My Day Has Been Made Reading This - Tumblr Posts
Ok wow wow wow I know nothing of this series, but after crossing this chapter, it demands a read-through!! So vivid, so emotion-fileld, top marks all around... We stan protective Mando in this house, and you'll not be dissapointed!! đđ
A Fresh Start [17]
Din Djarin x F!Reader
Warnings: losing tempers, arguing, mentions of alcohol and a bit of binge drinking, angst, people getting drunk
Word Count: 15k (i am so so so sorry, i know y'all said you wanted long but this is probably insane. i just needed to end it in that specific place to get the theme i wanted to touch on finishedđ i think you'll like the content if you can bear through it lolol)
Summary: When you made plans for your future they never involved being hired by a Mandalorian to baby-sit his adorable, green gremlin of a child. However, after your life fell apart in the span of one disastrous night,  you found it to be the only feasible option you had left. Nevarro was a  far cry from Coruscant, but the thriving community turned out to be  exactly what you needed. Every day you spend in Nevarro you  fall more  and more in love with your new life, but when your past rears its ugly head you find that perhaps peace wasnât meant  for everyone.
#17: CLOSE YOUR EYES, NER KAR'TA
"to be in love with you is to know that even on the days you make me so mad i could scream, i still want to kiss the hell out of your face." â¤Beau Taplin. "it's the way you wrinkle your nose when you're disappointed in me."
a/n: y'all would not believe the trouble tumblr gave me in posting this smh anyways sorry again this is stupid long (i did warn y'all im a mouthy motherfucker) but hopefully it can make up for the absolutely heartbreaking episode we all suffered thru today :)
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âIf I asked you to kick Kargaâs ass, would you?â
âWithout hesitation, ner karâta.â
You couldnât help but snicker under your breath at his quick answer. Din was lying reclined in the cot beside you with Grogu napping on his chest. It was an entertaining contrast. The soft father rubbing his sonâs back as the child snored while promising immediate violence at a single word from you. The awkwardness of yesterday morning seemed to have dispersed after your confession to him. Add to that the fact that Nima was sleeping in a medically induced coma on the cot you sat on the edge of, and you were on cloud nine. There was still a ways to go and you hated that your close friend⤠your family⤠had been injured in such a traumatizing way, but her arm would be saved.
The bacta tank had healed what it needed to. It fixed bone, muscle, and tissue nearly 80%. You didnât want to risk letting the tank manage the injury to the full 100%. Repairing hand injuries was a tricky thing simply because the tendons and muscles in the hand were so complicated. Youâd rather set her hand the old fashioned way⤠make sure she didnât lose any function. Nima would be devastated if her dexterity was compromised. Her job, her passion, relied on her hands.
âAnything else I can add to our to-do list today other than fighting the High Magistrate of Nevarro?â Din asked with a hum.
You grinned at him. âIâll let you know if I think of anything.â
Din nodded his head once. Your eyes glanced down at the hardware holding Nimaâs hand motionless so it could heal properly. You had already adjusted them, applied a healing paste, then wrapped it, but you couldn't help but re-check your work over and over again. Your obsessive behavior came in handy when Karga had stepped in ten minutes or so ago to check in on Nima. Though his âchecking inâ had turned into offering you a job once more. It seemed like every type of denial you had he had a counterpoint.
Your main one being that legally you werenât allowed to practice medicine. You still had a license because the trial questioning whether or not you were ethically to blame for Soranâs death had ended in your favor. However, one stipulation⤠which had come from a psychological evaluation the hospital made you go through after you were attacked⤠was that until Kurtâs trial was over you shouldnât be in the position of making medical decisions. It had been something you were more than happy to abide by as you ran from your life.
Kargaâs cheeky reply had been that he was the High Magistrate and as such he could allow you to do anything you wanted to do. Especially if that thing you wanted to do was be his cityâs physician.Â
A thought formed in your mind and you huffed out a sigh. You could see Din tilt his head toward you in question. You faced him, âWould I be crazy for considering taking Karga up on his offer?â
âI wouldnât say crazy.â Din replied. âBut why? I donât want you to feel obligated because Karga wonât leave you alone.â
âItâs not that.â You said. The thought grew in your mind, a chaotic frenzy that wouldnât leave you alone. âIf I hadnât been here, Nima wouldâve lost her arm. She might have even died. I stopped that.â Din remained silent and let you think aloud. âI can keep making that difference. I have to. If I donât then⌠If something terrible happens then isnât that my fault?â
Din sat up, holding Grogu to his chest so the boy didnât fall, âNo. No, itâs not. Thinking like that, taking on that guilt, isnât healthy.â He threw his legs over the side of the bed so he was sitting up and facing you. âDonât make a decision based on guilt, ner karâta.â
âI guess youâre right.â You mumbled.
He stayed silent for a beat before reaching a hand out to you. You stood and took the singular step that would get you close enough to settle your hand in his. Din pulled you forward so you stood between his legs. The cot was on a lower setting which left you staring down at Din while he was forced to tilt his head to stare up at you.Â
âTake guilt out of it. Pretend like youâre one of many that Karga is trying to hire for this job.â Din said. You lifted the hand Din wasnât holding so you could scratch Groguâs head. His mid-afternoon nap would be over soon and heâd be awake and bouncing off the walls with energy. âWould getting this job make you happy?â
You pondered over the question. There was a thrill in medicine. One you quite enjoyed when you werenât forced to care for the people who meant the most in the world to you. Plus, thinking long term, you couldnât be Groguâs nanny forever. It wasnât feasible. Not that you wanted out of their lives. You were so entangled in the web of their lives that that was hardly an option anymore. But, if you wanted a real relationship with Din one day, you couldnât be his employee. Youâd have to find a different way to make credits and support yourself.Â
âI think so.â You nodded.
âAs long as you're happy, then I think you should do it.â Din replied, but the sigh he released didnât match the approval of his words. âI just donât want you to make yourself sick with stress.â
âWorrywart.â You teased. Din chuckled and the rumbling in his chest must have roused Grogu. The boy began to rub his face against the metal he was lying on sleepily. You ran a finger alongside his ear. âHi, baby boy. Was buir too loud? Did he wake you up?â
Grogu mumbled, then turned with outstretched arms. Din lifted him as you reached out. When you pulled the small child to your chest he leaned his head against your shoulder but you knew he wasnât sleep based on the way he let his small fingers rub against your shoulder back and forth⤠just like you and Din would do to him. Grogu was mumbling soft words you didnât recognize.
âMhmm, tell mama all about it.â You hummed.
Dinâs hands had rested on your hips when he didnât have Grogu to hold. His thumbs tracing circles over your shirt right above your belt. He nodded, âDo you want children of your own one day?â
Your eyes widened in surprise at his sudden question. It was the last direction you expected this conversation to go. Your jaw popped open slightly. âUh, whâ¤what?â
âJust curious.â Din shrugged nonchalantly.
To be honest, you had never given it any thought. That was a future decision for future you to make. While in training, you told yourself it wouldnât be something you needed to even think about until after training was over. Then when you were working in the hospital, you told yourself you needed to get settled in your job first. Finally, your life spiraled apart and during the last year that was hardly something that was on your mind. It was funny that you went full circle and all of that led you to standing in Nevarroâs clinic thinking about a future with children of your own.Â
Taking care of Grogu was an experience that had given you more factors and variables to consider, but still you werenât sure what to say. You shook your head and spoke the truth. âTo be honest, I havenât thought much about it.â
âYouâre so good with Grogu, is all.â Din replied.
âWhat about you?â You paused. âEr, thatâs not what I⤠Obviously you already have a child. You have Grogu.â Din chuckled at your babbling. âI meant, would you want⌠more?â
Din tilted his head and a very casual nod. âI think so. I like the idea of a big family.â
âDo you have siblings?â You asked suddenly. âIâm realizing just now that I donât know a lot about your life before Nevarro⤠other than Grogu and the bounty hunting.â
âNo siblings.â Din shook his head. âNot by blood at least. After I was brought in by the Mandalorians, as a foundling, I grew up with a few other kids I considered to be siblings on Concordia.â
âWait, you were a foundling? Like Grogu?â
âYes.â Din nodded. âI was born on Aq Ventina, but when I was young⌠My town was destroyed in a Separatist attack. Battle droids destroyed everything. They⌠I lost my parents. I wouldâve been killed myself if a Mandalorian hadnât saved me.â
You stepped around him so you could sit down on the cot beside Din. He followed your movements with his t-shape visor. You lifted the hand not holding Grogu to settle on his knee. âDin, I am so sorry. I had no idea, I⤠I wouldnât have asked⤠I shouldnât have askedâ¤â
âItâs alright, ner karâta.â Din chuckled and set his hand on top of yours. âI knew you didnât know, but I wanted you to know. Besides, I started this line of questioning.â He squeezed his fingers around your own. âI know you said you were from Naboo. Can you tell me more? Do you still have family there?â
You fell into a casual conversation with him telling him about the family you still had there. Sharing a few memories that couldn't help but slip out when they came to mind. You felt bad that you were talking about happy memories when Din had just admitted to a tragedy, but he continued to ask question after question leading you into them. Which led to him sharing a few memories of his own from both worlds that he walked. Din lingered on a story about his parents⤠a happy one he held close to his heart based on the soft tone he spoke in.
âHow much do you remember of them?â You asked.
âEnough to know they were good parents.â
âIâm sorry you didnât get to spend more time with them.â You replied softly.
In response, Din lifted the hand on top of yours to bury it in the hair at the nape of your neck. He leaned you toward him and set his forehead against yours. The two of you only remained that way for a moment before Grogu sat up and rested one hand on your cheek and the other on his fatherâs.
âSkraan.â He blurted. Din and you broke apart, laughing, but Grogu was solely serious as he repeated himself. âSkraan, skraan, skraan.â
Din knew what he had to do. The part he was struggling with was the how. Oddly, in his mind, the first step was going to be the hardest bit. Steps two through whatever included taking the N1 out to Mandalore, find the living waters, bathe in said living waters, bring back proof to the Armorer, be redeemed in the eyes of his Covert, return to you as a full fledged Mandalorian rather than Apostate, and request to court you properly. Simple. Easy to remember. Din didnât even need to write it down. However, step one involved telling you that he was leaving Nevarro and that was going to be tough.
At first he thought heâd just bring you with him, but then you told him you wanted to try being Nevarroâs physician. Din couldnât pull you away from your home right as you had grown comfortable enough with your past to retry medicine. So, that was out. Then, when he had worked up the courage to say good-bye, Cara quit. That one had caught Din off guard. It happened days after Nimaâs accident. Cara claimed she got an offer to be part of special forces with the New Republic⤠an offer she couldnât turn down. She even took the time to remind him that this was never a permanent thing anyways.Â
However, Cara left in the dead of night without even taking the time to wait until Nima woke up. Din didnât believe that was a coincidence. He was more than familiar with the concept of running from emotions. When Nima finally did wake up, the look of heartbreak on her features when he had to answer her question of where Cara was had been tough to handle. Din reminded himself that his plan was not the same as Caraâs. He was not leaving you to stay away. Din was not running from you. If anything he was running to you. He just wanted to be the very best version of himself before propositioning you, and Din wanted to do this right.
Before he left, he was going to explain this to you⤠in great detail. And, if you truly meant what you said about allowing him to uphold his Creed, youâd understand. Din repeated that to himself over and over again like a mantra.
Regardless of how that played out, Din was stuck. It was one thing when he was leaving Nevarro short one marshal temporarily. Now the city would be missing him and Cara, and in good conscious he couldnât let that be.
Mayfeld, hands laced behind his head as his feet were kicked up on his desk, called out. âCome on, Mando. What? You donât trust me to hold down the fort while youâre gone?â
âExactly.â
âUh, ow.â Mayfeld complained. âYou couldâve at least pretended to think about it before answering so fast.â
Din chuckled under his breath. Honestly, his relationship with Mayfeld had come a long way. How he felt now was a stark difference in comparison to how badly Din wanted to shoot him in the face when they first met. After what happened on Morak, after revealing his face in front of Mayfeld, Din truly respected the man⤠trusted him. The truth is he would never forgive himself to leave Mayfeld here to deal with all the responsibilities alone. That wasnât fair to his friend. All those facts didnât deter Din from mocking and mildly bullying the man though. That was much too fun to give up.
âI have a friend flying in today to baby-sit you.â
âNice. Got me a nanny too?â Mayfeld replied. âHope sheâs as pretty as yours.â
Din knew the man was only trying to rile him up, and he technically had picked the exact topic that could do it. But, Din didnât take the bait. He shrugged. âHeâs not really my type, but Iâll let you make the call on that.â
âAlright. So Iâll be the Marshal, and heâll be my Deputy?â
âNo. Heâll be Marshal, and youâll still be Deputy.â
Mayfeld dropped his feet off the desk, hands falling to his side, and his jaw popped open in shock. âHold on! The new guy gets to be Marshal before I do?? Youâre just gonna promote him over me? Immediately.â
âExactly.â
The man scoffed in response and crossed his arms like a petulant child. It reminded Din of the way Grogu would pout when you told him you couldnât snack on cookies or cakes right before dinner time or when Din would wrestle a full sized critter out of his sonâs mouth before Grogu could swallow it whole. Mayfeld shoved up from his seat to cross the room and pour himself a cup of caf. Din stayed where he was⤠leaning against Caraâs old desk.
âYou tell your girl that youâre leaving yet? Or is that still a secret?â
âIâm going to tell her.â Din said firmly.
Mayfeld slurped out of his mug, purposely trying to annoy him, âYou said that four days ago, then three days ago, then twoâ¤â
âKeep talking and Iâll demote you from Deputy.â
âIs there even a level below deputy??â
âI can make one.â Din replied dryly. A wide grin crossed Mayfeldâs face and Din shook his head with a grumble. âToday. Iâll tell her today.â Mayfeld just stared at him from above the rim of his mug. Din pushed off the desk. âIâm going to do it.â
Mayfeld shrugged in response and Din resisted the urge to throw something at the man. He huffed and turned to leave. Mayfeld called out behind him, a teasing comment, and Din threw him a crude hand gesture over his shoulder causing the man to burst out in laughter.Â
It barely took him any time to get from the station to the clinic. When he stepped through the front doors he was greeted by Aayla and one other worker he wasnât familiar with. The Twiâlek waved him in and hit a button on the desk to unlock the backroom doors. It was the sound of your voice that greeted him first.
ââ¤and if you pull those staples out, youâll be dealing with me.â You stood at the end of a bed with your hands on your hips and your face drawn in concentration. Aayla had found and wrestled you into a white coat when you started and Din would be lying if he said he didnât like the look on you. Din especially liked watching you take control of a room. You could command a scene with voice and stare alone, and Din really, really liked watching you do it.
âBaby girl,â A vaguely familiar voice chimed and Din frowned at the nickname, âDealing with you would be my absolute pleasure.â
Din stepped further into the room to see that a worker from the hanger, a Trandoshan man he couldnât recall the name of, was sitting on a cot with a long cut from wrist to elbow. A line of staples was holding it closed. Din crossed his arms and tilted his head. âYeah? How about dealing with me?â
The Trandoshan looked to him at the same time you did, and he found it comical how different the reactions were. Your face split into a bright, gorgeous smile while the hangar worker stiffened up and averted his eyes.
âWell, hi there, Marshal.â You cooed and stuck your hands into the pockets of your white coat.
âDo we have a problem?â Din asked, trying to keep the amusement out of his voice.
You turned to look at your patient and raised an eyebrow in question. The Trandoshan glanced at him before looking back to you and shaking his head rapidly. You nodded and reached out to set a hand on Dinâs forearm. âI think weâre okay here.â
âCan⤠Can Iâ¤?â The worker pointed to the door.
âYupp. Keep it dry. Come back in a week, and Iâll see if youâre healed enough to take the staples out.â
The Trandoshan jumped up but paused when he realized he was going to have to pass Din in order to get out. Even though Din was technically blocking the way, he kept his position so the man was forced to squeeze around him. When the man was finally out, your laugh filled the air and Din sighed in admiration. You shrugged, smile still in place, âThat was kind of fun.â
âHowâre you doing?â Din asked.
âIâm okay.â You nodded and then scrunched your nose once. âItâs so weird. Iâm still not used to this, but at the same time I am?â You motioned around yourself. âItâs familiar, but itâs not. Am I crazy?â
Din shook his head, âOf course not.â
âHmm,â You took a step closer to him so you had to lift your face to meet his visor, âI think youâre biased.â
He grinned under his helmet then shrugged. âMaybe.â
âSo, what can I do for you, Marshal?â
âHave you had lunch yet?â He asked, and you shook your head in response. âCan I walk with you to get some? You arenât busy are you?â
You shrugged out of your white coat and tossed it onto a cot. âThatâs the beauty of working for a man who is super desperate to keep you around. I can do what I want.â Din chuckled and followed you out of the room. As you passed the front desk, you called out, âAayla, Iâm going. Just call me if any real emergencies come in. Okay?â
âYou got it, doc!â
As you both stepped out, Din offered you his arm and you slipped yours through it. He nodded back toward the clinic. âWho is the new girl?â
âMiriam.â You answered. âAayla is training her to work the front desk so I can train Aayla. Sheâll be able to help me with little stuff. I think sheâs got a lot of potential.â Din nodded toward a stand merchant who greeted him first. âWeâll be able to see more if I have an assistant, but we still canât do any routine kind of work. Karga still needs to get another physician to work that side of things.â
Din hummed. âI hear heâs working on it, but Iâll⌠encourage him to work faster.â
âOh, donât worry about it.â You shook your head. âI can be plenty annoying on my own. You shouldâve seen how much I bothered Admin back in Coruscant when I wanted them to buy the emergency department a whole set of ultrasounds.â
Din could imagine the scene and he wished he couldâve seen it. Heâd have to make sure he had a front row seat for when you began to hound Karga for this. Without even discussing it, it seemed you both had the same sandwich place in mind⤠the one that sold the cookies Grogu liked. Din didnât bother ordering for himself. He wasnât overly hungry. He mostly just wanted to spend time with you and make sure you took a break to eat. Din watched as you greeted the owners by name and after ordering your food you ordered a pack of cookies for Grogu as well. He could barely even pay attention to the conversation at hand because he was so busy watching you.
Even when the owners offered you the meal for free as a thank you for taking the job in town, you insisted on paying the full price. As you walked out, you frowned at him. âAre you sure you donât want something to eat?â
âIâm fine, ner karâta.â He replied. Din planned finding a bench where you could sit and eat⤠you had commented about how much you loved the current weather this morning⤠but the sound of his communicator made him groan.
âWhatâs going on?â You asked.
Din lifted his vambrace to see he was being hailed to the hanger. âOh. I have a, uh, friend visiting today. Heâs here early.â
âReally?â Your eyes widened.
âYeah. Iâm sorry. I have to go meet him.â
Din had begun to pull his arm away, but you kept your grip around it and briefly bit down on your lower lip drawing all his attention to the shape of the lips he loved so much⤠the lips that haunted his every dream. You pleaded, âCan I please come with you?â
âYou want to?â Din was surprised.
âYeah!â You bounced in place. âIâd love to meet your friend. I mean, if thatâs okay?â
âAlways. You should start eating while we walk.â Din nodded.
You snickered. âOkay. Bossy.â
Dinâs eyes snapped to you, and he chuckled. The two of you changed direction toward the hanger.Â
It wasnât like you werenât going to meet Cobb Vanth eventually.
The week had gone shockingly well. Better than you couldâve hoped, but then again your expectations were incredibly low. Working in the emergency clinic was actually enjoyable. Karga had tried to rope you into doing everything, but you put a hard stop on that for obvious reasons. Nevarro was still relatively small so when it came to emergencies⤠there really were not many emergencies. Only a patch up job here and there like with the Trandoshan this morning. Again the bar was low considering you started this job with Nima nearly losing her arm.
Nima had been doing very well physically, but, as much as she tried to hide it, emotionally she had taken a toll. You werenât sure why Cara left so abruptly. Din and you had talked about it in depth one night after dinner and he seemed to think it was because she had cared too much for Nima too fast. The only opinion you had on the matter was that Cara had certainly gotten on your bad side. You were loyal to your oldest friend and it irked you beyond belief that the once deputy of Nevarro had left when Nima needed her most.
âWhereâs your friend from?â You asked as Din and you neared the landing pad.
âTatooine.â
âAh, my neck of the woods.â
Din chuckled. âWere you even there long enough to call it your neck of the woods?â
âI lived in Mos Espa for at least half a year. In Tatooine years, that feels like a decade.â You replied and the laugh that left him made your cheeks warm.Â
He glanced over at you, your arm still looped through his, âWhat made you choose Tatooine, anyways?â
âItâs kind of a depressing answer. Definitely a mood killer.â You winced. Dinâs feet came to an abrupt stop and he turned so he was facing you entirely. You shouldâve guessed heâd have that kind of reaction. You shook your head. âI took care of a patient who said Mos Espa was where lowlifes and runaways escaped to when they had no other world to call home. SoâŚâ You shrugged. âI went to Mos Espa.â
âNer karâtaâ¤â
âI donât feel that way now. A lot has changed, and Iâm not the person who initially fled to Tatooine,â You said quickly, âBut you asked why I went, so I said.â With your next words, you kept your voice low so only he could hear you. âI promise Iâm okay, Din.â
Din gave you a curt nod. With an amused shake of your head, you slipped your arm through his once more and tugged him toward the landing pad. The Mandalorian warrior let you drag him along, and you couldâve swore he was dragging his feet on purpose to make it more difficult for you. The chuckle that left his helmet confirmed this for you.Â
âHow long is your friend staying for?â You asked, and Din stayed quiet. âAnd is his visit a social call? I imagine heâs heartbroken being away from the sands of Tatooine.â
Dinâs feet came to a stop once more, but this time it came as a surprise. You paused with him and gave him a curious look. He tilted his head. âAbout that, I wanted to talk to you aboutâ¤â
âMando!â
You and Din both turned at the voice. Walking in your direction was a very familiar face. Cobb Vanth? The marshal of Mos Pelgo was a far way from home, but he looked no different than the day you last saw him. His signature red scarf around his neck acting as a homing beacon for your eyes. Vanthâs eyes were initially focused on Din, but then they dragged over to you and he shook his head in surprise.
âLittle lady!? Is that you??â Vanth grinned.Â
Din and you both snapped to look at one another again rather than the new arrival. At the same time, the same words left your lips. âYou know Cobb Vanth!?â
Vanth spread his arms out as he continued to approach, a large duffel bag hanging from his back, âWell, ainât this a surprise!â
The shock wore off and it finally occurred to you that Cobb Vanth was here. Right here, right in front of you. You let out a laugh and rushed to meet him halfway. He greeted you by wrapping his arms around you in a tight grin⤠a laugh leaving him as well. What felt like another lifetime ago, you had met Cobb Vanth on your arrival to Tatooine. Though your plan had been to settle in Mos Espa you had accidentally ended up in Mos Eisley. In an attempt to get from one place to the other you got lost in the desert briefly after the land speeder you rented ran out of fuel halfway. It had been your fault for trusting the man you got the speeder from. Rather than dying you were saved by the man you were now hugging. Vanth had even been kind enough to get you to Mos Espa eventually.
You pulled away from Vanth. âItâs so good to see you! You look great.â
âOh, I know, darling.â Vanth winked. âBut still not holding a flame to you.â You chuckled and a hand settled on your shoulder. Din had walked over and you took a step back so you stood right beside him. Vanth motioned to the Mandalorian. âYou never told me you knew Mando.â
âI didnât back when I was with you, Vanth.â You glanced between the two men. âHow do you guys know each other?â
Vanth readjusted the bag around his shoulders. âNow that, little lady, is quite the story.â He continued on talking about how Din came looking for a Mandalorian and found Vanth decked out in Mandalorian armor. He followed it by describing how Din ended up flying into a krayt dragon to kill it from inside out. A detail you did not love to hear. âWeâve been best buddies since. Right, pal?â
Din didnât respond. You were still in awe at the coincidence of it all. You missed your Mandalorian by literal months. Din had swung through Mos Pelgo right before you had. What wouldâve happened if you met him then rather than now?Â
âMando?â Vanth questioned. Waving his hand once in front of the helmet. âYou alright?â
âIâm fine.â Din replied and you wondered where the tension in his voice had come from. You slipped your arm around his once more and he seemed to relax marginally. He cleared his throat before nodding. âHow was your trip, Vanth?â
Vanthâs lips stretched back out into a charming grin. âHey, I canât complain. Gotta say Nevarro looks better than I thought it would. Iâm excited to explore it.â He chuckled. âThe weather ainât too bad either. I was worried Iâd miss that desert air.â
âDonât worry. These lava plains are plenty hot enough.â You replied. âHow long are you here for?â
âSuppose 'til Mando here gets back.â
It took a second for the words to register in your mind, but Din picked it up much faster based on the way his entire body tensed once more. Until he gets back. Gets back? You slowly pulled your arm away from so you could turn and look at him. Before your hand could fall away entirely, Din caught it with his own⤠holding it against his arm.Â
âWaitâ¤â
âYouâre going somewhere?â You furrowed your brow in confusion. He hadnât mentioned anything about a trip. Din paused and somehow his hesitance irritated you. âWhere?â
Din sighed. âMandalore.â
Your eyes widened, âManda⤠The Mandalore that may or may not be poisoned still?â
âUm. Yes.â
âOkay.â You replied. âAlright.â You pulled your hand out from under Dinâs hand and shot Vanth a quick, firm smile. âIt was really good to see you, Vanth. Welcome to Nevarro! I guess Iâll be seeing you around.â Din took a step toward you, his nickname for you leaving his lips, but you took a step back. âI need to get back to work, but Iâll see you at home?â
You didnât give him the chance to answer and turned to leave. If Din called out after you, you didnât hear him. Your footsteps were rushed as you tried to wrap your head around the information you had just learned. Were you angry? Maybe. It wasnât a clear cut anger though⤠it was muddled. There were too many other emotions swirling in your head, but the main one that started to push to the front was disappointment. Every time you thought you understood where you stood with Din it seemed like something happened that made you question it all. Had he just planned on leaving the planet without telling you? Or maybe he wanted to wait until the last second and just wave to you as he took off, or hang a note on the fridge for you to find the morning of. Even if you werenât in this weird back and forth romantic thing with him, as someone who literally lived in his home and helped care for his child you were incredibly involved in his life. If you were a team, then you needed to know the plan.
More irritation boiled up in your blood, and you found yourself changing direction from the clinic to a familiar house. Your fist was banging on Nimaâs door before you fully even registered what it was you wanted to say. Nima opened the door, in her pajamas, and your eyes glanced at the metal brace surrounding her right arm out of habit.Â
Nima deflated and whined, âPlease, please, please, please tell me youâre here to clear me for work.â
âNo. Two more weeks. Iâm not changing my mind on that.â You replied and she groaned. âIâm here because apparently Marshal Mando is leaving the planet and hired a replacement marshal but didnât think to tell me any of this.â
âCome on in. I have alcohol.â
âI told you! I told you⤠didnât I tell you??â Mayfeld cried then spun to look at Vanth who was leaning against the wall. âI kriffing told him. Days ago.â
âPlease stop talking.â Din groaned as he hung his head back while slouching in the seat. Din thought that the worst part of learning you and Vanth already knew one another would be the tight hug you literally ran to give him. Vanth had pulled you up off your toes in the hug, and the primal side of him yearned for a fight. His hand literally twitched toward his blaster⤠his kriffing blaster. As if he was going to shoot down his good friend Cobb Vanth who left his town to do him a favor.Â
Din had a problem. He was a problem. Growing up the way he had, with the losses he faced, he tended to be possessive of what he considered his own. Din liked to think over the years he had gotten good at reigning that behavior in. He didnât shoot Vanth, after all. Still, that side of him didnât hesitate in rearing itâs ugly head in moments like when he watched Cobb Vanth hold you for what he considered to be a second too long. It wasnât until your arm slipped through his, a soft smile on your face, that he felt the logical side of him slip back into control.
Then, of course, it all went downhill when Vanth accidentally admitted the thing he had yet to tell you. Watching that smile fall off your features, feeling you try to slowly pull away, felt like he had taken blunt force trauma to the chest. It physically hurt and left a raw, aching wound and it only got worse as he watched you walk away. Din put the pain pretty high on the list of ones he experienced, and this was coming from someone who had a job that led him to be stabbed repeatedly.Â
âI am sorry about that, Mando.â Vanth spoke up.
âItâs not your fault.â Din straightened his posture and shook his head. âI shouldâve told her ages ago. Thatâs on me.â Vanth had apologized to him multiple times during the walk from the tarmac to the station. Heâd do so between asking questions about the town that Din was supposed to be giving him a better tour on. Din rested his elbows on knees. It dawned on him that there was a question he hadnât asked in his distress. âHow do you know her?â
Vanth crossed his arms. âIt was a couple months after you left, actually. She got lost between Mos Eisley and Mos Espa.â Dinâs eyes widened at the thought of you getting lost in that Maker forsaken desert. Vanth chuckled. âHer land speeder ran out of fuel. It was by pure chance I ran into her. She stayed in Mos Pelgo for a few days then I took her the rest of the way to Mos Espa. We stayed in touch though⤠here and there.â
Briefly, Din wondered what his life wouldâve looked like if the two of you had been in Mos Pelgo at the same time. It was a curious thought but he knew both of you had been different people at that time. Even if it, in the great scheme of things, wasnât that long ago. Less than a year. Then again, as quickly as you had wormed your way in his heart he couldnât imagine meeting you months ago wouldâve been that different. Din sighed and stood, he grabbed a holopad off the desk remembering that despite his dilemma in breaking your heart today he still had work to do.Â
âYeah.â Vanth hummed. âLittle lady and I didnât see each other often, but sheâd visit me or Iâd visit her for the occasional hook up.â
Dinâs head snapped to glare at Vanth and, in an attempt to ensure his hands were free, he slammed the holopad back down onto the desk⤠ignoring the tell tale sound of cracking glass. Vanthâs lips curled up into a mischievous grin and Din was half tempted to drag him back to the tarmac and ship his ass to Tatooine. Mayfeld burst into laughter and Din just shook his head.
âSorry, brother.â Vanth chuckled. âI saw how up in arms you got out on the tarmac. Couldnât help myself.â
âHilarious.â Din replied.Â
Eventually, Mayfeld and Vanth wandered out so the newest temporary marshal could get acquainted with the town and meet Karga. It gave Din a couple of hours to work though he spent most of it internally spiraling over the moment your entire face fell. He hated that he had been the cause of that⤠just because he had been too scared to fess up. His communicator began to go off and Din answered it.
âHi, Marshal?â A womanâs voice said. Din confirmed who it was. âThis is Ms. Wynn, Iâm in charge of Groguâs class. Everything's still fine, but class ended about twenty minutes ago and I havenât seen you or Soran. Is everything alright?â
Din shoved up from his deskâs chair. âIâll be right there.â
On his way out the door, he called Aayla at the clinic to see if you had just gotten caught up with a patient, but the woman claimed she hadnât seen you since he took you out for lunch. The clinic had been quiet otherwise. Dinâs stomach churned uncomfortably as he hurried to pick up his son. Were you alright? Or were you so upset that you refused to even care for Grogu? Din knew the moment that thought crossed his mind that he was wrong. Regardless of how upset you were with him, youâd never take it out on the little boy. Din just hoped you were okay.
You narrowed your eyes at Nima as she downed the last of her beer, âIs this all youâve been doing all day? Drinking?â
âWell, I canât work, soâŚâ Nima shrugged. When she offered you a drink you had turned it down, technically still on shift as the physician, but she hadnât stopped from drinking herself. You had come here to rant about Din, but as it turned out you both had plenty to complain about. For hours, you and her had sat on the back porch of her house . The last thirty minutes or so you were trying to pry information out of Nima about how she felt about the Cara situation, but the mechanic would simply shrug it away. You knew she was hurting more than she claimed though. âDo the skies look gross to you?â
âWhat?â You blurted and slumped down in your seat.
âThe sky. It looksâŚicky.â
You peered up best you could, and in her defense icky was probably the best word. The day had started clear, but the sky now had a greenish tinge to it. It reminded you of the beginnings of a storm, but you couldnât see any clouds. You leaned out further to look and by doing so it gave you a clear view of Nimaâs kitchen through a side window where you saw a clock resting against her wall. 3:37. Dank farrik. You jumped up.
âKarking⤠Grogu!â You panicked. Shit, shit, shit. âStop drinking, Nima.â
She mumbled a confirmation that you didnât firmly believe then started sprinting back to the center of town. You had never, ever been late to pick up Grogu before. Guilt gnawed at you imagining Grogu looking for you in a crowd of parents and not being able to find you. Maker, how could you lose track of time like that? You got to the school in record time to find that all the kids were gone. Ms. Wynn was cleaning up around a room and she said Din had come and picked him up about ten minutes ago.Â
As much as you wanted to avoid Din for a little while longer, you needed to see Grogu so you could apologize to him. On your way in you passed Mayfeld and Vanth who were standing in the lobby. They both raised their hands to greet you and you blew past them without preamble. You were a woman on a mission.Â
âGrogu?â You called out, searching the room. Faintly, you could hear Grogu calling back to you and he waddled into the room a second later. You breathed a sigh of relief and knelt down to scoop him up into a hug. âIâm so sorry, baby. I am so, so sorry.â
âNo sorry.â Grogu hummed giving your cheek a small pat making you chuckle.
The sound of a throat clearing had you glancing up to see Din leaning against the doorway that would lead back to his office. You were in an odd position because you were still upset at him from leaving you in the dark, but you were also ashamed and embarrassed at missing Groguâs pick up time.
âHi.â You mumbled awkwardly.
âIâm sorry.â Din blurted. Your eyes narrowed. Was he not going to address the âyou abandoned Groguâ thing first? âI shouldâve told you sooner that Grogu and I are going to Mandalore.â
You slowly stood up with the cooing child in your arms. âYou and⌠Youâre taking Grogu?? To Mandalore??â If he heard the rising anger in your voice, he didnât show it. âThe planet that, again, we donât know is even habitable?â
âOf course. Where I go, he goes.â Din shrugged nonchalantly. You blinked once, and Din finally seemed to catch onto at least one of the thoughts you had. âI want you to go, but I canât pull you away from Nevarro. Not when you just started working in the clinic, and if I did choose to leave Grogu here that would just be added stress for you.â
Right. Because worrying about Din and Grogu on some wasteland of a planet wasnât a stress factor. You locked your jaw and let out a slow breath through your nose. The boy in your arms seemed to latch onto the tension faster than his father did based on the worried looks he was bouncing between the two of you. Finally, you found your voice, âI forgot Grogu at school. I lost track of time. Iâ¤â
âIt was an accident, I know. Iâm not mad.â Din said calmly.Â
He wasnât mad. Din wasnât mad, and somehow that made you even angrier. A part of you wondered if he was purposely not showing any anger in an attempt to keep you from being angry. One mistake for another mistake. Tit for tat. Maybe he was trying to make up for the fact that he knew he upset you, but you hated the calm demeanor he still seemed to carry. It occurred to you then, that you wanted him to be angry. You wanted to argue. The Mandalorian in front of you was the picture perfect example of composure and it pissed you off.
âYouâre not angry.â You enunciated each word.
âOf course not, ner karâta.â Din shook his head. He drifted closer. âWe should talk more about this tripâ¤â
âWhy?â You shrugged and pasted a large smile on your face. If he wanted to be composed then youâd be composed too. âI should check on the clinic one last time before heading home. Iâll take Grogu with me. Get as much time with him as I can before you boys go on your little adventure.â
Din shifted his weight from one foot to the other, a nervous tic you usually only saw at home, âYeah. I might be late getting back. It looks like there might be a volcanic ash storm rolling in soon. Nevarro hasnât seen one since before the guild left here.â
âNo problem.â You said. âIâll see you at home.â
Din began to take a step toward you, but you turned on your heel to leave with Grogu. You knew you were being petty, but right now you didnât really care. If the two of you were playing mistake for mistake then this seemed fair too. You were petty to him and he didnât tell you that he planned to leave you alone on this planet without him or Grogu. Tit for tat.
Din watched you leave with the sinking feeling that the interaction between the two of you had not gone well. Mayfeld stepped in with an incredulous look while Din continued to just stand with his arms crossed over his chest.
Mayfeld scoffed and motioned behind him, âHow in the hell did you make it worse?â
Din mumbled a string of curses in every language he was familiar with and pushed past Mayfeld to leave. The man fell into step beside him. As much as he wanted to chase after you, he needed to help get the city prepped for the oncoming storm. Mayfeld, never able to take a hint, shook his head, âI mean, geez Mando. How is it you can string up a quarry in seconds, but canât figure out how to apologize to a woman?â
âWhere is Vanth?â Din asked, ignoring Mayfeldâs own line of questioning.
âWalking your girl to the clinic then home.â
Din locked his jaw. That was good to hear. He wanted to be the one to walk you and his son back to the safety of your shared home, but considering the circumstance he was just glad you werenât alone. Din ordered Mayfeld to take the eastern side of the city and warn all citizens to bring in or tie down their outdoor belongings while he took the west.Â
He didnât get it. Had you wanted him to be angry at you? Din was a little peeved, itâd be a lie to say that he wasnât. He had to leave work to pick up Grogu despite you taking on that responsibility this morning. Since starting at the clinic, you and him had taken turns, but Din liked to know beforehand so he wasnât just up and leaving the station. If an emergency happened, where you were needed with a patient, that was more than understandable, but that hadnât been the case. You had just lost track of time. A very human mistake to make, and honestly it was your first when it came to Grogu. So, yes, Din was a little peeved, but he wasnât angry.
Din pushed it out of mind. You knew the truth, and he could better explain himself tonight when he got home. Right now, he needed to focus on the task at hand.Â
According to Karga, the volcanic ash storms were quick but deadly. The closest volcano would spew out a hot and devastating breath of ash. Itâd roll over the city, blanketing everything in darkness, but it usually was blown away and gone in a matter of hours. Din had heard plenty about them, but they had never occurred while he was planet side. As long as there was proper prep to begin with then it should be a smooth transition. Karga, ever the planner, had built the city buildings with proper metal shields to roll down over windows and doors in the case of a storm. Everybody would stay indoors for a half a day, and then theyâd spend the rest cleaning up.
Din wondered if his helmet was equipped to withstand the ash. It should be. The beskar and his flight suit would keep the hot ash from burning his skin, and if his helmet worked correctly then the filter should keep out most of the dangerous ash. He only wondered in case he needed to venture out to save a citizen or two. They were making the rounds to tell everyone that staying indoors was an order, but Din knew with his luck one or two people would ignore the warning.
It took hours to ensure the entire city was ready to be locked down and make sure that Vanth found his place and that it worked for the man. Din had simply housed him in Caraâs old place. It was still furnished and it wasnât like Vanth needed anything permanent. The storm was still being estimated at being 24 or 36 hours out. It would give Din, Mayfeld, and Vanth time in the morning and afternoon to run through the city once more for final checks.
âHey,â Din called out as he stepped into the house with a sigh. When he rounded the corner he noted that you were in the kitchen alone and cleaning up. He glanced around, âGrogu?â
âBathed and in bed.â You replied without missing a beat. âItâs late.â
âYeah, sorry, getting the city prepped took longer than I thought it would.â Din groaned. âHow wasâ¤â
âI have leftover dinner for you.â You interrupted him and motioned to the stove. âBut I figure youâll want to clean up first.â
Din nodded in relief, âThank you.â You gave him a tight nod, a smile that didnât reach your eyes painted your lips, and he paused before heading back to the shower. âHey, youâre not going to bed are you? I wanted to talk.â
âIâm not going to bed.â You shook your head.
âGood.â Din turned and hurried off. From the moment Vanth let slip that he was leaving, Din had been craving to sit down next to you and explain everything. He wanted to take your hand in his and reassure you that everything was going to be okay, they wouldn't be gone long, and it killed him to leave you behind. Din wanted to explain that he was leaving to find redemption and revenge. Though, he wasnât quite sure how youâd handle that information.
As Din washed the day off of him, he wondered how youâd feel about that? If he told you the absolute truth that he planned to find redemption in part so he could court you. If he told you that he planned on tracking down Daelar to rip the manâs throat out. He wasnât positive how youâd handle either fact, but he was positive that he needed to tell you. Din was human, he made mistakes, but he made it a mission in life to not make the same mistake twice.
After getting dressed, Din carried all his armor, sans his helmet, into the room to set aside. He paused long enough to check in on Grogu and tuck the blanket thrown haphazardly around the hammock around the boyâs small body. âNuhoy morut'yc, adiâka.â Din readjusted the stuffed frog in Groguâs hammock with a smile and left the room as quietly as possible. A nervous energy settled along his skin and he rolled his shoulders once, âNer karâta?â
The kitchen was empty and Din titled his head in confusion at the finding. His eyes landed on a plate of food waiting for him on the island counter and drifted closer. Sitting beside the plate was a small note with the most passive aggressive of all smiley faces he had seen drawn.
âWent out with Nima. Donât wait upâ.
Din aggressively tore his helmet off and the only thing that kept him from slamming it onto the counter was the knowledge that the sound would wake up Grogu. His nervous energy melted into irritation. Sure, he hadnât clarified that he wanted to talk when he asked if you were going to bed, but Din knew his intentions had been clear. Thatâs why you had deliberately answered his question in such a specific manner. His hands clenched and unclenched as he took a slow and steadying breath.Â
He wasnât angry. He wasnât. Din repeated this under his breath in an attempt to convince himself of it.
It was funny. The last time you sat in this cantina with Nima, in these exact chairs, the two of you had also been talking about Din. The subject last time was how awkward it was to tiptoe around him in his own home. Mashal Daddy, is what Nima had called him last time.
âMarshal Dickhead.â Nima scoffed before taking the shot in front of her. She pushed your shot glass closer to you and you tossed it back as well. The liquid burned the entire way down and you grimaced. It had been ages since you drank to this degree⤠you were a light weight now. âThatâs what he is.â
You shook your head. âNo, he isnât.â
âOkay, I need you to work on your shit talk.â Nima pointed at you. âDefending the person youâre complaining about is kind of redundant.â
You tapped your glass and the bartender wandered back over to pour the both of you another shot which you took without hesitation. Nima tried to get them to pour another, but you shook your head and ordered two mixed drinks instead. At least those had something other than straight liquor in it.Â
âIâm pissed at him, but I donât wanna shit talk him.â You replied.
âThen what do you want to do?â
âI donât know.â You sighed. âI want to fight.â Nima gave you a questionable look and you shook your head. âNot physically. Maker, I donât have a death wish.â Picking to tussle with a Mandalorian could possibly be the stupidest choice in the galaxy. âBut I want to argue with him.â
Nima narrowed her eyes. âWhy?â
âBecause I⤠Iâ¤â Your words got caught in your throat and you tried to wash it down with a large swig of your drink, to no avail. It was dumb to want to argue, wasnât it? Couples tried to avoid that. Not that the two of you were an official couple. You groaned and buried your face into your hands⤠already feeling dizzy from the drinks. You wanted him to be upset with you, to feel comfortable enough around you to show that he was upset. Up until now, the two of you hadnât had any real arguments. Sure, there were little tiffs here and there about nothing important, and it typically always ended with Din conceding the point with a shrug. Despite what most people seemed to think, you knew that towering wall of beskar had emotions. He had a lot of kriffing emotions, and you wanted to see all of them. Even the negative ones.Â
âI think I get it. The âwanting to argueâ thing.â Nima said softly. You lifted your head to look at her and she gave you a small smile. The Twiâlek reached out to set her hand on your shoulder with a comforting squeeze. âYou want to have hot, angry make-up sex.â
Despite the sullen thoughts weighing you down, her words made a loud laugh slip from your lips. Nima look affronted that you were laughing at her theory, but you just shook your head and let the laughter die down to chuckles.
âI was serious.â
âI know you were. Thatâs why itâs funny.â You replied and took another sip of your drink. âBut, I think I want to have not angry sex with him before I go for the other stuff.â
Nimaâs eyes widened, âWait, you guys havenâtâ¤â You shook your head. âWhat the kriff are you waiting for!?â
âI donât know.â You admitted. It was a fair question. âI think weâre going slow.â
âBut, why?â Nima replied. âItâs obvious the two of you wanna jump each otherâs bones. Half the city thinks youâre already married to him.â
You furrowed your brow, âYeah, why is that? I get that the evidence stacked against us is damning, but to just assume weâre married?â
âOh, Iâve been telling everyone the two of you are married.â Nima replied.
âWhat? Why??â
âI donât know.â Nima shrugged. âSeemed fun. Figure itâll be true one day.â
You scoffed, âWell, it wonât be if he disappears on the cursed world of Mandalore.âÂ
The words fell out of your lips with more pain than you meant to convey. Nimaâs face fell and you lifted your drink to knock back the rest of it. That was a possibility, wasnât it? Din and Grogu leave you to never return. Then what? You live in the house you shared with them alone? Listening to the ghostly echoes of where they used to be?
âShots.â Nima called out to the bartender. âWe need more shots.â
The two of you were four more shots in when a familiar face wandered toward you. Vanth leaned against the bar on your other side with a smile that you could tell was concerned. âHey there, ladies.â
âWhoa, whoa, whoa, buddy!â Nima drunkenly lifted herself from her seat, nearly toppling over, and pointed at Vanth. âWe arenât interested. Sheâs married,â Nima pointed to you then pointed back to herself, âAnd I like pussy.â
Vanthâs eyes widened and you dragged her back down into her seat. âFirst, stop telling people Iâm married. Second, stop announcing to the bar that you like pussy. And, third,â You motioned for Vanth to take a seat beside you which he did, âThis is Cobb Vanth. Heâs a friend from Tatooine and the replacement Marshal while Di⤠Mando is gone.â
In your own tipsy stupor, you had nearly said Dinâs name aloud. Luckily, Nima was too gone to notice and Vanth didnât seem to care. He leaned over to over his hand in greeting. âItâs nice to meet youâŚ?â
âNima.â She replied curtly and held her hand out like a queen offering it to a peasant. You rolled your eyes, but Vanth just changed the position of his own hand to take hers with a small shake.
âNima.â Vanth said. âCan I buy you two drinks?â
âI insist you do.â Nima nodded and pulled her hand away.
You chuckled with a shake of your head and tossed back the rest of the one in front of you so Vanth could get you a fresh one. Nima was babbling about something mechanical that you couldnât follow along with and directing her words to anyone who glanced her way.Â
âIâve already apologized to Mando, but I feel like I owe you an apology too.â Vanth said. âIâm sorry about what happened on the tarmac.â
You snorted. âIt wasnât your fault for assuming Mando wasnât keeping secrets.â
âI donât know if Iâd call it a secret.â Vanth shrugged, catching the bartenderâs eye and holding up three fingers. He turned back to you. âI think the poor guy was just scared.â
âMandalorians donât feel fear.â Nima blurted out from behind you, apparently a part of the conversation now.
You shook your head. âI donât care if he was scared as long as he tells me that he is.â
âFair request.â Vanth shrugged. The drinks were brought over and you took a small sip of yours. The tipsy buzz floating in your skull was slowly shifting to just plain drunk, and a sadness crept in alongside it. You suddenly wished you were at home curled in bed⤠curled in his bed. Listening to the soft snores of both him and Grogu. âSo,â Vanthâs voice snapped you out of Dinâs dark and safe room and back into the noisy cantina, âWhere does that leave the two of you?â
âSheâs dropping his ass.â Nima barked.
âNimaâ¤â You whirled on her.
âYou donât need him! Heâs abandoning you!â Nima cried and you took in the way her lower lip quivered for just a moment. âWe donât need either of them! They can⤠They can go explore the kriffing galaxy or join the New Republicâs special forces team or whatever it is they want to do! We donât care. Weâre better than that. We donât need them.â She turned and shook her head before taking a large sip of her drink. âIâm better off without her.â
You reached out, wordlessly, and pulled her hand away from the glass so you could hold it. Nima tangled her fingers with yours and squeezed once⤠hers eyes glistening with unshed tears. You knew she had taken Caraâs departure worse than she wanted to admit. Nima was right. She didnât need Cara. Nima was strong and beautiful and smart and incredible. Cara had been a friend but she had also been a bump in the road. She left selfishly when Nima needed her most, but Nima was going to rise above it. However, she had been wrong about you.
You did need Din. Thatâs why the thought of him leaving Nevarro was so jarring and painful. Coming here had been a way to escape your past and hide out, but you had never expected to find someone who would grow to be so important. Honestly, it was a bit scary if you thought about it for too long, but the truth was that you needed Din in your life. Him and Grogu. Without them, youâd have a gaping hole in your heart and you werenât sure there was anything else in the universe that could fill that. Din hadnât fully explained his reasoning, you hadnât given him the chance, but you knew he wasnât leaving you. Nima had been blindsided by Cara and left with nothing. Maybe it wouldâve taken him forever, but Din wouldnât leave without saying good-bye and you knew⤠deep, deep down⤠that heâd fight tooth and nail to return to you.Â
âIâm sorry to ruin your night, Vanth.â You said, âBut I think weâre gonna call it quits.â
âDonât be silly.â Vanth shook his head. He tossed back his drink before rising himself. âIâll walk you ladies home.â
You gave him a thankful smile knowing you were in no state to navigate to Nimaâs house in the dark, put her to rest, then find your way back home yourself. Vanth chose to help Nima walk considering you had at least a little better control over your legs. The three of you stumbled out of the cantina into the warm night air⤠it was time to go home.
Din didnât have the time to put all his armor on, it was nearing one in the morning when his communicator went off, so he had simply thrown on the upper half of his flight suit, gloves, and boots. It left him in one of the more ridiculous outfits he wore considering his sweatpants did not match any item he adorned, but he just needed to get the door.
When he swung it open, Vanth stood on his porch with you in his arms sleeping soundly. He nodded toward your figure, âShe was wide awake when we dropped off her friend, and was doing decent on the way here, but by time I reached the end of you street she was dozing off on her feet.â
âThank you.â Din mumbled. He was quick to step forward and take you into his arms⤠not enjoying the way you were snuggled into Vanth. Though he did appreciate the man bringing you home. âI really do appreciate this.â You shifted so you could bury your head into the crook of his neck and Din sighed. âWas she⌠How was she when you found her at the cantina?â
Vanth didnât answer at first. He stared at Din for what felt like a long moment before looking at you then back to him again. Vanth chuckled, âI know Iâm new to town, brother, so take this with a grain of salt.â He shook his head. âBut itâs obvious she cares about you as much as you care about her. A fight now and then is normal, but donât let it go on for too long. You donât get time wasted back.â
âThanks for the tip.â Din mumbled.Â
Vanth gave him a quick nod before turning on his heel and leaving. Din shut the front door with his foot and carried you through the quiet house until he reached your room. The thought that you spent the night drinking until you were too inebriated to get home yourself bothered him more than he wanted to admit. You were a grown woman who could do what you wanted, but you had gone to specifically avoid talking to him. He found that incredibly annoying.Â
It was like you were purposefully trying to rile him into lashing out, and thatâs the last thing Din wanted to do. Din had a temper, but back during his bounty hunting years that was easily handled. Heâd get angry, heâd go hunt a quarry and burn that emotion right out of himself. Now, he was in a setting where he didnât have an outlet and he worked hard to keep that temper under wraps. Din had lashed out at Karga a time or two since his arrival, but that was expected and Karga was no stranger to his anger.Â
Din settled you on your bed and began to carefully take off your boots followed by your socks and pants. He kept his gaze off your lower half as his only goal was to make you more comfortable. He stood and pulled your covers up to tuck you in. Din paused for a moment before pulling his helmet off and tucking it under one arm. He ran a hand through his messy hair and sighed. Maker, you were driving him up the wall. You had no idea the kind of fire you were playing with. Itâs not like you were in danger, Din would tear his own heart out before hurting you, but he didnât want to yell at you.Â
âNi aalar sha yaim ti gar.â Din sighed aloud. A reminder. He leaned forward to press his lips against your temple. Din would not lose his temper with you because he could not afford to lose you. He turned off your automatic alarm sitting on the night stand by the bed and wished you the same farewell he had to Grogu earlier in the night. âNuhoy morutâyc, ner karâta.â
The headache you woke up with was nasty, and you swore in that moment to never drink again. Probably a fruitless promise to yourself, and not the first time you had claimed it, but right now you were miserable. You groaned and rubbed your face in your pillow before sitting up with a grunt. There was a weird amount of sunlight in your room and not just in âmy poor hungover eyes are overly sensitiveâ kind of way. You rubbed your face, glancing around, and it was then you realized the alarm sitting by your bed was off.
âShit.â You breathed and jumped out of bed. The sheets tangled around your lower leg and you hit the floor with a curse. First you forgot to pick Grogu up from school and now youâd be late to taking him to school. Maker, you were so stupid. As reliving as it had been to drink and talk to Nima last night, it hadnât been worth it for this. The speed in which you got dressed was startling and you burst into Dinâs room to find it empty.
Your hungover brain realized much too late that this couldâve been bad if Din were in here with his helmet off. âGrogu??â You hurried out of the room and into the hall. When you stepped into the kitchen you were met with the smell of food and the sound of babbling. Grogu sat in his high chair eating with his father right beside him dressed and ready for work. âGrogu.â
âMa!â Grogu greeted briefly before diving back into his food.
Din turned to stare at you and you rubbed your face in embarrassment, âIâm sorry. I donât know why my alarm wasnât on.â
âI turned it off.â Din shrugged. âVanth brought you home late. Figured you needed to sleep in.â Din rose from his seat and began to try and clean Grogu up from the mess he had made of breakfast. âYouâre fine. I can take Grogu to school this morning.â
âWhat?â You gaped in disbelief.Â
âWhat?â Din echoed.Â
âYou hired me to take care of Grogu while you worked and I am failing at that right now.â You spat.
Din scoffed. âFailing is a bit dramatic. You made a mistake. It happens.â
âI show up passed out from drinking on a work night, and your response was to tuck me in and turn off my alarm??â You said as your voice began to raise. âSeriously??â
âWasnât a work night.â Din replied calmly. âI wasnât on schedule.â
You groaned in frustration, âThatâs not the damn point, Din!â
âThen what is the point?â
âThe point is youâre supposed to be upset! Youâre supposed to be angry!â You snapped. Grogu cooed nervously from his seat and you bit back as much of your anger as you could. âItâs a normal human response. Why canât you just admit that youâre angry at me!?â
Din set his hands on his hips and shook his head. âWhy do you want me to be angry at you so badly?â
âBecause I want you to be human around me!â You snapped.
Din stiffened, and as much as you hated the way you worded that, you thought maybe it would be the line that pushed him over the edge. Instead, he just gave you a tight shrug. âSorry. I didnât realize I wasnât being human around you.â
âReally?â You laughed in broken disbelief. âYouâre not even going to react to that shitty thing I just said?â Din remained silent. âWhatever. Iâm taking Grogu to school.â
âYou donât have to do thatâ¤â
âActually, I do.â You replied sharply and scooped the boy up from the chair. Grogu reached up to set a hand on your face and you sighed⤠momentarily finding peace. When your gaze lifted up to spot Din once more the peace fell away. âItâs my job. Remember? Might as well do what I was hired to do while Grogu is still in Nevarro.â
Din didnât respond. He stood stock still. Enough so that a stranger could walk in and confuse him for a droid. On your way out, you scooped up Groguâs bag by the door and hurried out. There was a sharp, acidic tang in the air that greeted you and you flinched at the smell. The sky was uglier than it had been yesterday, but you were already late so you pressed on.Â
The entire rushed walk to school, you spent it apologizing to Grogu for yelling at his father in front of him. You shouldnât have lost your temper in front of the child. As if he understood the situation entirely, Grogu babbled along with you and continued to give your face small pats of reassurance. Right outside of the school, Ms. Wynn stuck her head out to greet you.
âHey, Wynn. I am so sorry about yesterday and for being late thisâ¤â
âHurry, get in.â She grasped you by the wrist and tugged you inside. She shut the door tightly behind you and you glanced around the room to see all the children being kept busy by the other school workers. You gave Ms. Wynn a confused look and she sighed. âThe storm is coming sooner than everyone thought. The watch people are estimating it to hit city center in the next twenty minutes or so. You canât be outside.â
You shrugged, âI can get to clinic in fifteen.â
Grogu wiggled and whined in your arms so you set him down so he could run off to play with his friends. Ms. Wynn shook her head. âNo. Itâs not worth the risk. Volcanic ash storms are incredibly dangerous. The entire city is locking up right now.â You still thought youâd be able to make it, but before you could argue further your communicator began to beep. âIâll let you take that. I need to start class.â
You nodded and watched her walk off before activating your communicator. âHelloâ¤â
âNer karâta?â Dinâs voice crackled to life⤠panic evident. âWhere are you and Grogu??â
âAt school. Wynn just locked us in for the storm.â
âGood.â You heard Din breathe out a breath of relief. âJust stay there until the storm passes. It should be over by this evening.â There was an awkward pause of silence before he cleared his throat. âIf you need anything, call me. Please.â
âI will.â You replied. Then added, âYouâll be safe at home, right?â
âYes.â
âGood.â You hummed. âIâll, uh, talk to you later.â
The call ended miserably and you wandered to the side of the room where you could drop into a chair. The good news was you wouldnât have to worry about Grogu like some parents probably worried about their kids. Minutes later, the sound of strong wind and debris rattled the metal sheet covering the window you sat by. It made you jump in alarm and you silently thanked Wynn for stopping you.
That had come much sooner than twenty minutes.
You had to applaud Ms. Wynn and the other workers for their tenacity. The storm outside sounded miserable and terrifying, but the kids seemed nonplussed by it with the way the teachers distracted them. Around the end of the first hour, Aayla contacted you to ask about a few people who had wandered out into the storm and then stumbled into the clinic. Most of the injuries had been superficial⤠the exposure short term as they came from nearby buildings. You walked her through how to mix some paste for burns.
It was during the second hour that the patients got too complicated for Aayla.
âI donât know what to do, Doc.â Aaylaâs voice shook. âI keep having him use his inhaler, but after a few minutes he ends up needing it again.â
âIâm worried heâs scorched his lungs. His asthma making it that much worse.â
âDo I mix a paste? Or⤠Or make a solution?â
You sank in your seat. It was a solution that needed to be made, which you trusted Aayla to do, but that fluid then needed to be aerosolized. That way the patient could breathe it right into his lungs. Working with the machine that did so was tricky and even you werenât the best at it. You hated the idea of getting Aayla to attempt it only to make a mistake and take on that guilt herself. She was still new to medicine. That kind of guilt shouldnât be weighed on her conscience considering she hadnât been trained for this.
âWhatâs his oxygen status right now?â You asked.
âItâs in the mid-80s and thatâs with an oxygen mask on.â
Dank farrik. He might not make it to the end of this storm. The patient could crash much sooner than that. You gave Aayla a few orders to keep the man stable then pushed to stand. You caught Wynnâs attention and the woman drifted closer after helping a child with a small task. She gave you a warm smile, and you returned a skeptical one.
âHi. So, I need a jacket, scarf, and some sunglasses.â
Wynn warned you against your idea, but you were dead set. You had no choice. So, ignoring her advice, you pressed on. You soaked the scarf in cold water then wrapped it a few times around your mouth and nose to use as a makeshift filter. The glasses would hopefully at least protect your eyes a little, and the jacket was to cover up the remainder of your skin. You were thankful you hadnât worn shorts today.Â
You had traveled to the back door to leave that way none of the ash would slip into the same room as the kids. It would take you 15 minutes to get to the clinic. It was now or never, you supposed.
Din was furious. His temper running hotter than the volcanic ash whipping around him. As it turned out, his helmet would keep out the dangerous conditions surrounding him. Groguâs teacher had reached out to him to let him know that you had traveled out into the storm to reach a patient. She had done so to ensure that someone else was aware of the situation. Din had thanked her before rushing out himself.Â
He asked one thing of you today. One.Â
He just wanted you to stay inside the kriffing school with Grogu. It wasnât asking a lot considering the literal fire and ash raining outside. It was common sense for someone to stay inside. Din was literally just asking you to follow common human survival instincts, yet you still left. You left, not protected in beskar as he was, but rather dressed in a wet scarf and jacket. As if that was going to help a karking thing.
Din tried to hail you over the communicator but it never got through. He told himself it was because of the storm. If even a little ash got into the communicator itâd glitch. That had to be it. Din refused to believe anything could have happened to you. Still, fear mingled with his rage, but he chose to ignore that for the time being.
Black and gray wind swirled around him, whipping his cloak in every direction, as flickers of burning ash drifted in the air. It was so thick that he could barely see a few feet in front of him. If he wasnât careful, he could step right over you on accident and not even know it. The thick ash was beginning to settle on the ground in thick piles like the snow of Hoth. When he reached the clinic doors, he saw the metal shutters were down. Din didnât hesitate to slam his hand against the metal as hard as he could.
If nobody opened the door soon heâd break through the shutters. Sure, ash would collect in the clinic lobby, but heâd deal with that problem later. Luckily for everyone, the shudders cracked open and Din quickly slipped through. Miriam, the new girl, had opened the door for him. Din didnât mean to blow her off, but he sped past her. She was clever enough to open the second set of doors without him having to have asked.Â
Inside the room, were a few people sitting on the cots or against the wall with a pink paste rubbed into splotches on their skin. Aayla stood in front of an older man who was struggling to breathe. A nebulizer, the same kind of machine that blasted a mist of medicine for Grogu, was being held up in front of his mouth.
âWhere the kriff is she?â Din snapped.
Aayla nervously stiffened in place. She pointed out of the room, âThereâs a small break room down the hall. Sheâsâ¤Sheâs in there.â Din spun to leave, but Aalya called out to him. He nearly ignored her until she spoke again. âI think sheâs more injured than she lets on. Thereâs some leftover pink paste from the last batch for her skin burns. Right now, sheâs using the other nebulizer.â
Din huffed out a small thanks before snatching the jar off a side table and following her instructions out of the room. He wasnât familiar with the back halls of the clinic, but he didnât need any more clues to find you. Halfway down the hall he could hear a barking cough. Din picked up his pace then threw the break room door open hard enough that it slammed into the wall.
You startled where you were sitting at a table with a nebulizer mask held in front of your face. Your eyes widened in surprise and you opened your mouth to begin to say his name only for you to begin coughing violently. Just for a moment, his anger subsided. Din hurried over and set a hand on your shoulder to evaluate your injuries.
âInjuries. Whatâs wrong?â
âJust⤠Just some burns.â Your voice was hoarse. âWorst of itâ¤,â You began to cough again, âLungs. In my lungs. Medicine will help.â
You took a few more deep breaths of the nebulizer and Din let his eyes trace your exposed skin. There were patches of mildly burned skin on your hands and on your forehead and upper cheeks. The pattern made it clear to see the shape of the sunglasses you had worn. Din tore off his glove and threw it aside rougher than he intended. Your eyes widened but you didnât say anything. Din dug his fingers into the paste and began to rub it over every single burn he could see on you⤠no matter how small.Â
When he was appeased that he got every single injury, Din shoved the jar aside angrily and huffed, âAre you out of your damn mind?â
âNo.â You replied. Your voice already sounding better. âItâs not like I had a choice.â
âExcuse me?â Din narrowed his eyes at you.
âI had a patient who needed me.â You shrugged. Then, you had the audacity to roll your eyes and mutter under your breath, âJust relax, Din.â
Din pushed to stand so fast that the chair he sat in went sprawling back and you jumped at the sound. He set his hands on the table and leaned toward you. âRelax? Did you just tell me to kriffing relax??â You stared at him silently, and Din took a step back with a shake of his head. He scoffed. âRelax.â Din felt his blood boiling under his skin. âBic ni skana'din.â
âDinâ¤â
âNo.â Din snapped. âYouâre going to sit there, and youâre going to listen to me.â He leaned in once more. âYou wanted me angry? Well, now Iâm angry! Dank farrik! What the kriff were you thinking!? I told you to stay in the school. I made myself very clear.â He slammed a hand down onto the table in frustration. âDo you realize how badly that couldâve ended?!â
You set down the nebulizer mask, âDin, I had toâ¤â
He reached out to snatch the mask from the table where you set it and forced it back into your hand. Din shoved your hand up so it was holding the mask by your mouth once more. âNo, you didnât. Those patients look fine in there.â
âThe old man wasnât.â You snapped back with a glare of your own. âHe might not have made it till the end of the storm.â
âWas there a chance he couldâve?â
âI mean, I guess, but there was just as equal of a chance that he wouldnât. Iâ¤â
âThen thatâs the risk that gets made.â Din yelled. âYou donât risk your life like that ever again. Do you hear me!?â
âIâm a physician!â You cried. âWhat would you have me do, Din? Risk him dyingâ¤â
âYes.â Din reached out and wrapped his hand gently on the side of your face. Din was breathing hard, his rage making him shake, but he kept his touch soft as he forced you to face him. âThatâs exactly what I would have you do. I donât give two shits about him, but you I canât live without, ner karâta. Is that not clear to you!?âÂ
You shook your head. âYou donât mean that. You wouldnât risk him dying.â
âWouldnât I?â Din let out a harsh laugh. He wouldnât risk one of the citizens of his city dying. In your shoes, he probably wouldâve done the same thing⤠but that wasnât the point. Din sucked in a sharp breath trying to get back to the point he was making. âIf I tell you to stay put, in order to keep you safe, you will listen to me. Do you understand?â Your eyebrows furrowed deeper and Din understood the immediate distaste for his words, but he didnât care. âI said, do you kriffing understand?â
The nebulizer stopped on itâs own and you tossed aside the mask before standing up with a scoff, âI understand, but Iâm not promising you I wonât do the exact same thing again.â You tried to walk around the table, out of his reach, but Din mirrored your movements and met you on the other side to block you in. You shook your head. âThis is my job. Helping people is what I do. Iâm not going to put people at risk just because you donât trust me to be competent enough to succeed.â
Maker, you were the most frustrating woman⤠Dinâs hands found his hips as he leaned into your space. âYou think itâs a trust thing?â He barked out an angry laugh. âAll it takes is one mistake, one miscalculated step, and thatâs it. Itâs not about competence or about trust. Itâs about gambling, and Iâm not going to let you gamble your life away for a stranger.â
âAs if youâve never gambled your life for a stranger before?? I highly doubt that.â You spat. âDin, youâre a good man and if you thinkâ¤â
âNo.â
You narrowed your eyes. âWhat?â
âI said, no. Iâm not.â Din said through clenched teeth. You were going to be the death of him. He was vibrating with frustration. Fear grabbed control of him at the realization that this was who you were. You were good, to your core, and this was going to keep happening. It was clear on your face that you didnât believe his words. You werenât getting this, and Din wasnât good enough with words to get you to. Resolution settled in his mind, determination, and his next words came out in a low growl. âClose your eyes.â
You blinked almost owlishly. âHuh?â
âClose your eyes, ner karâta.â Din demanded, his hands traveling to his helmet without pause. Your eyes widened in alarm before shutting tight. It scrunched your features up. Din tore his helmet off and slammed it onto the table before closing the space between the two of you.
Din had never kissed someone before, which seemed ridiculous considering the other acts he had performed, but the idea of it seemed easy enough. His hands found your jaw and he tilted your head up enough that he could press his lips firmly against yours. Din held them there until he felt your entire body slowly relax. He pulled back just a bit and opened his eyes to see your features had softened though your eyes remained closed. Dinâs nose brushed against yours, unable to bring himself to pull away from you any further. He mumbled the next words out, exhausted, but tightened his grip around your face in hopes to get his message across loud and clear, âI am not a good man. Iâm a selfish man, and there is nothing I wouldnât do⤠no line I wouldnât cross⤠to keep you and Grogu safe.â Din leaned his forehead against yours and sighed. âIâm sorry. Iâm sorry I kissed you without asking permission. I just⌠Ner karâta, I cannot lose you and I didnât know how toâŚâ
âItâs okay.â You mumbled. âIâll forgive you on one condition.â
âAnd that is?â
âKiss me again.â You breathed. You wrapped your arms around his neck, pulling yourself up to your toes, and Din didnât hesitate to meet you halfway. His lips pressed against yours once more, but this time it wasn't so simple. It was messy, for lack of a better word. Your lips moved against his, furiously, and Din mimicked every action. It was as if the anger of your argument had shifted and transformed into this moment right here. Teeth clashing against teeth, tongue pressing against tongue. The kiss was desperate and felt like a battle. You versus him in a competition to devour the other, and Din was never one to back away from a challenge.Â
He hooked his arms under your legs, lifting and turning, so he could set you on the table. Dinâs hands shoved aside the nebulizer machine that sat in the way and he heard the device clatter against the tile floor. Heâd buy the clinic a new one. Din pressed into you forcing you to either catch yourself by reaching back or continue clinging to him. You chose to keep your arms around his neck, wrapping around even tighter, and Din had to readjust and wrap his arms around your waist to keep you both from collapsing onto the table.
Din took a chance by nipping on your lower lip and the moan that left you was the perfect reward. He licked into your open mouth, a similar action you had done to him, and it deepened the kiss once more. Finally, breathlessly, Din was forced to pull back just enough to get air. You were panting as well⤠the only sound in the room being the heavy breaths you shared between one another and the howling storm outside.
âIâm sorry I forgot to pick up Grogu.â You said and the disappointment in your whispered words made his chest ache. âIâm sorry I left last night instead of staying to talk. Iâm sorry for yelling at you this morning.â
âNo, Iâm sorry.â Din replied. âAll of this couldâve been avoided if I had just told you about Mandalore. I also promise to get more angry at you if you promise itâll always end like this.â The soft, breathy laugh that left your lips was like a reassuring melody. You were safe. You were in his arms. You were okay. Din let out a breath of relief. âNer karâtaâŚâ
You tilted your mouth against his to let a soft kiss linger against his. The exact opposite of the kind of kiss the two of you had shared. You sighed, âWhy did it have to come to this? Why wouldn't you just admit you were upset with me?â
âI⌠I was worried about scaring you away if I lost my temper.â He admitted. âThings felt so good between us, so perfect, I didnât want to ruin it.â
âTelling me how you really feel is never going to ruin anything, Din. I want that. I want to know what youâre thinking.â You replied. âFighting isnât always a bad thing.â
Din pressed his lips softly against yours once⤠twice⤠three times. âI can see that.â Maker, maybe taking his helmet off was a bad idea. After getting to feel your lips against his it was going to be twice as difficult to maintain his control. âI need to put my helmet back on, ner karâta.â
You chuckled and set a soft kiss against his cheek before releasing him. Din took one more second to stare at you, unhindered by his visor, and he loved the way your lips were swollen from his. He grabbed his helmet and tugged it back on. When it was back in place he let you know. It was cute the way you peeked out of only one eye, just in case, before letting both open.Â
âI think Iâm ready to talk about Mandalore now.â You shrugged. âUnless, you have something better to talk about?â
Din chuckled and gave you a small shrug. âWe can talk about how you were my first kiss, if youâd like.â
âI am?â Your eyes widened. âSeriously?â He nervously gave you a small nod⤠face burning under his helmet. âOh man, I am so sorry. If I had know I wouldâve⤠wouldâve⤠I donât know. Been gentler?â Din laughed at the concern drawn all over your face. Your lips twitched up but you gave him a small shove. âIâm serious! Maker, I was basically going for your tonsilsâŚâ
Din lifted a hand to hold your chin. âIâm not complaining.â He leaned his cold forehead against yours. âAnd by the way, I am proud of you. Iâm so proud of everything you do. I⌠Can you promise to at least call me before you do something risky?â
âYeah.â You nodded. âI can promise that.â
Din would take the victory where he could.
mando'a translations:
Nuhoy morut'yc, adiâka
Sleep safe, little one.
Ni aalar sha yaim ti gar
I feel at home with you. Â
Nuhoy morutâyc, ner karâta.
Sleep safe, my heart.
Bic ni skana'din.
Expression of being angry or repelled, i.e. âthat really ticks me offâ
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