Rey Skywalker (
strongerthanblood) wrote2020-01-19 01:08 pm
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debut [for ben]
There's a moment that Rey realizes that this is the end of her story. She can feel the life draining out of her, but she isn't afraid of death, not anymore. How can she be, when with it comes the hope of new life for generations to come? She had won not just the battle, but the entire war, and her work is done.
Rey has spent her entire life searching for answers, always trying to find them in other people, but as she lays on the cold stone and stares up at the sky, she knows exactly who she is. The answer was inside her all along.
She is Rey, and her choices were all her own. Perhaps her life is ending just at the moment it truly begins, but she is content with that. There a certain amount of peace in knowing that her destiny has been fulfilled, and her friends can go on to live safe, happy lives. Her story may be over, but it will never die. The people she loves will live to tell it, and she will never truly be gone.
It's easy to give herself over to the Force. She fades away into it, and as the last breath leaves her lungs she hopes only to see those she's lost on the other side. Because even in death, she has hope. Be with me.
Then it's all over, and she can rest.
Power surges through Rey's body like a live wire, reawakening every nerve as blood pumps once more through her heart, and her eyes snap open as she sucks in a deep, gasping breath. She had thought her fight was over, her journey complete, but perhaps there is more work to be done.
Once she's on her feet, she holds out her hand and feels Luke's saber-- her saber-- fly into it, but before she can light it she comes to realize that she is no longer on Exegol. It is cold and dark, but this isn't the place she took her last breath.
The place she stands now is a clearing surrounded by trees, green and lush despite the snow falling down onto them, and her. Evergreen, they're called. They refuse to die, even when the world around them is cold and inhospitable. It makes sense that she would be reborn here, among them.
Rey blinks the snow from her eyelashes and reaches out around her, holding one trembling hand out tentatively. The energy that surges up to meet her is entirely unfamiliar and she gasps as it envelopes her. For as cold and dark as her current surroundings are, the place she's in is teeming with life. It's all around her-- joy and sorrow, light and dark. Violence and peace.
And Ben.
She feels it as suddenly as if she had been shocked and she lets the sensation flow through her, letting it warm her from the inside out as she reaches for him. Be with me, she thinks, pushing it through the bond as she looks around with wide eyes.
In all the chaos on Exegol, she thought that he had perished. Maybe he had, and she had too, and this is what comes after. In this precise moment, everything they've been through, everything he's done-- none of it matters. He's familiar to her in a place where nothing else is, and he's the only one that she can feel. More than that, she can feel the light within him.
"Ben," she says, breathing out the name to give it new life in this strange place. "You're here."
Rey has spent her entire life searching for answers, always trying to find them in other people, but as she lays on the cold stone and stares up at the sky, she knows exactly who she is. The answer was inside her all along.
She is Rey, and her choices were all her own. Perhaps her life is ending just at the moment it truly begins, but she is content with that. There a certain amount of peace in knowing that her destiny has been fulfilled, and her friends can go on to live safe, happy lives. Her story may be over, but it will never die. The people she loves will live to tell it, and she will never truly be gone.
It's easy to give herself over to the Force. She fades away into it, and as the last breath leaves her lungs she hopes only to see those she's lost on the other side. Because even in death, she has hope. Be with me.
Then it's all over, and she can rest.
Power surges through Rey's body like a live wire, reawakening every nerve as blood pumps once more through her heart, and her eyes snap open as she sucks in a deep, gasping breath. She had thought her fight was over, her journey complete, but perhaps there is more work to be done.
Once she's on her feet, she holds out her hand and feels Luke's saber-- her saber-- fly into it, but before she can light it she comes to realize that she is no longer on Exegol. It is cold and dark, but this isn't the place she took her last breath.
The place she stands now is a clearing surrounded by trees, green and lush despite the snow falling down onto them, and her. Evergreen, they're called. They refuse to die, even when the world around them is cold and inhospitable. It makes sense that she would be reborn here, among them.
Rey blinks the snow from her eyelashes and reaches out around her, holding one trembling hand out tentatively. The energy that surges up to meet her is entirely unfamiliar and she gasps as it envelopes her. For as cold and dark as her current surroundings are, the place she's in is teeming with life. It's all around her-- joy and sorrow, light and dark. Violence and peace.
And Ben.
She feels it as suddenly as if she had been shocked and she lets the sensation flow through her, letting it warm her from the inside out as she reaches for him. Be with me, she thinks, pushing it through the bond as she looks around with wide eyes.
In all the chaos on Exegol, she thought that he had perished. Maybe he had, and she had too, and this is what comes after. In this precise moment, everything they've been through, everything he's done-- none of it matters. He's familiar to her in a place where nothing else is, and he's the only one that she can feel. More than that, she can feel the light within him.
"Ben," she says, breathing out the name to give it new life in this strange place. "You're here."
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He moves right by her and she turns to follow, lifting her hand as if she could touch, but she curls it into a fist and drops it at her side just as fast. His energy feels different to her, less jagged and fractured. Less tormented. There is still a storm inside of him, but perhaps it isn't raging quite so hard.
She's so proud of him, but this isn't the time to get into that.
"Alright." It's hard to watch him walk away and she feels a moment of clawing panic, but she pushes it away and makes herself walk forward. The moon stays on her left and she keeps her hand on her saber, shivering as she steps over piles of fallen snow.
"I can hear it. The waves." She rushes toward the sound, breathing heavier as the trees start to thin, and she lets out a shuddering breath as she stumbles out onto a beach. There are lights in the distance, stretching out into the water, and she starts walking toward it. "I'm at the water's edge, and I think I see the boardwalk. There are lights on the water."
It's even colder here, and she lifts her saber in a trembling hand and ignites it, hoping that it will give her a bit of warmth while serving as a signal. "Look for my light."
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It was late, the streets were largely empty, save for a few lone cars, and pedestrians stumbling home from a light night of revelry. He rushed past them and they seemed to take no notice.
"Rey," he said again, his voice reverberating through the link binding them, even as his boots skidded on a patch of ice, arms pinwheeling to right his balance.
"This is a city. You might encounter someone else before I get to you, but they won't hurt you."
Thinking of her lightsaber and the fierceness with which she always came at him, he added, "Try not to scare them," with something of a smile in his tone.
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"I'll do my best," she replies with a smile of her own, teeth chattering slightly. When she sees stairs in the distance, she makes herself run through the wet sand to get to it. Nearly everything she sees is unfamiliar to her, and she stares up at a giant mechanical circle, struck with curiosity for a moment before shakes her head and turns away.
"I'm up on the boardwalk. There isn't anyone here." She can tell that this might be a lively place, but right now it is shuttered and dark. There are small booths and she reads them all, not quite making sense of any of them. She knows what cotton is, and candy, but not what the words mean together.
"Look for my light," she says again, hoisting her lightsaber up into the air with one arm. "I'm by a place that seems to sell whatever a corndog is."
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As his steps slowed, he passed into that disorienting space where her physical proximity seemed to overlap with the presence of her Force projection. Her voice echoed inside his mind, while the glow of her lightsaber grew brighter with each step.
In the distance, now, he could see the shape of her. He could see the tremble of her lightsaber, her eyes wild and frightened but as determined as ever. "Rey," he called, and now that she was there in front of him, he found himself unable to speak beyond that.
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But then she hears a laugh. Ben's laugh. That new sound is more interesting than any place she's seen, and she blinks as a small smile graces her face. He laughs now.
He's close. She can feel him now, and she startles a bit when he says her name. It comes from a place close to her, not just through their projection, and she turns off the saber as she slowly pivots to face him.
"Ben." She stares at him, blinking slowly as she takes a step forward. He looks like he did when he came for her on Exegol, softer than she's used to but still so strong. When he tumbled over that cliff's edge, she had thought he was gone, having been too wrapped up in the fight to reach for him like she had wanted.
But he came for her. Instead of clashing together in a rush of anger, they had fought side by side. And now they're here, in this strange, empty place. Together.
"Ben," she says again, this time feeling her eyes well up with tears as her voice trembles. "Are we dead?"
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His jaw worked, his throat tight as he looked away from her.
"I don't know why we're here. We aren't the only ones. There are others, pulled here from the far reaches of the universe. They call it Darrow. I thought of it as a prison, but..."
He shook his head, his throat clearing.
"We should find someplace warm."
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"But--" She died. She knows that she died. Or-- at least she thought she did. None of this makes any sense, but she finds herself too tired to argue it. She wants to be alive. Of course she does.
"Darrow," she repeats, swallowing hard as she hooks the saber onto her belt and slides her arms into the sleeves of his coat. In any other moment she might find it comical, how much she swims in it, but she can't seem to stop staring at his face.
His scars are gone. During all the chaos on Exegol, she isn't sure if she noticed. She did that. She was also the one to give him the scar in the first place, and her chest tightens as she's nearly overwhelmed by confusion.
She should hate him, shouldn't she? But she doesn't. She can't. She doesn't want to.
Before she even realizes what she's doing, she lifts her arm and tugs the sleeve of the jacket down until she can touch her cold fingertips to his cheek, where the scar once was. At the moment of contact, she feels that same spark from when their fingers touched in the hut, and it makes her breath hitch.
"Yes," she says, blinking as she pulls her hand back and swallows hard, blinking the sting from her eyes as she finally tears her gaze away from his face. "Someplace warm."
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"I arrived two weeks ago. I've found only a handful of people who claim any familiarity with our galaxy," he said, choosing not to mention the presence of Luke Skywalker, just yet. He led her down the boardwalk, toward the lights of the city, here he knew they might find an dining establishment open through the night.
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"We really can't leave? Wait." He keeps walking, and she lunges forward to grab him by the arm. "Wait, Ben. What do you mean you've been here for two weeks? We were just-- we just--"
Her hand is still on his arm and she jerks it away, brow furrowing as she forces herself to take a steadying breath. "I don't understand any of this."
It's then, once she tries to really reach out into the force, that she realizes how different this place feels, and she knows that he's telling her the truth. She thinks of Resistance, her friends, and she doesn't even know if they all made it out alive.
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His jaw worked, molars grinding, and he allowed himself a brief reprieve as he stepped ahead of her, opening the door to a small, empty diner with its Open sign cheerfully lit.
"When I arrived, the city was being invaded by fish monsters. You should count yourself lucky," he said wryly, plucking a pair of plastic menus from a stand by the door, which instructed them to sit wherever they liked.
Passing the exhausted looking waitress at the bar on his way towards the booth in the back, he ordered two coffees, which had already become something like a routine for him. It would be warm, if nothing else.
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Her brow quirks at the mention of fish monsters, but she's too distracted by the place he's led her into to question it. She has to squint against the light, and she looks around as she follows him.
The smell of food makes her turn, stomach rumbling slightly as she stares at what must be a kitchen. When was the last time she ate something?
When she turns back around, she's struck by the sight of Ben sitting in a booth. He looks so-- casual. His clothes are simple, free of his ornate helmet and cowl, and she blinks a few times before sliding in across from him. When she puts her hands on the table, the sleeves of his coat cover them entirely and the corner of her mouth twitches.
"Are we eating?" She asks, trying and probably failing not to sound hopeful. The place seems so calm, with everyone minding their own business, and she turns to give the space a lingering look before she feels comfortable enough to turn her back on it and face him.
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Her voice brought him back to himself, and patting his pocket to make sure he'd remembered the billfold he'd acquired for Darrow's strange paper and plastic credits, he nodded, pushing one of the menus in her direction. Afterwards, he let his hands rest, folded calmly on the table as he fought the urge to bury his face in his palms and weep.
He'd been alone for so long, and he'd thought it only fitting that he be alone in Darrow, as well.
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Someone comes over and sets down two cups of steaming, fragrant liquid. She doesn't know what it is, but she tugs her sleeves down so she can cup the mug in her bare hands. Blissful warmth travels up her arms and she sighs softly, taking a brief moment to close her eyes and enjoy the sensation.
When she opens them again, Ben is still sitting there stone-faced, and she isn't sure what it means. She could try to look into his head and find out, but she wouldn't do that to him now.
"Are you unhappy that I'm here?" She finally asks, lifting her chin a little when her voice cracks. It didn't feel that way when they were together in the bond, when he assured her that she was safe, but he's so quiet and the energy coming off of him makes her eyes sting.
She can't even for sure state she's pleased to have found him here, but she can't deny the pull that she feels towards him, whatever it means. There is one thing that she knows for sure. "I'm glad that I am not alone."
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He knew that she would drink the coffee black without complaint, but he reached for a packet of sugar, tearing it open and dumping its contents into her cup with deceptively steady hands.
Clearing his throat, he said, "You'll have somewhere to live. Credits to buy food. This happens often enough that they have a system in place."
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Her brow lifts slightly as she stares at those hands, and she doesn't look away until he speaks again. Even if they are being held captive here, that all seems a little too good to be true. "And what do I have to do for the credits?"
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"If you want more, you get a job. What that might be, you'll have to figure out for yourself."
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"I can't imagine just living," she tells him, smiling tightly even as her eyes well up with tears. Few people even know of their universe, he had said. So there is no Resistance, and no First Order. No more waiting for parents that will never come.
No more fighting, even though the person who was once her greatest enemy is sitting right across from her, adding sugar to her drink to make it more palatable. It's a lot to take in.
Her mouth opens but the woman comes back to ask for their order, and Rey gives the menu another look but her vision is too blurred with stubborn tears to read the words. She spots a picture of eggs, which she only had once or twice on Jakku, and points at them. "I'll have this, please."
And then the woman keeps asking her questions. How does she want the eggs cooked? What kind of bread? What kind of juice? Rey swallows hard and looks over at Ben, looking vaguely overwhelmed. "How do you eat your eggs?"
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"We'll have two. Over-easy," he said, his gaze sliding from Rey's stricken face to the waitress, who seemed largely unfazed by Rey's indecision. "Wheat toast. Orange juice. And a side of bacon."
She opened her mouth, prepared to ask yet another question, but the stony expression she was met with had her gathering up their menus and hurrying off to put in their order.
With a sigh, Ben turned to look at the window, as a car drove slowly by.
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She turns to thank the waitress and when she faces forward once more, Ben is turned away from her, facing toward the glass and not looking at her. Rey sighs and looks down at her drink, carefully raising it to her lips to take a sip.
It's awful and her nose wrinkles as she gives the cup a look, but she swallows and takes another sip just to feel the warmth of it inside of her. Ben's hands are still on the table and she finds herself wanting to reach across and touch him, but he isn't even looking at her.
There are so many things that they could talk about, that perhaps they should talk about, but she doesn't say any of them. Instead she thinks of how his hands felt on her shoulders, and she crosses her arms on the tabletop to drop her face into the soft sleeves of the coat.
It smells like him. She wasn't even aware that she knew what he smelled like.
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Drawing in a breath, he reached for the small container of creamer cups and slid it towards her. "Try this," he muttered, with a vague gesture to her coffee cup.
He sipped his own coffee. Black.
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Rey can hear Ben take a breath as she keeps her head pillowed in the sleeves, and she thinks about how, such a short time ago, she would never let her guard down around him like this. The vulnerable nape of her neck is exposed, and even when she hears the scrape of something moving across the table, she doesn’t move.
She isn’t afraid of him. She’s afraid of what she feels for him, but not of him. Not anymore.
At the sound of his voice, she lifts her head and looks down at the little white pods, giving him a skeptical look before she opens one and dumps it into the drink. She watches the color turn lighter, and then picks it up and takes a sip. It’s still bitter, but it does taste better.
Ben is drinking it plain, which doesn’t really surprise her. Of course he isn’t the type to indulge in small comforts. After taking another sip, she reaches for a sugar packet and holds it out for him to take. “It’s okay to have something sweet.”
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Whether it was intentional or not, on either of their parts, it was a metaphor lacking in subtlety. With a sigh, he plucked the sugar from her grasp, careful not to touch her fingers, and dumped its contents into his cup.
"I died on Exegol," he said, matter-of-fact as his spoon clanked gently against the rim of his cup. "This, I assumed, was my punishment."
He set his spoon down, hands folded on the table top.
"Now, I'm not so sure. You're here, and you..." He cleared his throat. "You certainly don't deserve punishment."
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She takes another sip of the drink, growing a little fonder if it each time, but when he suddenly speaks she freezes with the cup nearly touching her lips. She blinks rapidly and bites her lip as she sets the cup down, clearing her own throat as she sits up a little straighter.
“I thought you said that we weren’t dead.” Her brow furrows as she sets her hands flat on the table, shaking her head a little as her eyes sting. “I— I remember you falling and I—“ She pauses to take a breath and for one brief flash, she is envious of the way that he can keep himself so composed. “I remember dying, Ben. After it was all over.”
So maybe this is what comes after. But if that’s the case, why is it just her and Ben here? Where is everyone else? She reaches up to quickly swipe her thumb under one eye and then blows out a shaky breath, lips pursed as she steadies herself.
“Ben.” She looks up to meet his eyes, nearly reeling at the pain she sees in them. “I don’t want us to be dead.”
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He lifted his hands in a helpless shrug. The waitress, with perhaps the universe's worst timing, chose that moment to bring them their plates.
"I don't know that it matters," Ben said, offering the waitress a tight-lipped smile, one that communicated quite clearly that he didn't care for her to linger.
"It seems that we can be in two places at once. The way I understand it, whatever is happening in our world continues on without us," he said, pushing the plate of bacon towards her.
He felt perched on the edge of a knife.
"We're stuck here, for now. Neither of us want to be, but I... I have to believe that the choices we made... I have to believe that those last few moments weren't for nothing. Otherwise, it all comes crashing down and I—"
His jaw clenched. Their eggs were getting cold.
"I'm trying very hard to keep that from happening."
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But there isn’t any. Ben is telling her the truth, at least what he believes it to be. That much she knows. He’s dead and she’s alive but somehow they are both here, and they are both there. It doesn’t make any sense, but he’s telling her the truth.
Their food arrives and for a moment she is nearly distracted by it all, eyes widening slightly at what she considers to be a grand feast, but Ben draws her attention back. This time she cannot help herself. She leans over and takes his hands, curling her fingers around his wide palms.
“They were not for nothing,” she says, voice quiet but full of conviction. “No matter what happens here, it wasn’t for nothing.”
Suddenly, she remembers the moment of serenity she felt on Exegol when she first saw Ben in the dyad, and realized what he had done. It felt like pieces clicking into place, like relief and joy and pride all at once. The feeling couldn’t linger, not with the matter at hand, but she still felt it. She pushes that feeling out towards Ben through their bond, smiling a little as she squeezes his hands and nods.
“I’m proud of you,” she breathes out. “Ben.”
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