missed you. I'm really glad you're here."
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They lay calm and quiet, heartbeats and breathing slowing and perhaps beginning to synchronize. Cassian murmured, "I might fall asleep again."
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She wasn't sure if she could, but she also wasn't sure it mattered. It reminded her of something else she probably ought to say, though, this one easier than anything that had preceded it. "What you said before... It's okay if you wake me, too. Always."
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“I hope I don’t,” he murmured back, “but thank you.” He rallied enough energy to crack a lopsided grin: “I really don’t want to go to that apartment.” Too much truth to really be a joke… well, the joke was in knowing she wouldn’t kick him out for dreaming.
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"No, stay," she said, and she must have been more tired than she'd realized for how easily it came out and how little thought she gave it. "Please stay."
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“Always. As long as you want me.”
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"Thank you."
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With another brightening smile, he said only, "Just a Fact."
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The last conscious thought she had was hoping he would still be there in the morning. It had been a while since she'd really let herself hope for anything.
This time, as she slept, she didn't dream, or at least wasn't aware of doing so.
When, at last, she began to awaken again, it was a gradual thing, all sensation and no thought. She was warm all over — her head on a shoulder, an arm around her, curled beside another body, and, oh, she'd missed this so much. Home, the semi-aware part of her mind provided. She was finally, finally home. With a quiet, contented hum, she mindlessly shifted a little closer, not yet ready to open her eyes or be anywhere but here.
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He woke gently to light streaming in from the high, narrow windows.
And it wasn't a dream. Sometime in the night, Jyn had rolled in to him, curling into his arms. They lay softly together, unurgent, breathing together.
Cassian's arm had fallen asleep and he didn't care. He wouldn't disturb her for anything.
Usually, once Cassian woke up, he got up. Now, he closed his eyes back into her hair and matched his breath to hers.
They were back on the beach, but there was no sorrow now, no doom; no light coming for them; just themselves become oceanic.
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"Feels good," she mumbled into his shoulder, not wholly aware of doing so. She couldn't even be sure exactly what she was referring to. It seemed instead to encompass the entire drawn-out moment. Usually, the best — and thus worst — of her dreams weren't this detailed or vivid. Was he real? She thought he was, hoped he was. There was that word again, still inextricably bound to him.
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And more than any of that, the joy of her relaxation with him, that he might be giving any of that back.
He wouldn't pretend to be asleep if she wasn't. "Mmhmm," he agreed. For a heartbeat, his arms flexed; not enough to displace her, just enough to acknowledge. Lips half-brushing the top of her head, he murmured, "Good morning."
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He wasn't pulling away or trying to dislodge her, though. Jyn wasn't yet nearly alert enough to decipher what that might have meant, but it did stop her from jerking back as she might otherwise have done in her self-consciousness. To do so would probably have given entirely the wrong impression anyway. She had her wits about her just enough to know that she wouldn't want him to think he'd done anything wrong here when she was the one who'd unknowingly encroached on his space.
"Morning," she echoed, her voice still rough with sleep. For just a few moments longer, she could savor this. There couldn't be any real harm in that — at least, not to anyone but herself.
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