Kanan Jarrus (
notallofus) wrote2017-05-06 10:50 am
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There are days when Kanan wishes the detection capabilities of the Imperial fleet were a lot less good than they are. Those days usually coincide with missions that involve a lot of sitting around in a dead ship, with a deactivated Chopper and a lot of time to kill until contact is made.
Like today, for instance.
Probably all day, too. Hopefully not into tomorrow.
"So," Kanan says, voice pitched low and not quite sibilant enough to be a whisper. "How do you feel about another round of I Spy?"
Like today, for instance.
Probably all day, too. Hopefully not into tomorrow.
"So," Kanan says, voice pitched low and not quite sibilant enough to be a whisper. "How do you feel about another round of I Spy?"

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(Someday Zeb is going to come along, and anything he teaches them about his language is probably going to be essentially that. Thanks, Zeb.)
"So a nicely poetic sendoff for when you're sure someone is leaving?"
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Again, she struggles to come up with the Basic words for it. "... like a reminder, that your home is out there."
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"But... in a nice way."
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It matches Kanan's style nicely, for one.
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Hera may be smiling again.
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Kanan is sure of that.
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Maybe it works better coming from a kid. But still . . .
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There's also nothing unusual about an offworld adult Twi'lek speaking in Basic, even if they are being... direct about it.
"And I don't have the same reasons for it anymore."
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He's kidding.
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"I think we're doing okay as it is. And if we want screaming no one else will understand, that's what we have Chopper for."
Notice how she said that while he's powered down.
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"It's the metallic blorping noise that is the height of terrifying, it's true."
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"Didn't you learn anything like this with the Jedi?"
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Then --
"I think I would have, if there'd been an 'after the war' for us. During, there was only time to focus on strategy, on tactics, on leading the clone troops."
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Hera takes a deep breath.
"I think it worked the other way for me."
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Or at least not to stew in his issues.
"Oh?"
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But nothing comes, the space beyond them remains still.
"When I was a girl I was – a nightmare for my parents. I'd watch where ships landed and I'd run away to them. I knew to stay away from droids, but cargo pilots and clone pilots and smugglers – I'd just run right to them and tell them to explain their ships, to show me how they flew. Some of them threw me out, but I think a lot of them were so startled that this little girl had run right up to them, telling them what to do. That I wasn't afraid of anything."
She pulls her legs up into her chair, curling around them in a childlike sort of way.
"It terrified my mother. She and my father would tell me over and over again to stop, but I just ignored them. And she was right to be afraid, it's probably a miracle that the worst that ever happened was that some of the pilots were rough about kicking me out. But I didn't care when I got hurt, and I didn't care about my parents' threats. I just kept doing it. And I think they couldn't stand the idea of locking me up."
The problem with being both a parent and a freedom fighter.
"So my mother made this deal with me. That they'd stop yelling at me about it if I came back before dark, if I learned to use a blaster, and if I could prove I knew Basic and Huttese. Basic so I'd know if anyone was threatening me, and Huttese so I'd know when to run."
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Well, shit.
"It wasn't safe not to know. Damn."
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His voice is very, very quiet.
Because what do you say to that?
"Someday it won't be. We'll get rid of the Empire and -- "
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It's a big and. Not one she feels up to thinking about right now.
And she doesn't want him feeling like this, trying to brace under the weight of this fight, of the last war, of the seemingly unending string of crimes they encounter. She doesn't want her history to have brought him down.
Hera bites her lip, then lowers her feet back to the floor. "I'd also - I'd climb up, at night, on top of our home. Wherever we were, the mountains in Tann Province or the hideouts when we were on the run in the desert. And it was dangerous, obviously, but I wanted to see the ships crossing the sky at night. My mother was so tired of it, me and the ships, so when she'd find me to drag me back inside, I'd lie and say I wanted to watch the stars."
She raises her voice slightly, mimicking a little girl nagging her mother. "Luon, Onni! Onni! Viulen usnajmen, viulen usnajmen!"
Hera nearly laughs again as she says it.
(So she wasn't laughing at you, Kanan. At least, not entirely.)
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