Star Wars Roleplay: Chaos

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Private Realignment

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//: Ariel Yvarro //:

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"You were right, Rowan; he did shoot."

Ariel's voice broke the thick silence the Connor agent had been waiting in. Rowan knew she would be right. She usually was when it came to Djorn, but she didn't want to be - not with this. Even with how angry she was about what had happened, the Atrisian couldn't blame him. Their romance wasn't the warmest; it was plagued with the past - one that she struggled to get past. So much had happened, and she wasn't ready to face it.

But she wanted him to be better than this, be a better man - the man that she knew he could be. Sighing heavily, Rowan placed a finger onto the device on her ear. "Affirmative." Her voice calloused, trying to hide the sadness. "Are you okay, Ariel?" Rowan tried to hide the concern in her voice but failed. Some part of the woman had grown attached and protective, but Ariel could fully protect herself. This incident was enough evidence.

She waited to breathe until she saw Ariel and the girls make their way towards the transport. No words needed to be said between them. Rowan knew, and that was enough.

The ride back was silent. Rowan didn't mind it much; she was used to silent transport rides. Even with Djorn, they were quiet enough for death. It was a blur, the transport, the arrival, and walking through the door. Rowan paused and looked towards the children. "Did they see it? What their father really is?" The same concern hung in her voice as her brown eyes danced between the girls and Ariel. She tried to discern the state of the three of them without inquiring too intimately.

"You all have had a long day," Rowan started as she moved towards the kitchen to prepare tea, "They need their mother to put them to sleep." A smile thinly spread across Rowan's lips, a rare occurrence as she set the kettle to boil. "I'll have tea ready, and we can talk if you want, Ariel."
 

Ariel Yvarro

Guest
Rowan's presence was more comforting to Ariel than she cared to admit. The moments that had passed from the shoot to the transport, her daughter huddled in their small coats as they walked away from the only home they had ever truly known. Ariel wanted to break, she wanted to cry but everything she had been taught, and all her instincts otherwise screamed for her not to. She wore an enigmatic expression from the house to the transport and held it for as long as she could.
The small tremble in her voice betrayed Ariel even as she cleared her throat. The further and farther away from Revyia they were the more Ariel felt her shoulders relax. She squeezed her eyes shut, and it was only when she opened them that she held her trembling hand. "Didn't even notice that I was shaking," remarked Ariel with a light tone, even if the twinge of pain settled in the back of her voice. Rowan had asked if she was okay, and normally - the half-Galidraani woman would have done what the women normally did with their feelings. Hide them away, push them as far as they would go, and pretend they didn't exist. Ariel turned and looked Rowan square in the eyes and answered honestly, "not in the slightest."
The tears that danced in her eyes threatened to fall, "kriff." She cursed turning away from Rowan, "sorry." An apology, Ariel wasn't used to expressing her feelings in front of people. Well, people who weren't close to her, Rowan was - Rowan, they had met in what started out as a simple correspondence and unraveled into discrete meetings for drinks and caf here and there. Silence filled the transport otherwise and Ariel was grateful for it, the silence allowed her to process - just some of what had transpired.
She had prepared her daughters the best she could, something she and Rowan held concern for. How the girls were going to handle seeing their father, and for Ivalyn... Djorn was her hero. Everything she did, she did it with him in mind, she didn't want to believe what her mother was trying to explain. Ivalyn's silence afterward was more than alarming for Ariel. Once they had arrived at the undisclosed location that would serve as a halfway point and safehouse for her and the girls.
Ariel answered Rowan, "yes."
A short answer, the reply itself said more than the answer.
"Thank you," arrived the soft and grateful reply from the tired Imperial. She ushered her daughters into the guest room, and helped them to unpack their tiny little bags. The house they had left behind was set to burn, no doubt Djorn would have gone through it looking for anything to use - all he would find was heartbreak and the hauntings of a life he could have had. He instead chose the cold iron of the Empire over the warmth of heart and home. Zola and Ivalyn settled into the bed, and Ariel arranged the stuffed animal toys into the bed with them.
She sat at the edge of the bed, and looked over at her oldest.
Ivalyn looked over to her mother, a mixture of emotions crossed on her face, but finally spoke, "I hate him."
"Ivy."
"I don't want Ivy."

"Okay," she obliged, "okay, we can talk about a new you in the morning." She didn't want to argue or go into the lengths of a discussion about what this all meant to her six-year-old when she herself was still processing everything.
Ivalyn nodded firmly, Ariel leaned over to kiss her daughter goodnight. Ivalyn's small arm wrapped around her neck and held her tight. Ariel shut her eyes and rested her forehead against Ivalyn's. "You are so brave and so tough, but even my brave little princess needs to sleep."
The little girl let go, and Ariel looked over at sweet Zola who was already gone into the land of dreams. A reassuring kiss to the forehead and a pull of the blanket to tuck Zola in. Ariel rose up from the bed and walked toward the door and left it ajar so light could pour into the room.

True to her word, the Atrisian had readied tea, "thank you again, Rowan. I'm not sure we could have gotten out of there otherwise."
 
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//: Ariel Yvarro //:

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The tears of a heartbroken woman. Rowan knew them quite well. They were easy to shrug off and ignore, but when she saw the emotion on Ariel - her heart broke. Her gaze shifted away from her, giving the mother a chance to grieve what she had just lost or realized she had lost. Rowan could feel her mind and heart fighting, one wanting to comfort, while the other screamed in protest.

Ariel would have a nod to her apology and nothing more. Today, Rowan's mind won the battle.

* * *​

She didn't move from the stove, the twitch of her brow the only indicator that the Atrisian wasn't stone. All of this could have been avoided, she thought. Something needed to be different at some point and time, but all the factors led to one man and one government. The same government she served and the same man she served under. Rowan pinched the bridge of her nose as the kettle whistled softly. Two cups, one with one extra bag of leaves, both made to perfection in a way only the neurotic woman could.

Looking up from her focus, Rowan watched as Ariel took care of the girls. There was a strength there, and Rowan saw it, wondering if she could have done what Ariel did. Seeing his children only reminded her of distant memories with foolish desires. Ariel's movements pulled Rowan from her thoughts. The teabags were discarded, and she handed the milder cup to the Galidraani woman. Rowan poured a bit of cream and an extra sugar cube into her cup; the only sweet thing about the Atrisian woman was her milk tea. She nodded, allowing a hint of a smile to pull at her lips.

"You would have been fine without me, but you're welcome," Rowan spoke gently as she brought the tea to her lips. Her eyes never met Ariel's as silence once more fell upon them. Rowan sipped quietly, not wanting to trigger the war between her compassion and her mind. She didn't know how much longer her mind would remain in control. Not hearing anymore rustling from the children's room, Rowan set the cup down onto the counter and exhaled deeply.

"This isn't the last you're going to hear from him. Djorn will chase and continue until he gets what he wants." The slight smile faded as she looked down at her cup, "But you know that," Finally, Rowan's eyes glanced towards Ariel, a woman who had been through so much in her short lifetime. There was a beauty in her strength, and Rowan had to look away and focus elsewhere. "What do you plan on doing now? As much as I hate to remind you - Djorn, like any man, hates to be embarrassed." She picked up her cup, moving it slightly to mix the streaks of cream into the tan liquid. "I'll continue to do everything in my power to protect you, Ariel, but my influence can only reach so far, sadly."

A frustration knotted her chest; Rowan didn't understand why she was suddenly so professional about the matter. There had been so many times before this that they had been friendly. Yet now, when Ariel needed a friend, she was met with a bodyguard. "Unlike him, I'll jeopardize my standing with the Imperials to ensure yours and the girls' safety."
 

Ariel Yvarro

Guest


The moment arrived unpunctuated by the stillness here and it's unlike anything Ariel's experienced before. Ariel graciously accepted the cup of tea in doing so her eyes were not focused on the hint of a smile left by the Atrisian. Rather they had lingered a touch too long on the cup itself. "I appreciate your confidence in me, truly." Remarked Ariel, as she took the offered cup in hand. Rubbing the back of her neck with one hand while the other laid flat on the counter. She closed her eyes and let the moments wash over her, her eyes slowly opened only when the Atrisian's voice cut through the silence.
Ariel's eyes shifted back to the cup of tea, as if it held all the answers she would need. She swallowed hard as Rowan peppered her with questions, questions she had considered but had not confronted, not until now at least. Her posture stiffened bristled slightly at the more serious tone Rown took, not that the matter at hand wasn't serious to start with. "I imagine he's very much like the Empire he once hated in that he'll have his resources keeping tabs, of that I have no doubt."
She took in a deep breath and sighed, her shoulders lowered when she exhaled as if a boulder had rolled over them. Ariel looked over at the Atrisian briefly, as she turned to sit upon the stool that had been tucked so neatly into the counter. She rolled a hand through the loose strands of hair pushing them away from her face and pulling her hair to one shoulder. A profile view for the Atrisian as she sat a hand on her lap while the other gingerly pulled the cup of tea toward her, cupping it. "Thank you," she says, softly -- perhaps too softly, her eyes brown eyes softer than they had any right to be as Ariel looked at Rowan. Almost as if she were studying the other woman's features, "until such time that Djorn decides to show his face or send whatever imps he chooses to do his bidding. I will do what I do best, find somewhere to settle and build."
A half-shrug as she finally lifts the cup of tea, her attention cut away from the Atrisian and once more into the cup of tea - and once more as if it held all the answers she would ever need. "The women in my family aren't ones for simply sitting around doing nothing, even if we have the worst taste in men." The cup of tea to her lips as she delicately sipped allowing the amber-hued liquid to bring a much-needed warmth and comfort to her body.
 

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