Kaelon Virex
Character
Kael's breath caught the moment she re-entered the room.
It wasn't just the way she looked—though Maker help him, the fitted pants and that top hugging her curves just right definitely threatened to short-circuit his neurons—it was the lightness in her. The bounce in her step. That stupid, radiant smile she wasn't trying to hide.
She was beautiful. Not just because of the way her body moved or the impossible color of her eyes, but because of the war behind her every breath—and the fact that she was still here. Still smiling. Still letting him in.
That pause.
He caught it.
Even if she buried the truth behind another kiss, he felt it.
Something deeper than desire had started to sink into his bones.
It wasn't about heat or thrill anymore. It was about how she looked at him like he was something she hadn't expected to survive meeting. And how she held him like maybe—just maybe—he was worth staying for.
Kael held her gaze as she whispered:
His hands found her hips, thumbs brushing slowly over the edge of her jacket. A half-second passed before he answered, and when he did, his voice was low, steady, honest.
"I'm grateful for that," he said. "That I'm not like them."
His forehead rested against hers, their breath mingling in the narrow space between.
"Because I don't want to be another war, or test, or trial you survive."
"I want to be the reason you don't have to."
And then he kissed her again—slow, deep, a silent thank you for every piece of herself she'd trusted him with. He didn't rush it. He savored it. Like he already knew this moment would burn into memory, something he'd carry whether or not the stars let them keep crossing.
When he pulled back, just a breath apart, he gave her that sideways Kael grin again—but softer now. Wiser. A little more exposed.
"I might not be a Jedi," he murmured, thumb tracing her cheek. "No Force tricks, no mind reading, no glowstick saber to flash around."
His other hand slipped around her waist and pulled her in, their bodies close again.
"But I've got something your enemies should fear."
A pause.
"I've got US."
A moment passed....
"And that means there's a bond in me now that nothing can break."
The air between them hummed, quiet and loaded, and for a moment, Kael didn't need anything else—not the getaway, not the day ahead, not even the words.
He had her by his side. And that was more than he ever thought he'd deserve.
			
			It wasn't just the way she looked—though Maker help him, the fitted pants and that top hugging her curves just right definitely threatened to short-circuit his neurons—it was the lightness in her. The bounce in her step. That stupid, radiant smile she wasn't trying to hide.
She was beautiful. Not just because of the way her body moved or the impossible color of her eyes, but because of the war behind her every breath—and the fact that she was still here. Still smiling. Still letting him in.
"And you…"
That pause.
He caught it.
Even if she buried the truth behind another kiss, he felt it.
Something deeper than desire had started to sink into his bones.
It wasn't about heat or thrill anymore. It was about how she looked at him like he was something she hadn't expected to survive meeting. And how she held him like maybe—just maybe—he was worth staying for.
Kael held her gaze as she whispered:
"You're none of those things… in all the best ways."
His hands found her hips, thumbs brushing slowly over the edge of her jacket. A half-second passed before he answered, and when he did, his voice was low, steady, honest.
"I'm grateful for that," he said. "That I'm not like them."
His forehead rested against hers, their breath mingling in the narrow space between.
"Because I don't want to be another war, or test, or trial you survive."
"I want to be the reason you don't have to."
And then he kissed her again—slow, deep, a silent thank you for every piece of herself she'd trusted him with. He didn't rush it. He savored it. Like he already knew this moment would burn into memory, something he'd carry whether or not the stars let them keep crossing.
When he pulled back, just a breath apart, he gave her that sideways Kael grin again—but softer now. Wiser. A little more exposed.
"I might not be a Jedi," he murmured, thumb tracing her cheek. "No Force tricks, no mind reading, no glowstick saber to flash around."
His other hand slipped around her waist and pulled her in, their bodies close again.
"But I've got something your enemies should fear."
A pause.
"I've got US."
A moment passed....
"And that means there's a bond in me now that nothing can break."
The air between them hummed, quiet and loaded, and for a moment, Kael didn't need anything else—not the getaway, not the day ahead, not even the words.
He had her by his side. And that was more than he ever thought he'd deserve.