Lonely Luke Skywalker (
coolhandluke) wrote2018-01-09 03:29 pm
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Entry tags:
Ahch-To, Baby
There were a lot of things Luke hadn't asked himself in the years since arriving on Ach-To. Some because he didn't want to know--or imagine--the answers. Some because there was no reason to borrow more trouble than he already had, and the litany of regrets was already long enough. Some because, well, they just weren't thinks that Luke Skywalker ever thought of.
Like the fact that he looked like some old Jedi hermit, complete with beard and unkempt hair and dingy robes. It hadn't exactly been part of the plan, but then, there hadn't been anyone to comment, or even a mirror.
That was the outside, however. Inside, something in Luke had died long ago, stopping in its tracks. Meeting himself, he would have assumed wisdom and calm, if a little eccentricity. But that hadn't been why Luke had come here, and it hadn't been what he'd found. No, it wasn't the Jedi Master who had retreated. It was the scared farm-boy, who'd flown too high and been brought crashing to ground. It was Luke from Tatooine, who had tried to be Master Skywalker, the hero, and failed.
That was what he'd been running from. That expectation, and his failure at it. That, and the disaster he knew his presence would bring to what was left of what he and the Rebellion had built, if Ben knew where he was. Better, he'd thought, to close himself off and shut down before he hurt anyone else. By his own hand, or by leading Kylo Ren to exact revenge.
It was not so simple a thing, however, to die. Unwilling to take any more lives, including his own, he lingered. Unwilling to open himself up to the Force, he nevertheless existed within it, his body sustained by it as much as by the food he caught. For awhile it seemed that he would just continue, in a sort of limbo of his own making, unwilling to make a move that would upset the galaxy even further than his presence already had.
Until she came.
Rey held a mirror up to him, one he wasn't always willing to gaze into but one from which it was impossible to escape--not least because she simply wouldn't go away. At first resentful, he quickly became resigned.
And then, suddenly, he became expectant. Not hopeful--he would not go so far as to say that--but there came a morning when he realized he would be disappointed to find her gone, given up. Despite his fear, despite his warnings, he wanted her to persist.
Maybe because he hadn't. And as much shame as he felt over that fact, the shame was at least an emotion. And as much as he'd tried to suppress those over the past years, the irritation at her arrival had begun to wear away at his resolve like grains of sand until emotions he'd thought long buried began to unearth themselves.
The truth was, Luke Skywalker was every bit the mess he looked. And yet, the longer she stayed, the less he could find it within himself to resent it. He'd been too long alone, and too long waiting. It only stood to reason that he'd bend to the first wind that came.
Wasn't how this had all started, to begin with?
The sun had barely risen when he took position, waiting outside the hut she'd claimed, unwilling to seem too eager but having to quash a small stirring of impatience, just the same. Warnings not to get too close, too attached, flickered in his mind's eye like a glitched holovid. But Luke had never once detached from anything--and if going to the most remote location he could find hadn't done it, he didn't know that it was worth trying, anymore.
Like the fact that he looked like some old Jedi hermit, complete with beard and unkempt hair and dingy robes. It hadn't exactly been part of the plan, but then, there hadn't been anyone to comment, or even a mirror.
That was the outside, however. Inside, something in Luke had died long ago, stopping in its tracks. Meeting himself, he would have assumed wisdom and calm, if a little eccentricity. But that hadn't been why Luke had come here, and it hadn't been what he'd found. No, it wasn't the Jedi Master who had retreated. It was the scared farm-boy, who'd flown too high and been brought crashing to ground. It was Luke from Tatooine, who had tried to be Master Skywalker, the hero, and failed.
That was what he'd been running from. That expectation, and his failure at it. That, and the disaster he knew his presence would bring to what was left of what he and the Rebellion had built, if Ben knew where he was. Better, he'd thought, to close himself off and shut down before he hurt anyone else. By his own hand, or by leading Kylo Ren to exact revenge.
It was not so simple a thing, however, to die. Unwilling to take any more lives, including his own, he lingered. Unwilling to open himself up to the Force, he nevertheless existed within it, his body sustained by it as much as by the food he caught. For awhile it seemed that he would just continue, in a sort of limbo of his own making, unwilling to make a move that would upset the galaxy even further than his presence already had.
Until she came.
Rey held a mirror up to him, one he wasn't always willing to gaze into but one from which it was impossible to escape--not least because she simply wouldn't go away. At first resentful, he quickly became resigned.
And then, suddenly, he became expectant. Not hopeful--he would not go so far as to say that--but there came a morning when he realized he would be disappointed to find her gone, given up. Despite his fear, despite his warnings, he wanted her to persist.
Maybe because he hadn't. And as much shame as he felt over that fact, the shame was at least an emotion. And as much as he'd tried to suppress those over the past years, the irritation at her arrival had begun to wear away at his resolve like grains of sand until emotions he'd thought long buried began to unearth themselves.
The truth was, Luke Skywalker was every bit the mess he looked. And yet, the longer she stayed, the less he could find it within himself to resent it. He'd been too long alone, and too long waiting. It only stood to reason that he'd bend to the first wind that came.
Wasn't how this had all started, to begin with?
The sun had barely risen when he took position, waiting outside the hut she'd claimed, unwilling to seem too eager but having to quash a small stirring of impatience, just the same. Warnings not to get too close, too attached, flickered in his mind's eye like a glitched holovid. But Luke had never once detached from anything--and if going to the most remote location he could find hadn't done it, he didn't know that it was worth trying, anymore.
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Had he, after all, failed because he had tried not to be all the things Ben Kenobi and Yoda had warned him he was, and not because he was those things? The idea was a potentially life-changing one, and he backed away from it, for now. Instead, he found himself, smiling down (not too far down, really) and Rey and briefly touching his fingers to her chin as she looked up at him.
The skin contact was unexpected, even to him, because he had not consciously sought it. But he lingered on it only a moment, before his hand dropped, apparently having seen what he needed. She was determined, and she was honest. She had made a decision about him and he could not dislodge it.
"I don't need a mother," he said dryly. "But I will promise... to try."
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Because really? She liked the sense of fondness she got from Luke, liked it more than she really should. It made it so she hardly thought about it at all when his fingertips brushed along her chin, and she didn't realize it had happened until he moved his hand away. And even then... she only realized it because she suddenly found herself missing the contact.
She blinked, surprised at herself, given that she'd never been overly fond of being touched. But maybe she'd just never known anyone that she'd wanted to touch her. Even with Finn, she'd had to get used to the fact that he simply grabbed her hand or hugged her out of relief. But with Luke....
Luke was different. And she simply didn't have the social aptitude to actually piece together how.
"You can do better than try," she told him once she decided to push that aside for now. Her voice was every bit as wry as his as she put a hand on his arm, gently nudging him. "Go on. Don't make me watch you all night and... do whatever it is that mothers do."
She knew that most children had some sort of bedtime ritual with her parents, though if she knew that as part of some hazy memory from before she'd been abandoned, it wasn't a strong enough memory to tell her what, exactly, that was.
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There was no graceful way to end this conversation, especially with her standing in his hut, but once she left he would lay down again. He wasn't sure he could sleep, after all that, but he was more exhausted than he knew, and eventually drifted off.
As confused as his thoughts and feelings were around Rey's presence on the island, one thing she definitely was not to him was a mother. And contrary to his outburst and her own fears, he did not exactly see her as a child. Perhaps if he'd been around society more, he'd have been more cognizant of what his own age meant, but as worn and out of it as he was, there was a part of him that had, perhaps, never grown up. In truth, he had skipped something between the farm and the rebellion hero, some stage that he'd never really passed through.
Not that he was conscious of any of this. No, it took his subconscious and the admonition to sleep to manifest. And, perhaps, not a little bit the connection itself, morphing within dreams into a form that made physical the metaphysical link between them.
Finally dead to the world, Luke's mind was no less active, in a way he had not experienced in many years. He'd been alone for so long. And before that, he'd kept everyone at arm's length, as well as kept his mind and desires tightly regulated lest anything get past his barriers to disturb his charges. Without that practice, and with new material, suddenly his imagination took liberties he never would have guessed.
The images and sensations were dim and abstract, at first. Just fleeting touches, a tingle of aroused nerves, warmth traveling the unmapped course of his body. Gentle and tentative, almost shy with lack of practice. But the ambiguity did not last long. There was only one focus for such feeling, after this day, and his sleeping brain caught glimpses of her. Smiling up at him, hand on his arm, scooting closer. Body and spirit both bending to touch his, to get closer, to take more than the taste they'd fumbled for platonically that afternoon.
It was more a feeling than specific acts. Union. Togetherness. Warmth, but a heat that touched parts of him long forgotten except for where he had to maintain the basics of life. Flashes of hands, lips, of awkward rhythms enhanced by shared energies, minds brushing along with skin. Two souls, needing connection, finding it in each other.
When he woke, it was with a sheen of sweat and a sickening sense of guilt at the twist his mind had put on her kindness. She had shown him compassion, and it had taken less than a day for him to make it into something dirty and selfish. That it was not like him did not matter. Nor did it occur to him to wonder if it was entirely of his own doing--the idea that she might have something to do with it was unfathomable. No, this was Luke, dirty old man, taking advantage of a young person's trust in his legend yet again.
And further proof he could not be trusted about other people. Further proof, unlooked for, that something was very wrong with him and he was not worth saving.
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While Rey had been forced to grow up quickly while fending for herself on Jakku, there were some very important bits of growing up and adulthood that she'd just never experienced. Puberty had been a hell of a time for her, for example. Her body had begun changing in ways that she'd considered flat-out horrific, and if not for the fact that there was the occasional village of humans that she'd come across during her scavenging trips, she would have been convinced that there was something wrong with her. But she'd had things explained to her very patiently, and the physiological aspects of it had eventually made sense to her.
But there were other things, other feelings and sensations and emotions, that she'd just been unable to explain. Logically, from the point of it being a reproductive drive, it had made enough sense to her. But she'd never been interested in any person she'd ever known, and so alleviating those feelings in her bunk had been confusing and unfulfilling, given that she'd never had anyone to focus them on.
Not until now, apparently.
She'd heard of Luke ever since she was little, but now, actually knowing him as a person, he'd evolved into a fully fleshed-out being, someone warm and brave and wise and humble. That brief touch of his fingers against her chin carried over into touches that lingered longer, traveling lower over her body, satisfying her in a way that her own touches had never been able to.
Satisfied as she might feel, though, she knew there was something missing, something just beyond her grasp. She had no practical knowledge of how this worked, no real experience with a man that didn't involve violent combat, but somehow, she could feel Luke guiding her the same way he had when he was teaching her to connect with him. Only this connection was much deeper, much more intimate, and her desire to learn from him was even more passionate now than it had been when she'd convinced him to train her in the Force.
It wasn't until she woke up that she realized just how much the hazy sensations and longings had affected her, and when she saw just where her hand had slipped into as she slept, she felt a wave of embarrassment wash over her. She immediately looked to the door, and once she ascertained that there was no one there, she hastily fixed herself and stepped outside into the morning sunlight, making her way to a water basin to wash her hands and splash enough cold water onto her face to get her bearings straight.
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He'd have to face her again, of course, and he would. But how could he forgive himself for this betrayal, hidden and victimless as it was? How could he continue to teach her, interact with her, to abuse her trust when apparently he harbored some craven desire to touch her in a way that she could never return and which he was damned for imagining, even inadvertently? She had opened herself up to him and he had run with it, in a way he'd never experienced before, much less with someone young enough to be his--
No. The only thing to do was to banish it from his mind. Hopefully, his body would follow. She could not know, for to apologize for this in any way was to impose his perverse impulses upon her. He could only hope that it had been a fluke born of too long apart from people, that it was a dream in the way dreams often manifested parallels to truth rather than actual reality. He would forget about it, and she would, soon, become satisfied with what he had to teach and leave. It was the only answer.
Composed at last, he emerged, shields intact though somehow he knew exactly where she was as if his internal compass was now magnetically aligned to her north. At least, he thought, any embarrassment could be interpreted as shame for his behavior the night before. And he'd thought that had been reprehensible. If only he'd known.
"Rey," he nodded stiffly, taking his turn at the basin. What did he say? He could barely look at her, not with his banished thoughts so fresh in his mind, but to run now would be to invite her to follow. And he could not afford to have her ask what was wrong, now.
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But even as Rey realized who'd spoken to her, she also came to the realization that Kylo Ren might have been able to sense her dreams if he'd been watching her. He'd claimed to have been able to do it before. While that was mortifying in its own right, she suddenly became aware of the fact that Luke, too, may have sensed it, might have known that his student had thought impure things about him... as much as she could, really, given her lack of experience in these matters. For a moment, she could do nothing but watch him at the basin, trying not to stare and scrambling to try and hide her panic and her shame.
But while she was good at hiding specific thoughts, she'd always been something of an open book when it came to emotions, and Rey knew that. Still, she did her best to clamp down on it, not wanting to give Luke any reason to pry or make him think that she was somehow still upset over their exchange the night before. It was bad enough that she found herself looking over his features and deciding that no, it wasn't so strange that she would think of him, especially not in comparison to Kylo Ren. Luke had more than enough good qualities, but dwelling on them only made certain feelings spark up all over again.
"Good morning, Luke," she said, words a bit too quick to be natural. Searching for something to say so he wouldn't end up listening to something she didn't want him to hear, she eventually managed to tug the corners of her lips up into a small, strained smile as she asked, "Sleep well?"
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But no. No, she'd left him with an admonition to sleep, so it was perfectly innocent. On her part, anyway. She was treating him gingerly because he'd thrown a fit last night, like a petulant child. Part of him wished she'd stop calling him 'Luke,' though yesterday it had been all he could ask for, that she'd stop with the 'Master' nonsense. Now his first name felt like an unearned intimacy.
"Yes," he managed, after a too-long pause where he stared without actually seeing her. "Yes. Sleep. It was..." He caught himself, swallowing, started again. "I have to apologize for my behavior last night. It was... unbecoming as a man and a... as a ... host."
Fantastic, Skywalker. Is this really the best you can do? It wasn't the first time he'd confronted someone after some awkward dreams but it certainly had never been quite this inappropriate a subject. And, like everything else, he was grossly out of practice.
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Of course, that left her wondering about Luke's last relations, if he'd ever allowed himself to have any. He must have, as she couldn't imagine him going without all these years. Not because sex was a particularly exciting thing, not as far as she knew, but... well, he was attractive even as an older man. When he'd been her age, he must have had his pick of women.
Maybe it was a strange sense of jealousy telling her that that wasn't so, or perhaps it was because she had the impression that loneliness had enshrouded him for far longer than just his time on Ahch-To. Still, regardless of his personal experience in this matter, she shouldn't be thinking about it. He was a teacher, a mentor... and he was also old enough to be her father. No wonder he'd called her a child.
"Host?" She frowned a little, almost as though she didn't understand the word, then told him, "I don't think you have to worry about being a good host when your so-called guest was uninvited and invasive and-...." Thoroughly inappropriate, she almost said, but she stopped herself, not wanting to risk him asking after what she'd done that was so inappropriate.
She looked down, feeling awkward and skittish and wondering just how much of what she'd done (or, rather, what her subconscious had done) was plain on her face. "You have nothing to apologize for," she told him softly. "I'm just glad you were able to get some rest."
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And the way she was acting, almost as if she knew. She couldn't look at him, and her manner had altered substantially since the previous day. Had he really ruined everything with his outburst, or did she somehow get wind of his private thoughts?
And since when was her abandoning him ruining anything? Since when was her leaving 'abandonment' in his mind? When had he decided he wanted her to stay? This could not stand--he could not, in good conscience, allow her to remain here with his thoughts preying on her even in secret. It was reprehensible, a betrayal of her mission and his and the whole master/padawan covenant.
But you never really accepted her as a student, did you?
Shut up, he told himself. You are not going to start making excuses for this being okay, which was totally beside the point that in no universe was someone like her going to think he was--
"Did you?" he asked abruptly, to interrupt his own thoughts. "Rest, I mean."
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But once she stripped away all of that lofty reasoning... Rey simply didn't want to leave him.
The island wasn't the most hospitable, but Luke had managed to carve a life out for himself here, and she'd had to survive in a much harsher environment. She'd forced herself to find the beauty in Jakku just as he'd come to find the beauty of Ahch-To... and he'd been willing to share it with her in that field the day before. That had meant a lot to her; perhaps enough to make her feel a bond with him that she'd never been able to make with anyone before.
That was all it was, she told herself logically. If she did have feelings for him, it was because this was the most time she'd spent solely with one person, and they were borne more out of affection than any kind of real desire.
Reach between your legs and see if you don't find evidence to the contrary, a small voice chided her.
Shut. Up.
She felt her face heat up as she argued with herself, but she tried to fight it, allowing herself to seem surprised by Luke's abrupt question. "I... slept," she replied pragmatically.
While touching myself.
SHUT! UP!
Quickly, as though needing to say something, anything, to interrupt the progressively heated conversation going on inside her own head, she said, "I just had a lot of dreams, that's all. It made it a little hard to rest properly."
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Luke wasn't terribly concerned about his reputation at this point, but he was damned if he'd let this be the last word. He would fight this, somehow. With time, both the dreams and the memories would fade and he could... what?
Where did he think this was going?
"I'm sorry," he said, though of course she could not know he was apologizing for potentially violating her trust in sleep. "I'll... let you rest, then, since..." He cast about for some reason he needed to be busy today. "I have things I need to do. Food. To gather."
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"It's not your fault," she told him, and that was, technically, true. It was the fault of her own loneliness, and she wasn't going to let Luke even tangentially take the blame.
She was almost relieved when he said he had things to do, but the greater part of her was unmistakably disappointed. She inwardly cursed that loneliness of hers that made Luke's company so damnably pleasurable for her, in more ways than one.
"Do you... need company?"
The question was soft, almost hesitant, but Rey did indeed want to spend time with him if she could. Being alone now felt suffocating, especially when she no longer had to worry just about the possibility of Kylo Ren encroaching on her thoughts but also now fretted over whether she'd find her thoughts wandering towards something more inappropriate. Maybe being with Luke would keep her from dwelling on any potentially embarrassing thoughts... and if not, maybe she can just outright die from the embarrassment and not have to worry about anything anymore.
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Did he need company? It was the most absurd question Luke thought he'd been asked since the last question Rey had asked him. What was he supposed to do? Spend the day fishing and foraging next to her, like nothing had happened? Or spend the day imagining what she was doing, wondering where she was, thinking--
"I mean, I'm fine. I don't need help. I've... done this before."
It was a fairly lame explanation, all things considered.
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She didn't know if he could see the surprised disappointment in her eyes or if he'd just had a belated surge of etiquette. Either way, his explanation didn't really help matters, even if she uncertainly nodded.
"I understand that. But I didn't ask if you needed help. I asked if you needed company. Or if you just want me. For company. If you want me for company."
Oh stars, but she was awful at this sort of thing.
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She knew. She had to know--there was no other reason for her to correct herself so quickly. Why was she being polite about it? Did she fear his reaction, if she called him out?
Was he that much of a monster? Was she afraid to go, and afraid to stay? Luke took an inadvertent step back. How could he put her off without just being rude again? "No. No, I... it's not necessary. If you need rest you should stay here. Without me in your... way."
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... though later did have a nicer ring to it.
"I'm not going to get any rest and you're not going to get in my way, especially not when this is your home. I'm sorry. I'm a little... out of sorts this morning. It doesn't mean I value your companionship any less. But if you'd rather be on your own, I'll of course respect your wishes."
This was sounding far too formal, contrary to the comfortable way they'd talked the day before. She missed the casualness of it all, but maybe this would help put some distance between them and sharpen those blurry lines in between what they were supposed to be to one another versus... whatever it was that Rey seemed to want them to be.
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His wishes didn't deserve respect. From anyone.
"My companionship," he said a little hoarsely, "leaves much to be desired. I was rude yesterday. I am not going to demand you stay away from me, even if I thought it would do any good. But you are under no obligation to entertain an old man. Nor do I think I am in any state to... teach you."
Depends on what you'd be teaching, his brain--or part of it, anyway--offered helpfully.
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But the only thing she thought safe to answer was that last one, and even that had to be phrased carefully, given her inner struggle.
"I think there's no limit to what you could teach me."
She felt herself go warm at that again, a flush that she couldn't just package up and hide away from view. She knew she was a mess, she knew that he was either perfectly aware of why she was so awkward today or else he was left utterly in the dark. Either way, she took a deep breath and forced herself to make eye contact with him, not wanting him to think that she was completely uncomfortable in his presence now.
"Neither of us are good with... well, people. But I think having that in common means that we understand one another in a way that we don't understand others, or in a way others don't understand. So I'm not just 'entertaining' anyone, especially since I don't see an old man here. I see a man who could be my friend, if the circumstances allow for it."
Or more, that little voice cheerfully piped up, but she managed to shut up before that voice had any sway.
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What could he do? He could not call her on it, admitting to his own craven thoughts and thus driving her away for good. And he could not purposefully drive her away after that little speech, even if his body wanted very much to interpret it in a way she could not have meant. To deny her now, after her words of understanding and friendship, was to be cruel in a way he could not cover as unintentional. He was trapped between her innocent devotion and his own misplaced desires, and the only possible course was to give in--to her. Let her set the path and the tone and meditate away the follies of midnight. He could put this all behind him because, in truth, he was not strong enough to throw away a declaration that, even without the dreams, would have brought tears to his eyes.
She was utterly wrong, of course, to put that kind of emotional energy into someone like him. But he could no more stop her than he could stop the wind.
"One day," he said quietly, "you'll have friends enough that you don't have to rely on the one other person on an island for that." He shook his head. "But I'm not going to fight you any longer, Rey." After everything she must have seen, for her to offer something like this... he'd be a fool to throw it away.
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But then, she wasn't going to be on Ahch-To forever. And once he was back with the Resistance, Luke would be far too busy to give her another look, especially since he'd want to spend time reintroducing himself to society. And besides everything else... there was a war going on. She couldn't afford to lose sight of that, or else she and Luke would never leave this island.
Though if she were honest with herself, she could think of worse possibilities.
"I don't rely on you for friendship, Luke," she told him, fighting her way out of her own thoughts. "I want to be with you. As a friend."
And more. Tell him you want him as a friend and more. Tell him, he already knows anyway, why don't you just-
"You're... special to me," she murmured instead, needing to quiet that voice down again before she ended up snapping at it and making Luke fear for her sanity. "One day, when you're surrounded by people who care about you, I hope you remember that."
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"Rey," he said firmly. "You are..." He swallowed. "Very sweet to say something like that. Your concern is unwarranted. I told you before--I am not leaving this island. And even if I did, I..." He shook his head. "Your perception of my... social circle is exaggerated."
The truth was, having her fling such fears at him made him feel all the guiltier about twisting it into something else, something prurient. He didn't deserve this. And if he ever opened himself up to her, she'd know.
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But that was fine. If they were only going to talk about this tangentially, she'd accept the idea of him turning her away. At least it meant she wouldn't have to come out and say anything.
That made it a little bit easier for her to smile at him as she lightly mentioned, "If you don't leave this island, I don't leave this island. So again, you're just going to end up stuck with me for an even longer period of time. I don't mind that, but...."
But he was making it clear that he would, or at least that he eventually might.
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And ever was looking to be a very long time.
Perhaps it was a fleeting whim, born of solitude and sexual disuse, and it would pass. He hoped so. For both their sakes.
"You will, though," he said, unable to keep the hint of sadness from his tone. He shook his head. "But that's neither here nor there today." Abruptly, he turned on his heel, picked up his gear from where it sat next to his hut, and made off down the path to his habitual fishing hole.
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"Luke," she told him even as she moved to follow after him. "I told you. I'm not leaving here without you. And if that means I never leave here... I've been stranded in worse places before."
She realized with horror that she was reaching out towards him, as though meaning to take his hand, but thankfully she stopped herself, fingers clenching into a fist at her side as she walked alongside him.
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No more, he told himself. It's not casual if you're craving it, and you craving it is wrong.
"Stranded," he repeated, almost under his breath. Yesterday, the day before, he would have shot back that she was free to leave any time. Now, he did not feel like it. But he did not know what to say instead. He'd spoken more yesterday than he had in years. It was both exhausting, and exhilarating. "Have you ever caught a fish?"
She'd grown up on Jakku. Of course she hadn't.
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