𝙢𝙚𝙧𝙧𝙞𝙣 (
noch) wrote in
revivalproject2021-06-12 04:01 pm
closed ☾
WHO: Merrin + Cal, Merrin + Cobb
WHERE: Cal's workshop, those houses Cobb is fixing up
WHAT: Everything's just hunky dory here, nothing to worry about.
WHEN: Just after the superhero city event!
WARNINGS: Mentions of slavery and genocide in the thread with Cobb.
[ haha just kidding starters in comments below ]
WHERE: Cal's workshop, those houses Cobb is fixing up
WHAT: Everything's just hunky dory here, nothing to worry about.
WHEN: Just after the superhero city event!
WARNINGS: Mentions of slavery and genocide in the thread with Cobb.
[ haha just kidding starters in comments below ]

coming in hot
She doesn't indulge in it—in fact, it feels like her thoughts have turned traitor on her. She remembers standing outside the charity gala venue with him, also wanting to run her fingers through his hair then, the warmth from his jacket seeping into her skin in spite of the chill in the air. There was a warmth inside her too, a buzzing in her chest whenever he was around that must have been the city playing tricks on her—might still be playing tricks on her, honestly.
Because that warmth is still there, hearing him say that her happiness made him happy. It's the kind that... makes her feel a little unsure what to say, almost shy, though she does send him the gentlest of smiles, brief but sincere.
As usual, she tries to deflect. "Yes," she says finally. "You were not so very different, even as an... intern." Her teasing tone makes it sound like that could be a bad thing, even though she truly thinks it's anything but—he was still the kind, earnest Cal she knows.
There is one thing that kind of sticks out in her mind, though— "That is what you were like as a child?" With the memories in her head, she can picture him in her mind's eye as a small, gangly child that she often dragged around. Even when she was young, she was headstrong and outspoken.
alert alert
"Hey, you were an intern too, you know," he points out, brow arching, smile still in place, if quirking slightly. Having her company sure made it easier to deal with the menial tasks they'd been given to make use of the time.
He breathes out a laugh then, recalling some of their adventures as children, perhaps even a little sad that those hadn't been real memories. "For the most part, I guess?" He had little experience with play, but even in his thoughts his child-self from those memories had been quick to pick up on things, eager to please, and to explore new things. He wonders that he would have done as much if Merrin hadn't been the one instigating. He's pretty sure they'd wandered onto private properties on more than one occasion in the name of adventure.
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"Hm." The hum is wry, her eyebrows arching, and then she adds mysteriously, "That does not surprise me." Her gaze sweeps over him, not subtle at all, sizing him up now against the child she remembers. "You were much shorter." Then it lingers on his face, her eyes narrowing slightly. "And you had these..." What's the word? She doesn't actually know it, so she goes with: "Spots."
(Freckles. She means freckles. It's not something her kind have, women or men.)
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"Short comes with being a child," he says. "I think I was still taller than you." Maybe about the same height. But hey, if she's going to be teasing, there's no reason he can't. And then she says 'spots' and he snorts a laugh. "Freckles," he corrects.
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She studies his face a moment longer, leaning forward a little bit—now that she's looking for them, she can see that he still has his freckles, very faint compared to when he was a child—and that's not to mention his scars, even more pronounced to her now that she has an image in her head without them. She wonders if she looks any different to him, after he'd seen her without her tattoos?
"Hm," she intones again, arch, leaning back and crossing her arms over her chest. "It means that I am not surprised. You have not changed very much, Cal Kestis." After all, he's still a quick learner, eager to please, and maybe a little too curious and adventurous for his own good—at least in her opinion.
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Her skin had a warmer tone in his memories, but she'd always been naturally pale. She smiled a lot more as a child, but then they didn't have much to worry about then, and even later on her smiles didn't have the almost mocking edge of the one she frequented here. Certainly she'd teased, but it was more natural since they'd supposedly known each other for so long. But there was still a gap for the time she'd left, moved away after the unthinkable had happened to her family. Those had been sad, empty days.
"Was that pretty close to how you were, as a child?" he asks. Hard to change her mind once she'd gotten set on something, a bit of a competitive streak. She had that bit of curiosity and hunger for adventure too.
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Her gaze slides away from his, something a little wistful in it. "Yes. I was..." Stubborn, independent, direct. All things she still is, but back then... she was softer, quick to smile and laugh. Perhaps that's what happens when you mature, but she can't help but feel like that little girl was stolen away from her the day her sisters were massacred. She'd certainly turned into someone her younger self would barely recognize—first by grief, and then by anger and vengeance.
"As you remember," she finishes, just a little subdued. She has to force it back out of her tone, forming it into something lighter, more teasing. "Do you think I have changed?"
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"At least I was able to share something of it with you." Was that a strange thing to say? Having already left his lips, Cal doesn't regret saying what he has since he means it. He's glad to have gotten some glimpse of how she'd been, that she'd had some happiness at least, even if she'd already told him a little about how things had been for her and her sisters, before everything.
His hand lifts again, but this time to tap her lightly on the nose with a finger. "A little," he says, but with those kind of circumstances, it would have been difficult to not be affected by things at all. "But you're still you."
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Then he reaches out to tap his finger against her nose, and she stiffens in surprise, caught off guard. The touch, brief as it was, feels like a jolt of electricity running through her—his touches usually do, all the way back to when he put the astrium in her hands in Kujet's Tomb, fingers brushing against hers. At first, she thought that was just... that she'd just lived in isolation for too long, but now...
"It is..." she begins a little awkwardly, after a too-long pause, "good to know that some things in this galaxy stay the same." After everything the two of them have been through, with their entire lives upended more than once, that's actually a comforting thought.
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"Yeah..." Cal agrees. He knows it isn't always the case, that sometimes people can change a great deal, and change itself is impossible to avoid. In the end it depends on them, the choices made and the actions taken.
"I don't know how long it might take for our memories to settle, and I think that they're not going to be so easy to just ignore or forget, because they're a part of us now. But so long as we know who we are, and who we want to be, then that's what really matters."
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He's right. No matter what, she's still her. And perhaps an extra life—a happy life—isn't such a bad thing.
"Are all Jedi so wise?" Her tone is playful, but ultimately very sincere.
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"We try, anyway," he laughs. "I think what really made the difference was having someone to sound off of, who understands the situation. Sometimes I guess it's better than trying to tackle it yourself." But he can understand the need for some time alone as well.
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After her sisters were killed, she was left alone, with no one to depend on—not even Malicos, really, since he was more than happy to simply manipulate her. It made her learn to fend for herself, but maybe too much—it's why she was so reluctant to trust Cal, at first. Why she felt she had to test him. Why she still tends to try to... tackle things herself, even if it that isn't the best way.
"But I am glad," she continues softly. "That you understand." That I can rely on you.
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It's all too easy to fall back to that sort of mindset, but he feels he's come a long way, here. There are good people around him, even other Jedi. But while he's all too aware that whenever they might be sent back to where they're from, when they're from, at least he knows there's at least one person he can still look forward to seeing on the other side of things.
He knows that admission from Merrin isn't an easy one, but that's what makes it mean so much. The smile he gives her at that is a warm one as he nods, an expression that echoes the sentiment of her words.
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Maybe it's weird, but there's something immensely comforting in that, and it's kind of... exactly what she needed. Needs.
"It seems we are always connected in some way, no matter the life," she muses, a thoughtful expression on her face. Okay, two instances probably aren't enough to go on, but... she's going with it anyway, wondering what it was that created their story for them, and why. They could've been anything else besides friends—classmates, neighbors, enemies. Strangers. "Is that strange?"
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"I don't know if I'd call it strange. It's not bad though, right?"
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Is she going to say as much, though? No. "Not entirely," she says, one corner of her mouth quirking up to reveal that she's teasing, even if she sobers quickly. "Perhaps it is just strange to think of a place where we do not meet at all."
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"Yeah..." It's a sad thing to think about. To not have found someone to really connect with, to not have been able to grow. Maybe there would be other opportunities for them to change, although who could say if it would be for the better? Or maybe...they'd just be as they were.
"Just...knowing that if maybe I'd done something differently here or hadn't failed there, I might've never even gone to Dathomir. But that's where things have ultimately led me." No, he would have missed an important lesson if he never went to Dathomir. And who knows what greater harm Malicos might have caused if another Jedi hadn't stumbled into things, to reveal his true intent.
"Having met you, and been on this path we're on, I think I'd rather not think about how things could have been, otherwise," he admits.
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And... it's nice. Hearing him say that he wouldn't choose a different path. Hearing him say we. It does something to her, somewhere in the vicinity of her heart.
"Me neither," she says sincerely, her head tipping slightly to the side. "You say that even though you haven't returned to Dathomir yet?" Last he remembers, she'd raised her dead sisters and he'd been forced to flee. Sure, she filled him in a bit on what happened after, but... maybe she still feels guilty, a little.
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"I know there's something that I need to do there." Cal meets her eyes again. "Things haven't been great or gone smoothly, but I know I why I set out to do what I have. I just needed that push. But everything that's happened, or will happen along the way is just as important as that reason."
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But... "Perhaps you're right. Just this once," she says quietly, a subdued smile pulling at one corner of her mouth. She doesn't know if she would've been ready to make peace with him then, too weighed down by her anger and Malicos' lies. Maybe she'd needed to overhear that conversation outside Kujet's tomb, to see Malicos betray her with her own eyes, to let it galvanize her.
At the time, she was so furious with his betrayal that she hadn't paid much attention to Cal, or given any kind of second thought to what Malicos had said to him. But his lightsaber had been broken, forcing him to run to the Mantis, and some... part of him had been broken too, she feels like. When he returned to Dathomir again, he has different, somehow, in a way it would be hard for her to explain.
"What happened in the tomb? Before you left Dathomir." That tomb was a terrible place, even by Dathomir's standards. Something must have happened to him there.
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"I had to confront my master. We fought, except I only realized later that he wasn't really on the offensive. But he just...just kept goading me to attack. Telling me I was a failure, that I was weak..." He wonders if it'll ever get easy recounting this, even after he's come to accept responsibility. "I...I actually struck him with my lightsaber, and that's when he grabbed a hold of it and crushed it in his hands. Telling me I wasn't a Jedi."
He shakes his head, crossing his arms as he lets out a breath. "When I opened my eyes I was back in the tomb by the locked doors, with a broken lightsaber in my hands. It just felt like everything was falling apart at that point."
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There's a part of her that wants to take his hand, hearing him talk about his experience with obvious difficulty—but he crosses his arms and she shoves the impulse aside. "This is what happened, before you arrived here?" It's more a rhetorical question than anything, but it just further lodges that shard of guilt into her soul.
Her assessment hadn't been so far off. After going through all that, having everything fall apart, and then arriving here... she shifts her weight a little, eyebrows knitting. "I am sorry." Her gaze flickers to the side, and then back to his again. "For raising my sisters. I was angry with Malicos, and I didn't care if you were hurt alongside him."
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It hadn't been foolproof, of course. There was no way that he'd forget so simply the things that had happened to him, the wounds that had been reopened from years past. Still, distractions had helped, and people here knew nothing about who he was or had any expectations of him.
The apology comes as unexpected, and Cal turns his head towards her. "You didn't know. You were trying to do what was best for yourself and the legacy of your sisters." He smiles faintly, one end quirking up just a bit higher. "Although I could have done without being chased by them," he notes, just a touch dryly. When the world seemed to be crashing around you after being accused of betrayal by a ghost the last thing you wanted was to be pursued by the undead.
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But... there he goes again, describing things a lot more charitably than she ever would. If she's being honest, she wasn't thinking about herself or the legacy of her sisters at all in that moment—she was just hurt and angry, and she wanted to make Malicos pay for his betrayal. Cal was just caught in the crossfire, in the wrong place at the wrong time.
And before that—she'd put her faith in the wrong man and allowed him to manipulate her into violence against someone who would've been her friend before her enemy. She still... struggles with that, even with Cal's voice in her head telling her that Malicos was wrong to use her loss against her. But guilt and regret aren't so easy to negotiate with.
"You are strangely forgiving, Cal Kestis," she says, and there's a softer quality in her voice, underneath the usual harsh inflections of her accent. Then she pauses, her head suddenly canting to the side. "How did you hear about my sisters?" As far as he should know, she hasn't told him about the armored warrior, or Malicos promising her revenge against the Jedi.
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