Lyra Ventor
Character
Lyra slowed her steps just enough to glance back at him, blue eyes flicking over the way he bowed his head—humble, steady, almost annoyingly principled. Precisely the kind of answer a Jedi would give. Exactly the kind that made her chest feel too tight.
"I wasn't saying you needed an ego," she murmured, lips tugging faintly at one corner. "Just…saying you make an impression. Whether you want to or not."
She didn't say on me, too, but the thought burned uncomfortably warm across her cheeks anyway, so she turned forward again, letting the motion hide it. The crowd parted around them the same way it had in the streets earlier. Still, she noticed how he softened the space—bowing his head to a shopkeeper, stepping aside for a mother carrying baskets, letting children sprint past without the faintest ripple of disapproval.
Most Jedi she'd seen growing up looked like monuments. He walked like a man who remembered what it was to blend in.
"Working with me, huh?" she said after a few steps, voice light but carrying an undercurrent she didn't yet fully understand. "That almost sounds like a compliment."
A pair of kids ran by, one brandishing a long stick and shouting about being a Jedi, the others shrieking dramatically as they "fell." Lyra watched the scene with a small huff of air—amusement, disbelief, something gentler than either.
"Guess you're famous," she teased quietly, nudging him with an elbow before she realized what she'd done. Her hand quickly returned to her side, fingers curling as though she could trap the impulse before it escaped again. "Or infamous. Hard to tell."
The closer they got to the hangar row, the more she realized she was reluctant for this part to end. Ridiculous, considering they were walking to a ship, but after everything underground…the quiet between them felt oddly comfortable. Maybe a little too comfortable.
She cleared her throat, leading him up the ramp toward Bay Twelve, boots echoing against the durasteel plates.
"You can relax, you know," she said, glancing sideways at him. "Nobody's gonna try to cheat me. Not when you're walking behind me like some divine punishment waiting to happen."
A slow smile touched her lips—amused, but warm. "Besides…I can handle myself. The lightsabers help, but—" She paused, eyes tracing him for one heartbeat longer than she meant to. "You're…a different kind of reassurance."
Too honest. Too raw. Too late to take back. Lyra exhaled, brushed a strand of blonde hair behind her ear, and motioned ahead as Bay Twelve came into view.
"That's us."
But the way she said it—soft, almost reluctant—made the word mean something she didn't dare examine yet.
Syn
"I wasn't saying you needed an ego," she murmured, lips tugging faintly at one corner. "Just…saying you make an impression. Whether you want to or not."
She didn't say on me, too, but the thought burned uncomfortably warm across her cheeks anyway, so she turned forward again, letting the motion hide it. The crowd parted around them the same way it had in the streets earlier. Still, she noticed how he softened the space—bowing his head to a shopkeeper, stepping aside for a mother carrying baskets, letting children sprint past without the faintest ripple of disapproval.
Most Jedi she'd seen growing up looked like monuments. He walked like a man who remembered what it was to blend in.
"Working with me, huh?" she said after a few steps, voice light but carrying an undercurrent she didn't yet fully understand. "That almost sounds like a compliment."
A pair of kids ran by, one brandishing a long stick and shouting about being a Jedi, the others shrieking dramatically as they "fell." Lyra watched the scene with a small huff of air—amusement, disbelief, something gentler than either.
"Guess you're famous," she teased quietly, nudging him with an elbow before she realized what she'd done. Her hand quickly returned to her side, fingers curling as though she could trap the impulse before it escaped again. "Or infamous. Hard to tell."
The closer they got to the hangar row, the more she realized she was reluctant for this part to end. Ridiculous, considering they were walking to a ship, but after everything underground…the quiet between them felt oddly comfortable. Maybe a little too comfortable.
She cleared her throat, leading him up the ramp toward Bay Twelve, boots echoing against the durasteel plates.
"You can relax, you know," she said, glancing sideways at him. "Nobody's gonna try to cheat me. Not when you're walking behind me like some divine punishment waiting to happen."
A slow smile touched her lips—amused, but warm. "Besides…I can handle myself. The lightsabers help, but—" She paused, eyes tracing him for one heartbeat longer than she meant to. "You're…a different kind of reassurance."
Too honest. Too raw. Too late to take back. Lyra exhaled, brushed a strand of blonde hair behind her ear, and motioned ahead as Bay Twelve came into view.
"That's us."
But the way she said it—soft, almost reluctant—made the word mean something she didn't dare examine yet.