Lyra Ventor
Character
Lyra didn't realize she'd stopped breathing until his hand settled on her shoulder.
The contact was steady, grounding, and far too gentle for someone who had just torn through a nest of monsters and wrestled an egg sac to paste. The moment his fingers guided her arms up, positioning them as if she weighed nothing at all, her heart lurched hard enough that she almost swore aloud. She let out a shaky breath instead, trying to pretend she wasn't aware of every point of contact—shoulders, forearms, his chest, the heat of his skin through damp air.
And then he shifted her legs into place, hooking them around the sabers at his belt, and her brain promptly turned into static. Maker. This was happening. She was actually being carried like this, by him.
Her face pressed instinctively into the crook of his neck as he rose to full height, and she felt the deep, steady rumble of his voice reverberate through his skin when he said, "Hold tight." It did absolutely nothing to help her focus.
The air changed around them—cooler, filtered, breathable—and she felt the strange shimmer of the Force wrap over her skin like an invisible shield. It wasn't overwhelming, or bright, or painful. It was just…there. Warm, protective, humming faintly like a memory she didn't have a name for.
She held tight, because what else could she do? The alternative was falling into boiling sulfur, and she refused to die in a cave while wrapped around a shirtless Jedi like some delirious barnacle.
Syn's leap to the ceiling nearly jolted a gasp out of her—the sudden rush upward, the powerful coil and release of his muscles, the claws digging into stone with a sharp scrape. She locked her legs tighter without meaning to, breath catching as he began to move hand over hand along the cavern ceiling.
He climbed with terrifying ease, each movement precise and quiet, as though the weight of another person barely mattered. Lyra tried not to think about the shape of him beneath her arms or the absolute stability of his grip as they moved across the darkness.
At least the shield kept the sulfur from burning her lungs. Small mercies.
Light flickered ahead as they reached a turn in the ceiling, shadows dancing across metal beams and stone. She focused on that—anything but the warmth of his shoulder brushing her cheek or the steady rise and fall of his breathing.
When he finally dropped onto the metal platform, the landing was so smooth she barely felt the impact until his arm slipped around her waist, steadying her as he lifted her off him and set her back onto her own feet. Her legs remembered how to function after a moment—barely.
She stepped back quickly, clearing her throat, willing her pulse to slow.
"Yeah," she managed, brushing dust off her palms as if that might hide the fact that her hands were still trembling. "I can handle control panels. Doors, systems, anything that hasn't completely rusted through. I've worked with worse on salvage runs."
Her voice steadied as she forced herself to focus on the walls—the metal, the circuitry, the promise of something ancient and hidden beneath the new structure.
She didn't look at him. Couldn't yet. Not when the memory of how close they'd been was still burning hot under her skin.
"But, uh—" she added, clearing her throat again, "maybe…warn me next time before you decide to scale a cavern ceiling at full speed."
She didn't dare say more. Didn't trust what might slip out if she did.
Instead, she nodded toward the corridor ahead, stepping closer to the nearest panel. "I'll see what I can get open."
And if her voice sounded a little too firm, a little too focused, well…that was better than letting him hear the way her heart still hammered in her chest.
Syn
The contact was steady, grounding, and far too gentle for someone who had just torn through a nest of monsters and wrestled an egg sac to paste. The moment his fingers guided her arms up, positioning them as if she weighed nothing at all, her heart lurched hard enough that she almost swore aloud. She let out a shaky breath instead, trying to pretend she wasn't aware of every point of contact—shoulders, forearms, his chest, the heat of his skin through damp air.
And then he shifted her legs into place, hooking them around the sabers at his belt, and her brain promptly turned into static. Maker. This was happening. She was actually being carried like this, by him.
Her face pressed instinctively into the crook of his neck as he rose to full height, and she felt the deep, steady rumble of his voice reverberate through his skin when he said, "Hold tight." It did absolutely nothing to help her focus.
The air changed around them—cooler, filtered, breathable—and she felt the strange shimmer of the Force wrap over her skin like an invisible shield. It wasn't overwhelming, or bright, or painful. It was just…there. Warm, protective, humming faintly like a memory she didn't have a name for.
She held tight, because what else could she do? The alternative was falling into boiling sulfur, and she refused to die in a cave while wrapped around a shirtless Jedi like some delirious barnacle.
Syn's leap to the ceiling nearly jolted a gasp out of her—the sudden rush upward, the powerful coil and release of his muscles, the claws digging into stone with a sharp scrape. She locked her legs tighter without meaning to, breath catching as he began to move hand over hand along the cavern ceiling.
He climbed with terrifying ease, each movement precise and quiet, as though the weight of another person barely mattered. Lyra tried not to think about the shape of him beneath her arms or the absolute stability of his grip as they moved across the darkness.
At least the shield kept the sulfur from burning her lungs. Small mercies.
Light flickered ahead as they reached a turn in the ceiling, shadows dancing across metal beams and stone. She focused on that—anything but the warmth of his shoulder brushing her cheek or the steady rise and fall of his breathing.
When he finally dropped onto the metal platform, the landing was so smooth she barely felt the impact until his arm slipped around her waist, steadying her as he lifted her off him and set her back onto her own feet. Her legs remembered how to function after a moment—barely.
She stepped back quickly, clearing her throat, willing her pulse to slow.
"Yeah," she managed, brushing dust off her palms as if that might hide the fact that her hands were still trembling. "I can handle control panels. Doors, systems, anything that hasn't completely rusted through. I've worked with worse on salvage runs."
Her voice steadied as she forced herself to focus on the walls—the metal, the circuitry, the promise of something ancient and hidden beneath the new structure.
She didn't look at him. Couldn't yet. Not when the memory of how close they'd been was still burning hot under her skin.
"But, uh—" she added, clearing her throat again, "maybe…warn me next time before you decide to scale a cavern ceiling at full speed."
She didn't dare say more. Didn't trust what might slip out if she did.
Instead, she nodded toward the corridor ahead, stepping closer to the nearest panel. "I'll see what I can get open."
And if her voice sounded a little too firm, a little too focused, well…that was better than letting him hear the way her heart still hammered in her chest.