Aren didn't answer him at first.
She kept pace beside him, hands tucked into her pockets, breath drifting pale in the Ilum air. Snow crunched under their boots in a steady rhythm, and for a few moments the cold, glittering world around them felt far louder than either of them were willing to be.
But Omen knew her rhythms by now—the way her silence wasn't avoidance, but a sharpening of thought. He could almost feel it, the subtle shift in her focus as she angled her head slightly, the faint crease forming between her brows.
She wasn't ignoring his question.
She was dissecting it.
"Your Life Day gift," she echoed, not mocking, not dismissive—just thoughtful, as though the words themselves had flipped a switch behind her eyes.
Her gaze drifted to him then. Not a soft, romantic glance—nothing so simple. It was the kind of look she used when evaluating a piece of machinery she planned to modify. A quiet sweep over his frame, lingering not on aesthetics but on hidden places: the joints that sometimes tensed in the cold, the arm that still didn't move with perfect fluidity when he was tired, the faint stiffness along his shoulder where old wiring met bone.
To anyone else, it would've looked like she was simply studying him.
Omen knew she was reading him like a blueprint.
And then—almost imperceptibly—the corner of her mouth shifted. A faint spark softened the severity of her expression, not quite a smile but something close enough to warm the icy air around them.
"You're easier to shop for than you think," she murmured.
His brow lifted, amused and intrigued, but she didn't elaborate. Instead she nudged her shoulder lightly against his, a quiet brush of warmth through layers of fabric.
"And you'll like what I have in mind."
That tone—calm, assured, just a shade too pleased with herself—made a slow heat unfurl in his chest. Aren didn't get that tone unless she'd already solved a problem before he knew it existed.
And Force help him, he loved her for it.
They walked another few steps before her hand slipped free from her pocket. She reached out—not for his hand, not for affection—and let her fingers glide across the inside of his wrist. Right over the scar he never talked about, where a Kaminoan neural regulator still interfaced just beneath the skin.
The touch was feather-light, gone almost before he processed it.
But the implication landed like a pulse of heat beneath his ribs.
Aren wasn't thinking about trinkets.
Or charm bracelets.
Or playful, sentimental gifts.
She was thinking in circuitry.
In skeletal reinforcement.
In neural conduction and modern wiring.
In
fixing what the galaxy had never bothered to update.
A gift shaped with clinical precision…
and startling intimacy.
A gift from a woman who didn't express affection with words, but with a soldering iron and a vision of what he could become.
"Don't worry," she said, as though she hadn't just set his heart hammering, "I already know what you need."
And then—just like that—she pulled her hand back and nodded toward a vendor stand ahead where steam rose into the frigid air.
"Come on. Hot chocolate. Before your teeth start chattering."
It should have been a tease—but something in her eyes softened when she said it. Not out of pity, and not out of romance either. It was something steadier, more grounded. The kind of warmth she only ever allowed him to see when no one else was close enough to witness it.
The kind of warmth that told him, without a single word:
She wasn't planning a gift to impress him.
She was planning a gift to keep him alive.
To strengthen what had been broken long before she ever touched his life.
To rebuild the pieces of him with the same hands that could dismantle a starship engine in her sleep.
A gift no one else could give.
A gift only Aren would dare.
Omen felt the realization settle deep inside him, warming him more than the scarf around her neck ever could.
Whatever she was planning…
it wasn't small.
And it wasn't simple.
It was hers.
And it was for him.
And for a moment—just one—he let himself lean into the quiet miracle that someone like her wanted to build a future he could survive in.
Sergeant Omen