Star Wars Roleplay: Chaos

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Private Grease and light

The ship settled around him like a familiar weight. Not silent, not empty... just steady.
Rynar worked in the engine bay, shirt off, pants and boots smeared with grease, tattoos and scars catching the warm glow of the overhead lights. Tools were laid out neatly, each within reach, as if they had always belonged there. The hum of the engines vibrated softly beneath his hands, a rhythm that matched his own.


He shifted a part into place, fingers slick with oil, and let himself think about the market. Not the noise, not the yelling, just the edges, the way tension had snapped without warning, how quickly things had gotten messy. It had left a weight in his chest, quiet but persistent, the kind that only a home, or a ship you trusted, could absorb.

A soft grunt, a twist of a wrench, and the coupling clicked into place. Rynar leaned back slightly, letting his forearms rest on the warm metal, eyes tracing familiar lines of wiring and tubing.
"Still running," he murmured, almost to himself.
Light from the corridor spilled in through the open engine bay doors. Someone passing would see him here, see the quiet, see the work. Maybe they'd say something. Maybe not.

It didn't matter.
This was home. And for now, at least, it felt good to just be here.

Deanez Deanez
 
Dean paused at the threshold of the engine bay, one hand resting briefly against the frame before she stepped inside. She had meant to bring him something. Water, maybe. Or the inventory slate she had set down earlier and then forgotten to pick back up. The thought slid away without resistance as the heat and low hum of the engines wrapped around her.

She took in the scene without hurry.

Rynar at work, shirt discarded somewhere out of sight, tools laid out with meticulous care. The engine bay looked… right, in a way few spaces did. Ordered, but lived in. Maintained rather than controlled. Her gaze lingered on the rhythm of his movements, the way each adjustment seemed to settle the ship a fraction deeper into itself.

"Everything holding?" she asked, voice even, professional, as if they were mid-briefing instead of standing in what was slowly becoming home.

She moved closer, boots stopping just short of his workspace, arms folding loosely as she leaned her shoulder against a bulkhead. A faint smear of grease darkened one cuff of her sleeve; she did not notice it, nor the way she absently brushed her fingers together as if she had meant to wash them earlier and simply hadn't.

Her eyes tracked a conduit as he tightened it, then drifted briefly toward the corridor beyond the bay. Somewhere down that way, a cabinet door sat ajar. A mug rested on the counter where she had set it earlier. None of it rose to the level of concern. The ship was operational. That was what mattered.

"This place is starting to sound different," Dean said after a moment, tone thoughtful but detached. "Less echo. More…settled."

She shifted her weight, watching the engine readouts stabilize as he worked.

"I'll log the part replacement once you're finished," she added, already half-turning to retrieve the datapad she had left somewhere nearby. The fact that it wasn't immediately at hand didn't seem unusual. She would find it. Or another one.

Her attention returned to him, steady and composed.

"Let me know if you need another set of hands," Dean said simply.

Then she stayed there, quiet and present, the ship humming around them — unaware that for the first time in her adult life, nothing was demanding she account for every small thing left undone.

Rynar Solde Rynar Solde
 
Rynar didn't look up right away.
He felt her before he saw her, the shift in the air, the subtle change in weight and sound that told him someone familiar had entered the space. The engine's hum evened out beneath his hands as he finished tightening the conduit, then he leaned back slightly, forearm resting against the housing.

"Yeah," he said, finally glancing her way. "She's holding."
His gaze lingered for a moment longer than necessary, taking her in the same way she'd taken in the bay. quiet, unhurried. The grease on his hands and arms had long since stopped registering to him, but the way her sleeve now bore a faint mark of it did.

He hesitated.
The market surfaced then, not in flashes, not in detail. Just the memory of the snap. The shift from words to action. He exhaled slowly through his nose and looked back at the engine, fingers flexing once.

"I shouldn't have let it get that far back there," he said, voice low, matter-of-fact rather than defensive. "You didn't need to see that."
He turned toward her more fully, lifting a hand without thinking and stopping halfway when he caught sight of the grime coating his palm. A corner of his mouth twitched.

"…Mind's not the only thing that's dirty right now," he added, a dry note of humor threading through the words as he dropped his hand and reached instead for a rag.
He wiped his hands down, not really cleaning them so much as making a point of trying, then looked back at her.
"I'll finish up in a minute," he said. "If you still feel like staying."


The ship hummed steadily around them, warmer now, settled. Rynar stayed where he was, close enough without pressing, grease-stained and grounded, content to share the quiet for as long as she chose to stand there with him.

Deanez Deanez
 
Dean did not answer immediately.

She remained where she was, shoulder still against the bulkhead, eyes on the engine for a beat longer as if listening to the way it had settled under his hands. When she finally spoke, her voice was even, calm, unruffled in the way it always was when she chose her words carefully rather than quickly.

"You didn't let it get too far," she said quietly. Not reassurance. Correction. "You ended it before it escalated into something that would have followed us longer than it needed to."

Her gaze lifted to him then, steady and direct, not softened by apology or tension. She was not shaken. She had never been someone who broke easily under pressure. That much was obvious. But there was something else there now, something warmer and more deliberate.

"I could have handled them," Dean continued, matter-of-factly, without pride or challenge. "That was never in question." A pause, just long enough for the truth to land fully. "But I appreciated that you stepped in anyway."

She shifted her weight, uncrossing her arms, one hand lifting to rest lightly against the edge of the engine housing near him. The grease smear on her sleeve still went unnoticed, or perhaps simply unprioritized.

"There will be more moments like that," she said, not as a warning, not as fear, but as an assessment. "People who recognize what I was. People who resent what I am now. And people who think proximity gives them leverage."

Her eyes held his, unflinching.

"I know how to navigate that," Dean said. "I always have." Then, more quietly, without diminishing herself or him, she added, "But I am… adjusting to not doing it alone."

The admission was subtle. Not dramatic. Not heavy. Just a fact stated the way she stated most things.

She glanced briefly toward the open corridor, then back to him, grounding herself in the steadiness of the space, the hum of the ship, the quiet competence of his presence.

"If that happens again," Dean said, voice composed, "we will deal with it the same way we did today. Calmly. Decisively. Without letting it define us."

She paused, then added, softer but no less certain, "I don't regret how it ended. And I don't regret that you were there."

Dean stayed where she was, close without crowding, offering neither reassurance nor distance, simply sharing the space as the ship continued to breathe around them.

Rynar Solde Rynar Solde
 
Rynar shifted, eyes lingering on the open panel for a moment longer, then held out a rag.
"You got a little on your sleeve," he said quietly. "Here, wipe it before it sets."

Dean took it with the same careful ease she brought to everything, and he let his attention return to the engine, finishing the last adjustments. With a soft grunt, he shut the hatch with the edge of his boot.
He grabbed his shirt from where it lay nearby and used it to wipe the grease from his hands and forearms. The fabric quickly darkened with streaks of oil, but he didn't care, just enough to free his fingers.


When he straightened, his back was to her, and in the warm glow of the bay light, she could see it: a sprawling tattoo along his shoulder blade and upper back. It wasn't a single image, but a tapestry. a mural etched in black ink, telling stories of family, clan, and past lives. Figures intertwined with symbols, scars woven into the design, each line and shading holding a memory he rarely showed anyone. Battles survived, bonds honored, losses remembered, the quiet weight of everything that had shaped him.

He tucked the shirt back over his shoulder rather than putting it on fully, hands still slightly darkened from the work. "Better," he murmured, voice low, almost to himself, and finally turned just enough to meet her eyes, the bare skin and intricate mural catching the light.
The ship hummed steadily around them, alive and steady. And for a brief moment, it was just them. the quiet intimacy of the engine bay, the soft glow of lights on metal, and the personal history etched into the lines across his back, shared in silence.

Deanez Deanez
 
Dean glanced down only after he spoke, as if the smear had not existed until he named it. The dark streak along her sleeve registered a beat late, and she accepted the rag without comment, wiping at the fabric with slow, methodical strokes until the worst of it was gone. The mark faded, though not completely, and she paused a moment longer than necessary, faintly aware of the small absurdity of it.

"I didn't notice," she said quietly, not defensive, just mildly surprised. There was the barest hint of embarrassment there, quickly folded back into composure. "I usually do."

She set the rag aside neatly, then looked up again just as he shifted.

Her attention caught, unbidden.

Dean did not stare in the way others might have. She simply looked, eyes tracing the lines of ink across his back with the same careful focus she gave schematics or star charts. The tattoo was not decorative in the shallow sense. It was deliberate. Layered. Earned. She recognized that immediately.

"That's… extensive," she said, softly, the word chosen with care. Not impressed in a loud way. Appreciative. "It reads like a record. Not something done for display."

Her gaze followed one of the figures for a moment, then another, noting how scars had been worked into the design rather than hidden, how the composition accommodated what life had already written on his skin.

"It's well done," Dean added. "Not just technically. In intent."

She did not ask what each part meant. If he wanted to tell her, he would. She respected that boundary without needing to name it.

The hum of the ship filled the brief silence again, comfortable, grounding. Dean shifted her weight slightly, leaning back against the bulkhead, eyes lifting to his face now rather than his back.

"Since the engine is no longer demanding your immediate attention," she said evenly, a faint warmth threading through the practicality, "what do you want for lunch?"

A pause.

"We have rations," she continued, already cataloging options in her head. "But there's enough time to make something that feels like a meal instead of fuel."

She waited, calm and present, the question offered not as logistics alone, but as another small way of building something ordinary inside a life that had been anything but.

Rynar Solde Rynar Solde
 
Rynar followed her gaze without turning at first. He didn't rush to cover himself, didn't tense the way he might have once. Instead, he exhaled slowly, then shifted just enough to give her a clearer view before finally turning partway, shoulder angling toward her.
"Yeah," he said quietly. "That's what it is."
His fingers flexed once at his side, absent, as if tracing lines only he could see.

"Family. Clan," he went on, voice steady, unembellished. "Where I came from. Where I went wrong. Where I went alone." A beat. "And how I found my way back."
He didn't point out individual figures. He didn't name them. The explanation stayed broad by design, offered without drama or weight. Not exile spoken like a wound, but like a chapter already survived.

"It's not finished," he added after a moment. "Probably never will be."
Her question drew a faint huff of a laugh from him, soft and genuine. He reached down, grabbed his shirt again, gave his hands one last half-hearted wipe, then let the fabric hang loose from his grip rather than putting it on.


"Lunch sounds good," he said. "And before you argue, yeah, I can make rations taste like an actual meal."
He glanced toward the open doorway.

"Assuming Cupcake doesn't steal my jerky again."


As if summoned by accusation alone, a familiar shape appeared in the threshold. furred, alert, and entirely unapologetic. Cupcake stood there, head tilted slightly, a sealed pouch of jerky clenched proudly in her maw. Her tail flicked once, slow and satisfied.


Rynar stared at her for a long second.
"…That's the third time this week," he said flatly.
Cupcake did not move.
He sighed, the corner of his mouth twitching despite himself, and looked back at Dean. "See? Sabotage. Hard to be a culinary genius under these conditions."

He gestured lightly toward the galley with his chin. "Come on. I'll show you how to turn bland paste into something edible. Clan trick."
The ship hummed on, steady and content, as if approving of the plan.

Deanez Deanez
 
Dean's eyes tracked Cupcake the moment she appeared in the doorway, the jerky pouch clenched triumphantly in her jaws. There was a pause. A calculation. Then, with the same quiet deliberation she brought to everything else, Dean shifted her weight and took a careful step to the side, angling as if she were merely repositioning herself for comfort.

Another step. Slower.

Her hand lifted just slightly, fingers relaxed, timing precise.

Cupcake's ears flicked.

Dean froze.

The nexu's head turned a fraction, one luminous eye fixing on her with unmistakable awareness. Her tail swayed once, lazy and smug, and she backed up a single step out of reach, jerky still firmly secured.

Dean straightened, expression composed, if faintly chagrined.

"…Noted," she said calmly, lowering her hand. "She has situational awareness well beyond acceptable parameters."

Cupcake chirruped, entirely pleased with herself.

Dean exhaled softly through her nose, then glanced back at Rynar, the corner of her mouth curving just enough to signal dry amusement. "That," she added, nodding toward the thief in question, "is precisely why I wanted the spices."

She moved toward the galley at an unhurried pace, speaking as she went. "I assumed at least some of the protein would be… lost in transit." A brief pause. "I planned accordingly."

At the counter, she reached into the satchel she'd carried back from the market and began setting small packets out one by one, careful, methodical. Ground heatleaf. Dried nerra rind. A mild resin blend meant to add depth without overwhelming. Nothing flashy. Nothing excessive.

"I avoided anything meant to impress," Dean said, glancing sideways at him as she worked. "They're functional. Designed to layer rather than mask. The kind that can make paste taste like food without pretending it's something else."

She looked down at the lineup, then back at him again, eyes steady, quietly curious.

"They were the right choice," she said, not as a statement but an invitation. "Weren't they?"

Behind them, Cupcake settled just outside the galley, jerky pouch pinned under one paw, watching the exchange with the air of someone who had already won this round and was content to let the rest unfold.

Rynar Solde Rynar Solde
 
Rynar let a small, quiet smile tug at his mouth. He stepped closer as Dean arranged the spices, reaching up to brush a thumb lightly across her cheek. The contact was soft, fleeting, a gesture more of agreement and gratitude than anything else.
"You read it right," he murmured, voice low, just for her. "Exactly right."

Satisfied, he turned toward the galley counter. His hands were clean now, fully wiped, and he rolled up his sleeves as he gathered the rations. There was a rhythm to it, practiced but relaxed: measuring, layering, adjusting. Heatleaf first, a touch of resin, nerra rind tucked in where it would blend best. Every movement was precise, but with a care that felt… domestic, a counterpoint to the chaos of life outside the ship.

Cupcake remained near the doorway, jerky pouch still clutched possessively, tail flicking in idle amusement. Rynar glanced at her, muttering something under his breath that could have been a warning or a concession. The nexu didn't respond beyond a soft chirrup, content to watch.

He set a small pan on the stove, stirring the mixture slowly, letting the scents rise and mingle. Steam curled upward, warm and comforting. He looked over his shoulder once, catching Dean's steady gaze, and allowed himself a hint of humor.

"Try not to eat all the jerky before we finish," he said lightly, more teasing than admonition.
Then he returned to the pan, hands moving confidently as he turned the bland rations into something that, for a moment, felt like home. The ship hummed steadily around them, engines quiet but alive, the smells of heat and spice and small victories weaving together.

Deanez Deanez
 
Dean's hand closed around his wrist just before he could fully turn back to the stove.

Not tight. Not urgent. Just enough to stop him.

For a heartbeat, she studied him there, sleeves rolled, hands already moving with that quiet competence she was learning so well, and something in her expression softened in a way she did not often allow herself to show. Then she leaned in and kissed him, brief and warm and unmistakably deliberate, lips brushing his with a certainty that needed no explanation and asked nothing in return.

It lasted only a moment. Long enough to be felt. Short enough not to derail him.

When she pulled back, her thumb lingered once against his wrist, then she let him go without comment, as if the kiss were simply another truth acknowledged and set in place.

She moved a half step back and leaned lightly against the counter, arms folding loosely as she watched him work. Not assessing. Not cataloging. Just observing. The way he layered the spices rather than dumping them in, the way he adjusted the heat by instinct rather than by measurement, the small pauses where he tasted, recalibrated, and continued. There was a steadiness to it that matched the ship's hum, a competence that didn't need to announce itself.

Her gaze drifted briefly to the side, catching on a cup left near the sink, rim smudged, forgotten sometime earlier. She noted it without urgency, the way one notes weather or background noise, and let the thought pass. It could wait. Everything could wait, just a little.

Cupcake's presence at the doorway earned her a faint flicker of amusement, though she said nothing, only shifting her weight as the scents deepened and filled the galley. Heatleaf. Resin. Something warmer beneath it all that felt less like strategy and more like routine, beginning to take shape.

Dean's attention returned to Rynar, quiet and intent, and she stayed there, letting herself exist in the moment without directing it, without fixing it, already knowing she would wash the cup later, after lunch, along with everything else that belonged to this small, shared pause.

Rynar Solde Rynar Solde
 
Rynar let his hands move steadily over the pan, stirring and adjusting, but his voice carried softly as he spoke, more to himself than to anyone in particular.
"When I was younger," he began, tone low, careful, "my mother… she always made the food taste good. Didn't matter what we had... sometimes barely enough to fill the plate. But somehow, she made it… right. Warm. Satisfying. Like it wasn't just eating, it was something worth remembering."

He glanced briefly over his shoulder at Dean, letting the memory settle in the air between them. "And my father… well, half the time he wasn't drunk. Not always. On the days he was… he wasn't. And we'd come back from a hunt, me helping him clean whatever we'd caught, my mother setting the fire, tending the pot. I'd watch her, listen to him mutter about the cut of meat or the way the fire burned, and… I don't know. It just felt like home."

He stirred the mixture again, pausing to taste it, then nodded to himself. The flavors were right, but the memory lingered behind it, faint, grounding.
"And that's what I'm doing here," he said quietly, almost to himself, though Dean could hear it if she wanted. "Not just making lunch. Making it… worth it, even if it's just rations. Just a little bit of home."


Cupcake chirruped from the doorway, tail flicking lazily, as if approving of the sentiment without needing to say anything. Rynar smiled faintly at her, then turned back fully to the pan, adding a touch more heatleaf, adjusting the simmer. The scents mingled, rich and comforting, carrying the quiet warmth of memory into the present.

Deanez Deanez
 
Dean did not speak right away.

She stayed where she was, leaning lightly against the counter, listening to the cadence of his voice as much as the words themselves. The galley was warm now, not just from the stove, but from the way the memory settled into the space, gentle and unforced. She let it sit, let it exist without trying to shape it into something useful or strategic.

When she finally spoke, her voice was quiet, measured, but there was nothing distant in it.

"That sounds like something worth carrying forward," she said. Not reverent. Not sentimental. Simply true. "Not because it was perfect. Because it was consistent. Chosen. Repeated."

She watched him stir, the small adjustments, the care threaded through every movement. It was familiar in a way she hadn't expected, not in detail, but in intent. The way you could take something limited and make it deliberate. The way order could be built without ceremony.

"For most of my life," she continued after a moment, "routine meant structure imposed from the outside. Meals were scheduled. Efficient. Necessary." A faint pause. "There was comfort in that, once. Clarity."

Her gaze drifted briefly to the counter, the pan, the way the steam curled and vanished. She did not sound lost when she spoke again, only thoughtful.

"This," she said quietly, indicating the galley, the ship, the act itself, "is different. It isn't assigned. It isn't required. Which makes it… unfamiliar."

Not unwelcome.

She pushed off the counter and stepped closer, stopping just behind him, close enough to feel the warmth without touching. Her presence was steady, intentional.

"But I think I understand what you mean," Dean added. "About making it worth remembering. About choosing to build something small, and letting that be enough for now."

Her tone softened just a fraction, not emotion spilling over, but allowed.

"And for what it's worth," she said, eyes on the pan, on his hands, "it smells like home. Or at least… like the beginning of one."

She let the words rest there, unadorned, and stayed with him in the quiet hum of the ship, as lunch continued to take shape.

Rynar Solde Rynar Solde
 
Rynar didn't answer right away.
He stirred the pan once more, slow and steady, letting the heat settle where it needed to. The scent had deepened now, warm, layered, unmistakably more than rations. He adjusted the flame by feel alone, then, without thinking. his breath shifted.


At first it was just a hum. Low. Barely there. Something that lived in his chest rather than his throat.
Then words followed.
Mando'a, soft and unadorned, the cadence old enough that it didn't ask permission to surface. The melody was simple, built for kitchens and firesides rather than halls or crowds. His voice stayed in the low register, warm and steady, rising only briefly before settling again, like the ship's hum beneath it.


Not loud.
Not for display.
Just… there.


The words spoke of return. Of shared warmth after long roads. Of hands that stayed even when the night did not. Nothing dramatic. Nothing heroic. A love song meant for ordinary days and chosen company.
He didn't stop working as he sang. Didn't turn around. The song threaded itself into the rhythm of the moment as naturally as the spices had, another layer, added without fanfare.


Only after a few lines did he seem to realize he was doing it.
The melody faltered, not cut off, just softened, before trailing into silence. He cleared his throat quietly, stirring once more as if the pan required his full attention.
"Sorry," he said after a beat, voice calm but faintly self-aware. "Didn't mean to..."
He stopped there. No apology finished. No explanation rushed in to fill the space. Some habits didn't need defending.


The food was ready. He killed the heat, plated it with the same care he'd used throughout, then finally glanced back at her—not searching her face, just acknowledging her presence the way he always did when something honest had slipped out unguarded.
"…It's an old one," he added quietly. "From home."
The ship hummed on around them, steady and content, as if it recognized the tune—even if it had never heard it before.

Deanez Deanez

Mando'a Lyrics

Verse

Ni kar'ta besbecha,
Ni kar'ta solus,
Ni ven cuyir ner vod,
Gar ni ru'karir bal ni adenn.



Chorus
Aliit ori'shya tal'din,
Ke'pare bal ni jate,
Oya, gar ni vor'e,
Ni kar'ta, ni kar'ta.



Verse
Gar cuyir darasuum,
Gar cuyir jorhaa'kar,
Ni ven cuun bic ni,
Bal gar ni kyr'tsad.



Chorus (soft repeat)
Aliit ori'shya tal'din,
Ke'pare bal ni jate,
Oya, gar ni vor'e,
Ni kar'ta.


Translation (not poetic, just honest)

Verse

I am not broken,
I am not alone,
I still carry my family,
Even if I walk without them.

Chorus
Family is more than blood,
A home is more than walls,
Strength, if you stand with me,
I am not broken.

Verse
You are my shelter,
You are my steady ground,
I do not need more than this,
If you choose to stay.

Chorus (repeat)
Family is more than blood,
A home is more than walls,
Strength, if you stand with me,
I am not broken.
 
Dean stayed very still while the last notes faded.

Not because she was afraid to move, but because some things, once offered, deserved to be received without interruption. The song had settled into the galley the way warmth settled into stone on Csilla: gradual, quiet, unmistakable once it was there. She let the silence afterward remain intact for a breath longer than necessary, honoring it by not rushing to fill it.

When she spoke, her voice was soft, carefully measured, but no longer distant.

"You do not need to apologize," she said simply. Not reassurance. Not comfort. Just a statement of fact. "Some things surface because they are meant to be carried forward, not hidden."

She stepped closer then, not intruding, just enough that he could feel her presence beside him rather than behind him. Her gaze rested on the plated food for a moment before lifting back to him, thoughtful, steady.

"That song," Dean continued, "it is… very Mandalorian in its honesty. It does not ask for permanence. Only choice." A faint pause. "That matters."

She hesitated only briefly, then allowed herself something she rarely offered aloud.

"On Csilla," she said quietly, "there are no songs like that. Not for warmth. Our music is… sparse. Designed for ice halls and long nights. It is meant to remind you that stillness is not emptiness."

Her fingers rested lightly on the counter, grounding herself before continuing.

"There is a phrase my people use," she added. "It does not translate cleanly, but the closest meaning is this: The cold does not drive us inward. It teaches us where to stand together."

She glanced at him then, eyes calm, open, unguarded.

"Your song speaks of carrying family even when they are not beside you," Dean said. "Ours speaks of choosing to remain present, even when distance and silence would be easier."

A faint, almost imperceptible curve touched her mouth.

"I think they belong in the same space."

She looked down at the food again, at the care he had put into it, then back to him.

"Thank you for sharing it," she said, quietly but without reservation. "It was… welcome."

And in the steady hum of the ship, between spice and memory and chosen company, Dean let herself stand there with him, not as an observer, not as an agent of order, but as someone learning how to let a home be built around her without needing to name it first.

Rynar Solde Rynar Solde
 
Rynar moved deliberately, plating a portion for Dean first, then one for himself. The scent of the spices hung warm and inviting, steam curling lazily upward. He set her plate in front of her with a small nod, careful not to spill a drop.


"What'll you have to drink?" he asked, voice low, steady, casual, but with just enough humor to lighten the quiet. "I've got water, whatever synth-juice is left, or… well, I'm not on the menu."


He gave a faint smirk, brushing a stray bit of steam from his forearm before returning to his own plate. His tone was teasing, but soft, safe, the kind that belonged in this space, here with her.

Cupcake chirruped from the doorway, jerky pouch finally set aside, tail flicking idly as if she'd claimed her victory and would now observe the meal.

Rynar leaned back slightly in his stance, hands on the counter for balance, eyes catching Dean's as she considered the options. The ship hummed steadily around them, warm, contained, and home in a way neither of them had needed to label.

"You pick first," he said, nodding toward the small stack of cups. "Don't make me regret it later."


He took a careful bite from his own plate, letting the flavors settle. Not rushed. Not performative. Just the quiet comfort of two people sharing a simple meal, chosen and earned.

Deanez Deanez
 
Dean paused with the cup halfway to her lips, as if reconsidering something, then lowered it again, turning slightly so her shoulder brushed his in a way that was entirely intentional and entirely unhurried.

"Water is perfect," she said, softer this time, her tone carrying warmth instead of neutrality. Her eyes lifted to his, steady but unmistakably fond. "Especially when the company insists on spoiling me."

She accepted the cup from him, her fingers grazing his for just a second longer than necessary before she drew it back. Not an accident. Not a rush. Just enough to acknowledge what sat comfortably between them.

When she tasted the food, she actually stilled. Not dramatically, just enough to be noticeable. Her lashes lowered briefly, then lifted again as she looked at him over the rim of the plate.

"You undersold this," Dean said quietly, the corner of her mouth curving. "If you keep this up, I might start expecting you to cook every time. Or encourage you to." The implication was gentle, wrapped in calm rather than boldness, but it was there all the same.

She took another bite, slower, clearly enjoying it now, then leaned her hip lightly against the counter near him, close enough to share heat without crowding.

"And for the record," she added, eyes flicking briefly to his before returning to her meal, "if you were on the menu, I suspect you would be distracting enough to ruin my appetite." A faint pause. "Which would be unfortunate. For both of us."

Her gaze softened as she drank, attention drifting just long enough to notice the cup by the sink, the pan cooling on the stove, details filed away for later without urgency. This moment mattered more.

She looked back at him, expression open in a way it rarely was.

"I am looking forward to building a future like this," Dean said simply. "Meals. Small routines. You."

Then she smiled, just a little, and returned her attention to the food he had made, entirely content to stay right where she was.

Rynar Solde Rynar Solde
 

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