Lyra Ventor
Character
For a moment, Lyra couldn't move.
Not because of the monster clinging to the platform above them, not because of the ancient facility humming with a sick, unstable energy—but because Syn, the centuries-old Jedi Master who had carried her through darkness and water and corruption, leaned in close enough that she felt the warmth of his breath and pressed his forehead gently to hers. The contact was grounding, intimate in a way she was completely unprepared for. Her pulse stuttered hard against her ribs as the world around her narrowed to the warmth of him and the faint, steady hum of the Force radiating from his skin.
And then he kissed her. Not accidentally. Not out of desperation. A deliberate, measured kiss—brief but real—given to her with the same certainty he carried into battle. His hand lingered against her arm, steadying her, guiding her fingers along the hilt of the blade for one last moment before he pulled back. Lyra didn't gasp. Didn't flinch. Didn't even blink.
She froze where she stood, breath locked in her chest, mind blanking out so completely she may as well have been hit with a stun bolt. Everything she'd been feeling—the fear, the confusion, the strange electric attraction she kept forcing herself to ignore—collapsed into a single overwhelming rush that left her unable to think or even breathe properly.
Did he just—Did he actually—Maker above, had he really kissed her?
Syn's voice reached her as if from somewhere far away, calm and steady despite the monstrous presence filling the chamber. "When I say so, run along the platforms. Get behind. Do not look back."
His words washed over her without sinking in. She stood rooted in place, fingers numb around the sword she had nearly forgotten she was holding. Her body refused to respond. Her thoughts stumbled and tangled, unable to catch up with reality. The Force churned around her, but she barely felt it; all she could sense was the echo of his lips against hers and the rush of heat flooding her skin.
Then Syn's tone sharpened—still gentle, but edged with urgency. "Lyra. Go now." That single word struck through the haze like a blade, and the spell shattered.
She inhaled sharply, a shaky, uneven breath that finally broke through the paralysis. Her legs jolted into motion before her mind fully caught up, adrenaline flooding her system so intensely she nearly stumbled backward. She swore under her breath, color burning up her neck and across her cheeks, her heart thundering so loudly she was sure he could hear it—even through the roar of the Force.
"O-okay—right—yes—" The words tumbled out of her in a breathless rush. "Going."
She didn't dare look at him again. If she did, she wasn't sure her legs would keep moving.
Lyra turned and sprinted along the platform exactly as he'd told her, each step jarring, each heartbeat a frantic, disorganized flutter inside her chest. She clutched the sword like it was the only thing keeping her anchored to reality, the metal cool and steady in her hand while everything inside her felt blisteringly hot.
Behind her, two snap-hisses cut through the chamber—Syn's twin white blades igniting in perfect unison. A pulse of raw, focused power surged through the air as he released the restraint he'd been holding onto, the Force burning around him like a star on the brink of collapsing into itself. The metal grating beneath her feet vibrated as he launched forward, the dent left by his boot marking the spot where he'd kicked off hard enough to move with impossible speed.
The creature shrieked. Syn met it head-on.
And Lyra, halfway down the platform with her lungs burning and her face aflame, whispered under her breath, stunned and overwhelmed and unable to process any of it: "…did he really just kiss me?"
But she didn't stop. She didn't look back. She ran for the console and the path he needed her to take—still dazed, still flustered, but moving because Syn had asked her to run. And because if she thought too hard about what had just happened, she wasn't sure her legs would keep carrying her at all.
Syn
Not because of the monster clinging to the platform above them, not because of the ancient facility humming with a sick, unstable energy—but because Syn, the centuries-old Jedi Master who had carried her through darkness and water and corruption, leaned in close enough that she felt the warmth of his breath and pressed his forehead gently to hers. The contact was grounding, intimate in a way she was completely unprepared for. Her pulse stuttered hard against her ribs as the world around her narrowed to the warmth of him and the faint, steady hum of the Force radiating from his skin.
And then he kissed her. Not accidentally. Not out of desperation. A deliberate, measured kiss—brief but real—given to her with the same certainty he carried into battle. His hand lingered against her arm, steadying her, guiding her fingers along the hilt of the blade for one last moment before he pulled back. Lyra didn't gasp. Didn't flinch. Didn't even blink.
She froze where she stood, breath locked in her chest, mind blanking out so completely she may as well have been hit with a stun bolt. Everything she'd been feeling—the fear, the confusion, the strange electric attraction she kept forcing herself to ignore—collapsed into a single overwhelming rush that left her unable to think or even breathe properly.
Did he just—Did he actually—Maker above, had he really kissed her?
Syn's voice reached her as if from somewhere far away, calm and steady despite the monstrous presence filling the chamber. "When I say so, run along the platforms. Get behind. Do not look back."
His words washed over her without sinking in. She stood rooted in place, fingers numb around the sword she had nearly forgotten she was holding. Her body refused to respond. Her thoughts stumbled and tangled, unable to catch up with reality. The Force churned around her, but she barely felt it; all she could sense was the echo of his lips against hers and the rush of heat flooding her skin.
Then Syn's tone sharpened—still gentle, but edged with urgency. "Lyra. Go now." That single word struck through the haze like a blade, and the spell shattered.
She inhaled sharply, a shaky, uneven breath that finally broke through the paralysis. Her legs jolted into motion before her mind fully caught up, adrenaline flooding her system so intensely she nearly stumbled backward. She swore under her breath, color burning up her neck and across her cheeks, her heart thundering so loudly she was sure he could hear it—even through the roar of the Force.
"O-okay—right—yes—" The words tumbled out of her in a breathless rush. "Going."
She didn't dare look at him again. If she did, she wasn't sure her legs would keep moving.
Lyra turned and sprinted along the platform exactly as he'd told her, each step jarring, each heartbeat a frantic, disorganized flutter inside her chest. She clutched the sword like it was the only thing keeping her anchored to reality, the metal cool and steady in her hand while everything inside her felt blisteringly hot.
Behind her, two snap-hisses cut through the chamber—Syn's twin white blades igniting in perfect unison. A pulse of raw, focused power surged through the air as he released the restraint he'd been holding onto, the Force burning around him like a star on the brink of collapsing into itself. The metal grating beneath her feet vibrated as he launched forward, the dent left by his boot marking the spot where he'd kicked off hard enough to move with impossible speed.
The creature shrieked. Syn met it head-on.
And Lyra, halfway down the platform with her lungs burning and her face aflame, whispered under her breath, stunned and overwhelmed and unable to process any of it: "…did he really just kiss me?"
But she didn't stop. She didn't look back. She ran for the console and the path he needed her to take—still dazed, still flustered, but moving because Syn had asked her to run. And because if she thought too hard about what had just happened, she wasn't sure her legs would keep carrying her at all.