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26 Jul  ·  13 N

and the world keeps spinning - sebastenstan - Star Wars - All Media Types [Archive of Our Own]  >>

Chapters: 1/1
Fandom: Star Wars - All Media Types, Rogue One: A Star Wars Story (2016)
Rating: General Audiences
Warnings: Creator Chose Not To Use Archive Warnings
Relationships: Cassian Andor/Jyn Erso, Shara Bey/Kes Dameron (background)
Characters: Cassian Andor, Jyn Erso, Davits Draven, Shara Bey (background), Kes Dameron (background), Poe Dameron (mentioned)
Additional Tags: Emotion Without Plot, Emotional Hurt/Comfort, Psychological Trauma, Somebody Lives/Not Everyone Dies, Sharing a Bed, Colors, (i didn’t know that “colors” was a tag but it applies here), just your typical angst and shit
Summary:

Jyn goes on a quest to discover Cassian’s favorite color. Or, rather, to give him a favorite color.

25 Jul  ·  5 N

so………. i wrote a rebelcaptain fic, about 7k, about favorite colors (it’s a weird topic but whatever) and before i post it on ao3 i’d love some feedback. i reworked the second scene literally five times and the whole thing is far far from perfect but it’s reached the point where i don’t think i’m getting anywhere with it tbh. but anyway pls comment tysm

i. Massassi Base; green

The celebrations are just gearing up as Jyn knocks on his door. She has guessed that they both share an aversion to the jubilation that left hundreds of bodies in its wake, bodies blown up by grenades or felled by blaster shots, disintegrated now, just flecks floating in space. She knows no one will miss them at the party; the attention has been taken from the Scarif survivors and placed on Han Solo, Leia Organa, and Luke Skywalker, all eager-eyed and fresh, reveling in their accomplishments.

Jyn just feels tired.

The door opens and, as she expected, she is greeted by Cassian, who wears loose gray pants and a thin white shirt, a marked difference from his typical beige uniform and large, fur-lined parka. He is assisted by a crutch under his arm, and Jyn can see the outline of bandages poking through his top. He received treatment in the bacta tanks for two days, and the doctors said he was lucky to be alive. That they were both lucky to be alive.

Jyn doesn’t feel that way.

She feels stranded. She had been prepared to die on that beach, listening to the waves crash, watching as the world exploded in a beautiful pink, simply holding Cassian. She had been ready to greet death with open arms and a smile before the opportunity had been snatched away. Dying, she has come to find out, is easy; living, on the other hand, is a much taller order. Especially when everyone you know has been ripped away.

Except Cassian.

“Jyn,” he says, and there’s only a little bit of surprise in his voice. He winces as he talks, his ribs still aching, no doubt. She’s surprised he can even stand, to be frank, but a little bit of stubbornness and pride can go a long way.

“Can I come in?” she asks, and he draws the door further back and steps aside to allow her into his room.

After she crosses the threshold, he shuts the door behind them. Jyn supposes she should feel embarrassed, sneaking into a man’s room in the middle of the night, but she thinks that she’s gone through too much with Cassian to allow such trivial shame to prick the back of her neck, so she holds her head up high as she studies the space around them. His quarters are bigger than hers, but still small; the walls, floor, and ceiling are all gray concrete, with the white sheets on the bed and the ivory table shoved against a wall providing the only breaks in the monotony. There are no personal effects. In that, they are alike.

“I’m sorry to disturb you,” Jyn says mechanically, though she knows Cassian has not been asleep. The bed sheets are rumpled, like their occupant has been tossing and turning, unable to rest.

Cassian knows she knows, but small talk is normal, and normal is sane. Normal is good. If Jyn squints, she can pretend they’re somewhere else, far away from this base, far away from this rebellion, tucked in a safe corner of the galaxy. But they aren’t.

“You didn’t,” he responds automatically, his voice hoarse and tired. Jyn walks further into the room and he follows her with a strange, loud, three-legged gait, breathing heavily. She stops when she gets to the edge of his bed, trailing her fingers along the thin comforter, feeling Cassian’s gaze on the back of her neck.

“I didn’t want to be alone,” she mumbles to the mattress.

Cassian shifts his weight. “Let’s go outside,” he suggests suddenly. Jyn turns to face him, confusion flitting across her face as her brows knit together. “It’s quiet,” he explains quickly, mumbling. “Quiet and peaceful.” She glances down at his leg, then his bandage, then back up at him, and sees his jaw has set and his eyes have hardened, so she nods. She opens the door for him and he shuffles out, each breath causing him to grimace, but she knows offering help would be more painful, so she shuts the door and keeps pace with him. Cheers filter down the hallway, muffled by the walls but clear enough, full of hope and joy. Jyn ignores them.

The walk to the entrance to the base takes fifteen minutes, when it usually takes little more than five. Jyn says nothing, and Cassian just looks angry. The guards nod at them and open the doors; though the base is usually locked down at night, they seem more than willing to let Jyn and Cassian go out. It seems that not everyone has forgotten Scarif so quickly. Or maybe they have relaxed tonight. Jyn wonders if the guards wish they were at the party.

The cool evening air hits their faces as they step outside, the doors sliding shut behind them. The guards posted outside the base glance at them only once, just long enough to discern their identities, and face front again, their limbs relaxed without the threat of the Death Star hanging above their heads. Jyn breathes in the scent of the forest, damp and mossy, and exhales slowly, feeling the tension leave her shoulders just a little. Cassian has begun to limp towards the treeline, so Jyn follows him silently until they reach the edge of the forest. Panting, he throws his crutch to the ground and lowers himself down, his face blanching as he does so. Jyn bites her lip and barely restrains herself from offering a hand, an arm, something. Once he settles himself on the leafy forest floor, Jyn follows suit, the foliage crunching under her weight. With the temple behind them, as they look out into the forests of Yavin IV, Jyn can almost imagine that the Rebellion is a distant memory, that there is no war, and it’s just her and Cassian, listening to the sounds of the trees rustling in the gentle breeze.

Jyn twirls a stray blade of grass between her fingers. “I always liked green,” she admits. Yavin IV might be the greenest place she’s ever been; the trees and shrubbery are practically untouched except for the Massassi temples dotting the landscape.

Cassian shifts his weight so he can rest his back against a mossy tree, his breathing slowly returning to normal. “Why?”

She shoots a sideways look at him, frowning. “I don’t think people normally ask why someone’s favorite color is what it is.”

“You can just say there’s no reason.” Cassian picks up a handful of leaves in his right hand and crushes them, letting their remnants float to the ground. “I don’t have a favorite color.”

Jyn raises her eyebrows. “You don’t?” she asks, somewhat incredulously.

Cassian shrugs and scoops up some more leaves. “I don’t have a reason to.”

Jyn falls silent, watching the battered leaves fall from Cassian’s hand. She feels a pang of pity for his childhood; while her own may have been twisted and  strange and cut short, she had a favorite color, a favorite toy, a favorite book. She could remember a life untouched by loss, or grief, or fear, quick as it may have been. Cassian glances sharply at her and Jyn looks away, hoping that the pity did not show on her face.

“It reminds me of home,” she finally answers.

“Where?” Cassian’s voice is gentle and inquisitive; they are two normal people, sharing normal things about each other, like where they grew up. If Jyn repeats that enough, she can almost believe it.

“Lah’mu,” she replies, the word sticking in her throat. “In the Raioballo sector. I wasn’t born there, but I remember it the most. It was…” She pauses, deliberating what to say. That it was misty and damp, but her parents always had a fire burning, so their simple house was never cold. That she would write words in the volcanic soil to practice, finding it more entertaining than a pen and paper, and her mother would scold her afterwards for bringing dirt into the house. That the water from the ground tasted so strongly of minerals that drinking water had to be distilled from the air. “It was beautiful,” she finishes softly, her voice barely audible.

Cassian has stopped ripping up leaves from the forest floor and has started staring at her. Before, he had just been looking. Now his gaze goes through her skin, to her very center, where she is most vulnerable and naked. But his eyes don’t wound. They’re kind. Jyn bows her head and sets her jaw against the tears that begin to gather in her eyes, clouding her vision but never spilling over.

Cassian reaches out a hand and puts it on her knee. Jyn doesn’t look at him, can’t look at him, but she feels warmth radiate from where his calloused hand rests on her leg, and she instinctively grasps his fingers with her own, feeling the rough callouses that mirror the ones on her own palm. She can’t remember the last time she held hands with someone, or the last time she touched someone for no reason at all. His skin is reassuring against her own. It reminds her that he’s still there, that he came back for her when no one else had.

“I’m sorry,” Cassian murmurs, and Jyn knows that he is expressing his sympathy and sorrow for much more than just the loss of her home.

“Me, too,” Jyn whispers. Sorry for her mother, sorry for Saw, sorry for her father, for K-2, Bodhi, Chirrut, Baze, for Scarif and Alderaan. Though she doesn’t say any of those names, Cassian can hear them laced through her voice. Jyn looks back up, her eyes clear, and moves to sit next to Cassian by the tree, bark scraping her back as she positions herself beside him. She doesn’t let go of his hand.

They sit peacefully until true nighttime begins to settle over the forest, and the green is replaced by varying shades of black and gray. Wordlessly, they stand, Cassian hissing in pain as he hoists himself up with his crutch, and turn to go back to the base. The guards let them in and Jyn and Cassian wind their way back to their rooms, Cassian gritting his teeth as they walk. Jyn is surprised the doctors allowed him out of the med bay, but she supposes that he didn’t give them much choice in the matter. Compared to climbing the comm tower half-dead, this must be simple.

They reach Cassian’s room first. Jyn has noticed that the rooms of those higher up in the chain of command are closer to the entrances, no doubt to allow them to evacuate quicker. Sergeants are located further away. The new title still prickles Jyn; it fits her poorly, like an itchy shirt that’s too big, but she got tired of looking down and running. So the placard on her door reads Sergeant Erso. Captain Andor flashes in the light at her as she opens the door for Cassian and he drags himself to the bed, where he immediately collapses.

Jyn hovers by the doorway. He looks exhausted.

“Goodnight,” she says finally.

Something flashes in Cassian’s eyes. Disappointment, so brief that Jyn barely notices, and most likely would not have noticed if she were anyone but herself. She begins to pull the door shut before she can be drawn back in.

“Goodnight, Jyn,” Cassian says. Jyn looks back at him and sees him smiling, close-lipped, but his eyes have crinkled around the edges. She smiles back and closes the door.


ii. EF76 Nebulon-B frigate Redemption; red

They stand a hairsbreadth apart, pressed in on either side by the walls of the narrow hallway they have escaped to near the docking bay, so close that Jyn can count Cassian’s eyelashes. A great clamor swells from the hangar as mechanics give finishing touches to the ships and pilots shout goodbyes as they board, but Jyn pays the commotion no attention, trying to soak in Cassian for as long as she can.

He says, “Eight days only. Just gathering intel on Bothawui. First mission back, so it’ll be easy,” and flashes her a smile, a forced kind of lazy that makes her uneasy. The kind of smile her father gave her when she caught him late at night, huddled guiltily over plans, or the one her mother would carefully arrange when Jyn asked too many questions on Coruscant. Jyn has inherited that smile, and she recognizes it easily.

He was only cleared for duty two days ago—Jyn thinks it’s too soon—and it has only been seventeen days since Scarif. When she closes her eyes,  Jyn can still feel the heat of the Death Star’s laser against her skin, can still hear the waves roaring as they come crashing towards the beach, can still remember screaming until she was hoarse when Mon Mothma told her that the plans were lost, can still remember watching the last remnant of her father explode and be lost into space and the cheers that followed. Most of all, she can remember the feel of Cassian trembling underneath her as they waited for death, sand digging into her knees, the only time she had truly felt at peace even as death barreled towards them. But now that they are here, stuck in the vastness of space with a quarter of the Alliance fleet as they search for a new base, the thought of losing him almost makes her stagger.

“Don’t make any stupid decisions,” Jyn mutters, and she means it as half a joke, but the words carry more weight than she intends and hang heavily between them.

Luckily, Cassian plays along. “How can I if you won’t be with me?” he asks, a smile dancing on his lips.

Under different circumstances, she might have smiled too, but she finds her jaw has suddenly locked and her heart has leapt up into her throat. She screws her eyes shut and balls her hands into fists, and feels Cassian’s warm hand press her head against his chest. She can’t help but flash back to all the times she has been left: by her parents, by Saw, by K-2, by Bodhi and Chirrut and Baze and, unbidden, tears slide between her eyelids and drop onto Cassian’s shirt.

It’ll be easy, she tells herself, but even that simple lie rings hollow and false in her mind.

“Jyn—” Cassian begins, but his tone is too gentle and sounds like a goodbye, like he’s going to say something she can’t come back from, so Jyn cuts him off.

“Just make sure to come back, okay?” Her voice is quieter than intended, barely above a whisper, and it quavers.

His gaze softens as he nods, and wraps his arms around her, pulling her in tighter against her chest, and she can feel him rise and fall underneath her; the embrace is warm and unassuming and quietly fierce and as he releases her a heartbeat too late, Jyn fights the urge to tug him back and feel his arms around her again.

“I will,” Cassian murmurs, but Jyn doesn’t believe him. Promises are a dangerous thing, because they represent a future they can’t afford. “You be safe,” he adds softly, and then he reaches up to brush a lock of hair behind Jyn’s ear, and his fingers leave a trail of stardust where they brush against her skin. They linger like that, Cassian’s palm against Jyn’s cheek, warmth spreading from her stomach throughout her entire body, until they can no longer ignore the shouting from the hangar and Cassian sets his slim shoulders before he marches towards the cargo bay. He still has a limp; he’ll probably have it forever, that’s what the medics said, and his footprints echo unevenly as Jyn stares at his retreating back, which grows smaller and smaller until Cassian  turns a corner and disappears.

As the days pass, and five days turns into eight, eight to ten, and still Cassian doesn’t return, Shara Bey, her temporary partner, tells her not to worry.

“Captain Andor is a pro,” she tells Jyn confidently as they dodge blaster fire on Jelucan. “He’ll be fine.”

“Kes is gone for much longer than scheduled all the time,” she says through gritted teeth as she weaves their ship in and out of TIE fighters, maneuvering so two of them crash into each other and blow themselves up. “Kriffing idiots,” she grins. Even if she doesn’t share her sunny outlook, Jyn decides she likes Shara.

“The Alliance is really bad at time management,” Shara informs her cheerily back on the Redemption, a cup of caf clutched between her hands. “They probably just underestimated the time it took.”

“It’s been two weeks,” Jyn says, a little helplessly, her bowl of mushy, congealed oatmeal untouched. Her eyes are puffy from lack of sleep, and she doesn’t miss the way Shara looks at her with pity. Jyn suspects the happy act is partially a charade for her benefit, but she appreciates the effort nonetheless.

Two days after, they bring him back battered and bruised and bloody, limp as a rag doll as a stretcher wheels him to the med bay.

Jyn watches with hungry eyes that threaten tears behind the fiery rage burning in her pupils, and when she blinks, she sees red spots on the inside of her eyelids flashing in front of her as her heart slams against her ribcage, waiting for something, anything. The medics bar her from the room, so she paces, feeling as if she’s suffocating, choking, drowning in a sea of fear that presses down on her chest until she can’t breathe. He was red, so red—red spiraling out from his abdomen, on his forehead, caked beneath his fingernails, seeping out from his thigh. If she stops moving, she thinks she might collapse, sink to the floor with her head between her knees and collapse into the dark depths of sorrow and self-pity. But she’s stronger than that, so she doesn’t pause until he is wheeled back out—how long that was, Jyn doesn’t know; it was long enough for Draven to stop by and tell her to go to bed, but after Jyn gave him a terrible, bloodshot glare, he gave up—and then she follows him to the bed they set him down in, where he looks small and fragile, his chest rising and falling shallowly, his skin pale.

“He should wake in approximately three hours,” a med droid tells her, as miffed as a droid can possibly sound; no doubt it didn’t want her interfering with the patient, but Jyn simply settles into the chair by Cassian’s bedside and ignores the droid, so it moves out of the room and slams the door behind it.

She doesn’t know when she falls asleep, only that when she wakes up, her neck hurts from the chair and Cassian is staring at her.

Jyn sits up quickly, a little too quickly judging by the sharp pain in her neck, but she brushes the twinge aside as she takes him in, alive and breathing and looking like a miracle.

“Hi,” she whispers, afraid to say anything else.

His skin has regained some of its color, and his eyes are sharp and alert; she wonders how long he has been awake. “Hi,” he echoes, a bit raspy.

Jyn’s eyes are drawn to the bacta patch on his upper arm, where dried blood is still visible around the edges. Cassian follows her gaze and shifts his gown so that it covers the bandage. “I’ve had worse,” he reminds her, but Jyn can feel the fear creeping back up her throat, constricting her airway, and the possibility of having lost him hits her so suddenly that the words are tumbling out of her mouth before she can stop them.

“I was so scared, Cassian,” she blurts tremulously, the pent-up fear and anger and loneliness she feels pouring out all at once, and Jyn finds herself half-sobbing as the words fall out of her mouth, her heart racing: “I was so scared you weren’t going to come back and-and-and I just—you were so red, I thought I could lose you, everything was so bloody—”

“Jyn,” Cassian cuts across her, firm but gentle, “it’s okay. I’m not going anywhere.”

She meets his eyes, brown boring into green, and takes a deep gulp of air to steady herself.

I’m not going anywhere.

Promises are a dangerous thing, but Jyn allows herself to keep this one, at least until morning, because he has come back for her every time: on Jedha, on Eadu, on Scarif. Come back when everyone else has gone. So she takes Cassian’s words and places them next to her heart as she slows her racing pulse, letting deep breaths of air settle into her lungs. And then she reaches out to clutch his hand, their fingers tangled together, and she lets herself relax.

“Thank you,” she breathes. “For… for always coming back.” Her voice still quavers, her lips still tremble, and though the words seem woefully inadequate for the depth of gratitude she is trying to convey, he gives her a quiet smile; in that moment, an unspoken something passes between them, and Jyn knows he understands, and his words echo in her mind: welcome home.

Then Cassian’s smile widens turns into a grin, and with a mischievous glint in his eye, he asks, “So I take it you don’t like the color red?”

Jyn laughs, a sound she hasn’t heard since Cassian left, and gently slaps his arm. “I hate you,” she grumbles, and out of all the lies Jyn Erso has told, this may be the biggest one.


iii. Echo Base; white

Her mother is dying.

She’s had these dreams before; they’ve followed her since she was eight years old, so she knows what happens next.

Krennic stands over Lyra’s prone body, cape flapping in the wind, laughing as kicks her head with his boot. Her head lolls to one side and Jyn, hiding in the grass, can see the death in her mother’s glazed eyes. Jyn hurls herself at Krennic, howling, trying to gouge out his eyes, but he swats her aside effortlessly and continues to laugh as he points his blaster at Jyn, who falls down in the grass but doesn’t perish with her mother this time, not like she normally does. No, her brain has made a new scenario, and now Jyn finds herself on the comm tower, dragging her broken body towards the satellite, choking from sand and blood and fear. The tips of her fingers are bleeding from the effort of crawling along the path, and then a boot steps on her hand, and she feels her fingers break under the weight, and she screams, screams until her voice gives out and her throat bleeds raw. Krennic tsks at her and shakes his head from side to side. “Galen would be so disappointed in you,” he chuckles. A shot rings out and Jyn looks up to see Cassian, he’s come back for her, he’s shot Krennic—except, no, that’s not right, it’s the other way around; Krennic smiles as Cassian falls, and Cassian is Bodhi and Baze and Chirrut, and Jyn wants to tear Krennic’s face apart, but she can’t move as he throws her off the tower like a rag doll—

The lights switch on and Jyn sits bolt upright in bed, her heart racing. Her shirt clings to her back and hair is plastered to her neck with sweat even though the sheets have been kicked off the bed and there are goosebumps on her arms. A knot begins to grow in her stomach as she blinks to adjust to the sudden influx of light, and she can make out Cassian standing by the switch at the door, concern evident on his face. She hadn’t even noticed him getting out of bed.

“You were screaming,” he says gently, even though they both already know that.

Jyn swallows. “How loud?” she whispers. The walls between the rooms were thin; someone else could easily have heard her. Usually she wakes up on her own, shivering, and Cassian slings an arm around her and she can go back to a listless sleep, but the longer the Alliance has stayed in Hoth, the worse her dreams have become, egged on by the frosty air; the bags under Jyn’s eyes could swallow an ocean. She thinks Cassian can’t sleep, either, or at least not well; he just wears it better. He had pretended to be sleeping when she had first crawled into his bed during a mission to Bothawui, and they had quietly settled into the same room at Echo Base, though Jyn technically had quarters right next to Cassian’s, which she knows he requested specifically, though he has never said so.

“I think I’m the only one who heard,” Cassian responds, and silently moves back to the bed. She positions herself with her back to the wall, knees drawn up to her chest, and he joins her. The motions are completed with a practiced ease, a familiarity that only comes from many repetitions. Her mother used to say that repetition was the only way to become good at something. They are very good at this.

Whatever this is.

She wears only a thin shirt and shorts, and Cassian wears no shirt at all, revealing the patchwork of scars that lace his back and chest, but embarrassment over skin seems tedious, like a waste of energy. They are beyond that; their intimacy is something deeper and more profound that Jyn cannot quite put into words. She distantly wonders how many rebels think that they’re sleeping together. The whole base, probably. Technically, Jyn supposes, they’re not wrong.

“What was it?” Cassian asks.

Sometimes Jyn can’t answer, because the only thing she remembers are flashes of intense, scalding emotion: fear, anger, sorrow, powerlessness. She considers for a moment before replying simply, “White.”

Cassian doesn’t press. He waits for her to continue of her own accord, letting her mull over her next words so that they do not rip open a fresh wound, and she is grateful for it.

“I hate this planet.” Sometimes, she has to go in circles before arriving at the source. Cassian is all patience. She wants to trace the outlines of his scars, the blaster wound from Scarif, a jagged ridge that slices across his navel, two matching silvery lines down his back, smaller marks around his collarbone. “I hate how you could go to the other side of it and it would look the same. It’s blinding.” The next words get trapped on their way up and she swallows, unable to speak.

“It reminds me of Fest,” Cassian murmurs absentmindedly, filling the silence. “Fest had more citizens and cities, but it was cold and harsh. Like here. I can’t remember much, just snatches of memories.” He scratches at the mattress distractedly as he talks. “A cup of hot chocolate warming my hands, Stormtroopers crawling around the industrial cities, my father teaching me how to aim a gun… He always said that if you could shoot in a snow flurry, you could shoot anywhere.” Cassian smiles at the memory, his face momentarily taken over by an untainted happiness Jyn has never witnessed before, and she watches with fascination, wondering at the man he could have been. They have all lost in this war. They have lost family, friends, allies, but most of all, they have lost the people they could have been. They have lost possibilities; they have become bound on either sides by the walls of the Alliance and the Empire, only one long path stretching out before them. Sometimes, Jyn lets herself imagine the door at the end of that hallway, what it might lead to. Never for long, though. Too dangerous.

“I was born on Vallt,” Jyn admits slowly. “It was similar. Cold. Harsh.” She chews her bottom lip as she searches for what to say before she finally settles on, “This planet is too white.” She takes a deep, shuddering breath and tries to steel herself. “It reminds me of emptiness, the kind you feel when you have nothing left. I look outside and I see Stormtroopers, and I see Krennic and his white cape.” She locks her jaw. “White reminds me of fear.” Cassian’s smile has faded as he listens to the words unsaid. “And…” But she can’t continue. Jyn feels like a child, like when she would have a bad dream and sneak into her parents’ room and slither in between them, cocooned by their warmth and comforted by the rise and fall of their chests against hers, but they aren’t here anymore, just like Bodhi and K-2 and Chirrut and Baze—

No, she tells herself. Stop it. Stop it, stop it, stop it.

But the images keep coming, this time not dreams but memories: Lyra crumbling onto the ground, Galen choking on his own blood, K-2’s voice over the intercom, the green laser from the Death Star swallowing Jedha and Scarif, and somewhere very far away Cassian’s voice says, “Jyn,” but she cannot see in front of her because her eyes are swimming with tears that pool but never fall, and panic begins to rise in her chest, her breath coming in quick, short gasps as her throat constricts. “Jyn,” comes Cassian’s voice again, more urgent. She feels a pair of steady hands grab her arms, trying to pin them to her sides, but she throws him off, flinching at his touch, something primeval and feral awakening in her as she kicks out at him and her foot connects with his side.

“Get off of me!” she growls, heaving herself off of the bed and stumbling blindly across the room, great sobs heaving in her chest, she can’t breathe, her vision is crowded with the dead, with all those who left her, all those she killed, the world spins—

Jyn.” Strong hands take ahold of her arms again and she is whirled around to face Cassian. She tries to slide out of his grip, but her limbs have gone limp, the tears have started to spill down her cheeks, she can taste salt, and they drip down her chin and fall into her shirt, and she can hear Cassian telling her to breathe but she can’t, her lungs are collapsing, her throat is closed, all she can see is the white walls, the white floors, the white bed, and he tells her, “Focus on me. Focus on my voice.” He sounds calm and collected, like he’s done this a thousand times before, like nothing is wrong. “Try to breathe. In through the nose, our through the mouth.”

Focus on my voice. Jyn claws herself towards the noise, steady and low, soothing, and Cassian slowly begins to come in focus. She feels herself shivering in his grip, her muscles shaking, but she manages to gulp in one breath and exhale shakily. “In through the nose, out through the mouth,” he repeats. Over and over and over and over until Jyn’s heart rate has slowed to a fast jog and the sobs have stopped coming, though she keeps crying, crying like an infant, her lower lip trembling. “Just breathe,” Cassian instructs, and Jyn follows shakily. “You’ll be fine.”

She presses the heels of her palms into her eyes to stem the flow of tears, feeling more exhausted than she has ever been in her life. Cassian pulls her in gently, and she lets her arms drop, her head resting on his chest; he strokes her hair, his breathing slow and stable, and quietly murmurs, “You’re okay, Jyn.”

She can’t speak, just buries her face deeper into his skin, breathing in the scent of him, feeling his heartbeat. They remain frozen like that until the warmth from his body has spread over Jyn, and she can breathe steadily again, and then Cassian pulls away, tilts her chin up at him and kisses her. A simple kiss, though they have been building up to it for years, dancing around each other, pulling close and pushing away, and as their lips meet, Jyn feels her skin tingle. When he pulls back, she wraps her hand around his head and bends him closer, their lips crashing into each other this time, and he tastes like home, and he takes like kept promises.


iv. Bright Tree Village; brown

The morning air is still cold, and its tendrils brush Jyn’s face, raising goosebumps as she steps onto the platform outside the hut they had been put in for the night. She feels like a phantom; the reality has not sunken in yet, although the charred branches from the bonfires last night and scattered remains of food on the ground informs her that yes, the Emperor is dead, Darth Vader’s body has burned. Yet this moment just feels like a short pause, a collective breath by the Alliance before they wade back into the fray.

But she will try to enjoy this respite while she can.

Below her, Luke and Leia sit on the forest floor, heads bowed. They are still wearing their clothes from last night—Leia in a simple beige and gray dress, Luke dressed in all black—and she can just make out their mouths moving rapidly. Trying to make up for lost time, she supposes; they must have a lot to catch up on. Shara Bey and Kes Dameron run after their son, Poe, who is sprinting around as fast as his tiny legs can take him, which is not very quick, allowing Shara and Kes to sneak kisses before they have to go grab him. Jyn has heard Shara describe him with such longing in her voice it made her heart ache, listened as she detailed his tuft of dark hair and wide eyes, and as Shara scoops Poe up into her arms, laughing despite the bruise on her collarbone and the dark bags under her eyes, Jyn allows herself to smile. Kes wraps his arms around Shara’s waist and kisses Poe on the cheek, laughing at something his wife says in his ear.

She hears Cassian before she sees him, the wooden boards groaning unevenly under his weight before he appears in her peripheral vision. He stands by her side, hair mussed up, with a shallow cut on his left cheek, and he reaches out to lace his fingers with Jyn’s, each ignoring the dirt caked into the palms of the other. He inhales the fresh air, drinking in the view from among the trees that stretch far below them and far above them, the green disappearing into the pink- and orange-streaked sky as the sun begins to filter in through the leaves. The lines seem to momentarily disappear from his face, and for once, he looks his thirty years. Beneath them, Han Solo has joined Luke and Leia, gently kissing the princess  after he sits down on the leafy ground. Others have begun to trickle down from their huts, bleary-eyed but cheerful as they greet their comrades with lingering hugs and wide smiles. Several Ewoks have joined and begin to clean up their village, darting in between the legs of the rebels to pick up the trash, and Poe squeals with delight as he sees one, causing Kes to shush him hurriedly.

Cassian and Jyn stand like that for a while, clutching each other’s hands, watching the peaceful scene unfurl below them. They have the luxury of leisure now, at least for the moment, and they want to relish in it; forks have appeared in their path, and each split brims with possibility. Their path. They always been a we, Jyn supposes, ever since he handed her a blaster before Jedha; their webs had been tangled together, even when they were at a distance. It used to frighten Jyn, but now she only squeezes his hand tighter.

“Where will we go?” Cassian asks eventually, his voice still sleepy and scratchy. This is probably the first decent night’s sleep he’s had in years, save for the times he lay unconscious in the med bay.

Jyn shrugs. “Probably Coruscant. I’m sure Draven wants us to do some cleanup—”

“No,” Cassian cuts across her. “I don’t mean tomorrow or whenever we’ll ship out.” He grips the bark railing in front of him with his free hand and looks out to the sliver of horizon he can make out between the trees. “I mean after.” He relishes the words, daring and bold and brimming with opportunity.

Jyn sucks in a breath. “We might not—,” she begins on instinct, trying to stop him before his words get too dangerous.

“Don’t,” he says softly, letting go of her hand and turning to face her, pushing a stray piece of hair behind her ears. “Don’t say that. Not now.”

She understands. Not now when, for once, everything has gone their way, not now because they thought they would never make it this far and they deserve a future, or to at least imagine one, not now because they have earned a little bit of hope. So Jyn chews her lip and considers, trying to rack through all the planets she hadn’t been to, through the ones her parents had told her about, until she answers, with finality, “Naboo.”

Cassian nods, pensive. “My parents went there once, when they were first married,” he recalls, smiling briefly. “Whenever there was a particular cold day, my mother would always grumble and say she wished they had settled there, where green things could actually grow.”

“My father said it was the most beautiful planet he had ever laid eyes on,” Jyn recollects, recalling vivid descriptions of rolling hills, water so clear you could almost see the bottom, red roofs shining as the sun’s rays hit them, trade stalls with a variety of goods, each different from the last, and a happiness that seem to invade the air so that you couldn’t help but laugh.

“Lots of green,” Cassian remarks, a playful light dancing in his eyes.

Jyn gently shoves him with the palm of her hand and he rocks back on his heels but never loses his balance, smirking at her. “Maybe after we go there, you’ll learn to appreciate colors more. Might even get a favorite one,” she teases, grinning at him.

“I already have one,” Cassian says easily, smirking, but a hint of color creeps up the back of his neck and seeps into his ears.

Jyn raises her eyebrows. “What is it then, you lying bastard?”

Cassian throws his hands up in mock submission. “Easy there, I didn’t lie. I didn’t have one before, but I do now.” Jyn’s eyebrows move further up her forehead until he admits, “It’s brown.”

“Brown,” Jyn says flatly, more of a disappointed statement than a question.

Cassian nods. The smirk has disappeared from his face. “Brown,” he confirms.

“Like the Ewoks?”

Cassian laughs, and Jyn is startled at the sound; without other troubles lying in wait in his mind, his laugh is easy and light, like a gentle breeze playfully wheeling through the trees. “No. Not like the Ewoks.”

“Like what, then?” Jyn prompts.

He shrugs and casts his gaze downwards, at the now-busy ground below them. “Like home,” he murmurs.

Jyn frowns, bemused. “But Fest—”

“Not Fest,” Cassian interrupts, raking his gaze over her dark hair, her dark eyes, like he’s trying to memorize her, every line and scar and bump. “You.”

Jyn feels her breath catch in her throat. The sounds of morning below have vanished, and she can only hear the beating of her own heart hammering against her ribcage. She instinctively reaches out towards his face, tracing the outline of his jaw, and smiles a watery and trembling smile at him, and she feels safe. Like she’s home. Through everything, their one constant has been each other, and somewhere along the way they fell in love. He catches her hand and presses it to his skin, closing his eyes and leaning into her palm, and breathes in slowly. Jyn cups his other cheek and kisses him gently, just once, before she pulls back and they rest their foreheads against each other, simply there, reveling in the each other.

Someone clears their throat behind them.

Jyn releases Cassian and turns to stare at Draven, who looks like he hasn’t slept at all and is nursing a bad hangover. “Sorry to interrupt,” he begins drily, “but there’s work to be done.” He glances over them, and Jyn expects to see some sort of disgust and sourness in his expression, but he seems as if he’s about to smile at them, or maybe he’s just in a lot of pain from last night. “We need you to go to Coruscant,” he informs them, “to help stamp out loyalists hiding there. Report to me in two hours.” He looks at them once more then turns on his heels and leaves, crossing over a rickety bridge to another hut.

“You were right, then,” Cassian says mildly as he watches Draven’s retreating back. “Coruscant.”

Jyn rests her head on his shoulder. “Then, Naboo?”

“Naboo,” Cassian promises.

As the sun’s rays begin to shine down on them, Jyn wraps her fingers around her kyber crystal and smiles at their future.

13 Jul  ·  16 N

Tendrils of Smoke

a crappy fic, by me. my first writing attempt in ages. feedback is super appreciated!! contains brief buckynat, very very brief mention of staron, and general interactions between bucky and the team. also, in my mind, tony already knew about his parents’ death at the hands of the winter soldier beforehand. i started writing this before civil war came out, and kept with the track i was on even as it messed up how canon this was going to be. in the movie, tony obviously reacted violently, but i believe a lot of that was circumstance, and in a different scenario, everything would have turned out much differently. this fic assumes a lot of things have happened offscreen since the second cap movie, and i don’t describe them because a) i’m lazy and b) i don’t think i need to. i hope everyone enjoys the first thing i’ve published in over two years. god help me. (also, the movie natasha is watching is apocalypse  now. i don’t know why. make what you will of it.)

read on ao3

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19 Jul  ·  14 N

lol okay so i wrote a thing!! and i don’t like all of it. so i need some help pls folks it’s about bucky, and i started writing it before civil war came out so it is pretty much an au now. it does have some buckynat so fair warning to everyone, oops. but it’s pretty light. anyway the things i have issues with are the scenes where tony confronts bucky and the ending scene and the scene where nat comforts bucky. and lots of other places. anyway feed back is super appreciated thanks guys i don’t write a lot so pls forgive me i just want help

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23 May  ·  20 N

alright… so… .…   i wrote.. .. something… and i’d like feedback… k thx <3


Aftermaths are shit, Clint mused, staring intently at the grooves of the tractor’s worn-out, battered front right tire. A small brown spider was crawling its way up the tire, tiny legs scurrying along the black rubber, moving with a sense of purpose that Clint had been lacking lately.

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30 Jul  ·  39 N

from anna: a typical white girl

12 Sep  ·  93 N
Anonymous asked:
Will you write Sebastian Stan meeting a fan who is really laid back and casual and taking quite the liking to her and maybe secretly slipping her his number?? Any occasion, any name, anything really

ehehehe okay

——

It had been a really, really, really bad day, she mused, staring at the bottom of her (now empty) shot of jack. Her client was an utter asshole–one of the worst she’d had to deal with. Ever. And that was saying something. But the possible money was too much to turn down. She needed this case.

She let out a deep sigh and gestured for more jack. The bartender stared at her funnily, but slid another glass across the counter nonetheless. She didn’t really care what this college dropout thought of her (of course, it was impossible to tell if he was a college dropout, but he had the look–unkempt hair, five o’clock shadow, and an aura that screamed ‘go fuck yourself’). As she was drowning herself in that tiny glass, a man slid onto the stool next to her and ordered some beer.

She set the glass down and gave him a very nasty side-eye, but he seemed to not notice.

Wait.

She knew that man. Quickly looking back into her (again, now empty) glass, she narrowed her eyes and tried to remember where she had seen him. It was very hard to recollect something when your head is fuzzy from all that alcohol, but it came to her soon enough.

Captain Rum. That guy. She squinted harder. Sebastian Stan. That asshole.

Struck by the sudden thought that he might be able to read minds, she quickly added, But asshole in a good way. Good asshole. I mean asshole in the “you ruin my life because you’re perfect so you’re an asshole” way.

I’m stupid.

He’s hot.

She realized she was staring at his very chiseled jaw as he slowly drank his beer and quickly tore her gaze away and examined the imperfections on the counter. There was a chip in the wood right in front of her, and she began to absentmindedly poke at it, lips pursed.

She tried to order another shot, this time of gin, but the bartender said, “Ma’am, I think you’ve had enough to drink tonight. Can I suggest a glass water?” in a tone that made it clear he did not want to suggest a glass of water.

She puffed her cheeks out and sighed again. “I want… some…” She waved her right hand vaguely. “Water. Yeah, that’d be great.”

Sebastian Stan looked at her clearly for the first time. She noticed, but pretended not to and stared straight ahead, trying not to blush.

I look like shit, she realized as she caught a glimpse of her reflection in the mirror on the other side of the counter. Her hair was falling out of her bun, there were dark circles under her eyes (which were drooping and dull at the moment), and she was hunched over the counter like a cavewoman. She awkwardly straightened up and wiped her eyes, tucking a stray hair behind her ear.

“I had a trying day,” she blurted as way of an explanation for her horrid appearance and empty glasses around her.

Sebastian Stan nodded and gave a hint of a smile. “Sorry. That, um, sucks.”

She nodded vigorously, bun flapping against her head. “Yes. Thanks.”

The bartender came back and practically shoved a glass of water under her nose before picking up the empty glasses, glaring at her with a decidedly nasty expression. She glared back, her expression doubly nasty. The bartender turned his back and walked to the other end of the counter. She giggled. “Isn’t he just so pleasant?” she said, grinning. She seemed to be slowly making her way out of the quagmire of self-pity she was currently wallowing in, which made her head much clearer.

Sebastian Stan laughed a little bit. “Yeah, he is.”

He laughed at something I said. This is amazing. She smiled hugely and took a big sip of water, feeling it rush down her throat. She let out a satisfied sigh as she set it back down. “I’m sorry if I, I don’t know, made you wanna go to a different bar or something. I was kinda depressed. I mean, I still am, but I thought I should clean up my act for you. Not because you’re famous.” You are fucking up, girlfriend. “Just, you know, like a normal person. I would do it for a normal person, too. Not that you’re… abnormal. You know what? I need to go to the–”

He laughed again. It was a very nice laugh, she remarked, watching him throw his head back a little and those really, really nice lips part–

Okay, that was creepy. Don’t think that.

“I get, you know, much weirder… reactions than that,” he said, taking another sip of his beer.

Nonetheless, she thought dryly, I’m still blushing like a maid.

Sebastian Stan extended a hand. “Um, you know, I thought we, um, might as well introduce ourselves. I’m Sebastian,” he said, smiling.

She clasped his hand, which was very nice and smooth but still manly, you know?, and said, “I’m Elsa.”

He stifled a laugh and she rolled her eyes. “Yes, I know, let it go, let it go.”

“I’m sorry, I know you probably get that all the time, but, um–”

She shrugged. “It’s fine, I’m used to it. Besides,” she added, “it means that millions of little girls are in awe of me and will do whatever I want. Mixed blessing.”

He smiled again. He was really attractive when he smiled. Or when he cried. Or when he existed in general. Keep your head on your shoulders, please.

“So,” she said, twisting her body so she could face him, “why are you here? Any specific reason?”

This time he was the one who shrugged. “I felt the need for a glass of beer, but not in my apartment. And this looked relatively empty, so…” Sebastian Stan–no, just Sebastian now–gestured around to the rest of the bar, which really was practically empty except for a couple making out in a corner and the angry bartender.

She nodded. “Fair enough. Man’s gotta drink, right?” What the hell? That wasn’t even clever. Stupid.

But he still smiled at her again.

How do you knowwwwwwwwww heeee loves herrrrr? Wait, what the fuck are you thinking? You just met. Jesus Christ in heaven above. Is the “h” in “heaven” capital or lowercase?

“If you, um, don’t mind me asking,” he began hesitantly, “what was stressing you out so much that you, um, wanted to get really drunk?”

She rubbed her eyes and sighed. “Well, I’m a lawyer–what a unique job, right?–and this one client of mine is just an absolute asshole. You’d expect that I’d be used to assholes now, in my profession, but this one takes the goddamn cake. And–oh, shit, he’s calling me.” Her phone had begun to vibrate in her pocket (she couldn’t stand hearing it ring) and the words Fucking Asshole were on the screen, accompanied by a picture of Joffrey Baratheon. Well, this isn’t embarrassing at all, she thought, quickly answering the call and pressing her phone against her ear, hoping he didn’t see. She walked down the the other end of the bar–the one where rude bartender was not–and let out various exclamations of, “Oh, really?”, “Okay”, “Yes”, and “No”. Mostly she said “no”. By the time she returned to her stool, she looked ready to smash her head against a wall. “I’m really sorry, but I have to go–something’s come up with my client–”

Fucking Asshole man?” Sebastian said, laughing. “Let’s hope he doesn’t see that.”

She couldn’t help it–she grinned, too. But the grin faded as she picked up her wallet and dumped a wad of cash on the counter for the bartender. “I’m really sorry I have to go, but it’s apparently very urgent,” she said, implying that she thought it wasn’t urgent at all. “I’ll see you around, maybe? At least on the big screen.”

“Hopefully, um, sooner than that.”

It was only when she got home that she discovered a hastily-scribbled phone number written on a napkin and stuffed into her wallet that she realized he really meant what he said.

Hell yeah.

5 Aug  ·  7 N
gcdblood asked:
write some sad angst fanfic with major character deaths written in detail /idk ???/

well i thought it was better as i was writing it but idk thanks anyway

——

It was supposed to be an easy mission. It should have been an easy mission. The possibility of one of them dying was slim, and their enemies were unorganized and juvenile.

“Hold on, Clint,” Natasha muttered, examining the beat-in leather sofa. “I wanna see if there are any more clues in this place.”

Clint nervously fingered an arrow on his back, taking comfort in the sharp edge. “Nat, they’re gonna come back for us any minute here–”

Natasha rolled her eyes, but Clint couldn’t see since her back was facing him. Yet he had a suspicion that she had found his comment amusing, and not in the way he intended it to be.

“They’re amateurs. Don’t sweat it.” Natasha turned her head and stared at him. “Anyway, since when did you get so paranoid?”

Clint quit stroking his thumb along the tip of the arrow. “Since New York,” was his response. Natasha was silenced. She had been expecting some sarcastic and cynical remark, not a completely truthful and rather unnerving one. She continued to examine the sofa as if nothing had happened, then suddenly upturned the cushion and let out a triumphant “Aha!” Natasha grabbed the journal that was hastily hidden under said cushion with her left hand and brandished it in the air, triumphant.

Clint began to clap softly, slow and mocking. “Congratulations, now can we please leave?”

Natasha gave a rare laugh and smiled at Clint, tilting her head towards the back door. “Come on, let’s go.” She began to make her way towards the exit.

A split-second before it happened, Natasha paused and felt a sinking feeling in her stomach before she was deafened by the sound of guns going off, bullets ricocheting everywhere and glass shattering on top of her. Her ears began to ring, and her head spun as she felt a searing pain in her left shoulder, causing her to drop the journal and scream. Natasha grabbed Clint’s arm with her right hand, grinding her teeth in pain, and dragged him to the door as a stray sliver of wood, dislodged by a bullet, stung her in the face, all within the space of five seconds.

When did Clint get so fat? she thought, groaning as he collapsed against her shoulder. The door was five feet away and closing, when suddenly the bullets stopped and there was an eerie silence. Natasha could hear retreating footsteps and let out a small sigh of relief.

She slithered out from underneath Clint’s weight to look around. The place was in shambles–the sofa was riddled with bullet holes, stuffing poking out; wood was hanging by a splinter where bullets had pierced the wall and glass crunched under her feet as she walked. “They took the notebook,” she observed. “I let it drop when I got shot.” Natasha shook her head and scuffed some glass with her shoes. “I was sloppy. I didn’t even hear their footsteps approaching. Although,” she conceded, “that just meant they were here already, which isn’t exactly a comfort, either.”

Clint’s only response was a groan.

“Clint?” Natasha said, turning around to face him. He was swaying where he stood, hands clutched to his stomach.

Her heart stopped as she stared at his bloody hands, and as she watched, more blood seeped through the cracks between his fingers.

Oh, Jesus.

Natasha rushed over to him and laid him down on the sofa as he let out a whimper of pain. “You’re pathetic, Barton,” she said dryly, leaning over him and prying his fingers off the wound.

“I suspect I have fifteen minutes, at most,” Clint wheezed, grimacing.

Natasha ripped off some of Clint’s pant leg and pressed it onto the wound, remaining silent.

Why the hell do we never have an extraction team?

Oh, right, because most of the time you don’t fuck up this badly.

“Hold that,” Natasha instructed to Clint, yanking herself away from her thoughts and pulling out a radio from one of her many pockets. “SHIELD, it’s Black Widow requesting immediate help. Either send a medic or something to get us out of here quick. Over.”

The crackling voice on the radio informed her they were half an hour out at least.

For the sixth time in her life, Natasha Romanoff felt tears spring to her eyes.

Fuck.

Clint looked over and smiled weakly at her. “Kate’s a better archer than I am, anyway,” he said quietly.

Natasha slapped him.

Clint yelped and scrunched his face up in pain. “What the hell…?”

Natasha bent down so she was looking levelly into his eyes. “You are not dying like some pansy, Barton, you hear me?” she growled. “This isn’t some dramatic action movie, idiot.”

He smiled faintly, then said, “Give my love to my parents, Natasha… let them know I died a hero.” His eyes were beginning to glaze over with pain, but there was still a light of humor in them.

“You’re a dumbass,” Natasha said. She smiled gently as she felt a tear roll over her cheek, but she wiped it away angrily, turning her head away from her partner.

Clint let out a mock gasp gasped. “Crying for me? Wow, I’m very honored…” He trailed off and his head nodded to one side, eyes fluttering shut.

Natasha’s breath caught and she shook his head roughly.

Ow, Clint thought, but he didn’t have the strength to speak. Or open his eyes. Or move.

“You listen to me, Barton. Listen to my voice.”

Yes, it’s a very nice voice, mused Clint vaguely. Very, very nice.

“Don’t you dare die on me, okay? Don’t you fucking dare.”

Clint noticed her voice caught as she spoke. Nat… He felt two hands cover his own and smelled the flowers in her hair as she leaned in closer to him. “I’m sorry,” she breathed, voice softer and gentler than he had ever heard it. “I’m so sorry. You were right, we should have kept moving.”

Clint wrenched his eyelids apart to gaze at Natasha, raking over her brilliant red hair and piercing green eyes, her lips, her eyelashes… It made death seem less scary.

Clint Barton, you sentimental idi–

“Clint?” Natasha whispered. “Barton–”

She slapped him again, but there was no response. There was no pulse, either.

The tears stopped rolling down her cheeks, and her face became smooth as silk. She stepped away and told SHIELD there was no need to bring an extraction team after all, she could get them home.

It was only a week later, as Natasha unearthed over one hundred selfies Clint had taken when he had stolen her phone a while ago, that she broke down.

5 Aug  ·  5 N
Anonymous asked:
Writing prompt: really anything fluffy with your OTP.

okay so i did pepperony for this one it’s a lil longer than the han/leia one idk

———

“Are you serious, Tony?” Not for the first time that day, Pepper’s voice was exasperated. “Can you get any more narcissistic?”

Tony casually strolled into the room, his face scrunched up as if he were thinking long and hard about Pepper’s question. “Well, I haven’t fallen into a lake because I’m so in love with my own reflection yet, so—”

Pepper turned around to face him, hands on her hips. “Yet being the key word.”

Tony quailed at her expression, then smiled faintly in an attempt to remain lighthearted. “It matches your hair,” he pointed out.

Pepper rolled her eyes. “Tony, the shades are very different.”

Tony gave a vague shrug. “I mean, it’s close enough, right?” he said, a tinge of hope in his voice.

His only response was a long-suffering sigh and Pepper turning her back on him. Expression tentative, Tony walked up behind her and placed his hands on her waist. She only sighed again, but didn’t move.

Silence followed. Then,

“Well, I think you look good in anything—or nothing, alternatively—so I say you try it on.” Tony wrapped his whole arms around her waist now, feeling her stomach rise and fall and she breathed. Her hair smelled like flowers. She groaned and leaned her head back, resting the back of it on his chest.

“You are impossible,” she muttered, closing her eyes.

Tony grinned. “I know,” he said happily, slowly pushing her away and slowly walking out. “So, I’ll just start up some romantic music—”

Not ACDC again, or I will kill you in your sleep.”

“—and you come out in your lovely new dress and we dance, woo each other, and end with sex. Or, you know, maybe just kissing,” he added hurriedly, seeing the deadly look on Pepper’s face.

The two hour wait was well worth it, Tony mused as he chewed on a mint. Pepper looked, in his opinion, stunning.

Pepper’s opinion was that Tony was one of the worst people she had ever had the fortune to meet. Her dress was, essentially, an Iron Man dress. It was a slim, long, bright red dress, complete with a golden waist and golden fishnet arm warmers. Although, she admitted, it didn’t clash with her hair as much as she thought it would.

Tony began to clap and walked towards her, extending a hand like a proper gentleman. Pepper pursed her lips and took it slowly, nostrils flared.

“Oh, c’mon, honey, you look marvellous,” Tony insisted, one hand on her waist and the other touching hers.

“Didn’t you forget something?” Pepper said dryly, but her eyes were twinkling with amusement.

Tony frowned. “Wine, check. Breath mints, check. Beautiful woman, check.” He glanced at her. “You forgot your shoes,” he said, staring pointedly at her bare feet.

“Because,” Pepper said, “I tower over you whenever I wear heels.”

The real reason was that Pepper didn’t feel like walking or dancing in heels, just like how she didn’t want to bother putting on makeup. The two hours spent getting ready involved singing many songs in the shower, and lying on her bed for about a half-hour before ever so slowly putting on her dress, just to make Tony wait.

“Ah,” Tony muttered, “I always forget that.”

Pepper laughed, then raised her eyebrows at Tony, who suddenly exclaimed, “Shit! I forgot the music!” and dashed over to his Stark Industries music player. A lively waltz began to emanate from the speakers on the wall as Tony ran back over to Pepper and hurriedly resumed his position. They began to sway gently, Pepper indulging Tony in this one treat, but secretly plotting to dump ice on him to wake him tomorrow morning.

“It’s not that bad, is it?” said Tony tentatively, meeting Pepper’s eyes. “I mean, I just thought—maybe for the bridal shower—”

Pepper laughed. “Tony, I am wearing what I want to the bridal shower.”

Tony quieted, for once, but not for long.

“Do you really hate it?”

Pepper sighed and pecked him on the check. “No, it’s actually pretty nice. Minus the fishnet arm things, those were just you being self-absorbed.”

“I will acknowledge that,” Tony admitted, nodding his head. “But, you know, I spent a lot of money to have this made—”

“Because it’s not like you’re the richest man in the world already.”

“—and I would hate to see it go to waste,” he continued, ignoring Pepper’s remark.

Pepper rolled her eyes, but there was a playfulness in her that wasn’t there earlier. Tony let out an inner sigh of relief as the waltz changed to some sort of fast-paced thing that he didn’t know the term for. For all Tony knew, it might have been another, faster waltz.

Tony began to fidget in the silence. “I was thinking, maybe—”

“Tony?” Pepper interrupted.

“Yes, dear?”

“Shut up.” She leaned in and kissed him, slow and gentle and soft. It was a very nice kiss, she reflected, and it only stopped when Tony pulled away and asked,

“So, I take it this means sex?”

Pepper groaned.

5 Aug  ·  1 N
Anonymous asked:
Writing prompt: your OTP wedding proposal

so it’s short and not one of the otps i usually blog about (it’s han and leia from star wars so)

anyway

idk 

——

Han wasn’t the marrying type.

Or, at least, he hadn’t been until that friggin’ ice princess came along, with those big doe eyes and long brown hair and really, really nice curves. Not that he was that superficial. (Okay, maybe he was. But only sometimes.)

But Han was a changed man, thanks to that damn Obi-Wan and Luke. If they hadn’t come knockin’…

If they hadn’t come knockin’ you would be dead, and you would have died without meeting the love of your life. And, he reminded himself, even if you hadn’t died, you wouldn’ta lived a very happy and meaningful life now, would ya?

He had planned this for months, agonizing over the little details–whether she would like the ring or not, where the proposal would take place… For a while, he had been worried that she might beat him to the punch. But, so far, she hadn’t shown signs of anything out of the ordinary. And now, there was no turning back. Han had convinced her to take a walk through a park nearby tomorrow evening, and right as the sun was setting, he was going to get down on one knee, like a proper gentleman and all, and propose to her.

Tomorrow.

He let out a deep breath as he re-read the same bit of news over and over again. Leia was curled up on the chair opposite him, engrossed in some very intellectual book, no doubt. Her hair was down, her face free of any makeup, and her nightgown had ridden up to reveal a hint of thigh.

Han pushed his hair back and and scrolled to the next article, taking in nothing from the glowing screen. Leia looked up from her book and stared at him.

“You seem distracted.”

“What?” Han said, jumping a little bit. “No, no, I’m not distracted. Just, um, worrying about this news from”–he glanced down at the screen–“Tatooine. Nasty stuff.”

Leia raised a perfectly shaped eyebrow. “Uh-huh.”

Han nodded vigorously. “Yep. Yep, yep, yep…” He trailed off and stared at an ant slowly making its way across the floor, struggling with the burden of a crumb on its back.

Leia raised her other eyebrow and smirked. “Okay, then, tough guy. Whatever you say.”

Don’t say it.

Don’t you dare say it.

No you don’t, you little–

“What do you think about getting married?” Han blurted, look of shock trying to be replaced by a look of suave and charm.

Leia nearly dropped her book. “Sorry?”

Han shrugged, trying to act nonchalant. “Marriage. I thought, y’know, maybe you, and, um, me, could… I don’t know…” He waved a hand around vaguely. “Yeah, marriage.”

There was silence. The only sound Han could hear was the hammering of his heart in his ribcage, slamming against his bones like a trapped animal. You fucked this up really good, didn’t you, he thought bitterly.

Leia gave a hint of a smile. “Is that why you convinced me to take a walk with you in the evening tomorrow even though you never walk voluntarily?”

Han blanched. “Um, no, that was just because the weather is supposed to be fantastic tomorrow evening, so–”

Leia giggled. “It is, isn’t it?”

Han sighed. Damn princess.

Okay, you can’t become all nervous now, you are a tough guy, remember?

“You gonna give me an answer or what?” he said gruffly, looking at Leia’s forehead instead of her eyes.

“What do you think?” she teased, setting her book down on the table beside her.

Han gaped. “I don’t know, princess, you’ve always been an engima to me. Simple guy like myself, we gotta have a straight answer–”

Leia rolled her eyes. “It’s yes, dumbass.”

4 Aug  ·  3 N

yesterday, an anon asked for an au in which charles was shot in the head instead of the back. i kinda changed it so he was shot in the stomach, and there are probably one hundred million medical inaccuracies, but here it is. (under the cut because it’s about three pages!)

Keep reading

19 Jul  ·  12 N
doctorworm asked:
Stucky with 6 or Merlin + Arthur with 11

Stucky with 6 can be found here!

11: Person A falls off a structure, right into Person B’s arms.

“Arthur, are you sure it’s a good idea to be walking along that very high and very narrow wall?” Merlin called, squinting as he looked up at the king through the sun that glaring at the world.

From on top of the wall, Arthur rolled his eyes. “It will help me improve my balance,” he shouted to Merlin, biting his lip as he concentrated. One foot in front of the other, one foot in front of the other was his mantra. 

“I think your balance is excellent, sire,” Merlin replied, raising a hand to prevent his poor eyeballs from burning. “But it definitely won’t improve if you plummet to your death.”

Atop the wall, Arthur paused. “Are you suggesting I am going to fall?” he said angrily, never looking down at his manservant on the ground.

Merlin grinned. “Of course not, sire,” he yelled. “You are the epitome of grace and good balance.”

Arthur began to walk again, arms stretched out like some sort of birth. One foot in front of the other. 

“Are you sure the wall is quite sturdy?” Merlin said suddenly.

MERLIN!” Arthur bellowed, stopping mid-step. “SHUT UP!" 

Merlin laughed. "Yes, sire. I apologize for messing up your balance.”

Arthur’s nostrils began to flare and he turned his head to look at Merlin. Bad idea. Merlin was very far away, and very small, and it was suddenly very windy.

Shit.

“Oh dear,” Merlin said as the king began to wobble. He rushed towards the edge of the wall, arms outstretched, as Arthur began to fall, rushing down, down, down

Arthur could have sworn he heard Merlin mutter something in a different language, and suddenly the air became a cushion of sorts–he wasn’t falling, he was drifting.

What the hell?

But six feet from the ground, the cushion stopped and Arthur crashed into the dirt, wheezing.

“You’re supposed to catch me,” Arthur said weakly, coughing. Merlin was standing a good three feet away, arms still outstretched.

“But you’re not dead, so it’s okay that I didn’t catch you!” Merlin said brightly, lending Arthur a hand to pull him back up. “Funny how the… wind… you know… did something.”

Arthur nodded and brushed the dirt off his pants. “Yeah,” he mused, “funny…”

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5 Jul  ·  2 N
Anonymous asked:
For Fandom writing, could you do Merlin and Arthur with 1?

1: Person A attempts to poison Person B over dinner.

There was no other way, really.

(Well, maybe there was another way, but Merlin just really wanted to poison Arthur. It wasn’t really poison, though. Just a sleeping draught. But the thought of “poisoning” the king made Merlin grin.)

Merlin,” Arthur called from his table, “why are you still in my room?”

Merlin froze. (He had been standing still already, watching Arthur, but now his muscles tensed and his eyes widened.)

“I was just… waiting to see if the food pleased you,” Merlin spluttered, giving a smile that looked more like a grimace. Arthur raised his eyebrows.

“I’ve had this dish several times before, you know it’s one of my favorites,” Arthur pointed out, grabbing a slice of apple and putting it in his mouth. He closed his eyes as he chewed, a look of bliss appearing across his face.

Eat the chicken, Merlin pleaded inwardly. Eat the chicken, please.

Arthur opened one eye. “Merlin, as your king, I am commanding you to leave. My manservant watching me eat isn’t exactly my idea of a perfect dinner.”

Merlin held up a finger to stop Arthur. “But, my king, I’ve just realized your sheets need washing!” he exclaimed, rushing over to Arthur’s bed. Arthur turned in his chair to stare at Merlin incredulously.

“You washed them yesterday,” Arthur pointed out, mouth full of apple.

Merlin stumbled and crashed into the bedpost. “Did I?” he muttered, rubbing his head. “Whoops. But, being you, I’m sure they need to be cleaned!”

Arhutr raised an eyebrow. “You do know I bathe, right?”

Merlin tittered nervously. “Of course, sire, but… I’m sure some armor needs polishing! Or,” he said, dropping his voice, “maybe the wood louse are at it again.” Merlin nodded his head vigorously, expression completely serious.

Merlin. Leave,” Arthur commanded, grabbing a chicken leg and ripping the meat off with his teeth.

Merlin said nothing, but began to stare intensely at Arthur, who raised his other eyebrow. “What are you doing?” he said, speech muffled by the food in his mouth.

Merlin took a step closer to Arthur. “Aren’t you feeling sleepy, sire?” he asked.

“Am I–what?” Arthur said, looking confused and angry at the same time. Then, his expression softened, and his face fell forward into his mashed potatoes and chicken with a soft thud.

Merlin laughed as the king’s fair hair turned white, mashed potatoes embedding themselves in his roots, then the smile fell from his face.

I’m going to have to carry him all by myself to the horses.

Dammit.

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5 Jul  ·  3 N
Anonymous asked:
omg please cherik with #10

10: Person A and Person B meet unexpectedly when they’re both distracted and they literally crash into each other.

A circus, Charles thought, craning his head to get a look back at the flyer as he continued walking. Maybe there are some others there. There was a small, almost childish flutter of hope in his chest as he continued, eventually turning around and walking backwards, still mesmerized by the ad.

Erik was more concerned with the coin in his fingers than watching where he was walking as he hurried down the street. He had a lead–faint, just a whisper of hope, but still there. It was his motivation, his fixation. (It was, quite frankly, unhealthy.)

So it was really no surprise that they both crashed into each other. Erik’s coin slipped through his fingers and clattered to the ground, and Charles reeled backwards, apologizing profusely. Erik muttered a vague apology before bending down to pick up his coin, but Charles got there first.

“This is old,” Charles murmured, rolling the coin between his fingers. “German, yes?”

Erik looked at Charles warily. “Yes,” he said slowly.

Charles gave an apologetic smile. “Sorry,” he said, handing the coin back to Erik. “I’m a bit of a coin aficionado.” He paused. “Where did you get it?”

He had to keep Erik talking. As their hands had touched, Charles had felt a surge of raw power, like nothing else he had ever felt before. It was both terrifying and fascinating at the same time, almost like a circus, he thought.

Erik’s jaw clenched. “Someone who wielded great influence on me as a boy gave it to me,” he said, repeating the words as if rehearsed.

Good or bad influence, though? Charles pondered, blue eyes softening as he looked at this hard man. “If you keep it, it will probably sell for millions in fifty years.” He smiled. Erik did not.

“I don’t plan on selling it,” Erik explained, his words clipped and tense. 

Charles shrugged. “Well, if you’re going to ever be strong enough to wield something more important than a coin, you’re going to need training.”

Erik stared. “Sorry?”

Oh, nothing, Charles thought, projecting the thought into Erik’s head, past the walled defenses. I just get the sense you’re planning to do something dangerous with that coin.

And I hope I can steer you onto a better pathis what he didn’t add. 

The coin began to hover in Erik’s hand, and Charles could sense he was preparing himself for something.

“Easy now,” Charles murmured, placing a hand on Erik’s muscled and tense shoulder. “I just wanted you to know that you’re not alone.”

It may have been his imagination, but Charles could have sworn that Erik’s shoulders relaxed just a little bit.

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4 Jul  ·  3 N
A.