Star Wars Roleplay: Chaos

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Private Presence & Sunlight



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Arbra
Humanitarian Camp
0800
Arhiia Voronwe Arhiia Voronwe


The morning on Arbra felt almost impossibly gentle. Mist drifted low across the forest floor, carrying the cool scent of moss and wildflowers. Soft shafts of gold filtered through the canopy, warming the dew that clung to every leaf and root. The wildlife sang in quiet, conversational chirps, not alarmed, not restless.
Just alive.

Aiden stood near the edge of the clearing where the humanitarian camp had been set up, his sleeves rolled past his elbows and a datapad tucked under his arm. The supply crates stacked beside him hummed faintly as their seals recalibrated in the morning air. He had spent the last hour coordinating distribution lines, speaking with volunteers, lifting crates twice his size, and soothing anxious evacuees with a calm presence and steady voice.

It was good work, necessary work and it suited him more than most missions did.

Children darted past him carrying bundles of cloth and ration packs, trusting him implicitly not to scold them for weaving under his arms as they ran. He simply smiled and stepped aside, continuing to guide the flow of people and goods with an ease that looked effortless.

But every few minutes, almost unconsciously, his gaze drifted toward the walkway leading deeper into the trees.

Waiting.

Listening.

Feeling the soft pull of a familiar presence drawing closer through the quiet currents of the Force. He had arrived early, earlier than he needed to, telling himself it was to help steady the morning operations. And while that was true, it wasn't the whole truth. He wanted to be here when she arrived.

The breeze stirred his cloak, carrying with it the warmth of the rising sun. He closed his eyes briefly, letting the moment settle into him. Arbra's forests were serene in a way that invited honesty, not the loud kind, but the quiet, grounding sort that seeped under the ribs and loosened every guarded thought.

He sensed her before he saw her. A faint warmth blooming at the edge of his awareness.

Clear. Steady. Familiar.

Aiden straightened gently, not stiff, not formal, just attentive. His hand rested on the top of a supply crate, thumb brushing the edging absentmindedly as something unspoken eased through him.

The morning was beautiful. But it was about to become brighter


 




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Tags: Aiden Porte Aiden Porte


The transport hissed as it settled onto the forest floor, mist curling around its landing struts. Arhiia stepped down, boots sinking slightly into the dew-softened ground, satchel slung over one shoulder, her leather half-jacket snug against the morning chill. Her hair was pulled back into a quick, practical braid, the dirty-blonde strands catching the pale sunlight like a faint halo. Every movement was purposeful: she adjusted a strap on the satchel, scanned the tents, and immediately began giving directions.

"Crate Seven to the triage tent. Carefully, that one contains sterile bacta packs," she called over her shoulder, motioning two medics forward. "Diagnostics go to the north wing. Align them against the wall for easy access." Her voice was calm, precise, and unwavering. She moved with the quiet authority of someone both young and experienced—a strategist accustomed to having every piece in its proper place.

But even as she barked instructions, her eyes never stayed in one place. They flicked over the clearing, across the volunteers, toward the edge of the forest, always searching. She answered questions as they came, "Yes, that will be fine," or "Do that first," yet her attention strayed the moment she spoke the words. Every crate stacked, every bed unfolded, every supply organized—she performed it all with disciplined efficiency, but her mind traced a single thread through the activity, pulling her gaze repeatedly toward the clearing's center.

Minutes passed. Arhiia checked the coolant levels on the portable med units, gestured to a junior medic to recheck inventory, and oversaw the setup of the intake line. Each task completed flawlessly, each order followed without hesitation. Yet beneath the surface, her heartbeat raced, tiny thrills of anticipation threading through her chest. She kept scanning, scanning for him, holding herself together while knowing that once she saw him, composure would be harder to maintain.


And then, there he was.

Aiden.


He stood near the supply stacks, sleeves rolled past his elbows, datapad tucked under one arm, speaking with evacuees in his calm, grounded way. Sunlight caught the lines of his face and the fall of his dark hair, highlighting that same quiet intensity she remembered from their earlier correspondences. Her breath caught, and for a single heartbeat, all her practiced professionalism faltered.

She shook herself slightly, her body fighting the urge to bite her lower lip , shoulders straightening, then approached with long, purposeful strides, voice clipped, businesslike: "Knight Porte, I need to speak with you. In private." Her tone carried for anyone within earshot, commanding, firm—yet underneath it, an undercurrent of relief and something else she barely admitted even to herself.

He turned to her as she tugged gently on his sleeve, leading him toward an empty supply tent. Once the flap fell behind them, she finally allowed herself the movement she had been holding back all morning. She dropped her satchel, pivoted swiftly, stepped into him without hesitation, arms wrapping around his torso in a fierce, trembling embrace. Her forehead pressed to his chest, her scent—soft, floral, warming the small space—filling him. A soft gasp broke free, followed by a brief, shaky sob and laugh all rolled into one.

"I found you…." she whispered, voice shaking, gripping him as though she would never let go. She had not asked permission. She didn't need it. After all the letters, all the quiet moments shared and missed, she needed this—needed him—right now. And for the first time since stepping onto Arbra, she let herself feel the relief, the closeness, the quiet joy of finally being exactly where she wanted to be, in his arms, surrounded by his presence.

The man she was hopelessly falling for.





 




Aiden didn't hesitate.

The moment Arhiia folded into him, he wrapped his arms around her, firm but careful, protective without smothering, grounding without trapping. One hand instinctively cupped the back of her head, fingers sliding into the braid as though anchoring her to something steady; the other splayed between her shoulder blades, warm and supportive, holding her as if he'd been waiting for this exact moment since dawn.

He felt it. He felt everything. The tension in her shoulders melting and he could see exhaustion hidden under her discipline. The quiet relief that poured into him like a tide finally reaching shore. And he pressed his cheek to the crown of her head, closing his eyes as the scent of her, clean, warm, vaguely floral, filled his senses. The tent around them was silent except for the faint hum of generators and the soft, uneven cadence of her breathing against him.

"Arhiia…" he whispered, voice low and steady, the kind of tone one uses when calling someone back from the edge. His arms tightened, not to restrain but to reassure. "I'm here."


A simple truth, spoken like it mattered. Because it did. He felt the shiver in her laugh-sob, the way her fingers curled into his tunic as if confirming he wasn't an illusion conjured by hopes and long nights. And something in his chest, something he normally kept locked away. It unfolded, slow and warm and helplessly real.

He tilted his head slightly so his lips brushed her temple when he spoke again, softer, meant only for her:

"You found me...." He breathed her in.

Aiden didn't ask what pushed her to this, not yet. She needed closeness first, words later.

So he simply held her, letting his warmth soak into her chilled skin, letting his heartbeat steady hers, letting her lean as much weight as she needed into him. His thumb stroked slow, calming circles against the back of her shoulder. After a moment, he gently slid one hand up to cradle her jaw, guiding her just enough for him to see her face eyes bright with emotion, lashes damp. The smallest smile touched his lips, soft and achingly tender.

"You don't have to hold yourself together with me," he murmured. "Not here. Not today."

"And for the record…"


Aiden's voice dipped deeper, warmth threading through every syllable. "I'm glad you pulled me aside. Because I wanted to see you too." His hand at her jaw brushed her cheek, thumb tracing the soft warmth of her skin. "I've missed you, Arhiia. More than I let myself say." Outside, the morning bustle continued, voices, crates shifting, medics calling instructions. But inside the tent, time didn't push forward. It held still for them.

Aiden kept her close, kept her steady, kept her his, even if neither of them dared name what this was becoming.

But he felt it. And by the way she held him, trembling and relieved and impossibly sincere. He was sure, she felt it too.



 



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Tags: Aiden Porte Aiden Porte

She didn't mean to melt the second his arms closed around her, but gods, she did. The moment Aiden pulled her in, everything she'd held rigid and upright inside herself came undone with a quiet, shaking breath against his chest. She pressed her forehead to his shoulder, inhaling him—warm, steady, familiar in a way that terrified her—and her fingers curled into the back of his tunic like she needed the anchor. When her eyes stung, she tried to swallow it back, tried to pretend she still had the same tight control she always kept in place… but the tears still gathered anyway, soft and traitorous.

"Sorry," she muttered, though it came out thick, more honest than she meant it to be. She swiped at her cheek with the heel of her hand, then thumped his chest with the other—gentle, not even remotely meant to hurt, a small broken giggle ringing hypnotically out in the quiet air of the tent. "You absolute jackass. Making me cry." But the small hit lingered there a moment longer than necessary, her fingers flexing like she wasn't quite ready to let go.

When she finally leaned back enough to see him, she didn't step away. Instead she ran her eyes over him, slow and thorough, intimately— as if she were learning every detail she could in the moment — checking every line of him the way a warrior checks the edges of her blade—shoulders, ribs, hands, the scrapes on his forearm, the set of his jaw. Her touch followed her gaze, brushing one spot, then another, fussing without meaning to. "You're… okay?" she asked quietly, as if she needed the confirmation spoken aloud. "You look like you're in one piece, but you also look like you fought a small war."

Her voice was steady, but the warmth in it wasn't. That part slipped through her defenses entirely. The part that was his. The part she didn't know how to cage anymore.

And when her eyes lifted to meet his again, everything soft and bright inside her spilled through the cracks she only ever opened for him. "Aiden," she breathed, a little overwhelmed, a little undone, "you have no idea how happy I am to be here, to see you."

And she didn't hide it. Not from him. Not anymore.



 




Aiden didn't flinch when she thumped his chest, he barely even felt it. What he did feel was the tremor in her fingers, the way her breath hitched against him before the apology tumbled out, the way her body softened against his like she'd been holding herself upright for too long.


"Don't apologize," he murmured immediately, voice low, steady, threading through her like warm pressure against a bruise. "Stars, Arhiia… don't ever apologize for this."

His hand came up to her jaw, thumb brushing the faint trail her tears had left, not wiping them away so much as acknowledging them, honoring them. Her giggle, fragile and half-broken against his chest, made something in him loosen, some quiet ache he'd been carrying since the moment she stepped off that transport.

He laughed when he called her a jackass, it a series of chuckles he didn't know he had in him at that moment. "It's your fault." He said in a teasing tone. "Blame yourself..."

And when she looked up at him really looked, eyes sweeping him like she was mapping a wound he couldn't see he held still for her. Let her check him. Let her touch the bruises, the scrapes, the places he'd learned to hide pain in. The warmth of her fingertips sank into him more deeply than any bacta ever had.

He swallowed hard as she fussed over his forearm, her touch soft but sure.

"I'm okay," he said gently, leaning just slightly into her hand. "Tired. Sore. Probably look rougher than I feel. But I'm here. I'm in one piece." A faint smile pulled at his lips. "And I've definitely fought small wars with worse outcomes."

But as her eyes lifted to his again clear, earnest, unguarded, the teasing died on his tongue. Her voice, breathy and overwhelmed, hit him like a blow he didn't defend against.

'Aiden… you have no idea how happy I am to be here, to see you.'

For a moment, he forgot to breathe. The rawness of her tone, the truth threaded through it, the fierce softness in her expression all of it struck somewhere deep, somewhere he didn't let many people touch. His hand slid from her jaw to the side of her neck, thumb brushing the edge of her braid. Not pulling her closer. Not claiming. Just holding her in a way that made his pulse stumble.

"Arhiia," he whispered, her name slipping out like a confession, "I'm happier than I can tell you, that you're here."

He stepped in just a fraction, closing the last bit of space she hadn't already taken.

"I was waiting for you," he admitted, voice warm, quiet, a little rough around the edges. "Longer than I probably should have. I kept looking for you, every shadow, every voice, every footstep. And when felt your presence fully, and I saw you." His fingers tightened slightly, not enough to restrain, just enough to let her feel the truth in him. "…I swear I stopped breathing."

He let out a soft exhale, almost a laugh, but too full of feeling to be light.

"And if holding you is the first thing you do when you get here?" He brushed his forehead to hers, gentle, letting her feel the words instead of just hear them. "Then the gods help me, Arhiia… I'm never going to complain."

He didn't kiss her. He didn't rush the moment.

He just stayed close, breathing her in, steadying her, letting her steady him, hands warm against her spine and neck, grounding them both in the space where relief and longing finally met.

"Come on, we have work to do. Then tonight we can stay out and sleep under the stars. What do you think?"


 




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Tags: Aiden Porte Aiden Porte

For just a moment—
for the span of a breath,
for the distance of their foreheads touching—


the galaxy was quiet.


Aiden's hand at her neck wasn't demanding, wasn't coaxing. It simply held her as if he knew she could leave at any second and he wouldn't stop her. And somehow that made her lean closer, slow, deliberate, like gravity wasn't a law but something he commanded.

Her fingers threaded with his almost without her permission, the contact sending a warm, dizzying flutter through her chest. It was ridiculous, truly, how her heart reacted—sharp, tumbling, alive in a way she hadn't let it be in years.


She let her eyes close.

Just long enough to memorize how this felt: his breath across her lips, the faint brush of his forehead against hers, the steady whisper of the Force curling around them both like recognition.


No name for it yet.
No labels.
But she knew.
Stars help her, she knew.


Slow-burning didn't even begin to describe it. Aiden Porte was a fuse that had been lit weeks ago, and she'd spent every day pretending she didn't feel the spark chasing her spine. And now—now with his hand in hers and his voice soft enough to unravel her—there was no pretending left.

"Don't look at me like that," she murmured, barely more than breath, her voice warm and unsteady in a way she only ever was with him. "I'll forget how to stand."


His thumb brushed her pulse.
Her pulse stuttered.
For a heartbeat, she leaned—just a fraction, just enough—


Something unspoken hovered between them,


fragile,
precise,
dangerously close to being real.


Her other hand slid gently up his chest, feeling the heat beneath his tunic, the slow rise and fall of his breathing. She'd touched him before—bacta patches, cracked ribs, bruises—but never like this.


Never with her heart in her fingertips.



He saw her.
Not the medic.
Not the survivor.
Not the shield she carried.


Her.


She felt the warmth of it right in her center, blooming there, dangerous and bright. Her breath caught, a small, helpless sound. She might've kissed him then—not fully, not all the way, but enough to test the heat of the moment—if the world hadn't chosen that exact second to remind them who they were.


The ground jumped under their feet.

A bright, white-orange flash lit the canvas wall behind them. Then a deafening CRACK rolled across the camp like the sky splitting open.

Arhiia's eyes snapped open, instinct slamming back into place. A second impact shook dust from the tent poles. Her fingers tightened on his—for just a heartbeat—one last anchor before she released him.


Not pulled away.
Not jolted.
Just… letting go with a reluctant softness that said she didn't want to.


She stepped out of his arms, breath unsteady but mind cutting crystal-clear as she swept outside into the cold evening air.

Smoke rose in a dark column from the direction of the city—the one they'd just cleared, the one full of families trying to escape. Her chest tightened—not with fear, but with purpose sharpening like a blade.

"They're hitting the evacuation corridor," she said under her breath, voice steady but threaded with the fading warmth of the moment they'd just lost. "We don't have long."



 




He wanted to memorize the sight of her like this: strong, capable, always composed, now letting herself simply be. Her head tilted slightly, lashes brushing her cheeks, and he found himself caught between the impulse to look and the reverence not to disturb the moment. The Force hummed softly around them, curling close like it, too, recognized what they were becoming.

When she whispered 'Don't look at me like that. I'll forget how to stand' a small smile touched the corner of his mouth. His thumb brushed the hollow of her throat, felt the stutter of her pulse there, and he nearly told her he was having the same problem. But Maker, she was beautiful in the half-light the morning gold threading through the canvas above them, the soft rise and fall of her chest, the hint of color blooming along her neck.

Then the explosion hit, and he quickly followed her out of the tent.

'They're hitting the evacuation corridor. We don't have long.'

"It's more than enough time."

Aiden drew in one steadying breath, letting the smoke-laced air fill his lungs before pushing it out again. The chaos at the edge of the camp was rising shouts, alarms, the frantic shuffle of volunteers rushing to secure supply lines, but the moment the Jedi converged around him, the noise dulled beneath a singular, familiar focus.

They came quickly.

Boots thudding over soft forest ground. Brown and grey cloaks catching the rising wind. Faces set in disciplined resolve. Some young, some seasoned, all sensing the same thing he did. The next few minutes would define everything. Aiden stepped forward as they formed a loose circle around him, six, then nine, then nearly a dozen Jedi of varying ranks and Orders, most stationed here for humanitarian support, none expecting a sudden assault.

But every one of them stood ready.

"Listen closely," he said, voice low but cutting through the clamor like a blade. "The strike hit the evacuation corridor. That means they're targeting movement and bottlenecks first."

A murmur rippled through the circle. Someone swore softly. Aiden continued.

"Our priority is twofold: protect the civilians still fleeing and keep this camp from becoming the next target.You three stay here. Set a perimeter. Shield the medbay and coordinate with the volunteers. There will be wounded incoming, and they'll need you more than I will."

The three jedi, quick, sharp, and broke off to begin reinforcing the camp.

Aiden turned to the rest, eight in number, each strong, each steady, each watching him with a trust that was heavy and earned. His voice dropped into something firmer, deeper.

"The rest of you are with me." A brief hush passed through them. "The attackers hit fast. That means they'll strike again before the corridor can be cleared. We're going to intercept, draw fire away from the civilians, and push them back toward the ruins. We move as one unit, tight formation, once we found the source we break off and eliminate this thread."

He paused, turning slightly as another distant crack echoed across the trees. Smoke rippled upward, framed by orange light flickering just beyond the ridge. "Let's go!" Aiden said easily enough as he looked over to Arhiia, showing her a small stoic look, then giving a small nod before he took off towards the city.

Unaware if she was going or staying behind. They had their brief moment and that was more than anything. But now, it was time to work. There would be time afterwards for them, after the fight was done with.


 



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Tags: Aiden Porte Aiden Porte

Aiden's last command cracked like a whip through the air, and the Jedi scattered into their assignments. The smoke thickened, rolling low across the forest floor, and the sky above them shimmered with a strange, unnatural brightness — the aftermath of the strike beginning its ugly rain.

Arhiia was already moving.

Her braid snapped behind her as she dropped beside the first wounded civilian being carried toward the medbay. Her hands, steady even as the ground trembled, pressed against a jagged burn along the man's side. Blood warmed her palms instantly. She didn't flinch.

"Pressure hereexactly here," she snapped toward a Padawan hovering too close. She didn't look up, but the Padawan obeyed instantly, hands locking into the precise spot she indicated. "Good. Maintain it. Don't let go until someone replaces you."

Another volunteer rushed up with a half-toppled crate. Arhiia didn't need to see the label.

"Two meters back, third cabinet, top shelf. Blue seal, not white."

The volunteer blinked, startled. She didn't wait for them to question it.

"And hurry."

More wounded arrived. Arhiia was suddenly at three places at once—kneeling by one patient, barking orders to stabilize another, turning sharply to intercept a Padawan moving toward the wrong kit.

"No — that one clots too fast. Use the silver canister. Compress here. And keep talking to him. If he stops answering you, shout."

Then the wind changed.

Ash began to drift — first like snow, then thicker, darker, like the air itself was burning.

A shrill whine cut overhead. Shrapnel — real shrapnel, still glowing — began to fall through the trees in long arcs of fire.

Someone screamed.
Someone else yelled to take cover.


Arhiia didn't move.


Her eyes tracked the falling debris, her breath steady, her blood-slicked hands slowly uncurling from a patient's wound as she rose. Her braid swayed behind her like a living thing, and the Padawans around her paused — sensing something shift.

She could feel every heartbeat in the courtyard.

Every held breath.

Every child pressed against a medic's leg, waiting to see who would run first.


She stepped forward.
One boot on ash.


One hand lifting, fingers spread, palm angled toward the sky where fire was beginning its deadly descent.

The Force gathered so fast the air itself stilled — a silent, crushing pressure that made the dust rise from the ground in faint spirals around her ankles.


Then—

She pulled.
Not inward.
Not toward herself.


Upward.


The repulse detonated in a single, ringing shockwave — not loud, but impossibly clean. A dome of force rolled outward from her like a breath held too long and finally released. The falling fire shattered against it, fragments bouncing harmlessly away, flung toward the empty east ridge.


Padawans stared open-mouthed.
A medic whispered, "Maker…"
A child clutched her tunic, eyes wide.


Arhiia didn't bask.


"Fire suppression team!" she snapped, voice sharp as a vibroblade. "Track the debris—three hundred meters east. Supply tents first. Move!"

They moved.

A volunteer tried to thank her. She was already kneeling beside another wounded civilian, blood streaking her knuckles, breath steadying.

As she stood kneeling by the civilian — the words rang through her mind — strong and resolute as if her fathers imposing figure was standing right above her, smiling down upon her.

Frail things — are only frail until they decide they aren't my love… I believe in you, always.




 




The city burned like a wound against the horizon.

Flames licked at shattered durasteel and crumbled rooftops, painting the clouds in molten hues of orange and smoke-grey. The air was thick, too thick, with ash and ozone, the heat of blaster fire still pulsing from alleys where the fighting had only just been pushed back. Aiden Porte moved through it like a current through chaos, every motion precise, every command calm despite the storm.

“Get those families through the south corridor!” he shouted over the commotion, gesturing to a cluster of volunteers and frightened civilians. “Follow the Republic troopers, don’t stop for anything!”

He was already moving before the words finished leaving his mouth, cloak snapping behind him as he rounded the corner. The rest of his unit fanned out with practiced coordination, four Jedi Knights, two Padawans, each taking a sector to sweep for survivors. Through the Force, their presence shimmered: bright, focused, threads of purpose woven into the tapestry of the moment.

Every step he took was a heartbeat measured against the Force itself. Every exhale, a silent prayer that he wouldn’t find more bodies among the rubble.

The city’s main square was nearly cleared now. Smoke curled through the ruined archways of what once had been a market, banners torn and blackened. The distant thrum of evac transports cut through the noise, the sound of safety, of people escaping what could have been their graves.

They’d almost done it.

Aiden motioned two Knights forward. “Secure the northern perimeter. Ensure no one’s left behind. Once it’s clear, fall back to the refugee camp……”

He stopped.

A shiver crawled up his spine, quiet and deliberate. Not fear, not even a surprise. It was recognition, sharp and cold, seeping through the very marrow of the Force. The others around him felt it too, he could sense their subtle shifts, their hands moving instinctively toward hilts, the sudden tension coiling through the air.

The wind changed.

From the far edge of the square, the smoke seemed to bend inward, drawn by something unnatural. Shadows pooled unnaturally in the hollow of a ruined building, the world itself dimming as if the suns were briefly veiled. Then, out of the gloom, two shapes descended.

They didn’t fall. Their force aura gliding them effortlessly to the ground.

Dark robes drifting, faces obscured beneath the hooded weight of the Dark Side. The ground itself seemed to retreat beneath their presence.

The nearest Jedi to Aiden whispered, “Inquisitors…”

Aiden’s jaw set. His saber hissed to life in reply, its blue glow cutting a clean line through the smoke. Around him, his companions followed suit, emerald, amber, and violet flares bursting to life, illuminating the cracked cobblestones beneath their boots.

The two dark figures landed with almost graceful silence.

When they spoke, the air felt colder.

“So this is the famed Knight Porte,” the first drawled, his voice slick with venom and amusement. “Protector of the weak. Guardian of the broken. Hero of Naboo, was it?”

Aiden didn’t answer. His gaze remained fixed, unflinching.

The second presence, taller, leaner, his armor laced with crimson accents, stepped forward. The Force around him felt wrong. Twisted. Familiar with its corruption. “Jedi,” he said. “You think you can hide her from us. The girl.”

At the mention of her, Aiden’s expression didn’t shift, but his pulse did. The faintest ripple in the Force betrayed the truth he could not mask.

“She’s under my protection, you will not find her,” he said simply. “You’ll find no quarry here.”

The Inquisitor’s grin was small and cruel. “Then you know what comes next.”

Behind him, the other ignited a red blade, the glow reflecting in the smoke like fire catching breath. “Tell us where she is, Aiden Porte. Reveal her location, and your death can be… swift. Perhaps even merciful.”

Aiden’s lightsaber rose to guard. Around him, the other Jedi tightened formation, their stances aligning like a living wall of light. The Force surged between them, an unspoken unity that bound them together more strongly than any command could.

“You’ll find no mercy here,” Aiden said quietly, eyes narrowing. “Not for those who burn cities and hunt children.”

The taller Inquisitor tilted his head. “Then you’ve chosen the hard way.”

The air trembled, pressure building, darkness pressing down like a living weight. The Force screamed its warning, but Aiden didn’t move. His focus sharpened, the noise of blaster fire and chaos fading until there was only the heartbeat of the moment.

“Form up,” he said to his Jedi, his tone calm, even. “Hold your ground. No one breaks formation. Protect the civilians still en-route to safety.”

He stepped forward once, blade raised, the blue light washing across his features. The chill up his spine faded, replaced by that familiar, still resolve that only came before battle.

“If you want her,” he said, voice low and final, “you’ll have to go through me.”

The Inquisitors smiled.

“So be it.”

And then the square erupted, light against shadow, fury against calm, as Aiden Porte met the darkness head-on.


 



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Tags: Aiden Porte Aiden Porte

The camp was chaos incarnate. Smoke curled through torn canvas, mingling with the acrid tang of burnt ozone and blood. Civilians cried out, some too weak to move, others frantically clutching children. Padawans stumbled through the tents, unsure where to go, their eyes wide and panicked.

Arhiia Voronwe moved like a blade through it, her presence cutting the disorder into focus. Amber eyes flitted from one wounded person to another, memorizing injuries, calculating triage priorities, directing hands—human or Force-guided—with surgical precision.

"Stabilize him there!" she barked, slapping a compress over a leg wound. "Padawan! Rotate the bandage, keep steady pressure!"

Her voice threaded through the panic like a lifeline. She knelt beside a woman whose head gaped with a terrible wound, whispering encouragement while applying her father's taught techniques. Every movement was fluid, assured, a bridge between chaos and order.

Then it came—the chill, subtle, but unmistakable. A shadow moving through the Force like a blade tracing its path toward her.

From the smoke, a slender figure emerged, almost imperceptible, robes dark as midnight. Crimson light reflected off his blade as he stepped into view. Calm, precise, exuding malice. He didn't run; he glided.

A young Padawan, reckless with courage, raised a saber to block him. The Inquisitor's eyes flicked toward him with irritation. A flick of his wrist sent the boy flying across the camp like a rag doll. He skidded into a tent frame, groaning, dazed.

Arhiia's pulse accelerated. She ducked behind a medkit cart, hands bloodied from triage, heart hammering—but her mind cold, sharp. She reached behind her back and drew her father's massive twin-bladed saber. The amber blade hissed to life, illuminating the dust and blood around her. She knew she was outmatched physically, but her stance was unyielding. She would not allow him to hurt anyone on her watch.

"Step aside, girl," he said, voice low, cruel, taunting. "Where is he? Where is Aiden Porte?"

Her amber eyes flared. "I don't know who you’re talking about — And I don't care. You're not touching anyone else."

He moved like a shadow incarnate, strikes coming fast, brutal, leaving no room for defense. She deflected as best she could, each parry fueled by sheer will and the lessons her father drilled into her from youth. Force pushes, frantic rolls, hurling debris—she was chaos made precise, a hurricane trying to hold itself together.

But he was relentless. Too strong, too fast. One strike broke through her guard, snapping the saber in half. Amber light blinked out, leaving only the hilt trembling in her hands.

He smirked, frustration flashing across his features. "Pathetic."

Before she could recover, he grabbed her braid, yanking her upright, fists hammering into her side and stomach. Every hit reverberated through her, bones aching, ribs protesting, the taste of blood bitter in her mouth. Her vision blurred, pain slicing through every nerve.

"Where is he?!?” he hissed, holding her aloft. "Where is your precious hero? The Guardian of Peace?"

Arhiia's head snapped up, meeting his eyes. Blood trickled down her temple, stinging, but her jaw tightened. Every lesson, every word from her father, every ounce of discipline she'd honed, screamed at her not to break.

"I… I… will never…" she gasped between blows, spitting on him , her voice ragged but defiant. " tell you anything — or …let you hurt… anyone… while I breathe!"

He laughed, cold and empty, savoring her struggle. Then, with terrifying deliberation, he drove his crimson blade into her abdomen. Pain erupted, white-hot, tearing through her body in a wave of agony so profound she screamed—a raw, ragged sound that carried over the chaos.

"Ahhh!!!"

Her vision tunneled, the world narrowing to pain and fire. The medbay, the refugees, the smoke, the screaming—it all became a haze. Blood ran warm down her arms, her stomach, every muscle quivering, yet her spine remained as straight as she could make it.

She clung to consciousness with the iron will instilled in her since childhood. Every nerve screamed surrender, but she would not. Not to him. Not while anyone else could still live because of her. Her fingers dug into the dirt beneath her, nails scraping, grounding herself, summoning every shred of resilience.

The Inquisitor tilted her head back by her braid, eyes narrowing as he studied her. "Ah. Just another useless plaything," he whispered. "Not even a moment of true resistance. And yet…"

Pain flared again, but her lips curved into a defiant snarl through blood and grit. She wasn't just a girl in the dirt—she was the daughter of Master Iston, an embodiment of will forged in discipline and fire. She had survived worse, and though this moment was abyssal, she refused to disappear quietly.

Her half opened, pain filled eyes met with his — her defiant smirk still there, and the words that would escape her mouth next — were nothing short of stupid, but she knew — she could egg him on…. She just had to keep biding time.

“You hit like a girl….”


 




The battle had devolved into chaos, light and shadow crashing against one another in the ruins of the city square. Aiden’s breath came steady despite the heat of combat, his focus razor-sharp. The Inquisitor before him was fast, agile, his crimson blade cutting through the haze like a serpent’s tongue. But Aiden met him blow for blow, blue light sparking with every impact.

He shifted his stance, feeling the weight of each movement through his arms and shoulders. Every strike he delivered was clean, efficient, guided by calm precision rather than fury. The Force flowed through him, anchoring his movements, sharpening his instincts. When the Inquisitor lunged, Aiden caught the blow with a deft parry, spun low, and countered, his saber grazing the enemy’s armor in a burst of molten sparks.

The dark sider hissed, retreating a step, cloak billowing as he prepared for another strike. Aiden advanced, every motion a disciplined echo of his training, one purpose, one focus: protect the innocent, end this fight.

Then it hit him.

A tremor.

A raw, violent pulse through the Force that staggered his balance.

In mid motion, he could feel it, as his saber locked with his opponent’s, as pain, not his own, flared through his chest and abdomen like a knife twisting in the gut. It was sharp, searing, agonizing. A voice, distant but unmistakable, reached him through the current of the Force.

Arhiia.


His heart clenched. He could feel her pain, fear, defiance, but beneath it all, a fading strength. The Inquisitor before him sneered, thinking of Aiden's hesitation weakness, pressing his advantage with renewed aggression. But the Jedi’s focus had already shifted, his mind reaching beyond the battlefield.

Another Jedi shouted from behind him, sensing the same anguish ripple through the Force. “Go! Aiden, go! We’ll hold them!”

Aiden’s gaze flicked toward them just once, gratitude and urgency flashing across his face. Then he broke contact. A sharp twist of his wrist sent his opponent stumbling backward, and before the Inquisitor could recover, Aiden surged backward, propelling himself through the air with a burst of the Force.

The city blurred around him, fire, smoke, falling debris, none of it mattered. He could still feel her pain like a thread pulling him through the chaos. His boots hit cracked pavement; he vaulted through a half-collapsed archway, then into the open. Every sense screamed toward her. Every heartbeat was one too late.

And then, he saw her.

She was on the ground, half-conscious, blood staining her tunic, her hand pressed weakly against her abdomen. Standing over her was another Inquisitor, saber raised high, the crimson light casting a hellish glow over the scene.

Time stopped. The Force gathered around Aiden like a storm.

Blue light burst from his saber as he leapt, the Force hurling him forward with blinding speed. The air cracked with power as he soared over the debris, cloak whipping around him. In the split second before the red blade could descend upon her, Aiden’s saber collided with it in an explosion of color and sound, blue meeting red in a shower of sparks. The impact sent a shockwave through the ground.

Aiden landed between them, his boots skidding across scorched stone, stance low, blade locked against the Inquisitor’s. The snarl of their sabers hissed in the air, the two forces straining against one another. The Inquisitor’s eyes widened, first in surprise, then in fury. Aiden pushed forward, forcing him back step by step, the weight of his intent radiating through every inch of the clash. Aiden’s jaw was set, his expression grim, voice low and dangerous.

“Touch her again, any of them again....” he said, his tone steady as steel, “And I’ll show you exactly what the price of causing, bringing such reckless hate is, what its reward is from me.” The Force surged at his call, wrapping around him in a calm, luminous fury as the storm reignited, blue blade illuminating the area around him.

The inquisitor back away slowly, as he glanced around and smirked, he could sense the tides were turning against him.

“We will find her, Aiden Porte.” He hissed at him before disappearing into the night.

Aiden let out a small breath, before he clipped his saber to his belt and quickly moved back to Arhiia, kneeling at her side. “What were you thinking?!” Aiden demanded, before his tone softened up, he took her in his arms and lifted her up. ”Don’t worry, I’m gonna look after you.”


 



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Tags: Aiden Porte Aiden Porte


Aiden slid his arms beneath her, lifting her carefully, but even careful was too much.

The scream ripped out of Arhiia's throat before she even had breath to give it.

Her body convulsed, spine bowstring-tight, legs kicking once in pure reflex before curling toward the source of the agony splitting her open.

Her hand flew from his tunic to her abdomen and slammed down over the wound—hard—as if pressure alone might hold her insides together. Blood leaked hot between her fingers, thin rivulets trailing down her wrist.

"Ai—Aiden—!" Her voice cracked into shards. "Ashla—! Slow—slow—please—!"

Her face twisted, jaw clenched so tightly a tremor shook through it. Tears streamed down her temples, streaking through soot, falling into his collar.

But even in the haze of pain, her eyes were searching.

She dragged her head up, breath hitching violently, scanning the broken triage camp around them. A collapsed tent. The scream of a frightened child. A medic dragging someone by the arms.

Arhiia sagged back against Aiden's chest, her breath catching in short, broken bursts. Each inhale pitched her body forward; each exhale came out as a strangled groan she tried—failed—to bite back.

Her free hand curled into Aiden's tunic, gripping so hard her nails dug through the fabric.

"Stupid—" she rasped, voice wrecked. "Stupid—I should'veshould've stopped him—!"

Her breath hitched violently, another wave of agony tearing her from sternum to hip. She jerked in Aiden's arms, biting down on her lip so hard blood began to bead along the seam.

"Why—why was I—so damn weak—!"

As they would approach the tent, Medics would converge on them.

"Bring her in, now!" one barked.

"Clear that table—!"

"Get me a regen pack—!"

Arhiia didn't release him. Her fingers locked around his wrist like a manacle, refusing to let go even as the medics tried to take her weight.


"Don't—don't take him—" she gasped. "Don't—you—don't—touch—!"

She curled toward him instinctively, shielding her wound with her body, as if any distance at all would tear her apart again.

Two medics knelt at her side as Aiden held her upright. One sliced the hem of her shirt beneath the ribs, exposing pale skin just below her breast — smeared with dust, soot, and blood. The wound sat low on the left side of her torso—just below the stomach, above the hip—its edges blackened, flesh cauterized but still weeping from where the blade had twisted internally.

A medic hissed sharply.

"Through-and-through burn track, lower left quadrant."

"Depth?"

"Three centimeters at least—possibly more. There's deflection burn on the posterior—saber exited at an angle."

He waved another healer over.

"She's got abdominal wall trauma—partial muscle sever. Possible damage to the descending colon—bleeding behind the cauterization line. She's going into shock."

Arhiia groaned—a long, miserable sound—her head falling to Aiden's shoulder.

A healer touched the wound lightly.

Arhiia's entire body jerked, breath tearing in her throat.

"Stop—stop—don't—!" she cried, voice raw. Her hand shot out, grabbing Aiden's harder. "Aiden—don't let them take me—!"

Her breathing turned ragged, uneven, the air whistling through clenched teeth.

Another medic leaned in. "Her abdominal cavity's filling—she needs stabilization before she bleeds internally any worse. She has minutes."

"Try to heal through it," the second said to Arhiia, keeping his voice firm but gentle. "Apply force-assisted coagulation—"

She tried.

Her hand hovered over the wound, shaking violently. The energy flickered—dim, unstable—before collapsing.

Arhiia coughed, her breath hitching, tears spilling again.

"Won't—won't hold—" she choked out. "Maker—it—hurts—Ah—sharp— pain—!"

The medics exchanged a look.

Urgent. Alarmed.

"Get her sedative ready—"

"No!" she screamed—shoving the medic's hand away. "No—no sedatives—Aiden—Aiden don't let them—!"

Her grip on him tightened to the point of shaking, as if he were the only thing keeping her tethered to the world.

Her breath broke for a final time—not in pain, this time—but in grief.

"I'm—sorry," she whispered, barely audible. "I'm so—damn sorry…"

Her fingers curled around his, refusing to let go even as her body trembled and the medics pressed in around them, fighting to keep her conscious - until one without her looking injected her with the sedative and she lost consciousness.

“We have to take her — NOW.”





 


The smell of scorched flesh mixed with the metallic tang of blood. The cauterized edges were blistered and angry, still seeping beneath the surface. He had seen saber wounds before, had inflicted them when he had to. They had happened to him many times. But seeing one on her was something else entirely. It hollowed him.

He could feel her pain in the Force, sharp, burning, flickering like a dying star. He wanted to close it off, to shield her from it, but he couldn't risk losing his focus. Every whisper of her agony drew him closer to breaking. Her hand found his again when they touched the wound. The grip was desperate, shaking, nails biting into his skin.

'Aiden—don't let them take me—!'

He caught her hand between both of his, lowering his forehead briefly to hers. His voice was a rough whisper.
"I'm right here. I'm not going anywhere. You hear me?" The medics were talking fast now, depth of the wound, internal bleeding, muscle separation. He heard it all like echoes underwater.


"Don't," he whispered fiercely, tightening his hold around her fingers. "Don't you dare say sorry. You did everything right. You're alive, Arhiia. You hear me? You stay with me."

But her breath hitched again, shorter, shallower. Her eyes rolled faintly, pupils unfocused. The medics moved faster, one shouting for a stabilizer, another for the regen pack, and then a sharp hiss cut through the noise as the syringe went in.

And then she went limp against his chest. For a moment, Aiden froze as his mind didn't register the sedative, only the sudden stillness. The way her weight changed, the way the world seemed to collapse into silence around her.

'We have to take her — NOW.'

The world around him had narrowed to the rhythm of her breathing. Each rise and fall of her chest became the only measure of time that mattered.

Aiden sat beside her cot in the dim light of the medbay, every muscle in his body locked somewhere between vigilance and exhaustion. The soft hum of medical equipment and the distant patter of rain against the canvas walls filled the silence, but all he truly heard was her. He didn't remember what he'd said to the medics when they took over, only that his voice had stayed steady when it needed to, that he'd refused to let go of her hand until they had promised she was stable. He remembered leaning close, his words barely a whisper as she drifted on the edge of consciousness.

"You're here, Arhiia. You're safe. Always." He'd said it because she needed to hear it, even if she wasn't concsious for it. Because he needed to believe it.

Now, hours later, she slept under the dull blue glow of the monitors. Her face was pale but no longer strained, her breathing deep and even. The wound had been sealed, the bleeding stopped. Every now and then, a quiet tremor of pain flickered across her features, and his thumb would instinctively brush along the back of her hand until the tension eased.

He didn't let go. Not once.

His other hand rested on the edge of the bed, fingers curled slightly as if anchoring himself to the moment. The faint hum of the medical scanners reflected in the glass of his half-open eyes, the pale light tracing the sharp planes of his face. The adrenaline that had sustained him through the battle and the rescue had long since burned away, leaving only exhaustion and the heavy ache of relief.

He hadn't meant to fall asleep.

His head drifted forward, settling against the side of the bed near her hip, the weight of the day pressing down on him like armor he could no longer carry. Her hand remained in his even as sleep claimed him, his grip gentle, protective, the way a soldier guards something precious when the fighting is finally done. Outside, the storm had eased. The world beyond the medbay lay quiet, still, waiting for dawn.

But inside, there was only the soft, steady rhythm of her heartbeat, and the faint, unspoken vow that echoed beneath his breath even in sleep:

You're safe now. I'm here. I'm not leaving you again.




 




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Tags: Aiden Porte Aiden Porte


The world came back to her in pieces.

At first it was only sound—soft, rhythmic beeps, the faint thrum of rain against canvas, the low hum of machinery. Then it was pressure: a heavy, warm weight against her left hip, another around her hand, large fingers curled loosely around hers, anchoring her.

Then came the pain.

A slow, molten throb that radiated from her abdomen in sharp waves, hot and punishing, biting deep into muscle and bone. Her breath caught, a small, broken whimper slipping out despite every ounce of discipline she tried to muster.

Her eyelashes fluttered.

The world swam—blue-tinted monitors, medbay canvas, dim lantern light—and then it steadied just enough for her to see him.

Aiden. Slumped forward, his head resting on the edge of her cot, one arm folded beneath him, the other hand wrapped around hers like he'd welded their fingers together. His shoulders were bowed, exhaustion written into every line of him, but even in sleep, his hand didn't loosen.

Something inside her cracked.

Her throat tightened. Her lips trembled before she even realized she was smiling—one of those too-big, too-bright smiles that pulled painfully at her cheeks and made her eyes sting.

Then the tears came.

Quiet at first, then heavier, running warm down her temples and into her hair. She covered her mouth with her free hand to keep any sound from escaping. The movement tugged at the dressings across her abdomen and she hissed sharply, her body curling instinctively—only to stop, breath shattering as pain lanced through her.

The medics… the fight… the smell of her own scorched flesh…

Her father's saber—broken. Split in half like it was nothing.

She could still hear his voice in her memory:

Hold your ground, my flower. Even when your hands shake. Even when your knees fail. Hold.

Her chest tightened until she thought the pain might choke her.

She reached blindly toward Aiden—her fingers trembling, weak, shaking from the effort—and brushed them through his dark hair, pushing a stray strand off his forehead. She didn't realize she was crying harder now until her lips parted, voice barely more than a rasp.

"…hey… jackass…"

Aiden stirred faintly but didn't wake, his hand still locked around hers.

She swallowed, her voice uneven, raw.

"You only beat that Sith because I softened him up…" A breathy, pained laugh escaped her. "He punches like a girl, by the way…"

The humor cracked again, splitting open something deeper—anger, shame, grief.

Her chest hitched, and she pressed the heel of her palm against her eyes.

"I'm sorry…" The words scraped, fragile and choking. "I'm so… so sorry… I wasn't strong enough. I—" Another tremor of pain forced her breath to stutter. "How many people didn't get saved because I—because I got hurt? Because I slipped? Because I wasn't enough?"

She couldn't stop the tears now. Couldn't stop the shaking.

Her gaze drifted downward to her abdomen, to the thick white bandages taped firmly to her skin. She touched the edge of them with trembling fingers, expression crumpling when she felt the swollen heat beneath.

She choked on a ragged breath.

"And now… now I have to leave. I have to go back to the Order, the tanks—the healing—" Her voice wavered. "I ruined everything. I ruined tonight. Our night under the stars—"

Her eyes returned to Aiden.
To the way he held her hand.
To the way he had stayed.
To the way he had refused to let go.

A broken laugh, soft and wet, slipped out of her.


"I wanted…" She took a shaky breath. "I wanted to share a kiss under the stars…"

She brushed her thumb against his knuckles, her touch barely there.

"Almost died, I mean what I sight I must be — real attractive right?," she whispered hoarsely. "But I guess that makes me brave enough to say it now."

Her voice softened, just for him.

"I wanted that. With you — I want you Aiden… only you."

She let her head fall back against the pillow, tears slipping freely now, her pain and her truth tangled together in her small, trembling grip around his hand.

And she held on.
She didn't let go.





 



Aiden woke before he opened his eyes.

Some instinct that was older than training, deeper than discipline, pulled him from the thin veil of sleep. It was the change in her breathing that did it. The shallow rhythm, the sharp catch that always followed pain she didn't want anyone to notice. His fingers flexed automatically around hers.


When his eyes finally opened, the world came into focus in muted hues: rain filtering through canvas seams, the glow of monitors casting pale blue across her face, the faint reflection of firelight outside fading into dawn. He'd lost track of how long he'd been sitting there. Hours. Maybe longer. He hadn't dared move, afraid even the smallest shift might break the fragile peace of her rest.

And now she was awake. Tears glimmered on her cheeks; her hand trembled against his. The sound of her voice, soft, cracked, still laced with that stubborn edge of humor, hit him harder than any saber strike ever could.

'…hey… jackass…'

He almost laughed, almost. His throat worked instead, the sound catching halfway between a sigh and her name. He lifted his head slowly from the edge of the cot, exhaustion still dragging at his limbs, but when he looked at her, really looked it seemed everything else fell away.

Her eyes were glassy with pain and fever, her skin pale against the stark white of the bandages. Every part of her looked fragile, breakable. And yet, she was alive. The Force around her shimmered faintly, battered but unbroken.


"Hey," he murmured, voice rough with fatigue. "You're awake."

He shooks his head and laughed, shaking his head at her attitude, and her drive to keep going. She mentioned softening up the Inquisitor and he found another laugh when she mentioned how he hits.

"I couldn't have done it without you, when I felt you. I'm not going to lie, I got scared for the briefest of moments."

And then her laughter broke into something else.

The way her apology came, small, raw, trembling, tore right through him. He reached out with his free hand, brushing strands of hair away from her temple. His hand caressing her cheek gently, and lovingly.

"Stop," he said quietly. Not sharp, but final. "Don't do that. Don't apologize. Is that what you think, that you failed?" he continued, his tone barely above a whisper. "You saved half this city, Arhiia. You held your ground when others would have fallen. You were bleeding out and still protecting people."

He felt her hand tighten faintly around his fingers, the tremor running through her grip, the way she clung like she was afraid he might vanish if she blinked too long. He moved to sit on the bed next to her, he leaned closer until their foreheads almost touched, the edge of his voice low and fierce. "You were strong enough to live. Strong enough to fight."

The silence that followed was thick, the only sound the slow rhythm of her monitor and the soft drum of rain against canvas. He let himself breathe her in, the scent of bacta, blood, and the faint trace of her skin beneath it.

When she mentioned leaving , recovery, the Order, his stomach twisted. He'd known it was coming, but hearing it aloud felt like someone twisting a knife behind his ribs.


"I ruined everything. I ruined tonight. Our night under the stars—"
"I wanted to share a kiss under the stars…"
"Almost died, I mean what I sight I must be — real attractive right?,"
"I wanted that. With you — I want you Aiden… only you."


Those words froze him, time shift, it may have even stopped.

Her voice was so faint it could've been mistaken for a dream, but the Force carried the truth of it straight into him. The weight of it, the quiet certainty beneath the tremor, the way it filled every hollow space in his chest. He exhaled slowly, eyes closing for a heartbeat. When he opened them again, he didn't speak right away. He just looked at her, the bruises, the tears, the fierce will still burning behind the pain. His hand lifted, brushing his thumb over her cheek, catching one last tear before it fell.

"You always pick the worst moments for honesty," he said softly, the ghost of a smile touching his mouth. "Arhiia, you didn't ruin anything. You could never do that. You are the most beautiful person I've ever met in my life." He chuckled lightly at the though. "What I see when I look at you. It's not just beauty, your heart, soul, talent, and your light. You stood before a agent of darkness and told him to go to hell."

"I'm not going anywhere," he whispered. "Not now. Not when you need me. And if you think I'd let you slip away without getting that night under the stars…"

His hand tightened gently around hers.

"Then you don't know me as well as you think you do."

Aiden stayed there, head bowed, fingers interlaced with hers, listening to the steady rhythm of her heart through the monitor, until her breathing evened out again.


 



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Tags: Aiden Porte Aiden Porte
The moment his words settled, something in her chest gave out.

Not gently.
Not quietly.
Like a dam finally giving up its fight.

Her breath hitched—too sharp, too shallow—and her body jolted with it, a tremor running from her shoulder blades down into the cot. Her fingers tightened painfully around his, her knuckles whitening despite the weakness in her limbs. The tears she'd been holding back for his sake surged again, hot and fast, streaking down her temples into her hairline.

"Aiden—"

Her voice cracked, raw and unsteady, as if she'd been holding it underwater. Her chest rose and fell too quickly. Panic edged her breath, thin and reedy. The monitors spiked softly behind her.

She shook her head—barely, but enough that he felt the motion where their foreheads brushed.

She swallowed hard, her throat working around the words. "That man… " Another sharp inhale. "He held me up like I was nothing, like I was some toy he'd broken just to see what sound I'd make— he tried to use me find you… "

Her voice trembled into silence for a heartbeat, her body curling slightly before the pain stopped her cold. A strangled gasp tore free, and she bit down on her lip hard enough to taste blood.

But she didn't let go of him.

Her fingers clung like a lifeline, desperate, shaking, frantic.

"I should be dead," she whispered—too fast, too honest, like the edges of her thoughts were unraveling faster than she could hold them in. "I should be dead, Aiden. He—he stabbed me. I felt it. I felt his blade inside me. I felt myself slipping. And I thought—" Her voice fractured again, breath trembling. "I thought I'd never see you again. I thought he'd take that from me too."

A sob tore through her then, quiet but violent. She turned her face toward him, brushing her cheek against his hand, clinging to the warmth of him like it was the only thing tethering her to the present.

"I'm scared," she whispered, her voice shaking so badly she almost couldn't get the words out. "Ashla, I'm so scared, Aiden. I don't want to go under. I don't want the tank. I don't want—"

Her breath broke.

"I don't want that darkness again."

She forced her eyes open—bright, glassy blue swimming with fear and something wild, frantic—and met his gaze up close, their foreheads almost touching, her breath mingling with his.

"You said you won't go anywhere," she whispered. "Then don't. Don't leave me when they put me under. Promise me you'll be there when I wake up. Promise me you won't let them close that tank until you're touching me. Because if I wake up alone—" Her voice cracked.

Her hand slid weakly up his wrist, trembling violently, trying to pull him closer even though she had no strength left.

"And if I'm going under," she whispered, breath brushing his lips, "if I faced death, the fear of what if — than, I’d better do this before I loose my nerve again…"

Her nose brushed his, soft and unsteady.
Her voice dropped to a fragile, breathless murmur.

And then, despite every nerve in her body screaming, despite the pain twisting beneath her ribs, despite the medstaff hovering—

Arhiia leaned in.

Her lips—split, bruised, trembling—pressed to his as her hand came up and tangled into his hair.

Gentle at first, then firmer as emotion surged through the cracks of her shaking body. Her heart somersaulted wildly, monitors spiking in soft warning tones. Pain flared white-hot, stealing her breath, but she didn't pull away.

She kissed him like she'd been waiting an entire lifetime.

Like she wasn't sure she'd get another chance.


It was desperate.
It was fragile.
It was real.


A wet sound escaped her throat—half a whimper, half a sigh—and she broke the kiss only because her body demanded air.

Her forehead rested against his, breath trembling against his mouth.

"I wanted that," she whispered, eyes half-closed and shining. "More than you know."

Even in her pain, her eyes fixed in Aiden, and only him — her cheeks flushed bright red as the look that she have him was one of that a woman, desperately lost in what this was that had no name. As her hand came slowly down on the side of his cheek… and smiled softly.


“You promised me a night… I suggest you get busy with it Porte… because, you promised — and I need plenty of things to dream of when they put me out, but I think this was a good start.”


Her mind buzzing from what she’d just done. Normally, deep down, Arhiia was a composed and controlled individual… but with Aiden, something deep within her ached, and longed for him — made her so impulsive things she wouldn’t in a million years ever dream of doing to anyone.

 




For a heartbeat, Aiden forgot how to breathe.

Her words, trembling and raw, cut through him with the precision of a lightsaber, every syllable unraveling the armor he'd built around his heart. He could feel the fear radiating from her through the Force, the panic beneath her trembling voice, the desperate will clinging to him like a lifeline.

He wanted to tell her that she didn't need to be afraid. That the darkness couldn't take her while he still drew breath. But before he could speak, her lips found his.

The world fell silent.

The sound of the monitors, the rain, the quiet murmurs outside the medbay, everything faded until there was only the warmth of her mouth against his, the taste of salt and pain and something heartbreakingly human.

At first, he froze, not from hesitation, but from awe. Then the instinct to protect her, to hold her, overcame everything else. His hand rose to her face, fingertips tracing along the curve of her jaw, feeling the tremor there before settling against her cheek. His thumb brushed the corner of her mouth, smearing away the faint line of tears that lingered there.

He kissed her back, carefully, reverently, as if one wrong movement might break her all over again. His breath mingled with hers, slow and uneven, his heart hammering in a rhythm that felt far too alive for someone who'd spent years mastering calm. He deepened the kiss only enough for her to feel it, his warmth, his presence, the promise that she wasn't alone in this or in anything that came after.

When their foreheads remained pressed together, their breaths tangling between them. Aiden's eyes stayed closed for a long moment, memorizing the feeling of her in his arms, the trembling of her hand, the faint hitch of her breath, the life pulsing beneath her skin.

He opened his eyes slowly, gaze soft but steady.

"You don't have to fear the dark," he whispered. His voice was low, almost breaking with the weight of everything he wasn't saying. "I'll be there, Arhiia. When they put you under, when you wake, I'll be right here. You'll never wake alone. I will always be your light in the darkness."

His thumb brushed slow circles against her cheek as he leaned in again, letting his lips ghost over hers, not a full kiss this time, but a quiet reaffirmation, something tender and wordless.

He pulled back just enough to see her face, the faint color that had returned to her cheeks, the shimmer of tears that caught the light. His chest tightened at the sight, at the rawness of her, at how fiercely she still lived despite everything she'd endured.

"Force help me..." he murmured, a small, shaky smile tugging at the corner of his mouth, "You have no idea what you do to me."

He let his hand slip down from her face, resting over her heart, feeling its fragile but steady rhythm under his palm. "You wanted a night under the stars," he said softly. "When you wake, I'll take you there myself. And if it takes a lifetime, I'll make sure you never have to face the dark again."

Then, quietly, he leaned forward once more, pressing his lips to her brow in a long, lingering kiss, sealing his promise against her skin.

He stayed that way for a while, forehead resting against hers, his breath warm and steady, his presence a calm flame burning against the fear that still lingered in the air.


 



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Tags: Aiden Porte Aiden Porte

The kiss left Arhiia trembling.

Not softly — not delicately — but with a visceral shiver that rolled through her ribs and settled, aching, behind her sternum. Her heart slammed against the monitors in frantic rhythm, each beep sharper and faster than the last. It was embarrassing. It was overwhelming.

And it was real.

Aiden's forehead rested against hers, their breaths slipping between each other in uneven threads, and for a long moment she could only feel him. The warmth of his skin. The steadiness of his presence. The way his hand held hers like he'd been waiting years to do it.

Her lips parted on a choked, shaky inhale, and despite the agony burning through her torso, she managed a breathless, broken laugh.

"That's—" she winced, a flash of pain arching through her belly, "that's not fair… You see what you do to me, Aiden… and you still insist I'm the dangerous one?"

Her monitors spiked again, betraying her completely.

A healer stepped in, murmuring something about prep time and transfer sequence, but she barely heard them. Her attention stayed fixed on Aiden — on the way he looked at her now, like something fragile and fierce and wholly irreplaceable.

Her fingers tightened around his.
Not gracefully. Not heroically.
Just desperately.

When the healers edged closer to reposition her, she pulled in a thin breath, bracing against the pain, and reached up with the very last of her strength—catching his shirt with trembling fingertips and tugging him down toward her one more time.

Her kiss this time was soft, unsteady, warm with fear and longing and a thousand unsaid things she'd buried beneath armor her entire life. A kiss not meant to ignite anything — just to hold on.

When she sank back against the bed, her body sagged from the effort, curls clinging to her damp temples, breath trembling out in a slow collapse.

"It's a date," she whispered, the corners of her mouth lifting in a tired, crooked smile. "After I'm out of that blasted tank… by ashla, I'm looking forward to it."

Her eyelids drooped as pain and exhaustion dragged at her, but her hand stayed threaded with his, knuckles whitening every time the healers touched her wound.

They tried to encourage him to step back.
He didn't move.
And she didn't let him.
Her breath shook.
Her grip held.

Her world narrowed to the warmth of his palm against hers.

Even as consciousness began to slip sideways, even as pain blurred the edges of her vision—

Her hand stayed locked in his.




 

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