Star Wars Roleplay: Chaos

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Private You Can Run

The offices emptied the way they always did at the end of a long day, quietly and without ceremony, as though everyone inside had reached the same unspoken agreement that it was time to disappear back into their private lives.

By the time Shade and Cassian stepped out onto the street, Moenia's evening fog had already begun to roll in. Pale mist curled low against duracrete and stone, swallowing the bases of lampposts and softening the glow of the city into something diffuse and indistinct. Sound dulled beneath it as well. Passing traffic faded into a distant hum, footsteps lost their sharpness, and even voices felt muted, as if the fog itself were absorbing anything too loud or too sudden.

Shade adjusted her coat as they walked, posture relaxed enough to pass as ordinary, though awareness still lingered at the edges of her attention, as it always did. The day had run long, filled with briefings and reports that demanded restraint rather than instinct, precision rather than force. Republic work. Necessary work. The kind that kept her visible, accountable, and very far from the life she no longer lived.

Cassian walked at her side, close without crowding, their pace unhurried as they moved toward the transit lanes. Conversation drifted easily between them, light and familiar, the quiet decompression of two people stepping away from duty together. It was comfortable. Earned.

As they passed beneath a stretch of inactive lights, the fog thickened.

Shade felt a shift then, subtle enough that she did not immediately name it. Not danger. Not a threat. Just a faint sense of imbalance, like a change in pressure or temperature that did not belong to the weather. The feeling lingered briefly at the edge of her awareness before slipping back into the general noise of the city.

She did not slow. She did not turn.

Three figures moved through the fog some distance behind them, their silhouettes breaking and reforming as they passed through pools of low light. They kept their spacing careful and unremarkable, matching the street's pace rather than the people ahead of them. To any casual observer, they were simply part of Moenia's evening flow, swallowed and revealed by the mist in equal measure.

They did not rush. They did not close the gap too quickly.

They waited.

The fog thickened again, curling higher, dulling edges, and swallowing sound. Somewhere within it, the spacing shifted by a fraction, precise and silent, as unseen eyes tracked the pair moving ahead of them.

A mark had been placed, quietly and without ceremony, the way such decisions always were.

Not because Shade was careless.

But because she had chosen a life that could finally be followed.

Shade's hand brushed Cassian's arm lightly as they walked, a casual point of contact that grounded her in the present. Her expression remained calm, untroubled, eyes forward as though the street ahead held nothing out of the ordinary.

Behind them, the fog closed ranks.

And the hunt began long before either of them realized they were no longer alone.

Cassian Abrantes Cassian Abrantes
 



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Shade Shade

Cassian felt the night press in like a closing fist.

The fog thickened so suddenly it seemed less like weather and more like something poured into the street on purpose, heavy and clinging, damp against his lashes and the inside of his throat. Above, thunder rolled across the city's bones, low and distant at first, then closer on the second peel, like the sky was warning them not to take another step.

He slowed them to a halt. Not out of fear, but of control.

His boots stopped quietly on the duracrete, and he let his breathing steady, measured, as if he could refuse the fog any claim on his pulse. He glanced around without turning his head too fast, not giving the shadows the satisfaction of knowing exactly what had caught his attention. His eyes narrowed anyway, instinct sharpening the moment his vision started losing edges.

The streetlights were weak here, halos smudged into pale coin-shapes that did not reach the ground. The fog swallowed the bases of everything. The world became waist-high, and anything beyond that was suggestion.

It was almost suffocating.

Cassian could feel it in the way sound dampened, in the way the air tasted too wet, too cold, too wrong. He listened and found what he had been dreading: whispers, not quite words, threading through the mist from more than one direction. They moved in and out like radio interference, close enough to raise the hairs along his neck, indistinct enough to make the mind try to complete them into meaning.

That was how people panicked. That was how they got pulled apart. He didn't panic, he shifted.

It was a subtle step and a subtle turn, but it put him where he wanted to be. His back settled toward Shade's, close enough that he could feel the heat of her through their coats, close enough that if one of them moved, the other would know immediately. It was not a romantic gesture now. It was an old habit, the kind learned in alleys and drop-zones and corridors where visibility died first.

His hand drifted down near his hip, not reaching for anything obvious, not brandishing, just ready. His other hand lifted slightly, palm angled in a quiet signal, the kind you gave to a teammate when you needed them calm and keyed in at the same time.

Another rumble of thunder rolled overhead, deeper than the last. The fog pulsed with it, as if it had a heartbeat of its own. Cassian's gaze tracked the faint movement where the mist disturbed along the ground, the smallest signs of passage. A swirl here. A thinning there. A shape that did not belong to the wind.

And in that awareness, with Shade at his back and the city holding its breath around them, Cassian made himself very still, because predators mistook stillness for hesitation, right up until it became the moment they realized they had stepped too close.

"Cowards...show yourselves."


 
Shade felt the change in Cassian the instant it happened.

Not when he stopped moving, but in the way his presence recalibrated beside her, the subtle tightening of his posture and the measured adjustment of his breathing that spoke of control rather than fear. It was a shift she recognized without needing to see it, one born of long habit and shared survival instincts. She did not question it or resist it. She simply adjusted with him, matching his stillness as naturally as she matched his pace.

When he moved, she moved.

Her step was quiet and deliberate, bringing her back close enough that their shoulders nearly brushed, coats whispering together in the fog. She angled herself without turning fully, allowing their awareness to overlap while her senses widened to take in what his narrowed focus might miss. The warmth of him at her back was grounding, a familiar reassurance in an environment that had suddenly turned hostile.

The fog pressed in, thick and wrong, clinging to skin and sound alike, but Shade's attention had already shifted inward.

She felt it then, not as fear or alarm, but as recognition settling cold and precise in her chest.

The way the mist disturbed low to the ground, not churned by haste but parted with discipline. The spacing between movements was too consistent to be accidental. The whispers threading through the fog, never meant to resolve into language, were designed instead to unsettle, to draw the mind outward and fracture focus. These were not the habits of amateurs or street predators. They were techniques, layered and intentional, scraping against memories she had worked very hard to bury.

The Veiled Sight.

She did not speak the name yet, but it rose unbidden all the same, carried not by sight or sound, but by method. By patience. By the quiet confidence of hunters who believed they already understood the shape of their prey. This was how they moved. How they waited. How they tested without committing.

Shade leaned in just enough that her words would reach Cassian alone, her voice low and controlled, edged with something sharper beneath the calm.

"This isn't local," she murmured, her eyes tracking a faint thinning in the fog to their left before drifting back to the ground behind them. "They're spacing themselves deliberately. Listening for breath. Watching for reaction rather than movement."

Her jaw tightened slightly as another disturbance rippled through the mist, this one closer, more confident.

"They're trained," she continued quietly. "Not opportunists. Not muscle. This is someone who knows how to wait."

The realization settled fully then, heavy and unmistakable.

"Which means they've studied me," she said, more to herself than to him, a rare edge of anger slipping through her composure. Her fingers flexed once at her side, not reaching for a weapon yet, but acknowledging the truth pressing in. "Or they were trained by someone who did."

For the briefest moment, an unwanted thought surfaced, sharp and unwelcome. Former students. Faces she had once corrected. Movements she had refined. Mistakes she had taught them never to make. The possibility sat like ice in her veins.

"If it's who I think it is," Shade added under her breath, the curse that followed was quiet but sincere, "they know exactly how to take me down. They were built to."

She adjusted her stance minutely, aligning herself more fully with Cassian without needing to look, trusting the same instinct that had already brought them back to back.

"Stay close," she said softly, her tone steady despite the storm of recognition beneath it. "They won't rush this. They'll wait until we're tired, distracted, or forced to choose wrong."

The fog shifted again, closer now, responding to something unseen.

And for the first time since the night closed in around them, Shade allowed herself a faint, dangerous smile, not because she was unafraid, but because the hunt had finally revealed its shape—and she knew its habits as well as it knew hers.

Cassian Abrantes Cassian Abrantes
 



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Shade Shade

Cassian did not answer Shade with a speech, because this was not the kind of moment that needed one. He answered her with certainty.

"They will not have you," he said, low and absolute, the words carried on a steady breath that refused to quicken. "Not tonight, or ever."

The fog shifted as if it had been waiting for permission.

Two shapes pushed forward through the mist, no longer content to circle, no longer content to whisper. They advanced with the confidence of people who believed the outcome had already been decided, their spacing tight now, their footfalls measured for the moment of contact.

Cassian moved before the street could even fully register the change.

He stepped into the first attacker's line with quick, fierce precision, turning his body just enough to slip inside the reach rather than retreat from it. His hands came up fast, efficient, and controlled. One sharp strike broke the attacker's momentum, and the next ended it. The figure crumpled, collapsing into the fog, lifeless before they could even fully hit the ground.

Cassian did not pause to watch them fall.

The second attacker surged in immediately, trying to capitalize on the split second after a kill, and Cassian met them with the same cold economy. He pivoted, used the attacker's forward drive against them, and shifted his weight with practiced timing. His arm locked in, his stance anchored, and in one brutal, decisive motion, he snapped the attacker's neck.

The body dropped, limp and silent, swallowed by the mist at Cassian's boots.

For a heartbeat, the alley went strangely still, the whispers faltering as if even the hunters had to recalibrate after losing two pieces so quickly.

Cassian stayed where he was, shoulders squared, back still aligned with Shade's as though they were welded together by instinct and refusal. He did not gloat. He did not breathe harder. He simply lifted his gaze into the fog, eyes narrowed, and waited for the next one to make the mistake of believing he would hesitate.


 
Shade felt the moment the fog resisted her.

It was not a sound, nor any visible movement, but a pressure that settled against her awareness, subtle and wrong, like a held breath that did not belong to the night or the street around them. Cassian had already removed two threats with ruthless efficiency, bodies swallowed by the mist before they could even register as fallen, but the third had not advanced. That absence was not hesitation. It was intent. The Veiled Sight never rushed the final piece. They hid. They waited. They trusted concealment to finish what blades could not.

Her back remained aligned with Cassian's, not touching, but close enough that she knew his position without needing to look or listen for him. She slowed her breathing deliberately, forcing her pulse down, and reached inward, not to draw on the Force in any visible or expressive way, but to do the opposite.

She suppressed. The technique was quiet and exacting, a practiced collapse of presence that pressed outward like an absence rather than a wave. Where the assassin had wrapped himself in a cloaking veil, carefully layered and controlled, the suppression tore at it by denying it purchase altogether. The fog thinned abruptly in one precise place, drawn tight around a shape it could no longer hide without effort.

"There," Shade said softly, the word meant only for Cassian.

The assassin lunged the instant the veil failed, abandoning subtlety for speed as discipline gave way to necessity. The blade came in high and fast, angled for her throat, a killing strike meant to open her and end everything in a single heartbeat. Shade twisted on instinct, turning her shoulder into the line of attack rather than offering her neck.

Pain exploded hot and sharp as the knife drove into the muscle of her shoulder instead, deep enough to tear flesh and jar bone. Her breath left her in a hard, involuntary gasp as the impact staggered her half a step, boots scraping against the duracrete. Blood spilled immediately, slick and warm, soaking through fabric and down her arm.

Then the second sensation followed, almost worse for how quietly it arrived. Cold. A creeping numbness spread outward from the wound, insidious and wrong, threading through muscle and nerve like ice through water. Her fingers on that side spasmed once, then lost strength entirely as her arm went heavy and unresponsive, refusing her commands. Poison.

Her vision swam as the edges of the fog blurred and smeared, as if the world had tilted off its axis. She tasted metal. Her pulse thundered too loud in her ears, every beat a reminder that time was narrowing.

Shade clenched her jaw and forced herself forward anyway. She had been trained for this, not immunity, but endurance. Survival that was measured in seconds. She compartmentalized the pain, the numbness, the creeping vertigo, shoving them into a narrow mental space she could ignore just long enough. Breathe in. Breathe out. Stay upright. Finish the fight.

Her good hand snapped to her belt. Steel flashed as her knife came free.

The assassin tried to withdraw, sensing the poison had landed cleanly, but she caught his wrist with her remaining strength, twisted hard, and drove her blade in with brutal precision into tendon and joint rather than flesh meant to kill. His arm went slack with a strangled cry. She surged forward on momentum alone, slamming her weight into him and forcing him down hard onto the duracrete.

Her knee pinned his spine. Her vision dimmed at the edges, black spots blooming and receding as she fought to stay present. The knife pressed under his jaw, trembling only once before she forced it steady.

"Do not move," Shade said, her voice controlled even as her shoulder burned and her useless arm hung heavy at her side.

The fog closed around them again, but now it felt hollow, stripped of intent and threat alike. She flicked a brief glance toward Cassian, a fast assessment she trusted him to understand. Still standing. Still solid. Good. Her focus snapped back to the man beneath her.

"You tried to cloak," she said quietly. "You hesitated when you realized it was me."

The blade shifted a fraction, enough to draw a thin, deliberate line of red along his throat.

"Who sent you," Shade demanded, her voice low and unyielding, "and how many more of you think I am still theirs to claim."

The assassin did not struggle. That alone confirmed it.

His breathing was shallow but disciplined, his body rigid with training rather than fear. He met her gaze, recognition flickering there, followed by something colder and far more final. Acceptance.

"You already know," he rasped. "Veiled Sight." It was not defiance. It was confirmation. Shade's grip did not change, the blade remaining steady beneath his jaw. "That is not an answer," she said evenly. "It is a name." His mouth twitched faintly, the smallest expression of resolve. "That is all you get," he breathed.

Before she could shift her weight, before Cassian could intervene, the assassin moved. It was not an attempt to escape. He forced his throat down against the blade she held, a sharp and deliberate motion born of doctrine rather than panic. The knife bit deep and final. Blood surged hot over her hand as his body convulsed once, then went completely slack.

Shade tore the blade free with a sharp curse and shoved the body aside. She staggered upright, balance faltering as the poison surged unchecked now that the fight was over and her focus slipped.

"Confirmed," she said to Cassian, her voice held steady by sheer force of will. "Veiled Sight doctrine. No extraction. No surrender."

Her knees buckled without warning.

The world tilted violently as her vision tunneled, darkness closing in from the edges. She made it one unsteady step toward Cassian before her strength gave out entirely.

Shade collapsed, hitting the ground hard as the poison finally claimed its due, her breath coming shallow and uneven while the fog swallowed the street once more.

Cassian Abrantes Cassian Abrantes
 



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Shade Shade

Cassian caught her before she hit the ground hard, because he refused to let the night take anything else from him.

He dropped with her, one knee striking duracrete as his arm wrapped around her back and shoulders, careful of the injured side even as urgency tightened his grip. The fog pressed in close, wet and choking, thunder rolling overhead like a warning, but Cassian's focus narrowed until there was only the weight of Shade in his arms and the shallow, uneven drag of her breath.

"Hold on," he said, voice low and fierce, the words meant to anchor her to him more than anything else. He shifted her slightly, bracing her against him so her head would not loll back, so the world would not tip her into darkness unchecked. His gloved hand found her cheek for a brief second, steadying, grounding, thumb brushing once like he could keep her here by touch alone.

His jaw clenched as he looked at her, at the fight still trying to live behind her eyes even as the poison stole the edges.

"No," he murmured, the word sharp with refusal. "No, you do not get to do that."

He leaned closer, forehead nearly to hers, breath controlled despite the storm in his chest.

"You do not get to leave me like this," Cassian said, and for the first time his composure cracked just enough to reveal the truth beneath it. Not fear, but devotion turned into something ruthless. His grip tightened, firm without hurting, as if he could physically keep her from slipping away.

"Stay with me," he ordered softly, the command wrapped in a plea he would never admit out loud. Cassian kept his body angled between her and the fog, back broad and unyielding, eyes scanning only when he had to. The city could whisper all it wanted.

Cassian did not care. All that mattered was the woman in his arms, and the promise he was making with every steady breath he forced her to take.

"Hold on," he repeated, quieter now, voice rough at the edges. "I have you. I am not letting go."

Cassian kept Shade braced against him, one arm locked around her back while his other hand snapped up to his comm. His eyes never stopped tracking the fog, even as his voice cut through it with clipped authority.

"Republic Intelligence, this is Cassian Abrantes," he said, flat and urgent. "I need a medical response with antitox capability, immediately. Agent down, confirmed poison strike, Transit Corridor east service alley off Platform Six. Send medics and a security sweep now."

He keyed the channel again, harder. "Do not route this through local. I want Intelligence assets on the ground. Now."


 
Shade did not go still.

Her body sagged against him, weight heavy and uncooperative, but there was resistance threaded through it all the same. Training. Conditioning. The instinct to survive long enough to finish the mission, even when the mission had already gone sideways. Her breathing was shallow and uneven, each inhale a conscious act rather than a reflex, but she kept doing it.

In and out, the world fractured.

The fog blurred into pale smears of light and shadow, the thunder into a distant, echoing pressure, but Cassian's voice cut through it with brutal clarity. It anchored her in the way she had been trained to anchor herself to objectives. A point. A signal. Something to orient around when everything else slipped.

Hold on. She did.

Her fingers twitched once, then curled weakly into the front of his coat as if her body knew where safety was even when her vision did not. Somewhere beneath the haze, she recognized the symptoms. The creeping numbness. The heat under the skin. The way her thoughts kept trying to slide sideways instead of forward.

Chiss grade toxin, most likely. Tailored. Efficient.

She forced her eyes open again, just long enough to find his face, blurred at the edges but unmistakable. The effort cost her, a sharp wave of dizziness rolling through her, but she clung to consciousness the way she had been taught to cling to cover under fire. Seconds mattered.

Her lips moved. No sound at first.

Then, a breath scraped out, thin but deliberate.

"…Cass…" she murmured, voice rough, barely there.

Her focus slipped, came back. She swallowed hard, jaw tightening as she fought the pull downward.

"…do they have the right antidote?" Shade asked faintly, the question fragmented but precise despite the poison chewing at her clarity. "Chiss compound…probably modified…"

Her eyes fluttered, then steadied again on his, stubborn even now.

"I'm still here," she added, more to him than to herself, the words uneven but resolute. Her grip tightened a fraction, fingers digging in just enough to be felt. "Don't let them rush it. Wrong counteragent could—"

Her breath hitched. She winced, then forced another slow inhale, riding the sound of his voice as it came back to her again, grounding her when her own thoughts tried to scatter.

She leaned into him as much as her body would allow, trusting him to hold the rest.

"I hear you," Shade whispered, quieter still. "I'm fighting it."

And she was.

Cassian Abrantes Cassian Abrantes
 



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Shade Shade

Cassian tightened his hold just enough to keep Shade anchored, his posture steady even as the fog pressed in around them. His voice stayed calm, but there was steel under it.

"I will make sure they get it right," he told her, close to her ear. "I just need whatever specifics you can think of."

He lifted his comlink again, eyes scanning the alley while he spoke with clipped precision. "Intelligence medical, confirm you heard me. Suspected Chiss compound, potentially modified. Bring Chiss counteragent options and a portable tox scanner. Do not administer a generic neutralizer without a read."

"Stay with me,"
Cassian murmured.

A momen passed. Thunder rolled again, and Cassian's gaze flicked up, then back to her face, as if the rest of the world had become background noise.

Then, quieter, almost like he was speaking to the part of her that needed something to hold onto beyond survival, he added, "And when this is done… we should take a vacation. You and me."

His mouth twitched into the faintest, stubborn hint of a smile, as if he could will the future into existence by naming it.

"Just us," he said softly. "We leave all this behind for a while."
 
Shade's breath hitched as another wave rolled through her, sharper this time, less patient. The strength bled out of her right arm all at once, fingers loosening as if they no longer belonged to her, the limb dropping uselessly against her side. She made a small, frustrated sound at the loss, jaw tightening as she fought to keep the rest of herself present.

Her left hand clenched harder in the front of his shirt, knuckles pressing in, not graceful, not controlled, but deliberate. An anchor. Him.

She swallowed, tried to pull the words together before they slipped past her reach.

"…his knife," she managed, the syllables catching and breaking as they came. "The poison's on his knife."

Her head tipped briefly against his shoulder, vision greying at the edges, then she forced herself back up again, breath dragging in slow, trained increments. Resistance. Endurance. Stay conscious long enough to matter.

The comlink crackled near Cassian's ear.

"Republic Intelligence medical team en route," a voice confirmed, brisk and focused. "Two minutes out. Tox scanner and Chiss counteragents on hand. Hold position."

Shade heard it distantly, like a sound carried through water. Relief registered, faint but real.

She drew another shallow breath, eyes flicking up toward Cassian's face when he spoke of after, of something that was not fog and poison and concrete. Her brow creased, not in pain this time, but in genuine confusion.

"…what's a vacation?" she asked faintly.

It was meant to be dry. Meant to carry a hint of humor. The shape of it was there, but the strength wasn't. The attempt dissolved into a weak exhale that might have been a laugh if her body had cooperated.

Her grip tightened once more, left hand the only thing still answering her without delay.

"Sounds… inefficient," Shade murmured, the corner of her mouth twitching without quite lifting. "…but I'll… consider it."

Her eyelids fluttered, then steadied again with visible effort as she leaned into him, trusting his arms to make up for what the poison was stealing.

"Don't let go," she whispered, quieter now, the words pressed into the space between them rather than the air.

Cassian Abrantes Cassian Abrantes
 



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Shade Shade

Cassian kept Shade close as her grip tightened, her breath shallow and stubborn against the fog. He bowed his head toward her, voice soft but unshakable, the kind of reassurance that did not ask permission to be believed.

"Don't worry," he murmured, his thumb brushing her cheek once as if he could anchor her with touch alone. "I am still here."

The wail of approach engines and the quick cadence of boots cut through the muffled street. Republic Intelligence medical personnel appeared out of the mist in a tight, efficient formation, sealed cases, scanners already active, gloved hands moving with practiced urgency. Cassian did not release Shade until they were close enough to take her without jostling the wounded shoulder.

"Easy," he told her again, quieter, as they slid the gurney in beside them. "Let them work. You did your part."

They transferred her carefully, straps clicking into place, a hood of clear filtration settling over her face as the medics called out readings in clipped, clinical tones. Cassian stayed close, one hand briefly resting at her forearm, not to hold her down, but to remind her he was still there when her eyes fluttered and the poison tried to steal the last of her focus.

Then a medic stepped in front of him, polite but firm. "General, I'm sorry you cannot go further."

Cassian's jaw tightened, but he did not argue. He did not make their job harder. He only nodded once, sharp and controlled, and watched as they wheeled her away, Shade disappearing into sterile light and closing doors, leaving him standing in the corridor like the world had been cut in half.

Hours passed the way they always did in waiting rooms, slowly, cruelly, with too much time to imagine everything that could go wrong.

Cassian paced.

Back and forth across the same strip of floor until the pattern became almost ritual, his hands flexing at his sides, his shoulders held rigid as if posture alone could keep panic from taking root. The air smelled of disinfectant and recycled ventilation, too clean for what he felt. Every time footsteps approached, he looked up, expecting answers, bracing for bad news, hating himself for how helpless he suddenly was.

He had survived firefights, political storms, negotiations with men who smiled while they lied. None of it had prepared him for sitting in a chair he could not stay in, staring at a door he was not allowed through.

Cassian dragged a hand over his mouth and nose, then let it fall, breathing out slowly through his teeth. He stopped pacing long enough to press his forehead to the cool wall, eyes closed.

He prayed.

Not loudly. Not performatively. Just a quiet, desperate plea offered to whatever gods still listened in a galaxy that often did not. For the first time in a long time, he did not care if anyone would judge him for it.

Please.

Let her be okay.

He straightened again, resumed pacing, because stillness felt like surrender. His gaze kept snapping to the corridor, to the sealed doors, to the passing medics who did not look at him long enough to offer comfort.

Cassian's expression remained composed for everyone else.

But inside, worry gnawed at him with merciless precision, and every heartbeat was a reminder that Shade was behind that door, out of reach, out of sight, and still the center of his world.


 
Shade returned to awareness in fragments.

Sound came first. A low, steady hum, not urgent, not erratic. Machines were doing exactly what they were designed to do. The cadence was precise, unalarmed. That mattered.

Then sensation followed, dulled and distant, as if her body were separated from her mind by layers she had not yet earned the right to move through. The weight of the sheet across her legs registered next, grounding and real, followed by the faint pressure of restraints meant less to confine than to keep lines stable. Her right arm felt wrong, heavy, and absent in a way that told her exactly how close the poison had come to winning.

She did not panic.

She catalogued.

Breathing was assisted with a tube under her nose. Her lungs answered when she needed to breathe on her own. Heart rate elevated, but stabilizing. The sharp edge of pain had been filed down to something contained, controlled. Manageable. That meant the antidote had worked, or was still working its way through her system.

Her eyes opened slowly.

Light resolved into pale shapes before sharpening, white ceiling tiles giving way to clean lines and sterile geometry. Republic medical bay. Controlled. Impersonal. Efficient.

Shade exhaled once, deliberately, grounding herself in the present. Survival was no longer the question.

Recovery was.

Movement at the edge of her vision drew her attention. A nurse noticed the change almost immediately, human, middle-aged, calm in the way professionals were when they had seen outcomes far worse than this. She stepped closer, eyes flicking over the readouts before leaning slightly into Shade's field of view.

"You're awake," the nurse said quietly. "Try not to move too much just yet."

Shade complied without comment. Her gaze shifted instead, scanning the room out of habit, mapping corners and exits before stopping short.

Cassian was not there.

The absence was registered immediately, not as fear, but as displacement. She remembered the weight of his arms around her, his voice cutting through the fog with ruthless clarity, the way he had anchored her as her body began to fail. The memory was intact. Sharp. Unblurred.

That, too, mattered.

"Where is he," she asked, her voice rough but controlled, shaped carefully around the lingering weakness.

The nurse followed her line of sight, then nodded with an understanding that bordered on practiced familiarity. "In the waiting area," she replied. "He's been there since they brought you in. Barely sat down."

Shade closed her eyes for a brief moment. Not from fatigue. From something quieter. Relief, acknowledged and deliberately set aside.

"Please," she said. "Bring him here."

It was not a demand. It did not need to be. The nurse hesitated only long enough to glance back at the monitors, then gave a small nod. "I'll get him."

Minutes passed.

Shade used them the way she always did, testing the limits of sensation as it returned in slow increments. Breath steady. Vision clear. Her left hand flexed once against the sheet, then stilled. The right remained distant, but present enough to confirm circulation.

She would wait.

The door slid open softly.

Cassian Abrantes Cassian Abrantes
 



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Shade Shade

Cassian received the clearance with a single, clipped nod, and he did not waste a second of it.

He was past the nurse before the words fully settled, moving with swift purpose down the corridor as if the sterile lights and quiet halls could not slow him. Hours of waiting had built a pressure in his chest that only one thing could relieve, and every step was a refusal to imagine the alternative.

The door to her room slid open.

Shade was there, propped against white sheets, monitors humming softly beside her. Awake. Present. Her eyes found him immediately, steady despite the lingering pallor, and Cassian felt something in him loosen all at once, like a fist unclenching after holding too long.

He smiled without thinking, the expression warm and unmistakably relieved. He moved closer to her bed, careful not to crowd her, but unable to keep the tenderness out of his face.

Cassian leaned in gently and kissed her lips once, then again, soft and brief, as if he was confirming she was real and not something his mind had made up in a waiting room. He stayed close for a moment, forehead nearly touching hers, before he sat on the bed right next to her.

"I was so worried about you," he admitted quietly, voice rough around the edges in a way it rarely was. His gaze searched her face with protective focus, not just looking at her, but checking her. Making sure....

"How are you feeling," Cassian asked, gentle and intent. "Tell me."


 
Shade did not pull away when he kissed her.

She accepted the contact without hesitation or surprise, letting it ground her in the simple, undeniable fact of him being there. When his forehead lingered close to hers, she closed her eyes briefly, not from exhaustion, but from a quiet, private relief she did not bother trying to hide. His worry was evident in every careful movement, every searching glance, and she found herself silently grateful for it in a way that felt unfamiliar and unguarded.

If their positions had been reversed, she would have done exactly the same.

That realization settled in her chest with a weight that was not fear, but recognition.

Her left hand shifted against the sheet, fingers curling lightly around his sleeve, anchoring him as much as herself. Her right arm remained still at her side, heavy and unresponsive in a way she had already assessed and accepted. When she opened her eyes again, her gaze was steady on his, clear despite the lingering pallor.

"I'm here," she said quietly, her voice rough but controlled. "The antidote worked. Slowly, but cleanly."

She did not minimize it, nor did she dramatize it. The truth did not require either.

"My right arm isn't cooperating yet," Shade continued, her tone even, clinical without being distant. "Sensation is returning, but motor control is delayed. They warned me it would take time. Physical therapy will likely be necessary to regain full function."

Her thumb brushed once against his sleeve, a small, deliberate movement that carried more reassurance than emphasis.

"That's manageable," she added. "I've worked back from worse."

Her gaze softened then, not by much, but enough that he would notice. She studied his face the way he had studied hers, taking in the tension he had tried to contain, the strain of waiting, the unmistakable care threaded through it all.

"I know you were worried," she said, quietly acknowledging what he had not tried to hide.
"And I'm… grateful."

The word was chosen carefully, but it was honest.

She held his gaze for another moment, watching the way the tension in him had not vanished so much as eased, loosening by degrees now that he could see her clearly, alive and present in front of him. Her fingers tightened just slightly around his sleeve, not to restrain him or ask for anything, but as a quiet allowance, an unspoken yes to the closeness he had offered and never withdrawn.

"You don't have to keep standing guard," Shade said softly, her voice still rough but steady. "I'm not going anywhere."

It was not a vow meant to stretch into an uncertain future or bind him to promises neither of them could predict. It was simply the truth of this moment, given plainly and without armor.

She stayed there with him, awake and grounded, her hand still resting against his sleeve, leaving the quiet open and unguarded, inviting him to fill it or simply remain in it with her, exactly as he was.

Cassian Abrantes Cassian Abrantes
 



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Shade Shade

Cassian's hand stayed over hers, steady and warm, as if he could lend her strength by sheer proximity. His voice was quiet, but it carried the weight of an oath.

"We will get you back," he said, certain and unwavering. "Every ounce of it. Every function. Every piece they tried to steal."

He leaned closer, careful of the lines and the bruising. "I will be here with you," Cassian added. "I will stand guard for you, forever."

The words left him before he could temper them into something more sensible, and he did not take them back.

He looked down for a moment, eyes fixed on the sheet, on the faint tremor of her breath, on the reality that she had almost slipped away from him. When he lifted his gaze again, the softness was still there, but it was edged now by something colder, something that had been waiting behind his composure.

"Are there more of them," he asked, voice low and controlled, but tight with intent. His jaw clenched as he searched her face, not for weakness, but for information.

"If there are," Cassian said, and the promise in his tone turned hard, "I will go after them. I will hunt them down."

He squeezed her hand gently, as if to remind himself that she was still here, and then his eyes sharpened with a protective fury he did not bother to hide.

"I will kill them," he finished, each word measured. "I will kill them all."


 
Shade did not release his hand.

Instead, her fingers threaded through his, slower than usual, deliberate, the contact firmer than what her body strictly needed. In her mind, it registered immediately as weakness. Exposure. A concession she would normally correct.

She did not. She let it stay.

The weight of his promise settled over her, not comforting in the simple sense, but stabilizing. Cassian's certainty did not crowd her or demand reassurance. It stood beside her, immovable, and she found herself bracing against it rather than away from it. That, more than anything else, was the consequence she had been trying not to name.

When he spoke of hunting, of killing, of ending them all, she did not interrupt him. She did not soften his words or redirect the anger behind them. She only turned her head slightly, eyes shifting away for a brief moment as she gathered herself, as if orienting around the shape of a truth she had carried alone for a long time.

Then she nodded once. When she looked back at him, her gaze was steady again, composed, but there was no distance left in it.

"Yes," Shade said quietly. "There are more."

Her thumb tightened once against his hand, a subtle confirmation of what she was about to say.

"They recruited after I left," she continued evenly. "Expanded. Trained replacements. Their leadership is deliberately deceptive and internally compartmentalized. No one sees the full structure unless they are meant to disappear into it."

She did not dramatize it. She did not lower her voice. It was simply information, delivered cleanly.

"I have been tracking them for years," Shade added. "Indirectly. Through shell movements, intermediaries, and pattern repetition. They adapt, but not as well as they believe."

Her eyes held his now, unflinching.

"Your desire to see them gone aligns with mine," she said. "That has always been the end state."

Another pause, shorter this time.

"We will work on this together," Shade continued, her tone measured but unmistakably inclusive. "Once my arm is operational. I will not compromise execution by moving too early."

Her fingers remained laced with his, the grip neither loosening nor tightening, simply present.

"I am still here," she added quietly. "And I am not stepping away from this."

The words were not a challenge to his fury, nor a restraint on it. They were something steadier than either.

A shared line, drawn clearly.

And for once, she did not face it alone.

Cassian Abrantes Cassian Abrantes
 



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Shade Shade

Cassian sat beside Shade in the rehab clinic waiting room, close enough that his shoulder nearly brushed hers. The space smelled faintly of antiseptic and warmed plastoid, quiet except for distant voices and the soft hum of a ventilation unit overhead.

He kept his posture relaxed, but his attention never drifted far. His gaze tracked the doorway each time it opened, then returned to Shade's sling and her face. He did not hover, just stayed present.

"You got this, I'm with you." he said quietly, voice steady.

His hand rested on his knee, fingers flexing once as if he were resisting the urge to reach for hers. Then he did anyway, gentle, letting his fingertips meet her good hand.

The door across the room clicked, and a therapist called her name.

Cassian rose with her immediately, calm and certain.


 
Shade rose when the therapist called her name, the movement precise despite the sling and the faint hitch it still carried. This was not unfamiliar ground. The routine, the room, the cadence of recovery, all of it had already been mapped and remapped in her mind. She knew what was coming. That did not make it easier.

She glanced at Cassian as he stood with her, a brief look that acknowledged him without needing reassurance. His presence was already accounted for. Still, she did not pull her hand away when he touched it. She let herself take the steadiness he offered, even if she did not look at him for it.

Inside the therapy room, the air was warmer, and the equipment lay out with clinical optimism. The therapist guided her through the first set of movements, slow and incremental, designed to coax rather than force. Shade complied, jaw set, focus narrowed.

The irritation came quietly at first.

Her shoulder resisted the angle it was meant to reach. Her arm lagged behind her intent, muscles responding a fraction too late, a fraction too weak. She corrected, adjusted, and tried again. The result was the same. Incomplete. Insufficient.

Her breath sharpened.

She stopped the motion herself before the therapist could intervene, lowering her arm with controlled restraint rather than pain. Her fingers curled briefly at her side, the closest she came to a physical expression of frustration.

"It should be responding faster," she said, not to the therapist, but to the situation itself. "The signal is there. The pathway is intact."

She tried again. Failed again.

This time, the irritation edged closer to anger, not explosive, but dense, inward. She exhaled slowly through her nose, eyes dropping to the floor for a moment before lifting again, steady but sharper now.

"I know how to rebuild function," Shade continued, voice even but strained. "I know how long this should take."

Her gaze flicked briefly to Cassian, not seeking comfort, but acknowledging the witness.

"If this doesn't return fully," she said quietly, the doubt threading through despite her control, "then my margins narrow. Permanently."

She hated that thought. Hated that it existed at all.

Her shoulders squared again, resolve reasserting itself even as frustration lingered beneath it.

"I am not finished," Shade said, more firmly now. "I just…dislike uncertainty when it involves my own limits."

She drew a steady breath, preparing to try again, anger at herself carefully banked rather than denied, and glanced once more at Cassian.

"Stay," she added simply. "I want to get through this."

Then she turned back to the therapist and lifted her arm again, willing it to obey, refusing to let doubt be the thing that stopped her.

Cassian Abrantes Cassian Abrantes
 



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Shade Shade

Cassian listened to her without interrupting, letting her put words to the frustration instead of trying to soften it out of existence. When she finished, he held her gaze for a beat, then nodded once, quiet and sure.

"Can you give us a moment," he asked the therapist.

The therapist returned a polite nod and stepped out, the door sliding shut with a soft hiss that left the room suddenly smaller and quieter and Cassian moved closer.

"Hey," he said gently. He took her good hand in both of his, careful and warm, and lifted it slightly as if grounding himself as much as her. Then he leaned in and kissed her forehead, slow and tender. A second later, he pressed a brief kiss to her lips, soft enough to be reassurance rather than distraction.

"It is okay to be angry," Cassian told her, voice low and steady. "It is okay to have questions. More importantly, it is okay to be vulnerable right now." He stayed close, his thumbs stroking her hands,in a repetitive calm.

"That does not mean you are weak," he continued. "This is going to take time." His eyes searched hers, not for compliance, but for the part of her that would let him in.

"I am here with you," Cassian said, and there was no doubt in it. "And I am not letting you go through this alone." He drew in a slow breath, then let it out, as if offering her a rhythm to borrow. "Don't think about where you should be," he added softly. "Focus on one thing at a time. One movement. One day. One session."

He leaned his forehead lightly toward hers for a brief moment, close enough that the world outside the room did not matter. "You will get through this," Cassian murmured. "I know you will."


 
Shade did not pull away from him.

She accepted the kisses without hesitation, letting them land where they did, letting the warmth and steadiness of him settle the sharp edge of her frustration without erasing it. Her eyes closed briefly when he kissed her forehead, not in surrender, but in acknowledgment. When he spoke, she listened, really listened, even as part of her resisted the premise of comfort as a tool.

When he finished, there was a short pause. Measured. Intentional.

Her gaze dropped to the edge of the bed, fingers tightening once in the sheet before relaxing again.

"I still hate it," she said quietly.

Not dramatic. Just honest.

"I won't use that to get me through this," Shade continued, her voice steady even as irritation lingered beneath it. "Emotion has no place in recovery. It clouds assessment. It leads to shortcuts."

She lifted her eyes back to him then, meeting his gaze fully.

"But," she added, after a beat, "thank you."

The words were simple, but they carried weight. Gratitude, given without apology.

Her left hand lifted then, slowly, deliberately, and her fingertips traced the line of his jaw. The touch lingered a fraction longer than it ever would have before this moment, gentler, more open. It was not a request. It was an admission.

"I am becoming softer," Shade said evenly. "Weaker, for now."

She did not look away as she said it.

"But with your help," she continued, her thumb brushing lightly against his skin, "I will return to what I was."

A pause. Then something colder, more familiar, slid back into place alongside that softness.

"And when I do," Shade said, "we can go on the hunt."

Her hand lowered, settling back against the bed, but her focus remained sharp.

"I have information," she added. "Years' worth. Patterns, recruitment markers, and changes in leadership behavior since I left. I will share all of it with you."

Then, quieter, but no less precise:

"Do we know who attacked us?"

She held his gaze, irritation banked, resolve intact, trusting him with the question in a way she would not have before.

Cassian Abrantes Cassian Abrantes
 



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Shade Shade

Cassian held Shade's gaze for a moment longer, his hand still over hers, and let his voice soften around the edges.

"I have some IDs on some of them," he said quietly. "That is all we need."

He leaned in and pressed a brief kiss to her hands, then eased back just enough to give her room without stepping away from her. His thumb gave one final, steadying sweep over her hand before he turned toward the door.

"Come back in," Cassian called to the therapist, calm and polite.

When the therapist returned, Cassian shifted to the side, taking up his place near the wall again, present but not crowding. He offered Shade a small smile as she reset her posture and prepared to continue. It was warm and encouraging, the kind of look that said he saw her effort, and he was proud of it.

The smile faded a fraction as she started the next movement. Not enough to notice by anyone.

He could see the frustration she was trying to keep contained, the irritation at her own body for not obeying on command. Shade was not used to negotiating with her limits. She was used to setting them and then pushing past them.

Cassian's chest tightened with a quiet, private worry. He wondered if this was only the poison and time, or if it was something the Veiled Sight had planned with cruel precision.

And underneath that, a thought he did not like surfaced anyway.

Was it him.

Was it his presence that made her softer, more willing to lean, more exposed than she ever allowed herself to be. He kept his face composed and his posture steady, because she needed certainty more now than ever. His eyes stayed on her, attentive, supportive, and gentle.

Whatever the answer was, Cassian stayed where he was. Because she was still fighting. And he was not going to let her do it alone.


 

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