Star Wars Roleplay: Chaos

Register a free account today to become a member! Once signed in, you'll be able to participate on this site by adding your own topics and posts, as well as connect with other members through your own private inbox!

Private Under Soft Light

Shade did not interrupt him.

She listened the way she always did when something mattered, fully and without reaching ahead for the next step. His words landed with a quiet clarity that did not startle her so much as still her, as if something she had already suspected had finally been spoken aloud. For a brief, unguarded instant, the alignment was unmistakable. They wanted the same thing from this night. Not resolution. Not promises shaped too early. Just a presence that did not need armor.

The realization warmed her first, then tightened, instinctively, as she folded it inward where she kept things that were not yet ready to be exposed to consequence. But the flicker was there. It touched her eyes, softened the line of her mouth, lingered just long enough to be real.

Long enough for him to see it.

She reached for her own fork then, deliberately, grounding herself in the ordinary motion. The seared nerf medallions were still warm, the rice fragrant and simple, and she took a measured bite, letting the taste anchor her back into the moment rather than away from it. When she swallowed, she nodded once, small but sincere.

"This is very good," she said quietly. "Comforting. Thoughtful."

Not unlike the evening itself.

She set her fork down again and met his gaze fully, no retreat, no pretense. Whatever she had tucked back into herself did not erase what had already passed between them. It simply rested there, acknowledged.

"I'm glad too," Shade continued, her voice even but warm, shaped carefully in the way she only did with him. "For the food. For the quiet. For not having to defend the moment."

A pause followed, unhurried, her fingers resting lightly against the edge of the table.

"And for you," she added, softer now, the truth of it steady rather than dramatic. "For wanting to remember this the same way I do."

She did not say how she wanted the night to end. She did not need to. The understanding had already passed between them, brief and bright, before being folded away with care.

But it had existed. And that, she decided, was enough for now.

Cassian Abrantes Cassian Abrantes
 



Ff5bntH.png


Shade Shade

By the time the last bites were gone, the restaurant had found its rhythm again, muted voices returning, cutlery clinking in careful, ordinary patterns. Cassian set his fork down with a quiet finality and let the warmth of the meal linger, not just in his stomach, but in the ease that had returned between them despite everything that had tried to intrude.

He glanced to Shade's plate, then to her, and the small satisfaction in his expression deepened. She was still here. Still unarmored. Still choosing the moment.

When the waiter passed within reach, Cassian lifted two fingers in a subtle gesture.

"Another round," he said smoothly, voice calm and low. "Same as before."

The waiter nodded and moved on. Cassian didn't watch them go. His attention stayed anchored on Shade as he shifted in his seat, the movement unhurried, deliberate. He pushed his chair back just enough to stand, then slid it along the floor with controlled ease, angling around the table as though it had always been the plan.

No suddenness or demand, just a simple decision.

He settled into the chair beside her with a smooth, quiet grace that spoke of a man who knew how to move through formal rooms without drawing attention.

Cassian took a slow breath as he sat, the kind that steadied him, the kind that admitted the truth of his own want. Then he eased an arm around her shoulders, careful at first, an invitation more than a claim, letting the contact rest naturally, warm and present.

He smiled, the expression softening his face in a way few people ever got to see, and drew in another deep breath as if he were allowing himself to stop holding back.

"Forgive me," Cassian murmured, voice quiet against the gentle noise of the room, "but I don't want to keep my distance from you any longer tonight."

When the drinks arrived, he accepted his whiskey with an easy nod and took a small sip, just enough to taste it, then lowered the glass again. He turned his head to look at Shade from close beside her, his gaze steady, affectionate, and entirely unguarded.

For once, he didn't feel the need to plan what came next.

He only wanted to be here, near her, while the night still belonged to them.


 
Shade did not stiffen when he moved beside her.

She registered the shift immediately, of course. The sound of the chair, the change in his position, the subtle alteration in the space around her. Awareness was reflex. But there was no reflexive withdrawal that followed it, no recalibration of distance or posture. Instead, she adjusted naturally, the way one does when something aligns rather than intrudes.

When his arm settled around her shoulders, she allowed the contact to land fully before responding. Not testing it. Not measuring it. Just accepting it for what it was. Her shoulder leaned into his chest by a small but unmistakable degree, the weight of her resting there as a quiet answer to the invitation he had offered rather than asserted.

She turned her head slightly toward him, close enough now that she could feel the warmth of his breath when he spoke, the cadence of his voice threading through the ambient sound of the room. The apology in his words earned the faintest curve at the corner of her mouth, something restrained but genuine.

"You don't need to ask forgiveness for that," she said softly, her tone even and unguarded. "Not tonight."

Her hand moved then, deliberate and calm, coming to rest on his thigh where it lay warm and solid beside her. The contact was unhurried, intentional, fingers relaxed against the fabric, not gripping, not tentative. A choice made quietly, without ceremony. Not possession. Not reassurance. Presence, returned in kind.

When the drinks arrived, she accepted her glass and took a small sip, letting the familiar warmth of the wine ground her further into the moment. She did not rush it. There was no reason to. The night was not pressing them forward, and neither was he.

Shade's gaze lifted to meet his again, closer now, the distance between them no longer something to be bridged.

"I don't want distance either," she said quietly, the truth of it uncomplicated. "I'm content to stay exactly here, for as long as this evening allows."

She let her head rest lightly against him then, just enough to be unmistakable, the kind of contact she did not offer lightly and never without intention.

And for once, she did not feel the need to prepare for what came next.

She was simply there, with him, while the night remained theirs.

Cassian Abrantes Cassian Abrantes
 



Ff5bntH.png


Shade Shade

Cassian felt the moment she leaned into him, small, unmistakable, and something inside him eased as if it had been waiting for permission to settle. Her hand on his thigh wasn't possessive or tentative; it was simply there, warm and certain, returning what he'd offered in the same quiet language.

He kept his arm around her shoulders, not tightening, not shifting, just holding the closeness steady like it was something he meant to protect from the world's noise. When she said she didn't want distance either, his mouth curved into a soft smile that he didn't try to hide.

"Good," he murmured, voice low, almost relieved. "Because I don't want to spend the rest of the night wishing I'd been closer."

He took a small sip of whiskey, more habit than need, then set the glass down carefully. His gaze stayed on her, close now, intimate in a way that didn't require drama, and he drew in a slow breath.

He paused, thumb making a slow, absent stroke along her shoulder where his arm rested, a subtle reassurance that didn't ask for anything back.

"And I'm glad," he added, softer, "That you're letting me be the one you share it with." He leaned in and touched her nose with his, playfully and he even chuckled lightly.

For a moment he simply sat with her like that, listening to the restaurant's low hum return, laughter subdued, glasses clinking, life insisting on normalcy again. The world could rage elsewhere. Here, there was only warmth and the steady weight of her against him.

Cassian tipped his head slightly, close enough that his words were meant for her alone.

"If you want," he said, gentle and easy, "We can stay until the room empties. Let everyone else go back to their lives first." A faint, wry smile touched his mouth. "No rush to leave."

"Perhaps, we should also take this to more closed doors location."
Cassian smirked lightly, teasing, but also being brave with his words.

 
Shade did not withdraw when he teased the idea aloud. She did not laugh it off or redirect it into safer ground either. Instead, she stayed exactly where she was, her hand still resting on his thigh, fingers relaxed but certain, as if she had already answered him without words.

When he brushed his nose against hers, something softened in her expression. Not surprise. Not hesitation. Recognition. The kind that came when intent aligned cleanly on both sides.

She turned her head just enough to meet his gaze fully, close enough now that the rest of the room felt irrelevant, the hum of voices and clinking glasses fading into background noise rather than scrutiny.

“You’ve been clear,” she said quietly, warmth threading through the calm of her voice. “And so have I.”

Her thumb shifted once against his leg, a small, grounding motion, before her hand stilled again.

“I don’t want distance tonight,” Shade continued, her tone steady but unguarded. “Not here. Not later.”

She leaned in then, not hurried and not tentative, closing the space between them with deliberate intent. The kiss was brief and unambiguous, soft but assured, her lips pressing to his in a way that carried no doubt and asked no permission. No performance. No claim. Just choice, made openly.

When she pulled back, she stayed close, her forehead resting lightly against his for a heartbeat longer than necessary, breath steady, presence unbroken.

“I would like you to come back with me,” she murmured, her voice low enough to belong only to him. “My place is quiet. Private. We would not be interrupted.”

Her hand remained where it was, warm and certain, making it clear that the kiss had not been a question, and neither was the invitation.

“When you are ready,” she added softly.
And for anyone else in the room who might have noticed, it would have looked like nothing more than a couple sharing a private moment.

But Cassian wouIld know better.

Cassian Abrantes Cassian Abrantes
 



Ff5bntH.png


Shade Shade

Cassian didn't move at first.

The kiss had been brief, soft, and absolutely certain, and it left him looking at her like he'd just been reminded what choice felt like when it wasn't negotiated or disguised. His arm stayed around her shoulders. Her hand stayed warm on his thigh. The restaurant's low hum returned only at the edges, distant and irrelevant.

Then his mouth curved, slow, unmistakable, into a smirk that carried warmth more than arrogance.

"Well," he murmured, voice low, eyes fixed on hers, "That's the first time you've ever kissed me in public."

A quiet chuckle followed, more breath than laughter, the kind that lived close to relief. Cassian leaned in and pressed a gentle kiss to her cheek, unhurried, affectionate, before turning his head just enough to let his words slip against her ear, meant only for her.

"You aren't getting soft on me, are you?" he whispered, teasing, fond, entirely private.

He pulled back only a fraction, close enough that his smile was still hers to read. When she spoke of her place, quiet, private, uninterrupted, Cassian's expression softened into something openly pleased, the teasing giving way to simple, steady intent.

Cassian signaled the server with a quiet gesture and asked for the bill, tone polite, controlled. When it arrived, he handled it quickly, no lingering, no drawing attention, then rose in a smooth motion and offered his hand to Shade as he stood beside her.

As they stepped into Naboos night air, he walked with her at his side, not a step ahead in the way men sometimes did without thinking, but close enough that the space between them felt intentional. Their fingers stayed linked as they left the warmth of the restaurant behind, and the night air met them like cool silk, soft, damp with the scent of water and flowering stone.

 
Shade did not move away from him.

Her hand stayed where it was on his thigh, warm and steady, the contact unguarded and deliberate. The kiss had been brief, but it left a resonance she didn't rush to dismiss, a quiet settling in her chest that felt less like surprise and more like recognition. The restaurant's low murmur returned only at the edges of her awareness, irrelevant beside the way Cassian was looking at her now, as if the choice she'd just made mattered.

"Public," she echoed softly, the word carrying a trace of dry amusement. "You make it sound like a crime."

When he leaned in and kissed her cheek, unhurried and affectionate, Shade's breath caught for a fraction of a second before she mastered it, her fingers pressing just slightly into the fabric beneath her palm as if to ground herself. His whisper brushed her ear, teasing and fond, and she turned her head just enough that the line of her jaw hovered close to his mouth, a silent answer before she spoke.

"No," she replied quietly. "I am still very dangerous." There was a pause, measured and intentional, her voice lowering further as she added, meant only for him, "I am simply off duty."

When Cassian rose, the contact broke naturally, her hand falling away as he straightened. Shade watched him for a heartbeat, taking in the ease of the movement, the quiet certainty of it, before accepting his offered hand. Her fingers slid into his without hesitation as she stood to join him, the shift from seated intimacy to shared motion feeling less anchored, more exposed—but no less chosen.

Outside, Naboo's night wrapped around them, cool and faintly damp, carrying the scent of water and flowering stone. She walked beside him, close enough that their shoulders nearly brushed, their linked hands an easy constant rather than a display. The path ahead glimmered with soft light, and for a few steps, she let the silence speak for her.

Then her thumb brushed once across his knuckles, a small, grounding gesture.

"For the record," Shade said quietly, her crimson eyes lifting to meet his in the lamplight, "if softness only exists where it is earned…"

She held his gaze, unguarded now, allowing him to see the truth of it.

"…then yes. You are responsible."

Her fingers tightened slightly in his, not possessive, just certain, as they continued into the night together.

Cassian Abrantes Cassian Abrantes
 



Ff5bntH.png


Shade Shade

By the time they reached Shade's door, Naboo's night had quieted into something intimate, water-scented air, pale stone, and the soft hush of a city that had finally decided to sleep.

Cassian followed her up the short walk with an ease that felt earned rather than assumed. When the lock released and the door opened, he stepped inside with her, letting the warmth of her private space close around them, quiet, clean, undisturbed. The moment the door shut behind them, the outside world felt like it belonged to someone else.

Cassian's gaze found hers in the dim light, and a low, helpless chuckle escaped him, more relief than amusement, as if he'd been holding his breath for hours and only just remembered how to exhale.

He didn't waste time.

Cassian crossed the last step between them and drew her into his arms, firm but gentle, hands settling at her waist and then up her back with practiced care. He paused only long enough to read her, close enough to feel her breath, to make sure she was still choosing this, before he leaned in and kissed her.

Soft, certain and unhurried. When he pulled back, it was only by a fraction, his forehead nearly brushing hers as his smile lingered, warm and a little wicked at the edges.

"Off duty," he murmured, like he was savoring the phrase.

Then he kissed her again, once, twice, and let the affection turn playful, his tongue teasing hers, reverent and hungry all at once. Cassian's mouth traced from the corner of her lips to her jaw, and he pressed a series of gentle kisses along her neck, lingering just enough to make them unmistakably intentional. The kind of attention that wasn't rushed, but also wasn't pretending to be patient.

He held her close as he did it, one hand steady at her back, the other cradling her side, keeping her anchored to him like he'd decided there would be no distance left to tolerate tonight.

Another quiet chuckle against her skin, soft, pleased.

"I've been behaving all evening," Cassian breathed, voice low, teasing, meant only for her, and a sly smile on his face. "I think I've earned this."


 
Shade did not step away when he closed the distance.

Instead, she let herself settle into him, the space between them closing with a quiet inevitability that made her chest tighten for just a moment. Her hands came to rest against his chest, fingers splayed, feeling the steady warmth beneath the fabric, the solid reality of him standing there in her space. It struck her then how rare this was, how deliberately chosen. No orders. No necessity. Just him.

The kiss was met without hesitation at first, soft and sure, her mouth fitting against his as if it already knew the shape of him. She let herself lean into it, let the familiarity and warmth anchor her. For once, she did not catalog the moment or measure it against consequence. She simply allowed it to exist.

When he drew back just enough to murmur against her skin, her crimson eyes held a softer glow in the low light, less luminous than usual, unguarded in a way she rarely permitted.

"You have," she said quietly, her voice low and close. "You've been… very disciplined."

Her hands slid from his chest to his shoulders, thumbs brushing along the muscle there. For a brief instant, barely a pause at all, she hesitated. Not from doubt, but from awareness. This was the point where she usually stopped. The point where she chose control over continuation.

Then she did not stop.

Her fingers caught the edge of his coat, and she eased it from him slowly, deliberately, letting her hands trace the line of his shoulders and arms as the fabric slipped away. She felt his hands shift in response, warm and certain as they came to her sides, then her shoulders. He paused just long enough to read her before mirroring the gesture, easing her jacket from her with the same care she had shown him. The fabric slid free, leaving the warmth of his hands in its place, and the quiet symmetry of it loosened something inside her.

She leaned in then, her lips brushing the side of his neck. The kiss was brief and unhurried, unmistakably intentional. She lingered there for a heartbeat longer than necessary, breathing him in. The faint scent of night air, leather, and something uniquely his grounded her in the moment. This was not a vulnerability. This was a choice.

When he returned his attention to her jaw and neck, she tipped her head just enough to give him access, a quiet permission she did not need to speak aloud. Her breath caught once, soft and honest, before she steadied it again.

"You should know," she murmured softly, meant only for him, "that this is something I wanted."

Her forehead rested briefly against his, the contact intimate and grounding. She stayed there for a moment, breathing him in again, letting the weight of what she was about to say settle fully.

"You are the only person I have ever let past this door," she said quietly. "And there will not be another."

A faint curve touched her mouth as her hands settled again at his shoulders, holding him there with calm certainty.

"So if you've earned something tonight," Shade finished softly, "it's because I chose you."

Her fingers tightened just slightly, anchoring him and herself in the quiet of her home, as the rest of the galaxy remained exactly where she wanted it.

Cassian Abrantes Cassian Abrantes
 



Ff5bntH.png


Shade Shade

Cassian felt the coats slip away like they'd never mattered in the first place, fabric falling to the floor with a soft finality that left only warmth, breath, and the certainty of her hands on him. Everything else, broadcasts, threats, the galaxy's noise, went distant, as if her home had closed around them like a seal.

Shade's words landed with the same precision she carried in everything she chose. This is something I wanted. Cassian didn't question it. He could feel it in the way she stayed close, in the way her touch didn't waver, in the quiet strength of her presence. And in him, there was no denying the matching truth: he had wanted this too, wanted her, so long it had started to feel like a private ache he'd learned to live around.

Then she said it.

You are the only person I have ever let past this door. And there will not be another.

For a moment, Cassian's chest went tight. Not fear. Not possession. Something bigger, something that made him feel almost weightless and unbearably grounded at the same time. His heart swelled so sharply it was hard to hide it behind composure, and he didn't try.

He leaned in until their foreheads touched, resting there briefly, as if he needed the contact to prove the moment was real. His smile came soft and bright, a rare, unguarded thing.

"I'd choose you in every life," Cassian murmured, the words leaving him like a vow he didn't have to dress up.

Then he kissed her, deep, certain, and full of the love he'd been holding back all night. One hand settled at her waist, the other at her back, guiding her without hurry. He moved with her step by step, leading her backward through the quiet of her home, never breaking the kiss for long, only enough to breathe, to look at her, to make sure she was still choosing, and she was.

Cassian was fully aware of what waited beyond the next door, and he felt no doubt about it. No second-guessing. No fear of consequence. Only a steady, overwhelming certainty that this was a moment neither of them would regret, because it wasn't taken. It was given.

This was the woman he chose the one he loved. And as he guided her toward her room, he held her as if he meant it in the simplest, truest way: not for tonight alone, but for everything that came after.


 
Shade followed his lead without resistance, but not without awareness.

The kiss lingered, deep and steady, softening only when breath demanded it. Her hands slid from his shoulders to the front of his shirt as they moved together, fingertips tracing the warmth there as if confirming what she already knew. The quiet of her home wrapped around them, amplifying every small sound, every shift of breath, every brush of fabric against skin.

When her fingers found the first button, she paused. Not long enough to break the moment, just long enough to feel it settle fully in her chest. Then she undid it, the motion unhurried, deliberate.

She kissed him again as she worked, slower now, savoring the way he stayed close, the way his hands remained steady at her back and waist, guiding without pressure. Another breath, another soft step backward, her heels brushing the floor as she let herself be moved, trusted the space she'd chosen to give him.

Her fingers found the next button, then the next, easing them open one by one. The fabric loosened beneath her hands, and she let her palms follow, feeling the heat of him through the opening, the strength there that felt less like tension and more like reassurance. A quiet breath escaped her, unguarded, as she leaned in again, kissing him with a depth that carried warmth rather than urgency.

She broke the kiss only to breathe him in, close enough that her forehead brushed his, her crimson eyes softly luminous in the low light. There was a calm there, a steadiness she rarely allowed herself to linger in, and she let it stay.

Her hands slipped beneath the open fabric, resting against his skin, not exploring so much as holding, grounding herself in the simple fact of him. The contact felt intimate in a way that went beyond touch, and she stayed there for a heartbeat longer than necessary, letting herself feel it.

They reached the threshold of her room without rushing. She rested her hands on his chest, not stopping him, just anchoring herself, meeting his gaze in a moment that needed no words. Everything that mattered had already been said. Everything else lived in the way she stayed close, the way she kissed him again, slow and full, letting the night carry them forward exactly as they were.

Deliberate. Unhurried. And very much present.

Cassian Abrantes Cassian Abrantes
 



Ff5bntH.png


Shade Shade

Cassian's breath hitched as Shade's fingers worked each button with that same deliberate calm she brought to every choice that mattered. She didn't rush, and neither did he, he met her pace like it was the only rhythm worth keeping.

Between each small release of fabric, he kissed her again, soft, lingering, then deeper, never demanding, always listening. His hands stayed sure at her waist and along her back, anchoring her, guiding her only as much as she invited. When she paused, he paused. When she leaned in, he was already there, meeting her with quiet hunger that never tipped into haste.

A low chuckle escaped him against her mouth, warm, breathy, almost disbelieving, because she was doing this her way.

His arms shifted, a smooth, practiced motion, and he let the last of his own restraint go with the fabric, his shirt falling away without ceremony, like it had simply stopped being necessary. He didn't posture. He didn't preen. He only looked at her like she was the center of the room.

Then, with the same care she'd shown him, Cassian's hands found the hem of her blouse. He didn't yank, didn't rush, just lifted gently, giving her every chance to stop him with a word or a look. When she didn't, when she stayed close and steady, he eased it up and over, setting it aside like something precious rather than discarded.

For a beat, he simply stilled, eyes tracing her with something reverent and softened, as if the sight of her was less temptation and more truth. The lamplight caught the cool tone of her skin, the quiet strength in the line of her shoulders, the way she remained wholly herself even in intimacy.

Cassian's gaze lifted to hers again, checking, always checking, then he leaned in and kissed her once more, slow and certain. His mouth followed the line of her jaw with gentle insistence, pressing warm, unhurried kisses that carried more devotion than urgency, as if he was memorizing the moment rather than consuming it. He traced a series of kisses down her neck, and soon a few just above her chest.

When his lips returned to hers, his hands held her close, safe, chosen, wanted, and his voice, when it slipped free, was barely a whisper.

Cassian guided them toward the bed without urgency, as if he'd decided there was nowhere else worth arriving.

Everything after that stopped needing edges. The world narrowed to warmth and breath and the quiet certainty of being chosen, again and again, until time was not a factor. What remained wasn't a sequence he could have described cleanly later, only the feeling of it: love, heat, tenderness, the way Shade stayed present with him, the way he stayed careful with her even when his want ran deep. A blur, but not a mistake. Nothing stolen. Nothing hurried. Just them, and the simple truth that neither of them wanted distance tonight.

When the night finally loosened its grip, it was still dark.

The sun hadn't risen yet, but the air had shifted, cooler, softer, the kind of pre-dawn hush that made even a city feel like it was holding its breath. Cassian's eyes opened slowly, heavy with sleep and that lingering calm that comes after a night that felt like home.

He was nestled close to Shade, her warmth against him, her breathing steady. For a moment he didn't move, just listened, letting the quiet confirm that she was still there, that this hadn't been a dream or a borrowed moment he'd misjudged.

Cassian leaned in and kissed her shoulder gently, a soft press of his lips that carried more affection than wakefulness. Then he settled back against her again, cheek near her skin, arm staying around her as if it had always belonged there.

His breath eased out in a slow exhale, content and protective all at once.

And in the dark before the dawn, Cassian simply stayed, close, quiet, and grateful.

 
When Shade woke, the light had just begun to change.

It wasn't full morning yet. The sky beyond the windows held that pale, early hush Naboo reserved for those who rose before the city did, when the air was cool, and the world felt briefly unclaimed. For a moment, she stayed still, listening.

Cassian was asleep.

She could tell by the steady rhythm of his breathing, by the weight of his arm resting around her with the unconscious certainty of someone who had decided, even in sleep, that this was where he belonged. His presence was warm and grounding, familiar in a way that surprised her not with its intensity, but with its ease.

Carefully, deliberately, Shade shifted.

She eased herself from beneath his arm without waking him, moving slowly enough that the bed barely noticed her absence. He murmured once, quiet and indistinct, and she paused until his breathing evened again. Only then did she stand, pulling on a shirt and moving softly through her home.

The kitchen greeted her with stillness and clean lines, the faint early light catching along stone and metal. She took a breath there, a small one, grounding herself in the simple domesticity of the moment.

Breakfast.

The thought felt almost strange at first, and then oddly right.

She moved with quiet efficiency, setting water to heat, preparing something warm and uncomplicated. As she worked, her thoughts drifted unbidden to the lakehouse, to the morning he had cooked for her there without ceremony or expectation. The memory carried the same feeling she woke to. Not indulgence. Not sentiment.

Care.

When the first gentle sounds of cooking filled the space, Shade allowed herself a pause, hands resting on the counter as she looked toward the hallway that led back to the bedroom.

She had let him in.

Not just past her door, but past the line she had not allowed anyone to cross since Verin. Into the quiet, unguarded spaces of her life that had remained closed not out of fear, but out of deliberate choice.

That certainty did not waver.

What surfaced instead, as she set the plates with calm, practiced precision, was something more complicated.

Cassian deserved steadiness. Light. A life that did not constantly orbit danger and difficult decisions. She loved him without question, but love did not blind her to the truth of who she was, or the weight that followed her wherever she went. The thought settled quietly in her chest, not as regret, but as responsibility.

Was she the best person for him?

She did not answer the question yet. She simply acknowledged it, the way she did all things that mattered, and resolved that if she ever found the answer to be no, she would still choose what was best for him, even if it cost her.

By the time Cassian woke, the scent of breakfast had begun to drift softly through the apartment. Shade was already awake, already moving through the morning with quiet purpose, carrying both her certainty and her doubts with equal care, as if the day ahead belonged to them both, even while the future still demanded thought.

Cassian Abrantes Cassian Abrantes
 



Ff5bntH.png


Shade Shade

Cassian woke slowly, blinking against the early light spilling in through the doorway. For a moment he stayed still, half-dreaming, reaching instinctively for the warmth that had been beside him.

Empty.

He frowned faintly, more reflex than worry, until the air answered him with something better than reassurance. The scent drifting through the apartment was warm and rich, unmistakably food, something cooked with intention. Cassian's mouth curved into a soft smile.

Of course.

He sat up, rubbed a hand over his face, and pulled on his pants. Still shirtless, he padded barefoot across the room, following the smell through the quiet hall toward the kitchen.

Shade was there, already awake, already moving with that calm efficiency of hers. The pale light caught her profile and the clean lines of the space around her. Cassian leaned against the doorway for a moment, just watching, fondness settling easily in his chest.

She seemed…a little distracted, maybe. Something in the set of her shoulders, the stillness between motions. He noticed it, filed it away, and decided not to read too much into it. Not yet. Not when the morning was this soft.

Cassian stepped up behind her and wrapped his arms gently around her waist, with a familiar ease. His hands rested there, warm, steady, before he dipped his head to kiss her shoulder. Then he leaned in and pressed a soft kiss to her cheek.

"Good morning, my love," he murmured, voice still rough with sleep but unmistakably warm. He lingered close, chin near her shoulder, breathing in the scent of her and whatever she'd made. "Did you sleep well?"


 
Shade did not startle when his arms came around her. She leaned back into him almost automatically, accepting the contact with the same quiet familiarity she had the night before, even as something more complicated moved beneath the surface. Her hands paused for a moment where they were, resting on the counter, before she resumed what she had been doing, letting the normal rhythm cover the brief hesitation.

She turned her head slightly when he kissed her cheek, enough that her temple brushed his jaw, her eyes closing for just a heartbeat at the sound of his voice. The warmth of him was grounding, steady, exactly what she had expected to find there. Exactly what made the doubt easier to hide and harder to ignore.

"Good morning," she replied softly, her voice calm and unstrained, shaped the way it always was with him. "I don't remember the last time I slept that well."

It was true. Disarmingly so. The admission carried no drama, no emphasis, just fact, offered because it felt safe to do so. She shifted slightly in his hold, not to pull away, but to settle more comfortably against him, her back fitting to his chest as if it had learned the shape overnight.

After a moment, she glanced at him over her shoulder, her expression warm but thoughtful, the smallest crease of uncertainty tucked carefully out of reach.

"What about you?" she asked quietly. "Did you sleep well?"

The question was simple. The way she asked it was not.

Cassian Abrantes Cassian Abrantes
 



Ff5bntH.png


Shade Shade

Cassian's smile came easily, warm and a little sleepy, as he felt her settle back against him like she belonged there. He gave her a gentle nudge, as he kissed her cheek again, playful and affectionate, the kind of teasing that only worked because it carried no edge.

"I did a great job then huh?" he murmured with a soft chuckle, letting the humor lighten the air without dismissing what he'd noticed. "I slept really good."

He kissed her temple once more and lingered there for a beat, breathing her in as if anchoring himself in the simple fact of her. For a moment, he was content to let the morning be nothing but warmth and cooking and quiet.

Then the subtle crease in her expression returned to his attention, and he couldn't ignore it.

Cassian's arms stayed around her waist, steady and protective, but his voice softened into something more deliberate as he spoke again.

"Shade," he said quietly, the teasing fading into gentle sincerity. "We've been through so much together. I don't need the Force to sense when something is bothering you."

His thumb brushed lightly at her side, not pressing, just reminding her he was there. He shifted just enough to catch her eyes when she glanced back, his expression calm, open, and patient.

"Tell me?" Cassian asked softly.


 
Shade did not pull away from his arms, but she did go still in them, the kind of stillness that came not from tension but from careful control. She drew in a slow breath through her nose, steadying, letting the scent of the kitchen and the warmth of him give her just enough ground to stand on internally before she spoke.

When she turned her head this time, it was fully, meeting his eyes rather than glancing away. Whatever doubt lived behind her gaze, she did not hide it from him. She simply did not dramatize it.

"I'm not questioning last night," she said quietly. "Or what it meant. I don't regret it."

That much was firm. Certain. She let him see that first, deliberately, before she continued.

Her hand lifted from the counter and came to rest over his, where it circled her waist, fingers settling there as if to keep herself anchored as much as him.

"What I'm questioning," Shade went on, her voice even but lower now, "is the cost."

She did not look away when she said it.

"You don't choose lightly," she said. "I know that. And being with me is not a small thing."

A pause, not hesitation, but honesty given room to breathe.

"It comes with scrutiny. With risk. With consequences you didn't ask for." Her thumb moved once against his hand, a small, unconscious tell. "Enemies who will see me as leverage. Decisions you'll have to justify because of me."

Her expression softened then, not into fear, but into something vulnerable in a way Shade rarely allowed herself to be.

"I need to know you didn't wake up this morning and realize you chose something heavier than you meant to," she said. "That you didn't decide I was… easier than the reality of what I bring with me."

She leaned back into him again after that, just slightly, as if making it clear she was not pushing him away even as she asked the question that mattered most.

"I'm worth choosing," Shade said softly, not as a claim, but as a question that had teeth. "But I am not without cost."

Her eyes stayed on his.

"I need to know you chose me anyway."

And then she waited, not braced for rejection, but steady enough to hear the truth, whatever shape it took.

Cassian Abrantes Cassian Abrantes
 



Ff5bntH.png


Shade Shade

Cassian didn't answer right away.

He held her a little tighter, not as restraint, but as instinct, because the way she said it made his chest ache. Shade didn't ask for reassurance lightly. She asked when she needed truth that would hold up under pressure.

And she was right. He didn't choose lightly.

Cassian's eyes stayed on hers, steady and soft, no defensiveness in him, no attempt to dodge the weight of what she'd said. His mouth curved faintly, not amusement, just tenderness, and he exhaled slowly, as if letting the last of sleep leave him and making room for something more honest.

"I woke up…grateful," Cassian continued, thumb brushing once over her hand where it rested on his. "And I woke up knowing exactly what I chose."

He paused, just long enough to let her see he wasn't rushing to soothe her. He was answering her.

"The cost isn't news to me," he said. "Scrutiny, leverage, consequences, Shade, that's been my life since I stepped into that academy, since I started with the royal defense force, the name attached to me." A faint, wry warmth touched his expression. "People have been trying to turn me into an argument since I became of age."

His gaze sharpened a fraction, not hard, just resolute.

"But you," Cassian said, quieter now, "You aren't a burden I accidentally picked up. You're not a complication I'm pretending I can handle."

He leaned in and kissed her forehead, slow and deliberate, like punctuation. "You're the person I want beside me," he murmured.

Cassian let his hand slide a little, keeping her anchored against him, and his eyes didn't leave hers. "If someone tries to use you as leverage," he said evenly, "Then they learn they picked the wrong currency." His jaw set for a moment, then softened again. "And if the galaxy decides to make us justify this, fine. Let them."

Cassian said, voice low and unmistakably sincere. "I'm choosing you because you're worth it." He took a breath, and when he spoke again it was simpler, more intimate, the kind of truth that didn't need a speech. "I chose you last night," Cassian said softly. "I chose you this morning. And I'll choose you tomorrow, and after. I will love you as long as I breathe."

He drew in a slow breath, his arms still around her, but his posture shifting as if something inside him had turned over. The warmth of the kitchen remained, the quiet hum of morning, the scent of breakfast, but his mind flicked, unbidden, to Thessaly.

Not because of her, because of what he had not yet said to Sibylla or Elian.

The secret sat in him like a stone. He could imagine their faces when it finally came out, Sibylla's, wounded composure; Elian's stunned anger under the humor. Part of him believed they might understand. They were his family, they had weathered enough storms to recognize intent.

But belief was not the same as certainty. And Cassian knew there was a price he did not want to pay, but he would have too.

He could lose them, lose Sibylla and Elian.

The possibility was already pressing down on him, making the morning air feel thinner, even while Shade's hand rested over his. If everything went badly, if the wrong people learned the wrong details, if politics did what politics always did, there would be repercussions. There would be loss. And he could already see how quickly a name could become a weapon turned inward.

Cassian's mouth tightened once, controlled. He didn't pull away from Shade. If anything, he held her a fraction closer, as if saying what he was about to say required steadiness.

"Truthfully," he began, voice low, "I don't know what's going to happen."

He watched her carefully, not for fear, but for understanding.

"I keep thinking about Thessaly," Cassian admitted. "Not because of you. Because of what I haven't told Sibylla or Elian yet." His eyes flicked down for a heartbeat, then back up. "Part of me thinks they'll understand. They're…they're them. They've always been them."

A quiet, humorless breath left him.

"But there's another part of me," he continued, "That knows I could lose both of them. And that thought is already…sitting on my chest."

He paused, letting the honesty stand. Shade didn't need him to dramatize it. She needed him to name it.

"If this goes badly," Cassian said, voice steady but edged with something raw, "There's going to be fallout, and if Aurelian finds out, I don't know what he will do. Truthfully I don't care what he does, but its my brother and sister that I care about."

He swallowed once. His gaze held hers.

"And if the end of the day comes and all I have left is you," Cassian said quietly, "And my honor, just me, an honorable fool "

His smile twitched, not quite there, as if he could almost laugh at himself and couldn't.

"Would that be enough for you, Shade?" he asked softly.

There was no theatrics in it. No attempt to trap her into reassurance. Just the most vulnerable truth he could offer: that he was willing to be stripped down to the barest version of himself, if it meant he still got to choose her, and that he needed to know she could choose that version of him back.




 
Shade did not answer him immediately.

She stayed where she was, close enough to feel the steadiness in his breathing, close enough to feel the truth in the way he held her, not as something fragile, not as something temporary, but as something he had already decided was worth protecting. She listened to everything he said, and to the things he did not dress up or soften. To the care that entered his voice when he spoke of Sibylla and Elian. To the way his uncertainty was not about himself, but about what loving her might cost the people he had already lost too much for.

Her hand tightened once over his, not in fear, not in hesitation, but in acknowledgment. A quiet signal that she had heard him. All of it.

When she finally spoke, her voice was calm, steady, but there was nothing distant in it.

"I would never ask you to abandon the people who made you who you are," Shade said quietly. "And I would never pretend that losing them would be small, or something you could simply endure by force of will."

She lifted her gaze to his then, crimson eyes unwavering, unflinching in the low morning light.

"What you are afraid of is real," she continued. "And it matters. Loving someone does not erase the cost of loving them."

Her thumb moved slowly across his knuckles, a small, grounding motion that carried more meaning than reassurance ever could.

"I was trained to disappear," Shade said after a moment. "To become something that left no trace behind. To accept that survival often meant absence, and that attachment was something you learned to release before it could be taken from you."

Her voice softened, not with regret, but with honesty.

"Loving you is not that," she said quietly. "It is visible. It is known. It is loud in ways I cannot fully silence, even if I wanted to." She did not look away as she continued, the truth carried without apology. "It has weight. It carries consequences. And I accept all of that."

She leaned closer, not closing the space between them out of urgency, but intention, until he could feel the steadiness beneath her words.

"You asked me if it would be enough," she said. "You. Your honor. What remains if the world decides to take everything else."

She did not hesitate. Not even for a breath.

"Yes," Shade said simply. "It would be."

She drew in a slow breath, as though she were choosing each word with the same care she brought to every decision that mattered.

"Because I am not asking you for perfection," she continued. "I am not asking you to shield me from consequence, or to pretend that this path will not demand things from us both."

"I am asking for the man who stands in front of me now,"
she said. "The one who chooses with open eyes, who understands the weight of that choice, and does not look away from it."

Her hand lifted to his jaw then, not to guide him, not to claim him, but to steady him there with her.

"If the galaxy decides to turn this into a trial," she said evenly, "then it will not be the first time either of us has stood alone and refused to yield."

"And it will not be the first time we have been asked to decide what we are willing to lose in order to remain ourselves."


A pause, quiet and deliberate.

"And if it ever comes to a moment where it is just us," she said, "no titles, no protections, no assurances, I will still be here."

"Not because it is easy,"
she added. "Because it is true."

Her expression softened then, just slightly, but the certainty beneath it did not waver.

"I did not choose you because it was safe," Shade said quietly. "I chose you because you are honest."

"Because when everything is stripped away,"
she continued, "you do not look for an exit. You look for what you are willing to stand beside."

She rested her forehead briefly against his, the contact intimate and grounding, a shared breath held between them.

"And if loving me means your life changes," she finished softly, "then understand this. I am not something that will leave you standing alone once the cost is paid."

She stayed there with him, close and present, not because the future was guaranteed, and not because she needed to promise him anything more than this, but because her choice already had weight, and she carried it without regret.

Cassian Abrantes Cassian Abrantes
 



Ff5bntH.png


Shade Shade


Cassian stayed close to her for a long beat, forehead still near hers, breathing steadying as the weight of her answer settled fully into him. When he finally pulled back, his expression was soft in a way he rarely allowed, warm, openly affectionate, the kind of look that didn't try to hide how much she mattered.

"It means everything to me," Cassian said quietly.

He let the words stand on their own, simple and true. His hand remained at her jaw for a moment longer, thumb brushing her cheek with slow care, as if he was memorizing the fact that she was here and real and choosing him back.

Then his gaze shifted, not away from her, but inward, to the decision that had been waiting behind his ribs since Thessaly. "I'm going to have to tell Sibylla," he admitted, voice low but steady. "About Thessaly. About what I haven't said."

There was no bravado in it. No attempt to pretend he wasn't afraid of what it could cost. But there was resolve, clean and deliberate. Cassian exhaled, a quiet surrender to the inevitable. "So whatever happens," he murmured, meeting her eyes again with a gentle certainty, "Happens."

His mouth curved faintly, tender and a little wry, as if he could already feel the storm on the horizon and had decided he would walk into it honestly.

"But I won't lie to them," he added softly.

He leaned in and kissed her once, slow, lingering, full of love that didn't need grand declarations to be unmistakable, then rested his forehead against hers again.

"Thank you," Cassian whispered. "For choosing me with open eyes."


 

Users who are viewing this thread

Top Bottom