Synopsis: In a galaxy caught between silence and rebellion, Eira Mothma, a gifted student, catches the attention of Director Krennic. As curiosity and control collide, so does the tension between duty, desire, and the fate of a secret weapon.
🔹 Pairing: Director Krennic / OC (Eira Mothma) (Female)
🔹 Rating: Mature (no explicit content)
🔹 Word Count: 5231
"Eira…" Orson whispered, still breathless from the intensity of the moment, his voice low and rough. "What have you done to me?"
Eira could see the conflict flicker in his light eyes. His pupils darted momentarily, losing focus on her face, and a cold dread settled in her stomach, she was starting to lose him. The Director was returning, pulling the man back into the rigid composure she knew. The intoxicating feel of his lips, the possessive weight of his touch, she didn't want this to end. She tried to remind herself, this man is the mission. You are here for the Rebellion. But the fierce, raw jolt she felt when he kissed her like that was not her body acting, it was her body reacting.
She forced a breath past the heat in her throat, needing to pull him back to her, back to the moment. "I've only done to you," she murmured, her voice sounding a little shaky despite her best effort, "what you have done to me."
The attempt at lightness hung in the charged air, a challenge and a confession wrapped into one. Orson's eyes, wide and intense, snapped back into focus on her face. His breath hitched, a sharp, purely physical reaction that momentarily shattered the growing composure that had been taking over.
His mouth crashed back onto hers, hotter, hungrier than before, no hesitation, no careful edges. His hand that had slipped in beneath her uniform started to move with a desperate certainty, fingers sliding against the fabric until his whole palm was burning against her skin. She gasped into him, the sound swallowed by his kiss as he pressed her back into the cushions, his body following, not crushing but consuming, every inch of him taut with a desire he could no longer disguise. “Eira…” he breathed against her mouth, the word almost a groan, his lips trailing along her jaw as if he couldn’t choose where to touch her first. "You have no idea… what you do to me." Her hips arched helplessly into his touch, inviting him closer, and he responded instantly, his hand sweeping higher beneath her uniform, and his thumb brushing the soft line of her waist as though he were starving for the feeling of her.
A frustrated groan, low and ragged, tore from his throat and was muffled against his skin. Eira felt the muscles in his back tense, a desperate attempt to tighten himself and regain control.
"I need to go," he whispered, the words breathy, his mouth tracing a line along her jaw. "I should have left already. I have a meeting on Scarif. I can't be late."
But his voice was fractured, and his body remained pressed to hers, defying the urgency of his own words. Eira took advantage of his struggle, reaching up one hand to his uniform and the other to the back of his head, her fingers finding their way into the strands of his hair. She pulled him closer and crushed her mouth against his, dragging the protest from his lips and replacing it with a fresh wave of need.
As she deepened the kiss, Eira felt the hand hidden beneath her uniform move again. Slowly, possessively, it slid up her warm skin, moving higher and higher, until she felt the light, tentative edge of his finger run along the underside of her breast. She shuddered violently at the shock of it, the sudden, intensely intimate touch she had only ever imagined. The physical reaction pulled her instantly out of the fog of lust. This is it. This is the first time.
She pulled her mouth from his and stared up, trying to read his face, her breath coming in ragged, shallow gasps. Could he sense her inexperience? Would he be put off by the fact that she didn't know how to respond?
Orson looked back down at her, his eyes dark with a sudden, sharp realisation. He moved the hand beneath her uniform, fingers running along her skin again in a slow, confirming sweep. Eira's eyes closed as she bit her lip, a soft, involuntary sound escaping her throat. Her cheeks warmed instantly, blood rushing to her skin, because she knew he was watching, watching her reaction, watching her body's betraying response.
She needed to say something.
Eira opened her eyes and met his gaze, surprised that, in this moment, a wave of complete trust washed over her. There was no shame in her inexperience, and the worry that he would be put off no longer seemed a problem.
"I have never…" she whispered, her voice not hiding the slight tremor running through her body. "Never done this." She took a quick breath.
It took a second for the confession to sink in. Orson stilled completely, the breath momentarily trapped in his chest. Then, with painstakingly slow movement, he pulled his hand out from beneath Eira's uniform.
A wave of panic hit her. She must have misread the look in his eyes, he was pulling away. "Orson, I'm sorry—"
She was cut off as he moved, not retreating, but surging closer. He sat up slightly, enough to get leverage, and his hands flashed out, catching both of her wrists. He pulled them up, pinning her arms above her head and to the couch. His gaze locked onto hers, dark and intense, wiping away all shame and doubt.
"Eira," he murmured, his voice low, guttural, radiating absolute certainty. "You never need to be sorry for that. Not with me."
Then his mouth descended, crashing onto hers with a possessive passion that made her entire body arc against the cushions. Her toes instinctively curled, and she pulled uselessly against the firm, unyielding grip that held her hands locked above her head. He was thorough, consuming, kissing her with an intensity that promised he would accept nothing less than everything from her.
The kiss was a sudden, roaring tempest, drowning out the last faint echo of her apology. Her pinned wrists were both an anchor and a boundary, she was held captive, yet she felt utterly safe. Every inhale was his scent, rich and sharp, mixed with the warm air around them. She could hear the frantic beat of her heart thudding in her ears, a desperate, animal rhythm. She tilted her head instinctively, giving him deeper access, melting into the overwhelming pressure until the confines of the room, the lies, the secrets, the empire, the rebellion, were all the furthest thing from her thoughts.
And then the profound intensity lessened. Eira felt the hesitation first, a faint, almost invisible resistance in the movement of his lips as he attempted to pull his mouth away from hers. The pressure slowly, reluctantly, eased, until finally, the kiss broke, leaving her mouth tingling and damp. He didn’t retreat far, instead, with a shuddering gasp, he rested his forehead heavily against hers. His grip on her wrists loosened but did not fully release, allowing her arms to settle softly against the cushion. He closed his eyes, his breathing coming in deep, rough, lung-searing drafts. Eira felt the frantic, wild thump of his heart against her chest, and she knew he was doing the same thing she was, fighting for oxygen, fighting for composure, trying to slow the desperate, animal rhythm they had built between them.
Orson let out a long, shuddering sigh that seemed to originate from the depths of his being. He opened his eyes, the dark intensity from moments ago slightly blurred by exhaustion and want, but clearly focused on her. "I have to leave," he rasped, the words sounding like a declaration of defeat.
Eira opened her mouth to argue, to hold him there, but he cut her off, his voice dropping lower, almost pained.
"If I don't stop now, Eira, I won't be able to," he said, the words strained as he closed his eyes again for a brief second. "The thought of—" He didn't complete the sentence, but Eira realised with a shocking clarity that the knowledge of her being untouched, of her purity, of the potential of her being entirely his, had ignited something in him far more potent than mere lust. It was a raw, consuming, animalistic hunger, a primitive emotion that sat outside of all his calculated ambition, and she could see that even the Director was terrified of its power.
Against the screaming protest of her own body, Eira forced herself to speak, wanting to give him the out he needed and perhaps the one she needed as well. So she echoed his own words from that very morning after he had first kissed her, the phrase that first pulled them from their dangerous course of actions.
"But if there is one thing you cannot be," she whispered, the words trembling slightly, "it is late."
Hearing his own words spoken back to him, delivered with such knowing intimacy, seemed to momentarily break the agonizing spell. A low, humorless sound, a small chuckle, left his lips, immediately followed by a large, shaky sigh. Eira felt the tension drain from his body as he finally released her wrists, the heavy, warm pressure lifting entirely as he pushed himself up and away from the couch.
Eira watched him go, propping herself up on her elbows. Orson moved with a deliberate, almost ritualistic slowness, pulling himself back into the rigid composure of Director Krennic. His hands, still slightly shaking, went to his chest, straightening out his uniform, smoothing the fabric as if trying to iron away the evidence of the chaos beneath. When he was composed, the mask firmly back in place, he looked down at her. His gaze was still dark, carrying the weight of everything they had just done, but it was controlled now.
He reached down, extending his hand.
Eira took it immediately, the contrast between the coolness of his hand and the internal heat of her body a sharp reality check. She let him pull her to her feet, rising smoothly to stand before him. But before she could take a breath, he pulled her close into his chest, his lips finding hers once more, a fierce, final strike of passion, possessive and brief, before he pulled away.
"Oh, Eira... what am I going to do with you," he whispered, the words a low murmur of bewildered exhaustion.
A sharp, electric tingle ran through Eira at his confession, not of lust, but of complete bewilderment. He didn't have an answer for this. This part of their dynamic was outside the confines of his meticulously planned life.
Orson sighed again, the sound heavy and burdened. He ran a restless hand through his already mussed hair.
"I must impose a necessary reality upon our situation," he said, his voice dropping in register, sounding suddenly less like a lover and more like the Director she knew. "The demands of the project are escalating. I am locked in critical negotiations with the Senate for resource allocation. The components must be sourced from countless worlds, pieced together slowly, secretly. To maintain that level of absolute secrecy, and as such, I must be everywhere, at all times." He paused, his dark eyes searching hers intently. "This commitment will require an extended absence. I may be unable to return for weeks, perhaps months."
Eira's chest tightened, a familiar wave of panic and betrayal rising. She felt the sudden, sharp edge of being abandoned after a moment of profound vulnerability. She dropped her gaze instantly, her right hand clenching at her side, nails instinctively digging into the soft flesh of her palm, like it had so many times in the past.
Orson must have seen the familiar emotion flicker across her face, or perhaps he merely caught the reflexive clench of her fists, because he immediately moved, not to her face, but to her hand. His fingers gently, yet firmly, unfolded her clenched right hand, revealing the faint, crescent-shaped imprints already denting her skin. He didn't release her hand at first, using that grounding point to steady her, until, with visible reluctance, his fingers finally slipped away.
"Look at me, Eira," he commanded, his tone gentle but absolute. Eira obeyed instantly, lifting her gaze to meet his dark, intense eyes. "My absence is not because of you. If I could stay, I would.”
“So you're not upset…” Eira trailed off, unable to say the words for a second time.
Orson leaned down and kissed Eira's forehead before pulling back to look at her. "Never, I could never be upset about that. I would have thought you could tell that from my earlier actions?" There was almost a humour to his voice.
"For this to work, Eira, you need to understand our positions in all of this. The importance of the work we are doing..." Orson trailed off as he leaned in once again, his lips brushing against the shell of her ear.
"And how when I take you for the first time..." He whispered, and she shuddered.
"It will not be here on this damp, miserable planet, on a couch that reeks of impulsive surrender, with troopers pacing the halls just meters away." His breath warmed the shell of her ear as he spoke, his lips barely grazing her skin, no hands, no touch, nothing but the intoxicating closeness of his voice.
Eira’s breath caught, a soft, trembling sound slipping from her before she could stop it. The reaction pulled a quiet, satisfied hum from Orson’s throat, low, approving, and devastatingly intimate.
"No, Eira… when I have you, it will be somewhere worthy of the sound you will make when I touch you. Somewhere you can scream my name without restraint, without fear, without a single soul to hear you but me. A place where nothing, absolutely nothing, can pull my attention away from the places I want to kiss you, to touch you… from all the little sounds I intend to draw out of you."
A soft, helpless moan slipped from her before she could stop it, the sound raw with need. The moment it escaped, Orson’s lips brushed her ear again, deliberately this time, just the faintest graze, a whisper of contact that sent heat spiralling through her stomach.
“Mmm,” he hummed, low and pleased, the sound vibrating against her skin as he finally drew back, enough for her to see him again. The hunger in his eyes and a knowing curve forming at the corner of his mouth as her reaction settled over him.
“Just… like that,” he murmured, the words thick with approval and promise. He stepped back with deliberate restraint, putting distance between them. His gaze stayed locked on her, unblinking, intense, savouring the proof of what he could draw out of her without even touching her.
Orson stepped back with a finality that felt like a door closing. The heat, the hunger, the barely restrained want that had radiated from him only moments before, all of it vanished beneath the cool, impenetrable mask of the Director. He straightened with practiced precision, his hands moving to smooth the front of his uniform, each motion controlled and deliberate, as though the man who had just whispered filthy promises against her ear had never existed at all.
Eira remained standing where he'd left her, unsteady, her chest still heaving with uneven breaths she couldn't seem to slow. Her heart pounded so hard she could feel it in her throat, in her fingertips, in the heated flush that refused to leave her skin. Her legs felt weak beneath her, trembling faintly, and she breathed in deeply.
But she couldn't stop watching him.
Couldn't stop noticing how effortlessly he'd regained control while she stood there, still trembling, still burning, still feeling the ghost of his touch beneath her uniform. Her thighs pressed together instinctively, a futile attempt to ease the aching heat he'd left behind, but it only made her more aware of how thoroughly he'd undone her with nothing but words and the barest touch of his hand.
Orson crossed the room with steady, unhurried strides, his boots clicking softly against the polished floor. He stopped before a secured cabinet built seamlessly into the wall, its surface smooth and unadorned save for a single biometric panel. He pressed his palm against it without hesitation, and the lock disengaged with a quiet hiss, the door sliding open to reveal neat rows of datapads, document cylinders, and other items she couldn't quite make out from where she stood.
Eira watched the line of his shoulders, the way his hands moved with absolute certainty as he retrieved what he needed, two small security cylinders and a slim datapad. There was no trace of the man who had pinned her wrists above her head, who had kissed her like he was starving, who had confessed that she consumed his every waking thought. This was Director Krennic, composed and untouchable, already ten steps ahead while she was still trying to remember how to breathe.
The cabinet sealed shut with another soft hiss, and he turned back toward her.
Eira's breath caught as he began walking back, his gaze settling on her with that same unreadable intensity. She could still feel the warmth of his breath against her ear, still hear the low rasp of his voice promising her things that made her stomach clench and her pulse stutter. And now he was walking toward her again, calm and collected, while she stood there flushed and trembling, barely holding herself together.
He stopped before her, standing close enough that she had to tilt her head back slightly to meet his eyes, the cylinders and datapad held loosely in his hands.
Orson lifted the two small security cylinders, holding them between his fingers with the same precision he applied to everything. "These," he said, his voice crisp and businesslike, every inch the Director, "will grant you access to most of what you'll require here."
He reached forward, and Eira's breath stuttered as his fingers found the small pocket on the left side of her uniform, positioned high on her chest between her shoulder and breast. He slid the first cylinder in with deliberate slowness, his knuckles grazing the curve of her breast through the fabric, not an accident, but a calculated reminder of exactly how much control he had over her body, over her reactions.
Eira shivered, the touch electric despite the layers between them, her lips parting on a shaky exhale she couldn't quite suppress.
Orson's eyes flicked up to meet hers for just a heartbeat, something dark and satisfied flickering in their depths before he reached for the second pocket. His fingers repeated the motion on the right side, another slow, grazing slide as he secured the cylinder in place, and another tremor rolled through her in response.
He stepped back just enough to lift the datapad between them, holding it out for her to take. "Your training schedule is here," he said, his voice clipped and efficient. "Along with all project documentation you'll need to review. Everything you should be briefed on before you begin."
Eira reached for the datapad with unsteady hands, her fingers brushing his as she took it from him, the touch brief but enough to send another flutter through her still racing pulse.
Eira tucked the datapad against her chest, holding it with both hands as she tried to steady herself. Orson gestured toward the rest of the quarters with a sweep of his hand, his posture relaxed but commanding.
"Let me show you around our quarters," he said, his tone shifting back into something more instructive, though still carrying that underlying authority.
He emphasized the last two words deliberately, his gaze holding hers as he said them, making sure she understood exactly whose space she was occupying.
Eira blinked, her mind still foggy from everything that had just happened, but the clarity of that statement cut through. She glanced around the room the sleek furniture, the sterile environment, the plainess of it all.
"Why don't I have my own quarters?" she asked, her voice still slightly breathless but steadying.
Orson's lips curved into something that wasn't quite a smile, but more like a dark, knowing, edged with satisfaction. He took a slow step closer, closing the distance she'd barely managed to create, and his voice dropped into that low, intimate register that made her stomach clench.
"Because," he said, his eyes never leaving hers, "having you stay here, in the Director's personal quarters, sends a very clear message to everyone on this base about your position. Your authority. Your... proximity to power."
He paused, letting that sink in, his gaze dropping briefly to her lips before lifting again.
"And perhaps," he continued, his voice roughening with something darker, something possessive and edged with heat, "because I wanted to know that you're sleeping in my bed."
The words hit her like a physical touch, and Eira's cheeks flamed instantly, heat flooding her face and down her throat. Her breath caught, her lips parting slightly as her pulse kicked up all over again, the embarrassment and arousal tangling together until she couldn't tell which was burning hotter.
Orson turned and moved deeper into the quarters, not beckoning her so much as assuming She would follow.
He gestured casually toward the kitchen that occupied one side of the main living space. It was expansive, sleek counters, inset lighting, storage concealed behind smooth metallic panels. It looked rarely used, though not neglected, maintained rather than lived in.
Eira’s gaze lingered there, registering the absence of anything personal. No signs of habit. No softness. No indulgence. It was a functional thing, meant to serve a purpose, not to invite anyone to linger.
They continued on without pause. The refresher was visible beyond a partially open partition, black stone, pale lighting, precise and pristine. Nothing more needed to be said about it, and Orson didn’t bother to elaborate.
He stopped near a recessed work area set into the far wall. This office space felt intentional in a different way, a broad desk anchored the room, displays folded neatly into the surface, shelves built in rather than added later. Sparse, but not empty.
“You may use this,” he said, glancing at her. "When you need to work, it has been keyed to your security clearance."
The words were simple, unadorned, but the implication settled heavily. This wasn’t a courtesy extended lightly.
Finally, Orson turned toward the bedroom.
It was open, like the rest of the quarters. The bed was large, immaculately made, positioned with deliberate symmetry. The room was empty of everything, no softness, no warmth, nothing decorative to soften the severity of the space.
“A closet has been added for you,” Orson said, indicating a concealed panel along one wall. It slid open at his gesture, revealing neatly arranged uniforms already prepared in her size. “Your issued attire will be stored here. Anything else can be requisitioned.”
Eira absorbed that quietly. Not the bed. Not the implication of it. But the certainty of her presence already accounted for. Planned.
She turned to face him, her expression composed, even as something thoughtful tightened in her chest.
“So,” she said at last, meeting his gaze steadily, “what happens when you come back?”
She paused, then added, measured and direct.
“Am I expected to share a bed with you?”
Orson’s expression shifted not sharply, not defensively, but with the faintest flicker of something human crossing his features. A corner of his mouth curved, dry and understated, as though he were amused despite himself.
“I don’t snore,” he said lightly, the comment delivered with a casualness that felt almost out of place after everything that had passed between them. “Or so I’ve been told.”
The levity didn’t linger. He studied her for a moment, really looked at her, as if weighing not her words but what sat beneath them. Then his tone changed—not colder, but steadier.
“If that arrangement makes you uncomfortable,” he continued, “I can make other arrangements. There is a spare bed in the office that can be pulled out if necessary.”
He glanced briefly toward the bed, his expression unreadable. “Truthfully,” he added, “I’m rarely here long enough to sleep. This bed has seen little use.”
Eira’s fingers tightened around the datapad, drawing it closer to her chest as her gaze drifted once more through the room. Now that the heat of the moment had receded, the space felt stark in a way she hadn’t noticed before. Not hostile just empty. Smooth metal, clean lines, immaculate order. A room designed to function, to serve, but not to hold anyone once the lights dimmed.
The realization settled slowly, quietly, carrying with it an unexpected weight. This was the center of his command when he was here, yet it bore no evidence of rest, of comfort, of a life paused at the end of the day. Whatever warmth she had glimpsed in him whatever hunger, humor, or need clearly did not belong to this place.
She looked back at him then, really looked, her expression softening without her quite meaning it to. The datapad remained clutched against her as if it were something solid she could anchor herself to.
“So you aren’t lying,” she said after a moment, her voice quieter now, thoughtful rather than accusing. “When you say you won’t be back any time soon, then?”
Orson did not hesitate.
“Unfortunately, no.”
The words landed cleanly, without drama. Eira stayed silent, watching him instead this time the way he held himself, already braced for departure, already dividing his attention between her and the demands pulling him away. The ease with which he accepted the distance, the certainty of it, told her this was not a decision made. It was simply the shape of his life.
Orson's attention sharpened, focused wholly on her, and he spoke again before the quiet could deepen.
“I will be checking in daily for reports,” he said, his tone measured but deliberate. “And you may holo me if you require anything.”
“And if it is you I require?” Eira asked. The question sounding bolder then she ever meant it to be.
A slow smirk curved across Orson’s mouth nothing gentle in it, nothing uncertain. This was a man who knew exactly what hold he had on her, and enjoyed every second of watching her realize it.
“So needy for me already, my dear?” he murmured, voice silken with satisfaction.
He stepped into her space fully, closing what little distance remained. His bare hand slid from her chin to her throat, not squeezing, just resting there, warm and deliberate, his thumb brushing the pulse that hammered wildly beneath her skin as if confirming it belonged to him. He didn’t kiss her. He didn’t need to. The restraint was what made her core clentch.
His body aligned with hers, chest to chest, close enough that she could feel how hard he’d had to fight to keep control. His breath touched her mouth with every word, intimate and claiming.
“Tell me,” he murmured, thumb stroking once, slow and devastating, “what would you have me do if it were me you required?”
Eira’s breath trembled, not from fear but from the sheer intensity of him, so close she could taste the promise in the air, so controlled it was maddening. She didn’t look away. She couldn’t.
Her answer died on her tongue before it ever formed.
Orson didn’t wait for it. A low hum of amusement slipped from him, dangerous, knowing. His hand moved, slow enough she felt every second of the descent as his thumb dragged from her throat to the hollow at the base of her neck. His palm flattened over her sternum, heat bleeding through her uniform.
He leaned in, lips brushing her cheek, not quite a kiss, all breath and promise his mouth stopping just beside hers, close enough she could feel the shape of his words.
“Need,” he whispered, “is a powerful thing, Eira.”
His nose skimmed her jaw, deliberate and slow, as if he were memorizing her without taking what he wanted, not yet. His thumb stroked once more, lower this time, barely above the swell of her uniform.
“And you feel it,” he murmured, voice a dark velvet ribbon around her spine. “Here. For me.”
“Yes,” Eira whispered, more breath than word, but it touched his mouth where it hovered near hers.
His reaction was immediate, subtle, devastating. A low exhale escaped him, as if her single word had undone something he’d kept held tight. His fingers flexed lightly against her, not in demand, but in possession, his touch sinking through fabric like heat searching for skin.
And that was all it took.
Orson’s control snapped like a pulled wire, silent, invisible, then gone. He surged forward, his mouth crashing against hers in a kiss that was nothing restrained, nothing held back. It was fierce, hungry. His hand slid up from her to cup her jaw, holding her exactly where he wanted her, as though she might vanish if he didn’t anchor her to him. His other arm wrapped around her waist, pulling her fully into him, eliminating even the suggestion of space. The kiss was heat and intention and of tension igniting all at once, the kind that stole breath rather than asked for it.
A sound tore from Eira before she could stop it, raw, unguarded, a moan pressed straight into his mouth. It vibrated between them, changed the kiss, deepened it. For a heartbeat he devoured it, swallowed it like oxygen, and then too abruptly to be gentle Orson broke away.
His lips dragged from hers as if it cost him something to sever the connection, leaving her breathless and aching in the space he’d just filled.
"I must leave," he breathed, voice rough with restraint, "before you make me unable to do so."
He drew in a steadying breath, the kind that looked practiced, then lifted his gaze back to hers. "I will contact you tomorrow," he added, the warmth in his voice tempered but still present, "to hear how your first day went."
"Get some sleep while you can, my dear." His voice softened at the end, a parting caress in tone if not in touch.
He gave her one last look, lingering, heavy with everything unsaid, and then he turned toward the door. The room seemed to stretch with each step he took away from her, the space where his body had been still buzzing against her skin. He paused only once, hand on the control panel, as though he could feel her eyes on his back.
Then the door slid open, and Orson Krennic stepped into the corridor just beyond Eira’s sight. As the door sealed shut behind him, he paused. His spine straightened, shoulders squared, and his hand smoothed down the front of his uniform with precise, practiced strokes. A devilish smirk ghosted across his lips, private, satisfied, unrestrained now that she could no longer see him.
With a subtle lift of his hand, he motioned to the waiting troopers. They fell in behind him at once, instinctive, unquestioning. Orson Krennic moved down the corridor with the unhurried confidence of a man who had secured his objective, every step measured, victorious. Whatever battle he had just fought inside those quarters, he had emerged with exactly what he had wanted.
Synopsis: In a galaxy caught between silence and rebellion, Eira Mothma, a gifted student, catches the attention of Director Krennic. As curiosity and control collide, so does the tension between duty, desire, and the fate of a secret weapon.
🔹 Pairing: Director Krennic / OC (Eira Mothma) (Female)
🔹 Rating: Mature (no explicit content)
🔹 Word Count: 3644
“My dear…” Orson’s voice drifted through the quiet room, pulling Eira sharply from her spiralling thoughts. She startled, only slightly, but enough that Orson’s smile widened with something knowing as she blinked up at him from her place on the couch. A glass glinted amber in his hand, held out in offering. She hesitated only long enough to feel embarrassed by her lapse in attention before reaching up to take it, fingers brushing the cool edge as she offered him a small, shy smile.
Once the glass settled into her hands, she forced herself to look away from Orson and toward the figure seated across from her. Galen Erso sat rigidly on the opposing couch, posture straight, shoulders locked, and eyes fixed on her with a barely concealed tension that prickled her skin. He looked at her as if she were the only thing in the room worth watching, as if trying to read her from a distance, trying to understand what exactly she was.
Everything after Orson’s introduction blurred together. Voices, faces, the roar of rain on the landing platform, until the moment he announced her as his second‑in‑command. His equal. The hangar had gone still, his words cutting through the air with such force that Eira felt the mood shift instantly, a silent shock rolling through the crowd.
The fear was unmistakable.
A room full of scientists and Imperial personnel, all reacting with the same sharp realisation, the Director saw their failures, and had brought in someone he believed could succeed where they had not. Not because he trusted her more than them, but because none of them were competent enough. And worse, Orson had made no effort to hide how personally tied she was to him. She was not just an assistant or an observer, but a visible extension of his authority, positioned at his side to correct, to direct, to spy.
The irony was almost too much to bear.
But Galen… Galen’s eyes had not flashed with fear of punishment. His gaze held something heavier. Wariness, suspicion, even a faint sadness that twisted something inside her. He didn’t look afraid of what she might say to Krennic.
He looked afraid of her.
That realisation made her stomach tighten, breath faltering as she found herself locked in his gaze now, the weight of it pressing into her until she finally had to look away. She brought the glass to her lips, taking a swallow far larger than propriety allowed simply to ease the dryness that had come to her mouth.
“Relax, my dear,” Orson murmured beside her, the words low, amused, and far too gentle for the tension in the room.
When Eira lifted her gaze again, she caught the moment Galen accepted his own glass from Orson, his expression schooled but unmistakably sour, as though taking a drink from the man were an indignity he was forced to endure. Yet he remained silent. He had been silent since she’d arrived.
“And Galen,” Said Orson. “you should be happy. We are finally about to get back on schedule.”
Even as Orson spoke, Galen’s eyes never left her. That fixed stare, heavy, dissecting, made something deep in Eira flinch. Her shoulders curled inward before she could stop them, and her free hand tightened on her lap until her nails dug into her palm. The old instinct rose fast, overwhelming. She needed to disappear. Fade. Slip back into the shadows where no one noticed her, where she was safest.
The cushion dipped beside her.
A moment later, warm skin wrapped around her clenched fist.
Eira stiffened. She didn’t need to look to know whose hand it was, but the lack of gloves startled her almost as much as the contact itself. Bare. Deliberate. Intimate enough to make her breath hitch for reasons she didn’t want to examine.
But this wasn’t for her. It couldn’t be. It was for Galen. A silent display. A message.
“Eira, dear. You need to relax.” Orson’s voice came softer this time, coaxing rather than commanding.
She followed the line of his hand up his arm, to the firm line of his chest, and finally to his face. For a heartbeat, just one, everything else fell away. His expression couldn’t have been calculated for Galen’s benefit. There was no way this was performative or strategic.
Orson was looking at her. Truly looking.
The memory of their kiss earlier that day surged up with dizzying force, the warmth of his mouth, the faint scent of his cologne, the electric shock of how easily she’d melted into him. The thought alone loosened every muscle in her body. And then, her fingers slowly uncurled beneath his grip, and she let out a trembling breath.
Then, just as gently as he’d taken her hand, Orson gave it a single pat and withdrew. Whatever softness had flickered there vanished behind the cold authority settling back over his features. He leaned into the plush leather of the couch, arm draping across the back with practised ease, gaze snapping back to Galen as if nothing at all had passed between them.
“Now, Galen,” he said with crisp finality, “I trust you can play nice with Eira being in charge from here on—”
“Krennic, what have you done?” Galen cut in sharply.
A low, almost amused sound escaped Orson, something close to a laugh but edged with ridicule. “What have I done? I’ve done what you seem eternally incapable of, found a solution to your constant delays.”
Galen’s jaw tightened. “Does she even know what she is doing? What she’s helping to build?”
Eira felt the air shift, charged, brittle, something simmering beneath Galen’s words that had been clawing its way toward the surface since the moment Orson dragged him from the hangar. His voice carried more than accusation. It carried disbelief. Fury. And something else she couldn’t quite name.
Orson inhaled, lips parting to speak, but Galen cut him off again.
“What lies have you fed her? What promises did you use this time?”
The words struck harder than she expected. This time? Her brow dropped, confusion flickering sharply through her. What exactly did he mean? That she wasn’t the first person brought in to fix this disaster? Or… did he mean her specifically, the way Orson had touched her, stood close to her, the way he had kissed her earlier that day? Orson had insisted he’d never entertained advances before her… but really how was she supposed to know what was true? What wasn’t, when she was lying herself.
“Galen…” Orson warned, voice low, dangerous, yet it also felt directed at her, as if he could feel the questions clawing up inside her.
“For all sake, Orson!” Galen snapped, voice cracking with something raw. “She’s a child!”
That broke her. Everything up until those words had been about decisions and secrets and strategy, but child was a line she would not allow crossed. Not when without them knowing it she was risking everything to be here, to spy. She was done with being spoken about as though she couldn’t hear, as though she couldn’t understand, as though she should simply sit there and accept whatever narrative others decided for her. She was done with it all.
Before she even fully registered the motion, the glass in her hand slammed onto the table with a sharp crack, liquid trembling at the rim. Heat surged through her chest, through her throat, until the words tore free.
“You want to talk about children?” Eira said, the words slicing sharp and clean. “Fine. Let’s talk. Because the only thing childish here is your refusal to admit your own failures.”
She leaned forward, anger flushing hot under her skin. “I was brought here because you couldn’t deliver results. I understand exactly what this project is, what it demands, and what it can do. And despite your opinion of me, I am the one the Director trusts to fix what you could not.”
Her eyes locked on his, unblinking. “Call me a child again if it helps you sleep. But understand this, child or not, I outrank you. And I will be given the respect of the position I’ve been given. I’m not leaving, and I’m not backing down. So you might want to start getting used to it.”
Eira took a breath, forcing her features to remain still even as her mind reeled with the force of what she had just said. The words still rang in her ears, sharp, reckless, far louder than anything she had ever dared say to anyone, let alone a man she barely knew. Heat crawled up her neck as the reality of it settled over her. She had never spoken to anyone that way in her life. Not to professors. Not to senators. Not even to Mon.
And for a heartbeat, she wasn’t entirely sure she liked how it felt, and her eyes fluttered to the floor in shame.
Her pulse thudded in her throat, anger still humming under her skin, but beneath it came a jarring rush of something colder. Exposure. Vulnerability. As though she had stepped out of the shadows she’d lived in her whole life and straight into a blinding spotlight.
Her gaze flicked back up to Galen.
What she found there made her chest tighten. His expression wasn’t anger anymore. It wasn’t outrage or even disbelief. It was disappointment. A weary, resigned disappointment that made a knot form low in her stomach. As if he had expected her to be better than this, or worse, as if seeing her stand beside Krennic confirmed every horrible assumption he had already made about her, most damningly, that Krennic was romantically, or at least physically, involved with her.
The weight of it pressed into her ribs until her breath felt thin.
She didn’t know if she wanted to stand her ground or run from the room entirely.
“There she is,” Orson whispered, his voice low and undeniably pleased, as though this was precisely what he had been waiting for, as though he had held his silence not out of protection, but to let her bare her teeth on her own.
Galen’s posture shifted, the rigid anger draining into something smaller, something almost defeated. His eyes fell, and when he finally spoke, it was soft, halting, as though the words scraped against his soul on the way out.
“…My apologies, Ms. Mothma.”
It didn’t sound like respect. It didn’t even sound like sincerity. It sounded rehearsed. The kind of line a man learned after being put in his place one too many times, a defense mechanism rather than an admission. And something about that, about the quiet fear threaded beneath it, made Eira’s stomach twist. She knew that tone all too well; she had worn it herself for years, offering polite, practiced responses that hid resentment, exhaustion, or fear beneath a calm surface. Hearing it reflected back at her now was like catching her own ghost in his voice.
She didn’t want him to be afraid of her. Not like this. Not because of the power Orson had draped over her shoulders like a weighted cloak.
Her chest tightened; guilt pressed cold against the heat of her earlier anger.
Eira reached for her glass, anything to break the moment, and downed what remained in a single swallow, the burn sharp enough to force her breath steady. Then she stood, avoiding both men’s eyes, and crossed the room to the small bar tucked against the far wall.
The clink of glass on glass was the only sound she trusted herself to make as she refilled her drink, hands trembling just enough that she curled her fingers tighter to hide it.
And then, as if Orson neither felt the tension in the room nor cared to, he gave a low, amused chuckle. “She’s going to do quite well, isn’t she, Galen?”
Something in his tone made Eira’s breath catch. It wasn’t just a question about her competence, it felt like a challenge, a warning, and a declaration all at once, directed at Galen, yes, but edged with something private that made her pulse trip.
“Now,” Orson continued smoothly, “Eira will be doing some training while she is here. So I expect you and your team to be on your best behaviour in her absence. She will provide me with daily debriefs on your progress and the progress of the work.”
His words were sharp, efficient, clinical.
Eira took the statement as her cue. She inhaled slowly, schooling her features into composure, then crossed back to the couch with her freshly filled glass. The warmth of the liquor steadied her fingers as she sat, letting the burn settle deep in her chest while she gathered herself for the rest of this evening.
Sitting herself back down, Eira took a small sip of her liquor and then set the glass on the table before leaning back as casually as she could manage. She turned her attention fully to Galen, trying to mask the lingering heat of embarrassment beneath something steadier.
"I'll be doing weapons and flight training for the first part of my stay," she said, aiming for civility, maybe even a subtle offering of peace. "But I hope you and I can find some time to go over the project together tomorrow evening. I want your perspective on where things stand… and where the hiccups are happening."
Galen blinked at her, surprise loosening his tightly held composure. "You haven't seen our notes yet?"
"No," Eira admitted quietly. "Everything happened rather quickly with my stepping into this position." Her eyes flickered toward Orson for the briefest moment, seeking reassurance, or maybe just grounding, before she forced herself to meet Galen’s gaze again.
“Then we can discuss it over dinner,” Galen said after a moment, voice carefully even, though Eira could still hear the faint scrape of unease beneath it. “I can come collect you from your rooms, if you tell me where you're staying. We're a fair distance from the mess hall.”
“That sounds good,” Eira replied, though she faltered near the end, her words trailing off as she glanced toward Orson. “I’m… not entirely sure which are my rooms…”
“She will be staying in these rooms,” Orson answered simply.
Eira watched Galen’s eyes widen, only a fraction, but enough. Enough to confirm what she already suspected. These were Orson’s quarters. His private space. And she was occupying them.
“I see,” Galen murmured, voice flattening.
“So you can collect her from here,” Orson added.
Galen’s next words were not truly a question. “I would assume you two will be dining together, then?”
“I won’t be here,” Orson replied without missing a beat. “I need to leave tonight. Your delays, and my lack of funding and supplies, require my presence elsewhere.”
Eira’s head snapped toward him before she could stop herself, a sharp jolt of panic spearing through her chest. “You’re leaving?” The words slipped out thin and strained, her breath catching as the sudden, terrifying image flashed, of him vanishing into the storm outside and her being left here alone, abandoned on a remote world she barely knew, surrounded by people who either feared her, resented her, or thought she was Krennic’s newest mistake. The room felt smaller all at once, the air tighter, her heartbeat thudding hard enough to make her fingertips tremble.
Orson looked to her for the briefest moment, long enough for her panic to crash into a wall of unreadable calm, before he turned his attention to Galen. “You are dismissed," he said coolly. "You’ll have Eira’s schedule sent to you so the two of you can coordinate."
Eira stared at Orson, blinking, barely aware of Galen rising from his seat. Out of the corner of her eye she caught the scientist setting his untouched drink down, posture stiff, face unreadable. The soft hiss of the door sliding open, then closed, echoed through the room, far too loud in the sudden quiet he left behind.
“Eira—” Orson began.
“You’re going to leave me here?” she whispered, cutting him off.
Orson paused only long enough for the silence to stretch taut between them. Then he stood, unclasping his cloak with a practiced flick and draping it neatly over the back of the couch. Her breath hitched as he reached for the top of his uniform, unzipping the collar just slightly as he looked down at her.
“You didn’t expect me to remain here at all times, did you?” he asked, tone maddeningly even, before turning away and crossing toward the bar.
“No… no, but you just paraded me in front of everyone.” Her voice sharpened with returning confidence, a confidence she was starting to feel more accustomed too. “You made it clear to all of them that I’m here to… spy on them. To put them in their place, because you don't trust them. I thought I was here to help.”
“Of course that’s why you’re here, Eira,” Orson said as he filled a glass. He turned back toward her with the slightest arch of an eyebrow before taking a slow sip.
“They all think we’re sleeping together, Orson,” Eira snapped, the words hitting the air before she could temper them.
“No, they don’t,” he replied simply.
“Well Galen certainly does. Or do you touch all your subordinates the way you touch me?” Eira shot back.
"Galen and I have a complicated history," Orson began, his voice smooth but edged with something unmistakably personal. "But as I’ve told you before, you are the only one, Eira." He downed the contents of his glass in a single swallow, then crossed the room with deliberate purpose. The couch dipped beside her a heartbeat later, and before she could form a thought, his hand slid behind her head and his mouth crashed against hers, firm, claiming, leaving no room for doubt about exactly who he touched this way.
The force of the kiss stole Eira’s breath. His mouth pressed harder a second time, deeper, more insistent, as if something in him had finally snapped. Heat surged through her so quickly it left her dizzy, her fingers fisting in the front of his uniform to pull him closer, an instinct, a need, nothing careful or composed. Orson responded in kind, his other hand sliding to the back of her neck, guiding, tilting, controlling the angle of her lips against his.
Eira’s gasp parted her mouth just enough for him to take advantage, his lips moving with a slow, devastating precision that made her toes curl inside her boots. His thumb swept along her jaw, firm and possessive, and the small sound that escaped her throat was swallowed instantly by his kiss.
When she shifted closer, barely, just the press of her knee brushing his, Orson rewarded the contact with a low hum against her lips, the vibration sending a shiver down the length of her spine. His hand slipped from her neck to the curve of her waist, fingers splaying as he tugged her nearer.
She felt the moment his control wavered, just slightly, too slightly, his breath catching as she kissed him back with a sudden boldness, her lips moving with a hunger that mirrored the one burning through her chest. His grip tightened, pulling her flush against his side, and the kiss deepened again, turning heated, unrestrained, dizzying.
Eira barely recognized the soft, helpless noise that left her as his mouth traced the corner of hers before claiming her lips once more. Her pulse throbbed in her ears, matching the rhythm of his breath, ragged, uneven, nothing like the perfectly measured man she knew.
When at last he broke away, it was only by a breath, their lips still brushing, his forehead resting against hers as if he couldn’t bear to go farther. His voice came quiet, hoarse, each word threaded with the heat still crackling between them.
“Careful, my dear… if you keep kissing me like that, I’m not certain I’ll be able to stop.”
“And if I don’t want you to stop?” Eira whispered, the words slipping out before she could second‑guess them.
The effect was immediate.
Orson stilled, utterly, completely, as though the air itself had tightened around them. His breath left him in a low, quiet exhale that brushed against her lips like heat.
Then he moved.
His mouth crashed against hers with a force that stole every thought from her mind. One hand swept behind her shoulders, guiding, no, claiming, while the other pressed to her waist, urging her back. The couch yielded beneath her as he lowered her onto it, his body following, bracing above her without crushing her, every inch of him radiating heat and command.
Eira’s hands flew to his shoulders, fingers clutching at the fabric of his uniform as his kiss deepened, urgent and consuming. Her back arched beneath him, a soft gasp escaping her as his thumb traced slow, searing circles at her hip.
He kissed her like he had wanted this, wanted her, far longer than he’d let on. Like a man who had finally, helplessly lost control. There was no strategy here, no calculation, no careful orchestration. This wasn't the Director bending the moment to his will. This was a starved man drinking deep, pulled by something raw and instinctive, as if she were water in a desert he had walked through for years, every movement desperate, consuming, and unbearably real.
Her heartbeat pounded in her ears, in her throat, in the place where his chest pressed against hers, the world narrowing to the weight of him, the heat of his breath, the intoxicating slide of his mouth against hers.
When he finally broke the kiss, it was only long enough for him to hover above her, lips a breath from hers, voice rough and barely held together.
Synopsis: In a galaxy caught between silence and rebellion, Eira Mothma, a gifted student, catches the attention of Director Krennic. As curiosity and control collide, so does the tension between duty, desire, and the fate of a secret weapon.
🔹 Pairing: Director Krennic / OC (Eira Mothma) (Female)
🔹 Rating: Mature (no explicit content)
🔹 Word Count: 5060
Breakfast had been quiet, awkwardly so. Eira had only picked at the food Orson had set out for her, unable to stomach more than a few bites while he moved through the kitchen with his usual controlled efficiency. The clink of utensils and the faint hum of the city outside filled the silence that stretched between them. When he excused himself to his office, she exhaled in relief she hadn’t realised she’d been holding.
When her plate finally sat empty, she carried it and her caf cup to the counter before letting her steps wander through the living space. It was a reflection of the man himself, impeccable, deliberate, and yet not lifeless. The few personal items scattered around the room felt almost accidental, as though he had allowed the past to exist here only in fragments, as if he knew he would be the only one to ever see them. A few framed photographs and items rested on a shelf, and Eira paused before them, curiosity edging past her restraint.
Her mind flickered with the memory of Luthen’s warning as she looked into Orson's past. Luthen's insistence that Orson's interest in her was their opening. If Orson lost that interest, she’d lose her only way inside. That was what this was all about, she reminded herself. The rebellion. Getting close enough to learn something, to feed Luthen information about the Empire.
If Luthen expected her to keep Orson's attention, she would have to perform the part. Yet the weight of that lie pressed harder the longer she stood here. She hadn’t wanted to kiss Orson last night for the rebellion. She had wanted to kiss him because that's what she wanted to do. Maybe her feelings had already clouded her judgment, maybe they had doomed her mission before it began. And if Luthen sensed her wavering, if she couldn’t prove she could handle Orson Krennic, what would he do with a spy who knew too much? The thought chilled her. The fear of the rebellion’s quiet ruthlessness began to rival her fear of the Director himself.
Her hand rose to the stiff collar of her new uniform, fingers tugging lightly at the fabric as if that could ease the claustrophobia pressing at her throat. The green material marked her now as one of them, Imperial, Science Division, a label that still felt too heavy. She pulled again and found herself facing a narrow mantel lined with odd tokens, a smooth fragment of polished wood, a crumpled piece of metal turned matte with age, a sliver of glass or crystal resting like a discarded gem. They were arranged with such precision that the randomness seemed intentional, and then she saw one photo off to the side, a photograph of Orson standing beside another man, both in white, both far younger. The smiles were polite, forced even, as if neither wished to be there.
“Lio Partagaz,” came Orson’s voice from behind her, smooth and unexpected. Eira spun around quickly, her hand falling to her side. The faint guilt that came with being caught lingered in her eyes as he crossed the room. “We met in the ISB Academy,” he continued, his expression unreadable.
“Are you two friends?” she asked lightly, her tone careful as she took in his appearance. The gloves, the cape, and the full armour of the man the galaxy knew as Director Krennic, were back in place. The casualness of last night had vanished completely.
“I was his best man at his wedding,” Orson replied, his tone dry, almost thoughtful. “We are as much friends as two men in our positions can afford to be.”
Something in the way he said it, half serious, half resignation, cracked through the stiffness of the morning. Eira let out an involuntary snort before clapping a hand over her mouth, mortified by the sound. Orson’s brow arched in quiet amusement.
“I’m sorry,” she said quickly, laughter still ghosting through her voice. “I don’t mean to laugh. It just feels… very you. You look as though you hardly live here, but you have knick-knacks, you have a sort of friend, and I—” She hesitated, the words catching as heat crept into her face. “And I almost kissed you last night, and you…”
“Eira…”
“Orson, I need to—” she began, her voice uncertain, wavering under the weight of everything unspoken.
“Eira.” This time, his voice changed. The way he said her name pulled the air from the room. It wasn’t harsh, but it carried the dangerous authority of a man who expected to be obeyed. It struck something instinctive in her, freezing her mid-breath. Her eyes dropped before she realised it, hands curling in on themselves until her nails bit into her palms. The sound of her own heartbeat filled her ears, uneven and loud. For a moment, she was the careful, obedient girl Mon had trained her to be, controlled, silent, small.
Then, she felt it, the cool brush of leather beneath her chin. Orson’s gloved fingers slipped beneath, applying just enough pressure to lift her face back up toward him. The gesture was measured, unhurried, almost tender, but it left her pulse stuttering nonetheless. Her gaze met his, and she found no anger there, only intent, sharp, assessing, and far too close.
Her breath caught. The room seemed smaller, the distance between them closing into a single point of focus, his touch, the weight of his presence, the calm in his eyes that unnerved her more than anger ever could. For a heartbeat, she forgot why she was here, why she needed to keep her walls up. Everything narrowed to the press of his gloved finger under her chin, the warmth radiating from him, and her eyes for a moment flickered to his lips.
“Stop,” he said softly, a hint of something unreadable flickering through his tone, command and reassurance in equal measure.
Eira did. She couldn’t seem to do anything else, as her hands slowly released their grip, her nails pulling from her skin painfully. Her pulse thundered in her throat, her thoughts scattering between fear, want, and the dangerous awareness that suddenly couldn't seem to tell the difference between the two feelings.
But then everything around her went still as she watched Orson lean in, the faint scent of his cologne reaching her before the softness of his lips brushed against hers. Her eyes closed instantly, a rush of warmth igniting in her chest. The kiss was chaste, so light it was barely there, but it left her reeling. Every part of her seemed to burn at the contact, as if something dormant inside her had been set alight.
He drew back slightly, his gloved hand shifting to cup her cheek, the cool leather contrasting with the heat flooding her skin. He rested his forehead gently against hers, breath steady and close enough for her to feel it. Eira opened her eyes slowly, finding his gaze fixed on her with that same unreadable calm that made her tremble.
“We’ll talk about it later, Eira,” he murmured.
“You… you kissed me,” Eira whispered, her voice fragile, as though saying it aloud might break the moment apart.
“I did,” Orson said simply, the trace of a smile touching his voice. His hand lingered a heartbeat longer before slipping away. “And I would like to again, once the events of today are behind us.” He straightened, composure settling over him like a well-worn cape. “But there is one thing I cannot be, and that is late. So, my dear, will you please relax while you can? It’s going to be a long day.”
“You kissed me,” Eira repeated again, as if she couldn’t quite believe it. This time, Orson’s response was a quiet laugh, low and genuine, cutting through any of the remaining tension that lingered between them. Without another word, he bent to retrieve her bag from beside the couch, the movement smooth and deliberate.
Then, as he straightened, his other hand came to rest against her back, the touch firm but careful as he guided her toward the door. “Late, my dear,” he said with an amused murmur, the ghost of a smile playing at the corner of his lips. “We are going to be late.”
Coruscant – En route to Luthen’s Shop – Morning
The ride to Luthen’s shop was quick and quiet. Eira sat beside Orson, her mind replaying the kiss over and over. Every time she tried to steady her breathing, her thoughts betrayed her, circling back to the warmth of his touch, the sound of his voice. Out of the corner of her eye, she glanced toward Orson. He sat relaxed yet poised, a datapad in hand, a faint smirk curving his mouth as he read whatever report held his attention. It was maddening, how composed he could be while her entire world still seemed to tilt from that single, fleeting moment.
When the shuttle touched down, Orson set the datapad aside with precise care and stood, offering his hand to help Eira to her feet. His touch was steady, practised, and it made her pulse jump despite herself. The hatch opened with a hiss, and together they stepped down onto the platform. The cool morning air carried the faint scent of rain and engine exhaust. Then, like before, his hand found its familiar place at her lower back, guiding, directing, as he led her toward the entrance of Luthen’s shop.
Eira took a quiet breath, forcing calm into her chest. This was the moment Luthen had wanted, the two of them arriving together, close enough to draw conclusions. The door slid open with a soft mechanical hum, and Luthen buzzed them in, his wide smile already fixed in place.
Once inside, Eira moved in tandem with Orson toward the counter, their strides perfectly matched. The shop smelled faintly of metal and spice, lit by warm light reflecting off shelves of carefully curated antiques.
“Miss Mothma,” Luthen greeted, his voice rich with practised enthusiasm. “Ever the pleasure, and I see you’ve brought company. How lovely to see you again, Director Krennic.” His arms opened in a welcoming sweep as though this were a chance encounter.
Orson responded with a simple nod, his expression composed, revealing nothing.
“Luthen,” Eira said warmly, slipping easily into her role. “Thank you again for helping me with this task, you’re going to be a lifesaver.” Standing beside her, Orson removed his hand from her back and folded both behind him, his composure unshakable.
“A lifesaver,” Luthen echoed with a faint smile. “Now there’s something I’ve never been called before.”
Eira gestured lightly to her uniform. “An opportunity came up rather suddenly, and it would’ve been impossible to find something suitable for my sister’s wedding otherwise.”
“I see,” Luthen said, tilting his head with an air of curiosity. “Is that… Medical?” he asked, studying the green of her imperial uniform.
“Science,” Orson corrected sharply, a hint of impatience threading through his tone. He glanced toward Eira. “Tick, tock, my dear.”
“Yes, sorry,” Eira whispered, offering Orson a small, sideward smile before turning back to Luthen. “We’re on a tight schedule, Luthen. Would I be able to see the piece you found?”
“Of course, of course.” Luthen turned slightly toward the back of the shop, his tone rising with practised energy. “Kleya, bring out the piece for our young Miss Mothma, if you would.” He faced them again with an amiable grin. “I assume this means you’ll be taking the piece with you, then?”
“Actually,” Eira said smoothly, keeping her tone light, “I’d hate to worry about it getting lost or damaged. I’m not entirely sure where I’ll be over the next months. Would it be possible for you to have it delivered to my home on Chandrila before the wedding?”
“I’ll see to it personally that it arrives safe and sound, my dear,” Luthen replied just as Kleya emerged from the back, the same object Eira had seen the day before resting on a polished tray in her hands.
“That’s quite the service,” Orson observed evenly, his gaze shifting between the artifact and Luthen.
Luthen smiled, spreading his hands wide with exaggerated delight. “I’ll actually be in attendance myself, Director. The father of the groom has enlisted my help in acquiring a very particular wedding gift, and I could never trust a delivery ship to ensure it arrived unscathed and on time.”
Eira’s expression softened into a bright, convincing smile. “That’s wonderful, Luthen. Now, let’s see what you’ve found for me.”
Kleya stepped forward and placed the tray gently on the counter. The faint clink of metal echoed through the quiet shop, and the artifact caught the warm light. Eira leaned forward, her admiration genuine even if her words were a performance. “Luthen, you’ve outdone yourself,” she said, her voice low but full of awe. “She’ll absolutely love this, her own little piece of Chandrilan history. It is perfect.”
Imperial Platform – Departure
The wind on the landing platform whipped at Eira’s uniform as she and Orson approached his personal shuttle, a sleek black craft. Its design was unmistakably his, angular, powerful, and quietly imposing, a symbol of both his authority and ego. As the ramp lowered with a hydraulic hiss, two Death Troopers fell into step behind them, their mirrored visors glinting in the morning light.
Orson’s gloved hand came to rest lightly at the small of her back, guiding her forward with a gesture that was both courteous and commanding. “This way,” he said, his tone soft but leaving no room for refusal.
Inside, the shuttle was immaculate, an environment of discipline and precision. Every polished surface gleamed beneath the muted lighting. The air smelled faintly of metal and ozone. Another four Death Troopers stood at their stations, motionless except for the subtle shift of their weapons. Eira’s boots clicked softly on the floor as she followed Orson down the narrow aisle. When he turned and gestured toward one of the seats along the wall, she obeyed without question.
“Sit,” he said simply, his voice even, carrying that calm authority that always managed to unnerve her, and, somehow, steady her at the same time.
She settled into the seat, hands resting on her knees as the troopers took their positions. Orson moved to the front of the cabin, flanked by two of them, and stopped before the wide viewing window. A low vibration hummed through the floor as the shuttle’s engines engaged, and then the platform began to fall away beneath them. The endless towers of Coruscant shrank to thin spires of light and metal, swallowed by clouds.
Eira swallowed hard, her throat tightening as she stared out past Orson’s silhouette toward the receding planet. The city stretched endlessly below, her home, her family, Mon. The realisation struck like a cold current. She was leaving everything behind. Pressing her hands together in her lap, she dug her nails faintly into her palms, grounding herself against the ache rising in her chest.
This wasn’t just another journey. It was exile, chosen and necessary. She was leaving the only safety she’d ever known to step into the very heart of the Empire, into the orbit of the man she was supposed to deceive, yet the thought of Orson stirred something she couldn’t quite bury. The memory of his kiss, brief and electric, ghosted across her lips and tangled with the ache of leaving home. Every instinct screamed at her to turn back, to find a way out, to remember that he was the enemy. But the rebellion needed her, and Luthen’s expectations left no room for failure.
Her reflection flickered in the clean sheet of metal across from her, a figure in a crisp science-green uniform. She looked exactly like one of them, like every other officer of the empire. And as the stars began to replace the glow of the city below, Eira Mothma realised the full weight of what she had done, and that there was no turning back now.
Once the darkness of space filled the shuttle and she was sure the planet was a distant dot on a star map, Orson finally turned from the viewing window. The silence stretched as he crossed the cabin, the faint sound of his boots echoing in the otherwise hushed space. He came to stand beside her before lowering himself into the empty seat at her right. The motion was deliberate, controlled, as always, but there was something in the air, a subtle shift, as though the distance between them had grown smaller in the vast emptiness of space.
Orson wrapped his fingers together in an almost casual move, though nothing about him ever felt truly casual. The white leather of his gloves creaked softly as he interlaced his hands, in his lap as he angled his body toward her. The muted cabin light cut across his profile, sharpening the line of his jaw as his eyes drifted over her face, assessing, calculating, and something else that made a flutter rise in her chest.
“I have arranged a training schedule for you when we arrive at the facility,” he said, his voice low, smooth, and threaded with unmistakable authority. “Flight classes and self-defence will be a top priority. I need to know that you can take care of yourself when I’m not there. The facility is top secret and has its own personal security team, but incidents can still happen. I want you prepared in case of a rebel insurgency.”
Eira blinked, the term landing heavier than she expected. “Does that happen often?” she asked, her voice soft, a hint of concern tightening her words.
“Not under my watch, it doesn’t, but I cannot always be there” His reply came with a quiet confidence, a faint, self‑satisfied smile tugging at the corner of his mouth as he leaned back in his seat. The movement was controlled, almost languid, his shoulders relaxing as though he were entirely at ease while she sat there fighting the sudden awareness of how close he was.
“It's later,” Eira said simply, though her voice betrayed the quick flutter of her heart.
Orson’s gaze slid to her, unhurried, the faintest hint of amusement touching his mouth. “It is,” he agreed softly. Then, with a small incline of his head toward the Death Troopers stationed across the cabin, he added, “But is this truly where you want to have this conversation? With them listening?”
Eira exhaled sharply through her nose, half a laugh, half frustration. “Something tells me there will never be a good time. And that they—” she gestured toward the troopers, “—will always be around.” Her breath caught before she forced the words out. “You kissed me.”
One of Orson’s brows lifted, and the teasing glint in his eye made heat crawl up her neck. “Is that not what you wanted?” he asked, voice smooth as silk, but the expression on his face made it clear he was enjoying watching her fluster.
“Yes… no… I—” Eira stopped, drew in a breath, straightened her spine as though bracing herself. “Yes, it is.”
Orson’s smile deepened, slow and unhurried, as if he’d been waiting for her to finally give him that admission. He shifted just enough for his knee to brush hers, his voice dropping into a low, deliberate murmur.
“I see the way you look at me,” he said, each word slow and silken, rolling over her skin like heat. “The way your cheeks flush the moment I step too close… the way your breath catches when I speak your name… the way you melt into me when we dance.” He leaned in just a fraction more, his voice dipping lower, almost brushing her ear. “You don’t hide it nearly as well as you think, Eira. Every reaction you have to me…” His gaze swept down her throat and back to her eyes, leaving her skin tingling. “I notice all of it.”
Eira felt a heat coil low in her stomach as the warmth of his breath skimmed her ear, a shiver running from the base of her spine to the tips of her fingers. Her heart thudded painfully against her ribs, her thoughts scattering like sparks. If he noticed everything, every glance, every blush, every slip of breath, did that mean he could see her lies too? The rebellion’s secrets she carried? The double-edged nature of her purpose?
She should have been terrified.
But fear was not the strongest thing she felt in that moment. Not even close.
The heat spreading through her body was far more consuming, her skin prickling under the weight of his attention. The truth pressed against her ribs, she wasn’t afraid of him seeing her truths, she was afraid of how much she wanted him to.
“See,” Orson whispered, his lips close enough that she felt the ghost of the word against her cheek. “Just like that.”
Eira swallowed, her pulse tripping over itself, her thoughts still fogged with the lingering warmth of his breath.
“I can’t be the first woman you’ve had this effect on,” she whispered, trying, and failing, to disguise the tremor in her voice, to mask her arousal behind something resembling composure.
A low hum of amusement vibrated in Orson’s throat. “No, you’re not,” he murmured, his words brushing against her like a hand trailing down her spine. “But you are the first one I care to indulge.”
Her breath caught. She forced herself to speak, to keep her voice steady. “So… is that why you gave me a job, you could have asked me out on a date instead?” she asked, trying to sound casual, even as heat pulsed through her.
Orson leaned back slightly, studying her with a sharp, deliberate interest that made her feel exposed in ways that had nothing to do with danger. “I brought you into my work,” he said smoothly, “because your mind will help accomplish what I intend to achieve. The fact that I enjoy the effect I have on you…” His smile curved, slow and wicked. “…is an entirely separate matter, one that does make things a touch more complicated.”
Eira hesitated, the words leaving her before she could stop them. “And how does that complicate things?”
Orson’s eyes flickered to her lips just once, before he leaned back in his seat, the shift of his posture somehow making him feel even larger beside her. “Because I only have my work,” he said, tone steady but edged with a sincerity that stole the breath from her lungs. “My entire life is built on precision… control… the momentum of a thousand moving parts. And now”—his gaze dropped to her lips, then lifted again—“now you are in my thoughts when I should be focusing on the many cogs constantly turning beneath me.”
Eira’s heartbeat stumbled. The admission felt too big, too intimate, echoing in the small metal cabin like something forbidden.
“So you think about me often then?” she asked, unable to keep the curiosity, or the hope, from her voice.
Orson didn’t smile this time. He didn’t tease. He simply looked at her, unblinking, the intensity of his gaze pinning her in place.
“Every,” he said slowly, deliberately, “waking, moment.”
The words struck her like a physical touch. Eira’s breath stilled, her pulse fluttering wildly as she held his gaze. Something inside her, tightly wound, carefully controlled, gave way. Slowly, almost without realising she’d begun to move, she leaned toward him. Not much, just enough that the space between them shifted, tightened, charged.
“I… I think about you too,” she whispered, the confession trembling its way out of her before she could stop it. “More than I should. More than I ever meant to, and I know I shouldn't, but I can't stop.”
The confession hung between them, dangerous, intimate, reckless.
Orson’s eyes flicked down to her mouth, then back up, his expression sharpening with a warning that sent heat prickling across her skin.
“Careful, my dear,” he murmured, his voice low and edged with something darker, and his pupils darkened “I don’t play games. If you come any closer… I won’t stop myself a second time.”
Her breath caught, her body swaying a fraction nearer, drawn, compelled.
And then—
The shuttle lurched.
The stars outside stretched, then snapped back to stable points of light as they fell out of hyperspace. The cabin lights brightened, the steady hum of the engines shifting pitch. The Death Troopers straightened.
Orson exhaled once, a single controlled breath, and pulled back just enough to reclaim command of himself and the moment.
“We pause here,” he said quietly, though the heat in his voice remained. “Duty calls.”
Eira only nodded, her throat too tight for words. The moment between them, fragile, molten, dangerously alive, lingered like static on her skin. She rose as the shuttle dipped, bracing herself with a hand against the cool railing. The cabin shuddered again, a deeper rumble rolling through the hull as they hit the edge of atmospheric disturbance.
A heartbeat later, the muted tapping began, soft at first, then growing louder, sharper. Rain. Heavy, relentless rain striking the metal exterior in a steady, echoing cascade.
The sound filled the cabin, wrapping around them both as the shuttle descended toward whatever waited below.
“Welcome to Eadu. This will be your base of operations,” Orson said simply as the shuttle rocked through another patch of turbulence. Lightning flickered faintly beyond the viewport, swallowed by dense, roiling clouds. “Prepare yourself, my dear. The weather here leaves much to be desired, but it does make for excellent cover.”
Eira nodded, though her stomach tightened with nerves she struggled to name. Before she could gather her thoughts, Orson rose and extended his hand to her, the gesture fluid, confident, unmistakably his.
“It’s a short walk from the platform to the entrance,” he said with a small smile, the kind that suggested he knew the storm outside would test her. “I wouldn’t want you getting lost now, would we?”
She placed her hand in his, and he guided her forward, pulling her to stand beside him. His left hand held hers firmly, while his right arm slipped around her waist, steadying her, claiming space around her, shielding her from the inevitable violence of the landing.
Before she could fully comprehend just how close he’d drawn her, the shuttle doors hissed open. A wall of wind and cold rain slammed into them, stinging her cheeks, dragging at her uniform, nearly knocking her off balance.
She would have stumbled, would have been thrown back by the force of it, if not for Orson’s grip tightening around her, unyielding, anchoring her against him as the storm raged outside.
“Stay close,” he murmured against the roar of the wind, his voice steady even as the storm fought to tear them apart.
They moved quickly, Orson leading Eira through the dark and rain, his arm firm around her as the storm clawed at them with unrelenting force. The world outside was nothing but wind, water, and blackness, Eira could barely see her own boots, let alone the path ahead. But Orson didn’t hesitate once. He guided her with absolute certainty, each step purposeful, confident, unbothered by the chaos around them.
Then, suddenly a seam of light split the darkness, a large door sliding open before them. Warm air rushed out to meet them, bright and startling against the storm’s fury. Orson pulled her inside with him, the transition so abrupt her breath caught in her chest.
The door sealed behind them with a heavy metallic thud.
Silence fell almost instantly, broken only by the hum of machinery and the drip of rainwater sliding off their clothes. The hanger was vast, brightly lit, and buzzing with distant activity, workers, consoles, supply crates, an island of order in the middle of Eadu’s violent weather.
Orson’s grip loosened at last.
Before Eira could fully adjust to the sudden brightness, a gloved hand rose gently to her cheek. The touch was warm despite the rain, his thumb brushing away a cold droplet as her eyes fluttered, overwhelmed by the shift from storm to safety.
“You’re alright, my dear,” he whispered, his breath brushing her skin. A faint chuckle followed, low and intimate. “Although not too wet, I hope.”
Eira took a moment before his words fully sank in, the soft chuckle warming her far more than the hanger’s heat. She rolled her eyes with a smirk, brushing a damp strand of hair behind her ear as her breath steadied.
But then, movement flickered at the edge of her vision.
She turned.
A group of men stood several paces away, lined in rigid formation, boots together, shoulders squared. Their expressions were carefully schooled into professionalism… except for the man at the front.
Galen Erso.
Eira recognised the man from the day Orson had appeared in her classroom, his posture, his presence, the faint haunted look in his eyes. But now, as his gaze landed on her, something inside her tightened.
The look he gave her was not one of surprise.
It was pity.
And suspicion.
A quiet, dawning horror flickered in his eyes too, as though he already understood something Eira herself hadn’t fully grasped yet. As though he could see the invisible line she had crossed simply by stepping off that shuttle at Krennic’s side. It was the expression of a man who knew how the Empire worked, who had lived long enough beneath its weight to recognise the moment someone became trapped in its machinery.
It was the look of someone who knew she had stepped into something she could never step back out of.
And then she felt Orson’s hand slip away from her cheek, slowly, deliberately. The warmth vanished, leaving her skin chilled in its absence. In that small gesture, she understood exactly what Galen Erso was seeing, why suspicion shadowed his eyes. Why, pity softened the tight line of his mouth. Why the other men behind him stood just a little straighter, their gazes flickering with something like unease.
Director Orson Krennic did not put his hands on people. Not on subordinates. Not on colleagues. Not on anyone.
Except her.
And in a single, undeniable moment, without a word spoken, he had just told everyone in the room exactly why Eira was here, and who she belonged to.
Synopsis: In a galaxy caught between silence and rebellion, Eira Mothma, a gifted student, catches the attention of Director Krennic. As curiosity and control collide, so does the tension between duty, desire, and the fate of a secret weapon.
🔹 Pairing: Director Krennic / OC (Eira Mothma) (Female)
🔹 Rating: Mature (no explicit content)
🔹 Word Count: 3394
Coruscant – Orson Krennic’s Residence – Late Evening
The door slid open with a quiet hiss, and Orson gestured Eira inside with the unhurried assurance of a man who never questioned command. Her bag hung from his hand, retrieved from her shuttle without discussion after they’d left the café. It was a small gesture, one that made Eira’s gaze linger with unease, knowing the communication crystal was tucked inside.
She stepped past him, her gaze moving through the apartment with cautious curiosity. It was both exactly what she had imagined and nothing like it at all. The space was sleek and deliberate, every surface immaculate, the lines sharp and functional. Yet it wasn’t cold. Not entirely. A white cape hung over the back of the couch, soft and carelessly draped, a half-finished glass of amber liquid glinted faintly on the counter beside an active datapad whose light hummed softly in the dim room.
The place looked lived in, but only just, a life measured out between departures. The faint scent of polished metal mingled with a trace of something warmer, that same crisp cologne that lingered like an afterthought on his uniform. Vast windows framed the deep sprawl of Coruscant’s skyline, the light of the city flickering across the glass like fire.
Eira stood just inside, absorbing the quiet. Part of her had expected perfection, a commander’s quarters, arranged like a museum to his discipline. But this space betrayed something else, interruptions, small signs of distraction, a life caught between control and perhaps exhaustion.
Orson’s footsteps were slow behind her, deliberate, letting the door close with a whisper. “Have I left you speechless again?” he asked, his voice easy, touched with amusement.
Eira turned slightly, offering a faint smile. “It’s just like you, polished, precise, but with something unexpected tucked in the corners.”
His mouth curved, that restrained smile that never quite reached his eyes. “Would you care for a nightcap,” he asked smoothly, “or shall I show you to your room so you can retire?”
Eira hesitated, her lips curving as she considered him. “A nightcap,” she decided softly. “It would be a shame not to see how you unwind.”
Orson’s smile deepened, satisfaction flickering in his eyes. “I suspected as much,” he murmured as he placed her bag neatly beside the entryway. Then he crossed to a small bar set against the wall, where bottles gleamed in the dim light. He poured two half‑glasses of a light brown liquid, the scent rich and spiced, curling through the air. When he handed her one, his fingers brushed lightly against hers, a fleeting contact that lingered just long enough to make her wonder if it was intentional.
“You surprise me, Miss Mothma,” he said, voice smooth, almost lazy with confidence. “I half expected you to retreat behind those careful walls of yours by now.”
Eira took the glass, studying him over the rim. “And miss the chance to see how you spends your evenings?”
He laughed quietly, a sound low and genuine. Motioning toward the couch with a subtle gesture of his hand. “Sit, please.”
Eira obeyed, keeping the glass in her hand as she sank into the couch. Orson followed, unhurried, lowering himself beside her rather than across from her. The distance between them was carefully measured, close enough for the faint warmth of his shoulder to reach her, yet far enough that she couldn’t tell whether he meant it as comfort or challenge.
Orson turned slightly, angling his body toward her. He rested one elbow along the back of the couch, his head propped lightly on his fist as he studied her with quiet amusement. The casual posture carried more intent than ease, and under his steady gaze Eira felt her cheeks warm. She took a small sip of her drink before meeting his eyes again.
Orson’s gaze lingered, his voice softer now, carrying that easy tone that made conversation feel deceptively casual. “You seem to be quite calm considering everything that you have learned today,” he said, tilting his head slightly.
Eira nodded, a faint smile pulling at her lips. “Is calm not the normal emotion in this situation?"
He chuckled quietly, swirling the drink in his hand. “Most people, when they learn of the project, fall neatly into one of two categories,” he said, his voice taking on that measured, thoughtful cadence she’d come to recognize. “They’re either horrified by what it represents, or they want the power for themselves.” He looked at her then, assessing quietly before the faintest smile tugged at his mouth. “But you, you don't fall into either of those. Instead you sit here drinking with me, neither in celebration nor fear. It's quite curious really.” He paused, his tone softening but carrying a hint of intent. “No second thoughts then? You’re in this, with me?”
“Well,” she replied lightly, “you’re much less terrifying without the full uniform and entourage.”
“Am I?” He arched a brow, amused. “I’ll have to remember that for future negotiations.”
She smirked into her glass. “By the way you negotiate like a man who doesn’t lose often. Also, I don't know if we really negotiated, you more or less, automatically approved everything I asked for.”
"You didn't ask for anything I wasn't already prepared to offer,” he said simply, and for a heartbeat, their eyes held.
Eira hesitated, then added with a faint, thoughtful smile, “Though, if we’re being precise, you didn’t actually agree to everything.” Her tone was light, but the words carried a trace of frustration beneath them. “You’ve already arranged for one of your soldiers to play the part of my escort at my sister’s wedding, haven’t you? My convenient plus‑one in uniform.”
Orson’s mouth curved, amusement flickering in his eyes. “You don’t understand how valuable you are yet?"
Eira tilted her head, a spark of defiance slipping through her careful tone. “How dangerous can it possibly be at a wedding on my homeworld, surrounded by family?” she asked. “Or is it me you don’t trust, not them?”
Orson’s smile didn’t falter, but his gaze softened, the sharpness in his eyes giving way to something quieter, almost confessional. “If I didn’t trust you,” he said, voice low and deliberate, “you wouldn’t be here.” He leaned slightly closer, his tone softening further, carrying a warmth that made the words feel heavier than they should have. “But your safety, Eira… that’s another matter entirely. A matter, I take very personally.”
The silence that followed wasn’t awkward, it was heavy, threaded with an unspoken curiosity neither seemed willing to name. Eira didn’t look away, she studied him openly, her gaze steady, examining the subtle shifts in his expression as though searching for something hidden beneath the composure. When he leaned in, his voice dropped to something lower, almost intimate. “You’re staring,” he said, the faintest tease beneath the words.
Eira let out a breath that could’ve been a laugh. “And you don’t seem to mind.”
His mouth curved, slow and deliberate. “I don’t,” he admitted.
Their voices had softened now, the space between them tightening until the air itself seemed to hum. Her pulse stumbled when his gaze flicked to her lips before returning to her eyes. “Careful, my dear,” he murmured. “You might make me think you actually enjoy my company.”
Eira’s breath hitched as he called her 'my dear', the words coming out low and deliberate, carrying a warmth that made them sound intimate. The way he said it left little doubt it was meant as more than politeness, and a flush bloomed across her cheeks that spread down her throat in spite of her efforts to remain composed. The warmth in her chest swelled, discomfort, curiosity, and something else tangled beneath her ribs until she couldn’t quite tell them apart. Before the feeling could consume her, she tipped back the rest of her drink in one steady motion, the burn anchoring her. Then, with deliberate calm, she leaned forward and took Orson’s glass from his hand, setting it gently on the table with hers before looking back at him, her pulse still uneven.
For a long moment, she simply sat there, glasses forgotten on the table, the silence between them stretching taut. She could feel the pulse of her heartbeat in her throat as her thoughts tumbled, warnings, hesitations, and the ache of wanting to know what would happen if she ignored them. Her mind told her to rise, to thank him and retreat to the safety of her room, but her body remained anchored, caught by the weight of his gaze.
She could feel it, the way his eyes lingered on her, unhurried, studying. When his gaze flicked, for the briefest instant, to her mouth, the air between them shifted. Eira’s breath stilled, her pulse fluttered wildly. She told herself it was foolish, reckless, that it meant nothing, that it was all for the cause. Yet as the heat coiled in her chest, she felt herself lean into it, drawn forward by something she could neither name nor deny.
Her eyes searched his, looking for any sign of rejection, any trace of restraint, but found only the calm intensity that so often unsettled her. Slowly, deliberately, she began to lean closer, the faint scent of his cologne filling the narrow space between them. Her mind screamed at her to stop even as her body betrayed her, inching nearer until the tension seemed to hum in the air itself.
Her breath caught when she saw his eyes flicker again, to her lips, then back to her eyes, and she swallowed hard, nerves and desire warring inside her. The distance between them felt impossibly small now, each second stretching thin and breathless, until she thought, hoped, that maybe he would be the one to close it.
The sharp trill of a com device shattered the silence, slicing through the charged air like a blade. The sound jolted Eira back into herself, and she drew in a breath as Orson’s expression hardened. The warmth drained from his posture in an instant, replaced by the crisp precision of command. He didn’t move right away, just sat there, watching her, his eyes unreadable, as if measuring what had almost happened.
Then, with a controlled exhale, he rose from the couch, straightened his top as though there was to be an inspection, and crossed to the wall. When he answered the call, his voice was curt and sharp, the clipped tones of someone interrupted. There was no trace of the man who had been sitting beside her only moments before. "What is it?"
Eira took a shuddering breath as the chill of the air hit her, the reality of what she’d nearly done crashing over her. The burn of embarrassment mingled with the cold realization of the potential consequences, what it would have meant, what it still might mean. She could barely hear the words coming from Orson’s side of the room over the pounding of her heart in her ears. But even without hearing, she could tell from the taut lines of his posture, that he was not pleased by whatever he was being told. The warmth that had once filled the space between them was gone, replaced by the sharp edge of command and control, leaving Eira to sit in the hollow stillness, acutely aware of the line she had almost crossed.
Orson ended the call with a final, clipped word and lowered his hand from the panel. His expression was unreadable, though the tension in his jaw betrayed irritation. He stood for a moment in silence, eyes fixed on the view beyond the windows as if gathering the fragments of his composure. When he turned back to her, the shift was complete, Director Krennic once more, precise and composed, the intimacy between them replaced with the calm authority of command.
“Come,” he said, his tone even but distant. “It’s late. I’ll show you where you’ll be staying.”
There was no trace of warmth left in his voice, only order, as though the last few minutes had never happened.
Eira only nodded, her cheeks still warm and her heart still pounding wildly as she rose slowly from the couch, the echo of their almost‑moment still thrumming in her chest.
She retrieved her bag from where he’d set it by the entryway and followed Orson through the residence. His stride was measured and silent, the sound of her steps the only thing echoing softly in the vast space. They ascended a short flight of stairs to the next level, where he paused before a doorway that opened with a muted hiss to reveal what must be his guest room.
Orson motioned for her to enter ahead of him, his gesture polite but distant. As she stepped inside, the lights rose automatically, revealing a crisp, clean room that looked almost untouched. The sheets were sharp, the surfaces spotless, and the faint scent of sterilized air hung in the space. Eira could tell instantly that no one had ever stayed here before. It was perfect, impersonal, and cold a room made, but never needed before now. She let her gaze drift across the simplicity of the furnishings before glancing back at Orson, who stood just inside the doorway. His shoulders had lowered slightly, the first hint of strain easing as though the irritation from his call was finally beginning to fade.
“This will be yours for the night,” Orson said, his tone formal again. “You can freshen up through there.” He gestured toward a side door that likely led to a small washroom. “There’s sleepwear in the top drawer of the dresser, and your uniform has been hung in the wardrobe.” His gaze flicked briefly toward it, then back to her. “I took the liberty of having everything tailored to your measurements.”
Eira let out a short laugh, the last of the tension from earlier finally cracking. “Tell me,” she said in a teasing, warm tone, “you didn’t also personally pick out the undergarments, did you?”
Orson’s mouth curved into a slow, knowing smirk. “Would it bother you if I had?” he asked lightly, his tone deliberately teasing, the hint of a purr beneath his words that made her pulse quicken. He didn’t answer her question directly, only held her gaze a beat too long, letting the implication linger, he would know exactly what she wore, every layer chosen at his discretion. The faint amusement in his eyes was enough to make her shift, the teasing power of the moment unmistakable.
Eira tilted her head slightly, the corner of her mouth curving as she found her voice again. “Then I suppose it’ll be difficult for you to concentrate tomorrow,” she said, her tone light but threaded with heat, a spark of daring that made his smirk deepen.
Orson stepped further into the room, the air between them tightening again with his presence. He didn’t speak right away, only lifted a hand to brush a loose strand of her hair back from her face, his fingers lingering just long enough to graze her cheek. The touch was light, almost absentminded, yet deliberate enough to make her breath catch. His eyes held hers, the faintest gleam of amusement returning. “I imagine I’d find it difficult regardless,” he said, his voice low and smooth, carrying that familiar edge of charm and control.
"Orson..." she began, her voice quiet, unsure of how to word what she wanted to say.
He interrupted her before the thought could form, his tone steady and rich with quiet warmth that slipped beneath her defenses. “Get some rest, my dear,” he said, his voice carrying a low tone that made her shiver. He leaned in, slow and deliberate, until his breath brushed against her skin, his lips grazing her forehead in a brief, charged goodnight that sent a tremor through her. Straightening, he lingered for a heartbeat longer, eyes holding hers. “You’re going to need it,” he murmured, softer now, the words heavy with implication. “I’ll see you in the morning, Eira.”
Coruscant – Krennic’s Residence – Morning
Sleep had come in fragments, restless and hot. Eira woke before dawn more than once, tangled in sheets that felt too heavy, her thoughts chasing the memory of Orson's voice, the low, teasing warmth of it, the way he’d said her name. Worse were the flashes of night prior. the ghost of his touch, the brush of his lips against her forehead, and the realization that he hadn’t kissed her when she clearly wanted him to. He’d shut her down so easily after his call, then gone on to flirt as if nothing had happened, leaving her reeling. The confusion tangled with something far more dangerous, something that refused to fade. By the time the city’s morning light filtered through the room’s tall windows, she had given up on rest entirely.
Now she stood before the mirror, the pale glow of the lights reflecting the figure staring back at her. The uniform fit her perfectly, too perfectly. Every seam, every line tailored to precision. It was strange, seeing herself like this, crisp, composed, Imperial. The reflection felt both foreign and familiar, as if she were meeting a version of herself she’d never intended to become. The girl who had once hidden in shadows was gone, replaced by someone who looked ready to stand beside Director Krennic himself.
The sound of the door sliding open behind her drew Eira’s attention. She turned, catching sight of Orson standing there in uniform, minus his cape and gloves, a cup of caf in his hand. Morning light cut across the crisp lines of his white attire, reflecting off the polished fabric. A small, knowing smile touched his lips as his eyes swept over her, taking her in from head to toe. For a heartbeat, neither spoke, his gaze steady, hers caught between pride and the lingering awareness of the night before.
"It suits you," he said, his voice smooth but edged with unmistakable approval. His gaze lingered, tracing her silhouette with quiet satisfaction.
He moved further into the room, the quiet confidence of command in every step, and extended the cup toward her. “Caf?” he offered, his tone lighter than she expected. The faint curl of his mouth suggested amusement as she took it from him, his fingers brushing hers for just a second longer than necessary.
“Thank you,” Eira whispered, her voice soft, barely reaching the space between them. She turned back to the mirror, the faint steam from the caf curling upward, and caught Orson’s reflection behind her. Their eyes met in the glass, his calm, composed and hers uncertain, restless. A shuddering breath rolled through her as the memories of the night before pressed in, the want to kiss him, the way his voice had dropped when he told her goodnight, the heat of his breath against her skin. Every detail replayed with cruel clarity, and it left her unsteady.
The uniform she wore suddenly felt too tight, the air too warm. A low current of anxiety hummed beneath her skin, the same kind that had kept her awake through the night. She could feel her pulse thudding at her throat, her thoughts spiraling, and she quickly raised the cup to her lips, taking a slow sip of caf in hopes that the heat would steady her racing nerves.
Behind her, Orson’s reflection shifted slightly in the mirror. “There’s breakfast waiting downstairs if you wish to eat,” he said casually, as though the tension between them didn’t still hum in the air. The smoothness of his tone only made her pulse quicken again, the normalcy of his words brushing against the chaos of her thoughts.
“Orson,” Eira said softly, turning slightly toward him, her voice uncertain but carrying intent. She wanted to bring it up, to ask about the night before, about what almost happened between them, but he cut her off before she could speak.
“We will discuss it later, for now we’re on a tight schedule,” he said smoothly, his tone all business again, though his eyes lingered on her for a heartbeat too long. “If you still wish to visit Luthen’s shop, we’ll need to leave shortly.” The warmth that had flickered between them cooled once more, replaced by the sharp edge of purpose that always seemed to come when he was the Director again.
Synopsis: In a galaxy caught between silence and rebellion, Eira Mothma, a gifted student, catches the attention of Director Krennic. As curiosity and control collide, so does the tension between duty, desire, and the fate of a secret weapon.
🔹 Pairing: Director Krennic / OC (Eira Mothma) (Female)
🔹 Rating: Mature (no explicit content)
🔹 Word Count: 4195
The speeder eased to a stop along the narrow lane, its engine settling into a soft idle. Through the glass, Eira could see the muted facade of Luthen’s gallery, polished signage, shuttered display lights, the kind of quiet storefront that blended into the Upper Levels without inviting questions. Her driver remained in the front seat, gloved hands on the wheel, but eyes on her.
Eira pressed the brass buzzer beside the door. A heartbeat later, there was the familiar click of the lock and the gentle chime of the bell. Luthen appeared as the door opened, his smile warm and practiced, the picture of gracious discretion.
“Miss Mothma,” he said, with a low nod that almost passed for a bow. “Right on time. Come, come, the light in the back is kinder at this hour.”
With a theatrical sweep of one hand, half flourish, half habit, he guided her past the front cases and their carefully curated antiquities. Eira caught, in the corner of the window glass, the faint reflection of her waiting speeder and the driver’s steady profile. She didn’t look back.
He guided her toward the quieter back of the shop, where the shelves and display cases gave way to equipment and smaller items, where the noise of the city seemed to fade. “We’ll keep this brief,” he murmured, tone light even as his eyes assessed her. “I suspect you have a busy afternoon.”
Eira inclined her head. “I do.”
Luthen’s smile thinned, the practiced warmth cooling into something more deliberate. “Through one of my contacts in the ISB, I’ve learned the Empire is diverting resources, expanding prison capacity, increasing transport runs. There must be a reason. Perhaps Director Krennic knows why. He’s constantly petitioning the Senate for more funding for his energy project. That is what you should be watching for. Why the hoarding, why the secrecy.”
Eira’s grip tightened slightly on her satchel. “One of the conditions I’ll be setting with Director Krennic is that I’ll be allowed to return here for visits, and to attend my sister’s wedding on Chandrila. I can easily use the ruse of purchasing items from you for those I miss, now that I am gone, as cover to deliver information. But I’ll be careful. I won’t risk losing this chance. Not when it might help break the chokehold the Empire has on all of us.”
Luthen gave a single approving nod, then reached behind him to a low shelf. He lifted a small, ancient artifact, carved stone, faintly polished with age, its origin unmistakably Chandrilan. He turned it in his hand, the light catching faint engravings. “That should work as cover, just be sure to keep your visits few and far between. Now perhaps this,” he said smoothly. “Something old, something that carries the beauty of your sister's homeworld. She would appreciate it, I think. Bring the Director here, before you leave. We will make a play of how perfect this piece is as a wedding gift. Insist that I have it delivered to Chandrila at the time of the wedding, and in doing so, make him feel the importance of your presence there.”
He set the artifact gently back down and straightened, his voice quiet but firm. “We have months until the wedding, that should be more than enough time to gather some form of intel. But until then, I want silence. They will watch you carefully at first, and unless it is absolutely imperative, do not communicate with me.”
Eira nodded slowly, eyes lingering on the artifact before meeting his. “The wedding it is then.”
Luthen’s smile returned, faint but edged with steel, his tone dropping into something colder, graver. “Good. There’s one more thing. It will be rare I ever contact you, I can’t risk that kind of communication. But remember this, 'I have friends everywhere.' If you ever hear those words, take them seriously. They will probably be followed with 'we’ve been discovered'. If you’re lucky, there may be somewhere prepared for you to run to. If not…” His gaze held hers, steady, unforgiving. “Then hide. Disappear. Find a quiet corner to live out the rest of your days. Because if you’re caught you will be tortured, put somewhere never to see the light of day again.”
Eira straightened, her voice low but steady. “Don’t worry. I already have an idea of what the Empire is capable of, and I know the risk I’m taking.”
Coruscant – Upper Level Café – Evening
The area was quiet when Eira’s transport let her out near the café. The glow of the towers cast long shadows across the polished walk, and the air carried the faint chill of recycled wind from the ventilation systems above. Her pulse quickened as she spotted them, Death Troopers, stationed casually but unmistakably near the corners of the plaza, their armor gleaming black beneath the lights. They didn’t move. They didn’t need to. Their presence alone was enough to clear the space. There was not another soul in sight.
Eira drew a slow breath and steadied her hands, forcing herself to walk forward, the click of her boots too loud in the silence. Through the tall windows she could see the interior of the café, mostly dim, but lit enough to reveal him.
Orson Krennic sat near the center, a simple cup in hand. He wasn’t in his uniform. No cape, no medals, no gloves. Just a dark turtleneck, sleeves pushed back slightly, his posture relaxed as he leaned against the chair, sipping quietly. The sight of him like that, civilian, almost ordinary, struck her harder than she expected. It nearly knocked the breath from her lungs.
For a moment her steps faltered. Her heart stuttered painfully against her ribs, heat rising in her cheeks at the sheer strangeness of it. She had braced herself for the Director, the man in white, the controlled presence who could dismantle her life with a single order. But this… this man who looked so at ease, so casual, it unsettled her in a completely different way.
Eira pushed down the remainder of her fear, swallowed it hard, and kept moving. Each step closer felt heavier, threaded with anticipation she hadn’t wanted to admit to herself. He was waiting for her. And from here on, there would be no shadows to hide in.
As she reached the door, the latch released with a soft click, before the glass slid to the side. Eira stepped inside, the warmth of the café washing over her. Orson set his cup down with quiet precision and rose smoothly to his feet. There was nothing performative in the motion, no grandeur, only the simplicity of manners, the kind of courtesy that made her breath hitch all over again. He inclined his head slightly, as though greeting her into a private world meant only for the two of them.
Eira’s eyes flicked around the café as she crossed the threshold. It was empty, stripped of its usual life and bustle. No students hunched over datapads, no weary professionals having meetings and murmuring over caf. Only the quiet hum of the serving droids gliding along their programmed paths, polishing glasses that didn’t need polishing, setting cups that no one would drink from. The emptiness pressed around her, amplifying the awareness that this space, tonight, belonged only to him, and now, to her.
Orson greeted her with a smile, one that felt disarming in its simplicity. He lifted a hand, and with a subtle gesture summoned one of the serving droids, instructing it to bring her a spiced caf. Then he stepped to her side, pulling out the only other chair at the table with the same confidence he carried into every part of his life. The quiet scrape of its legs on the floor seemed to echo in the still café.
“Sit,” he said softly when Eira didn't move. When she lowered herself onto the chair, he waited until she was settled before returning to his own seat across from her.
For a moment Eira only stared at him, unable to help herself. The plain clothes, the easy way he moved, it was such a stark contrast to the image she had of him that she could not look away. The serving droid arrived and set her drink down with mechanical precision, but she barely registered it. Orson, of course, missed nothing in her stare, and the corner of his mouth curved upward in quiet amusement. He let out a low laugh.
“Would you have preferred me in uniform?” he asked, voice smooth with teasing.
Eira felt heat rush to her cheeks, her composure faltering. She shook her head lightly, almost embarrassed at being caught staring. “I just— I never expected to see you, not in uniform. You look… so different. Almost human. Not the man in white everyone fears.”
Orson chuckled, the sound low and genuine. “I figured you might prefer a more casual meeting,” he said, settling back in his chair with unstudied ease. “Especially since we’re in such a public space.”
Eira glanced around at the empty room, her lips curving into a wry smile. “It doesn’t feel very public when you’ve emptied out the café, and the two streets around it.”
Orson’s smile lingered, faint but deliberate. “One can never be too careful.”
Eira tilted her head, her tone edged with challenge. “Is that why you walk around with Death Troopers at your heels?”
His amusement faded into something more serious, his posture straightening as he regarded her. “When you accept my offer, you’ll understand. You too will have an armed escort any time you step beyond the facility where the work is being done. It isn’t ceremony, it’s necessity.”
Eira’s brow furrowed slightly, curiosity sharpening her features. “How can an energy project possibly require that much security?”
Orson’s gaze held hers, steady, deliberate. “Accept my offer, and I’ll tell you. Until then…” he let the words trail, a calculated promise. Then, leaning in slightly, his voice softened. “Tell me, Eira, what is it you want? What demands would make you say yes?”
Eira lifted her cup, using the motion to steady her nerves, the rising steam brushing against her face as she took a slow sip. She set it back down carefully, then raised her eyes to meet his. “They are non-negotiables.”
Orson inclined his head, his expression one of cool patience. “Go on.”
“First,” she said, her tone firmer now, “I want weapons training, defense training. I need to know how to defend myself.”
A faint smile touched his lips. “That was already my plan.”
“Second,” she continued, “I want to learn to pilot a ship. Properly. Not just the basics.”
His reply was immediate, smooth. “Also already arranged.”
Eira’s fingers curled slightly against the table. “Third, I want freedom of movement. The ability to leave the facility when I choose.”
Orson leaned back slightly, considering her with quiet amusement. “That one depends. Work schedule, deadlines, security. But I will always try my best to make it happen.”
“Fourth,” she added, her voice tightening, “I want to graduate. If I’m going to abandon my studies to work for you, I want assurances that when my time with you is over, my academic record will be complete, so that I can continue on in whatever endeavor I desire, that I will be able to continue my life.”
For the first time, Orson hesitated, then he inclined his head. “Consider it a promise.”
Eira noticed him pause before answering, the briefest flicker of thought crossing his features. It wasn’t resistance, but a hesitation that made her wonder what it was about that particular request that gave him pause.
Then she continued. “My sister’s wedding. It’s in nine months, on Chandrila. I will be there. And I will not be flanked by troopers.”
This time his smile thinned, his voice measured. “You’ll be there. I’ll see to it. But security is not optional.”
Her palms pressed against the table as she began to rise, heat flaring in her chest. But Orson’s hand moved quickly, reaching across the space to cover hers. His glove was warm, his grip steady, the sudden contact halting her in place.
“You cannot go without some form of protection,” he said lowly, holding her gaze. “But I can arrange for escorts who will not draw attention. Discreet. Non-uniformed. No one will know they’re there but you.
Eira shook her head, voice sharp. “No, I won't be in my home, with armed guards around me." She pushed herself fully upright, but his grip rose with her, sliding to her wrist, firm but not harsh. The movement caused her to pause, his presence wrapping around her as surely as his hand.
“One escort,” Orson said, his tone even but edged with authority. “Civilian dressed. Tell your mother you are bringing a guest. But the escort will be of my choosing. You must understand, your safety is not negotiable. To the Empire, yes, but especially to me. I will not allow you to be alone among hundreds of guests, you know well enough are only their for their own selfish reasons. That is a risk I refuse to take.” His voice softened, just enough to shift from command to something almost personal. "Please, Eira."
She froze at the sound of her name on his lips, startled by the plea buried in his tone. Slowly, Eira sank back into her chair, drawing a deep breath as Orson released her wrist with measured calm. The tension in her chest loosened, though her heart still raced, and after a long pause she gave a quiet nod. “All right,” she said finally, voice low but steady. “I’ll agree to that.”
For a long moment, neither spoke. The café seemed to shrink around them, silence pressing close until it was just the two of them, locked in a fragile balance of trust and defiance. Eira’s pulse still raced, but she steadied herself, lifted her chin, and drew in a breath. “Then I accept,” she said clearly. “If you can give your word to everything you’ve agreed to here, I’ll leave with you. But now that I’ve agreed…” her gaze sharpened on his, “I want to know exactly what I’m working on.”
Orson regarded her in silence, his eyes hardening, his tone measured when he finally spoke. “What I tell you cannot leave this table. If word were ever to escape, if you so much as breathed it to someone not authorized, you would not only doom yourself, but everyone you care about. The Emperor himself would see to it that you were made an example of. Do you understand, Eira?”
The weight of his words pressed down on her, and she felt the cold edge of doubt slip into her chest. The thought of Mon, of her sister, of them dragged into ruin because of her, made her pulse stumble. Her throat tightened, her breath caught. She realized she may not have thought about the true cost of stepping into his world. She may not have known what she was agreeing to until now.
Orson’s voice cut through her silence, harder now, more force behind it. “Do you understand?” His eyes bore into hers, demanding the answer, making her feel the full gravity of what was at stake. “Normally I would hide the scope of what I am doing, bury you in some side project and shield you from the whole of it. But if you are to help me, truly help me, then you must know everything. And with that comes the weight of responsibility, and the silence it demands.”
Eira drew a long, steadying breath. Her eyes locked on his, studying him, really looking at him as though weighing every part of who he was. Then she inclined her head slowly. “Yes, I understand. This is of the utmost secrecy,” she said, her tone steady, almost solemn. “If you are willing to give me everything I’ve asked for, then I will give the same in return.” The words left her lips with practiced conviction, sounding true even as her pulse thundered in her chest. Because deep inside, beneath the certainty of her voice, she knew the truth, she was lying.
As if on cue, the hum of the serving droids faded, one by one gliding silently into the back until the room was left still. Eira felt it before she realized it, the faint crackle in the air, the way the background noise of the city seemed to dull. A jammer had been activated. If anyone had tried to listen, they would hear only static.
Orson leaned back in his chair, his posture shifting from sharp focus to something almost conversational, though his eyes remained fixed on her. “What you are about to hear is known to only a handful of people in the entire Empire. It is called Project Stardust.”
The name lingered between them, deceptively delicate. His voice, though quiet, carried the weight of steel. “It is an energy initiative, yes, but one unlike any other. The ultimate convergence of power and control. We are constructing something vast, an orbital weapons platform capable of harnessing kyber energy on a scale once thought impossible. Entire worlds could be brought to heel by its presence alone.”
He paused, studying her face for any flicker of reaction before continuing. “But ambition invites complication. Galen Erso’s team has labored over the core, the weapon’s heart, and still the systems resist us. Energy instability, cascading failures, calibration drifting under stress. Every solution closes one gap only to open another. We have lost months to this, months I cannot afford. The Emperor’s patience is not infinite, and each delay costs me dearly.”
His gaze sharpened. “That is why I want you. Because you see the patterns others overlook. Because you think differently, outside of the equations that have trapped them in their loops. I need someone who can see the threads no one else will, who can tie them together before the whole tapestry unravels.”
The silence after his words was absolute, the weight of them pressing into the room. Orson let it hang there, daring her to feel the magnitude of what he had just entrusted her with.
Eira’s mind raced. The word he had used echoed in her mind, this was far larger than anything she had ever allowed herself to imagine. The magnitude of it crashed over her, and for a heartbeat all she could hear was the thunder of her pulse in her ears.
Her lips parted, the word catching in her throat before finally escaping, barely more than a whisper. “A weapon?”
Orson inclined his head, his voice steady and resolute. “Yes. A weapon. One that will bring order to chaos, that will ensure lasting peace across the galaxy. With it, the Rebels, the Separatists, any who would defy Imperial order will find themselves unable to resist. Once it is completed, the galaxy will finally know stability, and no world will dare rise to plunge us back into chaos.”
Eira’s voice slipped out before she could stop it, barely audible, as if she were confessing a thought to the air. “You’re building a weapon.” The words hung there, stark, and she forced herself to meet his gaze again, to steady her breath. “For the peace of the galaxy… and you, you need my help?”
Orson let a small smile break across his face, a glint of wry humor softening the intensity of the moment. “Now she gets it,” he said lightly, the dry edge of his voice pulling her back from the weight of the revelation. Then, more quietly, his eyes steady on hers, he added, “Eira,” he said, his voice lower now, a rare softness threading through the words, the kind that carried both urgency and trust. His eyes did not leave hers, steady, intimate, as though entrusting her with something more than duty. “With the Emperor pressing for results, it is you who may yet save me.”
Hearing her name spoken that way, with that weight and intimacy, sent a tremor through her. The enormity of what he had confessed should have filled her with only dread, this weapon, this monstrous project, but instead there was a tangled current running beneath it. A dangerous, confusing heat. She could not ignore the part of herself that leaned toward him, that heard her name in his voice and felt the beginnings of something she had not expected, a girlish, traitorous crush she threading its way into her heart.
She knew he could charm, knew his desire for her would flicker the moment he no longer needed her, perhaps even vanish the instant she was placed where he needed her. She wouldn't be surprised if she never saw him again once he had what he wanted. And yet none of that stopped the heat rising through her, warming her cheeks, betraying her with every wild beat of her heart.
Orson noticed, the faint flush across her skin and the restless light in her eyes, and he smiled, a genuine, warm smile that softened his features. Lifting his cup of caf, he raised it slightly toward her. “To new beginnings,” he said, the words carrying both certainty and invitation.
She lifted her cup to meet his, holding it gently against his as she echoed, “To new beginnings,” her voice quieter than she intended, carrying a nervous warmth that betrayed the flutter in her chest. "So what is it I will be working on solving exactly?"
Orson gave a casual wave of his hand, leaning back in his chair with easy confidence. “That is for when we get to Galen's facility. For now, enjoy the quiet before the storm.”
Eira lifted her cup, steadying herself with a sip before meeting his gaze. Her lips curved faintly, equal parts wry and curious. “Well then, Director, what shall we talk about?”
He smiled, the expression calm but sure as he replied with casual ease. “First, you should know we’ll be leaving tomorrow morning. And, unfortunately, given the security risk, you won’t be able to return to your home tonight. I trust you’ll forgive the inconvenience.”
Eira rolled her eyes and let out a quiet sigh. “Can’t say I’m surprised about that.” She set her cup down with a soft clink, then added, “But before we leave tomorrow, I need to make one stop. Luthen sent word that he acquired a piece I may like for my sisters wedding gift. I need to view it before we go.”
Orson inclined his head, agreeing without hesitation. “Of course.”
Her brow arched slightly as she studied him. “So where exactly am I staying for the night, if you aren't allowing me to go home?”
His smile deepened, warm and assured. “I’ve had the spare room in my residence prepared for you. Everything you should need is already there, waiting.”
Eira tilted her head, her smile tipping more toward shy than conflicted, though the heat in her cheeks betrayed her. “That seems rather inappropriate, considering you’re now my employer, and what twice my age?” The words came out lightly, almost like a schoolgirl’s tease, the kind that carried more than a hint of a crush, even as the weight of what she had agreed to pressed somewhere deep beneath it all.
Orson’s smile lingered, sly with a teasing edge as he leaned in just slightly. “Technically, you haven’t started working yet,” he said, the words playful, almost daring, as though testing how far her blush might spread. Then, softer, with a glint of mischief, he added, “And as for age… it’s only a number, Eira. If anything, it just means I have a bit more, experience.” He lifted a brow as he said it, the gesture subtle but pointed, carrying a meaning that lingered beyond the words themselves.
Eira let out a soft laugh, shaking her head, then fixed him with a steadier look. “How are you these two different people?” she asked, voice low but clear. “The man who tormented me, the man who held me on the dance floor, and now…”
His gaze didn’t falter. If anything, it sharpened, though his tone softened as he asked, “Now what?”
She drew in a breath, her pulse quickening as she admitted, “You look at me like I'm the only one in the room."
A slow smile curved his mouth, genuine and unshaken. “And how could I not, Eira?” His admission seemed to leave her momentarily unmoored, and he saw it. He let the silence linger only a breath before leaning forward slightly, voice lowering into something steady, intimate. “You see, I can’t help it. I can see your potential, your brilliance, your heart, and all of it makes it impossible to look anywhere else.”
Her lips parted, her reply slipping out in a whisper she couldn’t quite control. “And that scares me,” she confessed, the words trembling with truth. “Because I don’t know what to do with that.”
Orson’s smile didn’t fade, if anything, it softened further, carrying a rare patience. “I don't expect you to know, not right now,” he said gently.
Synopsis: In a galaxy caught between silence and rebellion, Eira Mothma, a gifted student, catches the attention of Director Krennic. As curiosity and control collide, so does the tension between duty, desire, and the fate of a secret weapon.
🔹 Pairing: Director Krennic / OC (Eira Mothma) (Female)
🔹 Rating: Mature (no explicit content)
🔹 Word Count: 4476
Note: Sorry for the delay in uploads, it has been crazy pants this last little bit, but things should start winding down some, so I can get back to writing and uploading ❤
Eira said nothing as she climbed the stairs ahead of Mon and Perrin, her heels clacking against the stone with each measured step. The weight of the night pressed heavy into her shoulders, wrapping around her like the silk gown that still clung to her skin, warm from hours of movement, from the heat of countless gazes, from Orson's touch and the many dances they had shared.
She reached her bedroom, and the door slid open automatically in response to her presence. She stepped inside with a quiet hope that she could escape the tension that had thickened the air during the entire ride home.
But Mon was close behind.
The senator entered without pause, her posture sharp, movements precise. The door snapped shut behind her with a sound that echoed far too loudly in the stillness of the house.
Eira turned slowly.
Mon’s face was unreadable, neither composed nor furious, but something taut and controlled that flickered beneath the surface like a storm barely held at bay.
"We need to talk," she said, her voice low and tight, every syllable wound with restraint.
Eira stayed silent, her eyes searching Mon's face, trying to read the shadows gathering there, to anticipate the storm she knew was coming. But her hesitation cost her. Mon took a sharp step forward, the click of her heel against the floor like a blaster shot in the silence.
"He harassed you. He cornered you. He manipulated you, and you danced with him like you were lovers!" Her voice cracked against the walls, louder than she'd intended. She inhaled quickly, struggling to pull herself back into composure, but the tremble in her hands betrayed her.
"You... you held onto him like you were his whore. In his dress, with a smile on your face like you don't know the man he is." Mon’s voice trembled with fury now, her composure fraying with every word. "That man loathes me, Eira. Everything I stand for. Everything this family has sacrificed. And now you—you offer yourself up to him like you're just waiting to be used." Her words cracked, bitter and sharp. "Do you not see, did you not listen, this is what he does. He takes what he needs, who he needs, and when they’re no longer useful, when they disappoint him, he discards them into some cell like they meant nothing. And he will do the same to you." Her hand shook at her side, like she was working hard to contain her fury.
Eira’s breath hitched as though she had been struck. The word lingered in the air, vile and heavy, and for a heartbeat she could do nothing but stare. Mon, the woman who had become her mother, had just called her a whore. It wasn’t only the insult, it was the way it carried a disbelief, as if Eira hadn’t seen the danger with her own eyes, hadn’t understood what Orson was capable of. As if she were a fool.
But she wasn’t a fool. And the cruel irony burned, she had succeeded so well in playing her part tonight, in becoming what she had chosen to become, that even Mon believed the illusion. That was the point. That was the fire Orson had told her she could claim.
Her anger rose hot in her chest. “Don’t you dare,” she snapped, her voice sharp and shaking with heat. “Don’t you dare pretend that you’ve kept me safe all these years by locking me away, by teaching me to be quiet, polite, invisible. That’s not safety, Mon, it’s a prison. And I won’t live in it any longer.”
She stepped forward, her eyes blazing. “You think Director Krennic is the threat? He’s the one who looked at me and saw more than a shadow. He’s the one regardless of his past transgressions offering me the chance to be something more, to burn, to matter. He offered me a place. A job. And I’m going to take it.”
Mon’s face went pale, but Eira didn’t stop. “I know you’re afraid. Afraid of him, afraid of the Empire, afraid of what I might become if I step outside the little world you’ve built for me. But I’m not going to be afraid. Not anymore.”
Eira's voice shook, not from doubt but from the force of conviction. “Hate me if you need to. Distrust me if that makes it easier. But I won’t hide. Not from him, not from you, not from anyone. This is who I am want to be, and you can’t keep me caged.”
Mon’s fury ebbed in an instant, leaving something far more fragile in its wake. Shock hollowed her features, devastation pulling at the edges of her carefully schooled composure. She looked at Eira as though she no longer recognized the girl before her.
The sight landed heavier than the insult ever had. Eira’s own anger twisted inward, guilt flooding through her chest so sharply it hurt. She loved Mon, would always love her, and yet she had spoken like she wanted to wound. And she had. She could see it now in Mon’s eyes.
But that was what she needed. If Mon distrusted her, even hated her for this, then it would make the path ahead easier. Eira couldn’t let her know the truth, not about what she planned to do, not about the rebellion she was sure she was about to join, not about the dangerous game she had chosen to play. Better for Mon to see a reckless young girl, with big doe eyes for the man she was about to start working for, than a spy in the making.
Eira drew in a long breath, her shoulders tight, her heart aching even as her resolve held firm. This was the role she would play, and she would play it well.
Mon’s lips parted, but no words came at first. When she did speak, it was halting, almost stammered, so unlike the polished senator Eira had always known. “I… I don’t even know who you are right now,” she whispered, as though the confession itself cost her strength. “I never thought you, this, existed in you.” The raw disbelief in her tone struck Eira harder than anger.
Eira held her ground, though her chest felt tight. She forced herself to meet Mon’s wounded stare. “Then maybe you never really knew me at all,” she said, her voice low but steady, every word meant to cut. “You raised a shadow, a silence, a ghost in fine clothes, but that isn’t me. Not anymore. I won’t be your quiet little secret, Mon. I won’t be your daughter in name, paraded out when it suits you, tucked away when it doesn’t.”
The words came out like fire, harsher than she intended, but she didn’t take them back. Because if Mon believed them, if she truly thought Eira was lost to her, then it would make the road ahead easier to walk. And it would keep Mon safe.
Mon’s eyes glistened, though no tears fell. She took a slow step back, as if the distance could shield her from the sting of Eira’s words. Her shoulders rounded inward, the fire that had fueled her anger dimming into something that looked like defeat. And then, with visible effort, she straightened again, drawing on the senator’s mask that had carried her through endless chambers and battles of words. Her voice was calm, too calm, layered in diplomacy that barely veiled her pain.
“I hope you find what you’re looking for,” Mon said, her tone crisp, her chin lifted though her eyes betrayed the fracture beneath. “And I wish you all the luck in the galaxy.”
Without waiting for a reply, she turned sharply and strode to the door. It slid open with a soft hiss, and then closed again with a final snap behind her.
The silence that followed pressed down on Eira until her knees gave out. She sank to the floor, her hands clutching at the silk pooled around her, a silent sob tearing from her chest with no sound but the rush of her breath. She bowed her head, trembling, her whole body heaving with the ache of what she had just done.
Coruscant – Luthen’s Shop – Morning
The buzzer gave a faint ring as Eira pressed it, and a soft click followed when Luthen released the lock from behind the counter. The door swung inward on quiet hinges, and a bell above it chimed gently as she stepped inside. The hush of the shop immediately wrapped around her. Dust-moted light filtered through high windows, falling across shelves lined with relics, curiosities, and objects that seemed to hum with forgotten stories. The quiet here was different from the suffocating silence that had filled the Mothma residence this morning. It felt alive, brimming with secrets.
Luthen Rael looked up from behind the counter, his easy smile already in place. He spread his arms as though welcoming an old friend. “Miss Mothma. What a pleasure. And such timing, you bring a certain brightness with you, first thing in the morning.”
Eira dipped her head politely, though her lips curved faintly. There was warmth in his words, but also curiosity, a sharpness beneath the charm. “Thank you for seeing me, Luthen.”
Before she could say more, another figure appeared from the back, moving with brisk precision. Luthen gestured casually. “This is Kleya, my associate. She keeps me organized, or so she claims.”
Kleya’s gaze was appraising, cool but not unfriendly. She inclined her head once before returning to a set of carefully catalogued items.
Luthen straightened behind the counter, his tone light but professional. “Now then, tell me, what is it you’re searching for? Something for your sister, correct?”
Eira nodded, her fingers brushing the clasp of her cloak. She chose her words carefully, letting them carry the weight she hoped he would catch. “Something old,” she said softly. “Something from before the Empire. Something that most wouldn’t recognize for what it truly is. I wouldn’t want her gift to bring the wrong kind of attention.”
Her eyes lingered on him, just long enough to hint at the double meaning.
Luthen’s smile didn’t falter, but there was a subtle shift in his expression, a spark of understanding lighting behind his eyes. He tapped the counter lightly with one hand. “Ah. Then I think you’ve come to exactly the right place." He paused, then added more carefully, testing her with the weight of his words. "However what if I can’t acquire items like this? It’s dangerous, after all, and I’d hate for you, or myself, to attract the wrong kind of attention.”
Eira lowered her voice, the words carrying steady despite the faint tremor of nerves. “I’m willing to take that risk, if you are.”
Luthen’s expression shifted, his smile fading into something more serious. His eyes narrowed slightly, measuring her with a sharpness that cut through the pleasant mask he wore. “And how can you be so sure?” he asked softly, his tone no longer playful but deliberate, probing. "How can I be sure this won't come back to burn me?"
Eira’s chin lifted, her gaze unwavering. “Because I know who you are,” she said, her voice quiet but certain. “I know what you and Mon speak of when you think no one listens. She raised me to be a shadow, to move unseen, but shadows can move around and hear everything. You both never thought of the threat inside the home, but I did. I know you’re working against the Empire. And I know I can help.” She drew a breath, steadying herself. “I have the chance to step inside their walls, closer than either of you can go. And I want to use it to bring them down.”
Kleya reacted first, her body snapping taut as she moved with sudden purpose, a hand darting toward the blade hidden at her side. Her eyes were cold, intent. But before she could take another step, Luthen lifted one hand, palm outward, a quiet command that froze her in place. His gaze never left Eira.
Luthen studied her in silence for a long moment, the weight of his scrutiny pressing heavy in the space between them. At last, he exhaled, his voice low and edged with something that sounded almost like regret. “If only it were that simple.”
Eira didn’t flinch. Her voice dropped lower, carrying heat now, threaded with urgency. “You’re the one who told me men like the Director, if you can get close enough, they may slip, may make mistakes. I think I’m perfectly positioned for that now. And after everything that’s happened, I’m done hiding. I want to stand up.”
Luthen’s gaze sharpened, the warmth from earlier gone entirely. He leaned forward just slightly, his tone clipped, insistent, like a blade testing her defenses. “And what exactly do you think you’ll be doing, then? What part do you imagine playing in this? What use will you be to me?”
Eira’s lips parted, but the rush of thoughts in her mind stumbled over one another. “I don’t know yet,” she admitted, though her voice was steady.
Luthen pressed harder. “What does the Director want from you? What are his intentions? His feelings?”
“I… I don’t know,” she said again, her hand tightening on the edge of her cloak.
“And what information could you possibly gather?” His voice was quiet, but sharp as steel. “What could you bring back that I don’t already have?”
Eira met his gaze, jaw tense. “I don’t know,” she repeated, firmer this time, as though bracing herself.
Luthen’s lips thinned, his head tilting just slightly as though the weight of his disappointment was pressing down on her. “If you don’t know anything,” he said at last, his voice cutting clean through the silence, “then what good are you?”
Eira’s eyes flared, her voice rising hot in the hush of the shop. “He wants me. Krennic told me himself, he needs me. His team has hit a wall, and he’s out of time. He came to me because he thinks I can solve it. He had the university give us a test problem, but it wasn’t hypothetical. It was about energy diversion and conversion, and I solved it. He told me so. He said it was a solution they’d been chasing for ages before they figured it out.” She stepped closer, her breath tight, furious at being dismissed. “I’m just a student, but I saw what his experts could not. And now; now he will give me anything, do anything to bring me in. That gives me power, power over him, power to know things.
Her hands tightened at her sides, the words spilling sharper now. “I know what he says it is, a clean energy project for the good of the galaxy. But I also know what I solved, and what it means. And if you didn’t want me involved, if you didn’t want to enlist me before knowing that information, then why approach me at all? Why test me? Why let me come here?”
Luthen’s stern expression softened into something else, something sharper but edged with satisfaction. The corner of his mouth curved, the faintest trace of a smile breaking his mask. He gave a small nod, glancing briefly toward Kleya before returning his gaze to Eira. “That,” he said quietly, “is what I was looking for.” His eyes glinted with approval as he added, almost smug, “See Kleya? I told you she would be perfect.”
He straightened, his expression thoughtful now. “We have very little time,” he said, the warmth gone from his voice, replaced with crisp intent. “If you mean to do this, there are things you’ll need to know before you leave.” He turned slightly toward Kleya. “Lets get her a communication crystal.”
Kleya hesitated, but at Luthen’s nod, she moved with brisk efficiency to a locked case behind the counter. From it she retrieved a small, multifaceted shard set in a simple clasp of metal. She held it out, her eyes still sharp with suspicion as she placed it in Eira’s hand.
“This,” Luthen said evenly, “is an encoded communication crystal. It will allow you to piggyback on the Empire’s own towers to transmit secure signals. Kleya will show you how to activate it, how to mask it, and how to destroy it if you must. Learn quickly. If it falls into the wrong hands, Eira, we will all be dead. Every one of us. Remember that before you even think of using it, that you are not the only one involved in this. I have amassed a network, a network that you are now a part of. That you are now responsible for.”
Eira was given only the briefest of instructions, and told to return tomorrow at the same hour for more. She left the shop quietly, the bell above the door chiming in her wake, her mind racing with the weight of what had just transpired.
The silence that followed her departure seemed to thicken until Kleya turned sharply on Luthen, her fury barely contained. “What are you thinking?” she hissed. “Bringing her in like this, without even consulting me? You’re risking everything, everyone, why?”
Luthen’s expression remained composed, though his eyes betrayed a harder edge. “We are running out of time, out of chances. Things are moving faster than we can keep up, and I have the feeling she might be able to find the answers we need.”
Kleya’s glare did not soften. Her voice was colder still. “The question is, if she does, will she be brave enough to do something with it? She is a child, Luthen.”
Luthen’s gaze hardened, though his voice remained measured. “And so were you once, Kleya. A child who wanted to take on the Empire.”
Coruscant – Mothma Residence – Evening
The house was quiet when Eira finally returned, after spending the day avoiding her home. Mon ignored her entirely, her figure stiff and cold as she watched Eira pass the dining hall. Eira climbed the stairs slowly, the silence pressing on her chest heavier than any argument could have.
When she stepped into her room, the lights brightened at her presence. On her desk, her comm pad blinked with a waiting message. Her breath caught as she crossed the room and activated the display.
Director Orson Krennic.
The message was short, but carefully crafted, the words threaded with his familiar precision.
Miss Mothma,
I must leave Coruscant to return to my duties ahead of schedule, and I would like very much for you to come with me. The decision is yours, but know that I would rather like to have you at my side than left behind in shadows that no longer suit you.
— Director Orson Krennic
Eira stood staring at the pad long after the message faded as the device fell into sleep, her pulse quickening at the weight of them. He hadn’t begged, hadn’t demanded. He had simply stated, with the calm certainty of a man who always got what he wanted.
She held the pad and carried it with her to the bed, sinking down onto the edge of the mattress. For a long moment she only stared at the blank reply screen, her pulse hammering. Once she replied, there would be no undoing it. If she agreed, she would no longer be Mon Mothma’s ward, or a student at the university, she would be a woman working under a dangerous man inside the very heart of the Empire, carrying secrets she meant to use for the rebellion. The likely outcome was clear, discovery, imprisonment, death. Was she ready for that? She drew in a long, steadying breath. The screen reflected faintly in her eyes as she read the words again, weighing them. Her fingers hovered over the keys as her mind raced. She wanted to take the job. She wanted to make a difference, but not for the Empire and so if she did this there would be conditions, her conditions. If Orson wanted her, then he would have to agree to what she asked for. And if he couldn’t, then she wouldn’t go. She would stay here, and make it clear she never wanted to see him again.
Her lips curved faintly as she began typing, her words carefully professional,
Dear Director,
I am prepared to accept your offer, provided we first discuss certain conditions that must be met. If you cannot agree to them or cannot deliver on them, then I regrettably will need to decline.
She paused, her mind drifting back to the way his eyes fluttered to her lips, then added one last line, softer, teasing enough to take the edge from the demand,
And Director, if that is the case then… perhaps it’s best we never see each other again, though I admit I’d find that a dreadful shame, you are an excellent dance partner after all.
— Eira Mothma
Almost immediately, the pad chimed with an incoming reply.
Orson: It would indeed be a dreadful shame to never dance with you again. Tell me where and when you would like us to meet, and I will make it so.
Eira's lips curved faintly, despite herself. Her fingers hovered over the keys as she moved to sit cross-legged on the bed, back against the headboard, and the soft fabric of her blanket as she pulled it up and over her knees.
Eira: Late night coffee tomorrow? There’s a café on the upper level, Sun and Stone. It’s quiet. One of my favorites.
Orson: Say twenty-one hundred standard hours.
She smiled at the efficiency of it. No hesitation. No questions. Just, yes. Eira hesitated for a moment, thumbs lingering on the screen before typing again.
Eira: What are you doing right now?
There was a pause, and her stomach fluttered with the smallest flicker of nerves. Too forward? Too strange?
Orson: I’m not sure what you mean.
She rolled her eyes, half-smiling.
Eira: Right this moment. Are you at home? Eating? Plotting your next move? What is the great Director Krennic doing when he’s not making reckless offers to unsuspecting students?
Orson: Finishing a report that bores me more than I care to admit. And now, answering you, which I find far more engaging. And it was not a reckless offer.
She bit her lip, a quiet laugh escaping.
Eira: That sounds much better than my evening. I skipped dinner.
As she waited for his response, her stomach gave a low, bitter twist, half hunger, half anxiety.
Orson: A reckless choice. I should scold you.
She tilted her head, amused.
Eira: You sound like you care.
Orson: Perhaps I do.
That one made her breath catch. Just slightly. She adjusted the blanket over her legs, the pad warm in her hands.
Eira: Where did you study? Surely not at some dreary academy.
Orson: I was placed in the Futures Program. Carida first, it was unbearable. Then Coruscant. Slightly less so. Both gave me what I needed. Discipline. Reach. Leverage.
Eira: And your first posting?
Orson: A mining outpost on Wecacoe. All mud and metal. I spent most of my time covered in dust and hatred. But it taught me what ambition is worth, and what it costs.
Eira: Where were you born?
Orson: Lexrul. A dull planet. I left it behind the first moment I could. I’ve never gone back.
Eira: You make it sound as though you were destined to escape it.
She watched the screen, her finger absently brushing along the edge of the device.
Orson: I was. And perhaps you are too.
Her hands stilled. The words sat heavy in her chest—heavier than she’d expected. She didn’t know what to say to that. So instead, she typed something else. Something smaller.
Eira: What did you want to be, before you became all of… this?
The response took longer this time.
Orson: Important. That was all.
She exhaled slowly, heart thudding. The honesty surprised her. The simplicity cut deeper than any ambition-laced speech he might have given.
Eira: I wanted to be a musician, once upon a time. I used to play the cello.
Orson: Why did you stop?
Eira hesitated, her fingers hovering over the keys. For a moment, she considered a simpler answer. But something about the quiet tone of his earlier message, the way he’d admitted he simply wanted to be important, made her type the truth instead.
Eira: My teacher was cruel and I was young. Any mistake was met with ridicule and belittlement. I started digging my knuckles into the wood of the chair when he would yell at me. Then my nails into my palms to keep from screaming out at him. The more I hurt, the worse I played. The worse I played, the more I hurt. Eventually, my hands just… ached all the time. So I stopped playing, but the pain in exchange for silence did not.
The reply didn’t come right away. She could imagine him reading it, perhaps surprised. Perhaps not.
Then…
Orson: You deserved better than that. A shame. I imagine you played beautifully.
She didn’t reply immediately. Her fingers lingered over the screen, tracing the edge of the device as if unsure whether to keep going.
Eira: Maybe I did. But it doesn’t matter now. I haven’t touched a cello in years. It feels like that memory belongs to someone else.
Orson: A younger version of yourself, perhaps. Perhaps one day, you’ll decide this version of you has no more need to fear the short sightedness of someone who does not see your potential.
She smiled faintly, unsure whether to take it as praise or a warning.
Eira: And what about you, Director? Was there ever something you gave up? Something or someone you loved that didn’t survive the ambition you seek?
Orson: A few things. Most of them however are not worth mourning. One or two… perhaps. But none of them were people.
The message made her blink. There was a shadow there, something unspoken. It struck her more than it should have.
She hesitated, then typed, deliberately casual.
Eira: So there’s no secret wife hidden away in a tower somewhere, sighing at the stars and waiting for her brooding warlord of a husband to come home?
She nearly erased it. Nearly.
But she didn’t.
Orson: No tower. No sighing. No wife.
A beat.
Orson: Would that have disappointed you, Miss Mothma?
Her cheeks flushed. She didn’t answer that.
Instead.
Eira: I’m too tired to be teased, Director.
Orson: Then sleep. We’ll talk tomorrow.
Eira: Goodnight.
Orson: Goodnight, Eira.
The use of her first name lingered on the screen long after the message ended. She held the pad against her chest for a moment before setting it aside, her heart far too awake for how late it had become.
Synopsis: In a galaxy caught between silence and rebellion, Eira Mothma, a gifted student, catches the attention of Director Krennic. As curiosity and control collide, so does the tension between duty, desire, and the fate of a secret weapon.
🔹 Pairing: Director Krennic / OC (Eira Mothma) (Female)
🔹 Rating: Mature (no explicit content)
🔹 Word Count: 4015
Note: I really hope I didn't mess anything up lol. I ended up rewriting this whole chapter as something just wasn't feeling right. I hope you all enjoy ❤️
The moment her fingers touched his, the music shifted. As if the orchestra itself had been waiting for them.
Orson’s hand closed around hers with the precision of a man who had calculated the space between them down to the breath. His touch was warm despite the glove, steady, as though there was nothing uncertain in what he was doing. He turned her hand gently, placed his other at the small of her back, and began to move.
The room swelled and contracted at once.
Eyes followed. Conversations flickered and died again. But it wasn’t him they were staring at. It was her.
Eira’s pulse fluttered at the base of her throat. The first steps were easy, measured, practiced. But the awareness of every stare clawed its way up her spine. The heat of attention was a living thing, slipping beneath her skin. She had never drawn this kind of focus. Never invited it. And now, wrapped in black silk and shadowed by a man who did not know how to go unnoticed, she was at the center of the storm.
Her gaze flicked instinctively toward the perimeter, toward the senators whispering behind their glasses, the aides elbowing one another, the admirals with narrowed eyes. Her eyes locking with Mon's before Orson’s hand on her back tightened, just slightly.
"Don’t look at them," he said, low in her ear. "They’ve never seen anything like you, and it frightens them. Let them be frightened."
Her breath caught at his nearness, at the weight of his voice cutting through the noise. It should have felt like control. Possession. But it didn’t. It felt like defiance, offered in solidarity.
She looked at him. Really looked. His eyes, blue and razor-sharp, were on her and only her. Not scanning the room. Not searching for opportunity.
Just her.
And for reasons she didn’t want to name, that made her chest tighten.
He dipped her, slowly, deliberately. Not for show, but for control, as if reminding her of gravity. His hand never left her spine. When he pulled her back up, their faces hovered too close for propriety, his breath brushing her cheek. Still in the rise of the motion, Eira let her free hand slide down the length of his arm instead, a subtle, intimate gesture that spoke not of submission, but of trust. Then, as the next turn came, she stepped in a breath closer than needed, her body brushing against his with deliberate softness. Not enough to scandalize, but enough to answer the dare in his eyes. Her head tipped slightly as they turned, the curve of her shoulder aligning with the line of his chest, a silent admission that she was no longer afraid to be seen this way. A flicker of confidence sparked through her, unfamiliar but intoxicating.
"There you are," he murmured, voice low as their steps matched in time. "I was beginning to think you might disappear again."
Eira let her fingers drift slowly up the collar of his jacket before settling lightly against his shoulder, her touch barely there, yet unmistakably intimate. "Would it make you happier if I did?" she asked, her voice soft, but steady.
"Never," he said, the word landing like a truth he had never needed to think twice about.
They turned once more through the flow of dancers, the world narrowing to the arc of the floor and the heat between them. Eira tilted her head just enough to study him through her lashes. "Good because, I don’t want to ever be that girl scared, in the back of a transport ever again, and thank you," she said quietly, just above the hush of the violins. "For the dress."
Orson’s gaze sharpened, but not with arrogance. There was something warmer beneath it. Approval, maybe. Or satisfaction. "You wear it better than I ever imagined."
She swallowed, the words finding a home somewhere beneath her ribs. "I almost didn’t."
"But you did." He guided her into another slow turn, their feet gliding with an ease that belied the tension in the air. "And the moment you walked through those doors, every person here knew they would remember you. You chose to be unforgettable, Eira. And you were. You are."
She smiled at him, an expression both coy and real. "What brings you to this particular party tonight, Director?"
He didn’t hesitate. "You."
Her brows lifted slightly.
Orson’s expression remained composed, but the corners of his mouth curved faintly. "I didn’t think Senator Mothma would let me anywhere near you again. I thought it best to… take advantage of the opportunity provided to me."
"Bold of you," she said.
"How else was I to get a moment alone with you?"
She arched a brow. "And why would you want that, Director?"
"Because," he said, voice lowering as he guided her into another graceful step, "I have a proposition for you."
The final notes of the waltz rang out in a shimmer of strings. For a moment, the world seemed to hold its breath. They stopped moving, but neither stepped away.
Then, a new melody began.
Softer. Slower. More intimate.
Neither of them spoke as it started. Orson’s hand remained steady at the small of her back. Eira’s palm drifted against the fabric of his uniform, just over his heart. And without a word, they began to move again, closer now, the space between them folding like paper.
She glanced up at him, her voice quieter now, drawn into the intimacy of the moment. "What kind of proposition?"
This time, he didn’t smile. His expression shifted into something more serious, intense, but not unkind. “I want your help,” he said simply. “No, I need it. Galen Erso’s team has hit another wall. Their energy models are failing again. We’ve spent months throwing simulations, resources, and some of the brightest minds in the galaxy at the problem. Nothing has worked.”
Eira held his gaze, her brows faintly drawn.
“We're behind schedule,” Orson continued, his voice low, meant only for her. “Far enough that the timeline I presented to the Emperor is slipping. I don’t need another committee of engineers offering the same solution from different angles. I need someone with perspective. Someone who already sees patterns others don’t. Someone who’s already done what my best minds couldn’t.”
His fingers tightened slightly at her back as they turned, guiding her through a narrow pass between couples. The pressure of his touch wasn’t demanding, but it wasn’t tentative either.
“I believe that person is you,” he said. “And I don’t say that lightly.”
Her heart was pounding now, whether from the dance or the way his voice wrapped around her name, she couldn’t tell. She held herself still, studying him. There was no smirk, no charm in his tone now. Only certainty. And something quieter beneath it.
"I’m not going to be able to solve something your team couldn’t," she said at last, softly.
"You already have,” he replied. “That problem I distributed to the university, the one you solved in minutes? It was one of ours. A design failure we spent half a year untangling. You solved it as if it were routine."
Eira blinked, her mouth parting slightly. “I’m a student.”
“Which is irrelevant. You’re capable. I’ve seen the proof.”
"I have classes. A program to finish. I can’t just walk out of my life because you ask nicely."
Orson’s hand guided her through a tighter step, his chest brushing against hers as they moved. His voice dipped lower, his breath warm against her ear.
“I could see to it you graduate immediately. Full honors. Top of your class. A single transmission and it's done.”
Her breath caught. “You’re joking.”
He pulled back just enough to meet her eyes. “I’m not.”
She studied him, suspicion curling in her stomach. “You can’t do that.”
“I can. And I would. I’ve been granted full discretionary power to bring this project to completion, by whatever means necessary.” He smiled faintly. “Academic protocol means very little to me.”
She faltered, her step stuttering slightly beneath the smooth rhythm. His hand at her back held her steady. She looked down at his chest, then back up again, her mind spiraling, Mon’s disapproval, her studies, the implications of stepping so close to the center of the Empire’s power.
“I don’t expect an answer tonight,” he said, his voice like velvet over steel. “In fact, I’d be disappointed if you gave one. Think about it. Make your demands. If you help me achieve my dream…”
He leaned in slowly, deliberately, lips hovering just beside her ear, his breath brushing her skin like a whispered dare.
“…then I’ll see to it you find your own.”
The music shifted.
From the elegant, staccato steps of the previous piece, a slower melody began to unfold, strings first, swelling with rich, aching chords, followed by the soft rhythm of a piano, patient and romantic. The air in the grand hall changed with it, softening. It was the kind of music that invited closeness, that quieted conversation and stilled hands over glasses. That made couples step nearer, voices lowering to whispers. It was not a waltz for display, it was for indulgence.
And without a word, Orson Krennic didn’t release her. Instead, he shifted their hold, drawing Eira just slightly closer. His hand at her back slid in to rest more firmly along the curve of her spine, the other maintaining their joined grasp, gloved fingers enclosing hers.
Eira hesitated for only a moment.
Then she stayed.
The room seemed to fade. The light turned warm and low. Around them, the gala blurred into vague movement and indistinct color, a painting left in water. She could feel her breath more clearly than any music, feel the subtle shift of fabric against fabric as his hand moved ever so slightly lower along her back, not improper, not yet, but enough to draw a sharp awareness through her.
He was watching her.
And she was watching him.
“You didn’t have to dance with me just to offer me a job,” she said, voice light but edged, a flicker of dry amusement in her expression.
“Would you rather I had sent a stormtropper to deliver a datapad?” he asked, mouth curling at the corner.
She tilted her head. “That might have felt more appropriate. Less... theatrical.”
“And yet, here you are,” he said, his gloved hand shifting slightly at her back. “Letting me continue to spin you across a ballroom.”
“For someone who claims to be a man of logic, you certainly lean into spectacle,” she countered.
He chuckled, quiet and dark. “Only when the stakes are high.”
“And I’m a stake, am I?”
“You’re something far more interesting than that,” he said, tone smoothing into something silkier.
She felt her breath catch as his fingers subtly traced along the line of her waist.
She didn’t pull away.
“I suppose I should be flattered,” she murmured.
“You should,” he said simply, and the way he looked at her then made her feel as though the rest of the room had vanished entirely. He leaned in, just slightly, and in a voice low enough that it was meant only for her, he added, “I do not tend to give my attention to anything but my work,” he murmured, his eyes lingering on her with unmistakable intent. “But tonight, you’ve made that… difficult.”
Her breath hitched. A second too late, she realized how the question lingered, how close they had become, how his hand now rested not at her back, but just above the slope of her hip.
“I—” she faltered, words slipping away beneath the weight of his gaze.
His eyes were on her, fixed and searching, no longer guarded by distance or calculation. And then, just for a moment, they flicked downward.
To her mouth.
Her heart skipped.
She felt it in the stillness between them, in the way the music seemed to dim against the pulse in her ears. His lashes fluttered, barely perceptible, before he drew his gaze back to hers. But the shift had already happened. The current had changed.
His fingers flexed slightly on her hip before they slid, gliding with slow precision along the silk of her dress. Eira felt the heat of his touch through the fabric of her dress and the leather of his gloves, the way the pressure changed as he reached the point just above the curve of her backside. The sensation sent a rush through her chest, her breath stalling as her entire body tensed, not in fear, but in startled awareness. It was a claiming touch, quiet and deliberate, and it made her feel as though every inch of her skin now existed solely to register him.
Eira drew in a slow breath, willing her heart to steady. Her pulse thundered in her throat, but she forced her spine to straighten, lifting her chin as if she hadn't just come undone under his hand.
"And how ever could I be making that difficult, Director?" she asked, her voice teasing, but low and laced with challenge. Her lips curved up faintly.
He didn’t answer right away.
Instead, his eyes raked over her with deliberate slowness, pausing at the flush just beginning to rise in her cheeks, then drifting lower, as if committing every detail of her to memory. When they returned to meet her eyes again, his smirk was subtle but unmistakable.
His hand moved again, just slightly, his thumb sweeping a slow arc against her hip through the silk.
“How do you make that difficult?” he murmured, his gaze lingering as though he’d personally taken the measurements. “That dress, every time you breathe, it moves with you.”
His eyes lifted to her cheeks, where the flush had deepened just slightly. “The color of it suits you. Brings out the blush in your cheeks.”
His thumb pressed lightly against her hip again, slow, deliberate.
“The way your breath catches when I moved my hand,” he added in a voice that curled against her skin like smoke. “You hide it all very well, but not from me.”
He leaned in, voice slipping to a whisper, warm and edged with something far too intimate for a ballroom filled with senators.
“And I find all of that... very distracting.”
Their bodies moved in tandem, slow and fluid, as if the music played only for them now. He shifted his hand once more, not lower this time, but firmer, his touch an anchor, meant to remind her that he was real and present and watching.
“Tell me,” he said softly, his breath brushing the edge of her ear, “do you always react to your superiors like this?”
Eira let out a quiet laugh, the sound low and velvety. She tilted her head just enough to bring her lips near his jawline, not touching, but close.
“No,” she murmured, voice silk over steel. “But then tonight you are not my superior, seeing as how I have not accepted your offer."
His grip on her tightened slightly, just enough for her to feel the shift in tension between them, not a warning, not possessive, but grounding. As if her words had struck something in him and he needed to remind her she hadn't won yet.
Then he leaned in, closer than ever, his hand drawing her flush against him with a slow, possessive pull. The fingers at her hip pressed into silk and bone, anchoring her to him as his lips brushed her ear, not near, not beside, but on, a deliberate touch that made her toes curl in her shoes.
"You haven't accepted it yet," he whispered, the words sliding hot and low against the shell of her ear. "But we both know you will."
She shivered, and he felt it.
The final swell of strings hovered in the air, the music stretching toward its close like a held breath. Around them, couples began to slow, movement gently ebbing as the last few notes shimmered through the grand hall.
The music faded into silence, giving way to the distant murmur of returning conversation and the gentle clink of glassware. A new melody began to bloom from the orchestra pit, livelier, lighter, but Eira and Orson remained motionless in the quiet space between songs.
His hand still rested against her. Her fingers still curled lightly around his. Neither of them moved to step away.
They stared at each other, the air between them still electric, still alive with everything that hadn’t been said aloud.
Then, a hand tapped Orson lightly on the shoulder.
“Mind if I cut in?”
The voice was young, earnest, and utterly oblivious.
Eira blinked, turning just slightly to see a fresh-faced Imperial officer, uniform crisp, smile polite, standing at their side. He glanced between them with no recognition of what he’d interrupted, no idea who he had just touched.
Orson didn’t speak.
So Eira did, "of course."
The young officer took her hand, far too light and impersonal in comparison. Eira allowed it, her body still humming with heat that didn’t belong to this man.
Orson stepped back with a grace that made the moment feel rehearsed. But his eyes didn’t leave her.
He disappeared into the edge of the crowd, his gaze tracking her every step, until the other dancers swallowed her from his view.
Mon Mothma appeared at his side without warning, her presence a sharp blade wrapped in silk. Her posture was regal, her voice low, and her smile so perfectly composed it was almost cruel.
"Director Krennic," she said smoothly. "That was quite a performance."
Orson didn’t look at her at first. He kept his gaze on Eira, now moving stiffly in the young officer’s hold. When he did turn, it was with the calm of someone who expected to be approached.
"Senator Mothma," he replied, tone light, eyes amused. "You’ve raised the most remarkable young woman."
Her smile tightened, just a fraction. "She’s not meant for this."
"No," he agreed. "She’s meant for so much more."
"You only see her as a tool to achieve your goals. I see her as a daughter that I love, and care about."
"I see her as a force the galaxy won’t know how to contain."
"And you intend to let it consume her, don’t you?"
"No," he said, his voice softening but not retreating. "I intend to let her choose."
Mon stepped slightly closer, lowering her voice. "If you turn her into another cog in your machine, if you make her complicit in whatever it is you’re up to—"
"Then she’ll do so as someone who chose to be brilliant," Orson cut in, his smile thin. "Not someone hidden in your shadow."
Their gazes locked like drawn weapons.
Mon’s next words came like ice. "If you hurt her—"
"Then you’ll what? Vote me out of favor? Leak a memo?"
She smiled, sharp and deadly. "I’ll burn your legacy to the ground, Orson. Brick by brick."
He leaned slightly closer, lowering his voice to match hers. "Then you’d better start gathering your matches, Senator."
⁘⁘⁘⁘⁘
Eira’s dance ended with a practiced smile and a polite nod. The young officer thanked her, nervous, apologetic, but she had already begun to turn before the music stopped. She stepped away before another partner could approach.
Across the ballroom, she saw him.
Luthen Rael.
He stood just beyond the outermost edge of the crowd, tucked into the shadows between two marble columns, watching her with that unreadable calm that made her stomach twist. He didn’t move. Didn’t signal. He simply waited.
Eira’s heart thudded once, then steadied. She smoothed a hand down the front of her dress, exhaled slowly, and made her way across the floor.
She plucked a glass filled with something pink from a passing tray as she moved, letting it serve as armor. Casual. Controlled. Her heels clicked softly on the polished stone, each step deliberate. She could still feel the ghost of Orson’s hand at her back, the heat of his breath at her ear, but she pushed it down, buried it deep.
This was a different kind of dance she was about to do, with different steps and a different partner.
She approached without hesitation, slowing only as she came within arm's reach.
"You’ve been watching me," she said lightly, taking a slow sip of the drink in her hand.
Luthen’s expression didn’t change. But his eyes, sharp and always calculating, lingered on her face a moment longer than necessary.
"Hard not to," he said. "Especially with a display like that."
Eira lifted a brow.
"The dancing," he added. "You looked comfortable. Especially with a certain Director."
She gave a quiet laugh, soft but wry. "I hope that was satisfactory, then. I imagine you were watching closely."
Luthen arched a brow.
Eira took another sip of her drink, her tone lighter now, almost smug. "I believe I could manage another round, too. My partner seemed quite keen."
That earned her the faintest twitch of amusement at the corner of Luthen's mouth, not approval exactly, but interest. She let the silence linger, letting him decide how much of that had been for his benefit.
"I was thinking I might stop by your shop tomorrow," she began, lowering her voice just slightly, but she didn’t finish.
A presence moved in at her side, calm and unmistakable.
“Miss Mothma,” came Orson’s voice, smooth as silk. “Forgive me, I didn’t mean to interrupt. Please continue."
Luthen's expression barely flickered, but Eira could feel the shift in the air between them, sharp and immediate.
She turned toward Krennic, the glass still poised in her hand, mask of composure and a smile on her face. "Director Krennic, let me introduce you to Luthen Rael. He runs the quaintest little antiques shop."
"Pleasure." Orson spoke with a tight and forced smile.
"The pleasure is all mine, Director." Luthen spoke with a sweeping wave of his arms. "Miss Mothma was just reminding me of her need for a wedding gift for her sister."
Mon’s voice cut through the exchange, smooth and pointed as she approached. "Director Krennic," she said with a polite nod, "I thought I had made myself clear?"
"Mother, how nice of you to join us." Eira greeted before slipping her hand around Orson’s bicep with calm familiarity, the motion fluid and instinctive. Mon’s eyes went wide for a fraction of a second.
Orson glanced down, then covered her hand with his own. The gesture was slow, deliberate, possessive without apology. He didn’t look at Mon right away, he looked at Eira, a smile curling at the corner, something smug and indulgent behind his eyes. Then, as if just now registering the Senator’s presence, he turned with a smooth pivot.
"Ah, Senator Mothma. I hear congratulations are in order."
Mon's expression didn't falter. "Yes. My youngest daughter is recently engaged."
"A fortunate man," Orson said, lifting his glass. "To earn the trust of someone raised by you."
"How strange," Mon replied, her tone laced with practiced calm. "To hear you speak of anything other than pleading for budget extensions."
Orson's head tilted, amusement flickering in his eyes. "Even I require some... diversion, from time to time."
"Pity," Mon murmured, sipping from her glass. "I had assumed your distractions were less sentimental."
"Only when sentiment proves dull," he countered smoothly.
She turned slightly toward Eira now, though her eyes remained on Orson. "And how long before you grow bored of this sentiment, Director?"
"Can’t I enjoy brilliance when it’s in front of me?"
Luthen let the moment breathe, then turned slightly toward Eira.
"I believe I may have just acquired a piece you'd appreciate," he said, calm and measured. "If you're free, you should stop by tomorrow. Why don’t you come by first thing, and we can see if it is to your liking?"
Eira nodded slowly. "I'd love that."
Then Orson, still holding her hand over his arm, tilted his head toward her with that same smug edge.
Synopsis: In a galaxy caught between silence and rebellion, Eira Mothma, a gifted student, catches the attention of Director Krennic. As curiosity and control collide, so does the tension between duty, desire, and the fate of a secret weapon.
🔹 Pairing: Director Krennic / OC (Eira Mothma) (Female)
🔹 Rating: Mature (no explicit content)
🔹 Word Count: 3213
Silence had returned in the week since Eira has last seen Orson Krennic.
Gone were the stormtroopers in the halls. Gone were the diverted corridors, the flicker of surveillance drones hanging too long at the edges of vision. Even the glances from her classmates, once sharp with gossip and suspicion, had dulled again to disinterest. The university pulsed forward as if nothing had ever happened. As if the missing assignments, the locked shuttle, the hand on her wrist, all of it, had been a fever dream.
But Eira knew better.
She stood beneath the archway of the main quad, bag slung over her shoulder, the hem of her coat shifting in the breeze. The fountain ahead gurgled softly. Students passed in clusters, talking, laughing, too loud. The sky dome overhead projected a pale morning light with streaks of artificial cloud cover. Too perfect. Too unchanged.
And yet the stillness of it scraped at her. Something inside her flinched at how easily the world had smoothed itself back into place. As if her panic had been a misstep. As if she was the problem.
Her steps echoed against polished stone as she walked, alone, toward her lecture hall. The building loomed ahead, stately and precise, with old-world ornamentation that tried to convince students they were learning in a place that mattered. She passed the same rust-streaked banner hanging from the column. The same lopsided trash bin that had been there for months. The same chipped corner tile by the side door that she used to count, absently, while waiting for her lectures to begin.
Everything was as it had been.
Except for her.
She didn’t go straight to her seat. Instead, she stood in the back of the hall, letting her eyes adjust to the dim. The platform at the front was already lit, her professor’s voice murmuring through early announcements. Not her old professor, he’d been removed days after the gala. Replaced without ceremony, and no one had truly seen the wrongness in that.
Eira had. Quietly. To herself.
And now the man standing at the lectern wore the change like a badge. Pale-eyed. Stern. Too rigid. He didn’t look at her, but she could feel it, the awareness of her presence just beneath his formal tone, the fact that he was still watching.
She moved to a seat in the upper tier. Sat. Listened. Took notes she didn’t really need, nor care about anymore.
And all the while…
“You could burn if you wanted.”
The words returned again, just as they had in the mirror the night after the dress shop. As they had in the quiet ride home after. As they had, uninvited, in the pause between sleep and waking all week long.
Not you should burn — not a demand, not an order. You could.
A possibility. A key, offered with maddening certainty.
Eira’s fingers curled around the stylus in her palm. As her mind thought back to the shuttle, to the feeling of being trapped and for the first time since that day, she wasn’t afraid. Not exactly. What she felt was sharper than fear. A kind of hunger. For something else. Something more than scripted lectures and careful steps and neutral smiles.
She wanted to know things. She wanted to understand the world behind the walls. The quiet wars, the whispered plans, the truth beneath the calm. She wanted to choose her own fate, even if it meant stepping into the fire.
Because the quiet she’d returned to?
It was stifling. It was loud. And she hated it more than anything.
And Orson Krennic, for all his arrogance and cruelty, had said something no one else ever had.
“I wish I preferred you extinguished.”
Eira’s gaze sharpened. The lecture blurred around her. And the first time in her academic career, she didn’t care about the material on the screen.
Coruscant – Mothma Residence – Evening
The soft lights flickered on as the door closed behind her with a gentle hiss.
Eira stood still in the foyer for a moment, letting the silence settle.
It used to feel like peace, this quiet. Clean floors, filtered air, the faint scent of polished wood and blooming incense from the conservatory down the hall. All signs of a home that ran like a machine—flawless, ordered, untouched.
But now the silence grated.
It wasn’t peace. It was absence.
Absence of questions. Absence of truth. Absence of her.
She moved up the stairs slowly, her boots making the only sound in the house. No aides. No Mon. No voices or distant newsfeeds humming from the next room. Just the hollow, echoing quiet of a place that had always been a little too perfect.
By the time she reached her bedroom, she was already tugging at the strap of her satchel, her shoulders tight from the weight of the day. She kicked off her shoes at the door, half expecting to hear Mon call from somewhere, not to ask how she was, but to remind her about protocol, or posture, or how she might want to wear her hair for whatever function loomed next.
But there was nothing.
Eira turned toward the center of her room—
And stopped.
Boxes.
At least a dozen of them, arranged like a private boutique had exploded across her bed. Multi-coloured packaging tied with satin ribbons, all bearing the familiar golden seal of Mon’s preferred designer. One dress box had been left open, pale fabric spilling over its edge like a puddle of light.
A note was balanced atop in Mon’s familiar, slanted script:
Formal engagement Tomorrow. Senator Bel Vorn’s estate. Attendance is mandatory. Please choose whatever feels most appropriate. I’ll expect to have you meet me there.
She read it twice, then dropped it back onto the box without reaction.
Of course. An event. Another stage. Another costume.
Eira looked between the towers of packaging and moved toward the stack at the end, where something looked out of place. Larger. Sharper. A single box, black, wrapped in ribbon and her dressers familiar seal.
But it didn’t belong.
Her fingers hovered over the lid, her pulse ticking a little faster now, and then, slowly she lifted it open.
Inside was fabric. Midnight-dark. Smoother than silk, but heavier. A gown, clearly tailored to her measurements. Off-shoulder. Revealing, but elegant. Sculpted. Bold without being garish. And beneath it, nestled in deep velvet, a matching set of earrings and a simple choker, obsidian and silver.
Resting on top, between the folds of cloth, was a single blood-red flower. A flower that tugged at a distant memory in her mind. The flash of her parents moving in front of her, outside, in a field of flowers. The image disappeared as quickly as it came, before Eira’s mind came back to what was in front of her.
A card. She picked it up slowly, delicately as if it might hurt her if she moved too fast.
You move as if unaware of what you do to a room. As if the heat beneath your skin isn’t already unraveling the air around you.
They will watch you, if you let them. Helpless to explain why they can't look away.
But I will know. Because I’ve seen what you could become, if you ever stopped holding back.
You were never meant to be small.
You were meant to burn.
– Orson
Her breath left her, not sharply, not in shock, but in a quiet, simmering exhale that made the room feel warmer than before. It wasn’t fear she felt. Or anger. Not exactly. It was something harder to name. Dread, maybe. Or heat. Or the unmistakable weight of being noticed.
He had no right. But he’d sent it anyway.
And worse… she understood why.
The dresses Mon chose were meant to make her disappear. This one, this was a dare. A dare to be seen, and to be remembered.
What would Mon say, if she saw her in this?
What would the other senators say?
What would he say?
The question shouldn’t have mattered. But it did. It burned beneath her skin, not with shame, but with something she hadn’t let herself feel in weeks.
Curiosity, and the desire to be seen.
She lifted the dress from the box and turned to face the mirror. Held it up, just enough to see the outline, to see what it would do to her shape, to the girl who had been standing invisible in rooms for far too long.
The reflection staring back was unfamiliar. Stronger. Older. A version of herself not trained into silence. Someone unafraid of being remembered.
She didn’t try it on. Not yet, she felt like doing so would change her forever, and she wasn’t sure she was ready for that. At least not tonight. So instead she placed the dress carefully back into its box. Closed it and tucked it away with the others.
The flower found its way into a vase on her desk, and the card. The card she tucked into the pages of her favorite childhood fairytales. Somewhere it couldn’t be lost, and would not be found.
Coruscant – Grand Reception Hall, Upper Sector Gala Night
The air smelled like crystal wine and expensive silence.
Eira stepped out of the transport alone. No Mon at her side. No senator’s entourage to anchor her presence. Just the soft rustle of silk trailing behind her and the sound of her own heels tapping against polished stone.
The lights of the grand hall shimmered through the giant windows like stars held captive in chandeliers. Every surface reflected something, laughter, caution, calculation, and above it all, the music played something soft and imperial, a waltz that floated beneath conversation like a current pulling everything forward.
And then she entered.
For a second, only a second, the sound didn’t shift. The music didn’t falter. No one gasped or dropped a glass. But a pause settled. Barely perceptible, but real. The kind of shift that happened when people took note. When they didn’t know who someone was, but sensed they would need to learn.
The dress clung to her differently than anything she’d worn before. It didn’t try to hide her. It didn’t retreat. It dared to exist, a shade too dark, a cut too precise, just enough to suggest this wasn’t a senator’s daughter playing dress-up. This was someone who should be looked at.
She felt it then. That heat again. The one that had lived under her skin since the tailor’s shop, since his voice in her ear. You could burn if you wanted to.
And tonight, she was burning.
Eira crossed the marble floor with measured grace, each step deliberate, as if she belonged in this world, because perhaps she finally understood that she did. Or at least, she would not ask permission for it anymore.
Whispers followed. She didn’t have to hear them to know. Curious looks turned into speculative ones. Someone elbowed someone else. Names were exchanged in hushed tones. But she kept walking.
Until she stopped.
Because she felt it.
That particular kind of gravity she’d come to recognize.
Her eyes lifted.
He was already watching her.
Orson Krennic stood across the room, a glass in hand, half drank. His white uniform cut a sharp silhouette against the warm tones of the chamber, too stark, too commanding to be accidental. But he wasn’t talking. Wasn’t mingling. He wasn’t doing anything at all, except watching her.
He didn’t look away.
He didn’t try to hide that he had been watching.
And when their eyes locked, truly locked from across the room, Orson Krennic smiled.
Not the kind he would wear in strategy briefings or public appearances. Not his polished smirk or diplomatic facade she had seen before. No, this was something she was sure was rarer. Smaller. Private. It didn’t ask permission. It simply was, calm and unshaken, as if he had been waiting for this moment and now that it had come, the inevitability of it pleased him.
It wasn’t a challenge.
It was an invitation.
And the fire inside her, the one she had only just begun to claim as her own, sparked hotter beneath his gaze.
Eira’s breath caught. But she didn’t avert her eyes. Not this time. She held his stare, let it stretch between them like a drawn wire, taut and thrumming with something neither of them would name.
Let him see her.
Let him feel what he had lit.
Not because she owed him anything.
But because tonight, for the first time in her life, she didn’t want to vanish.
She wanted to burn.
And she wanted him to watch.
⁘⁘⁘⁘⁘
Mon Mothma stood near the fringe of the crowd, half-shielded by a column of cut crystal glasses arranged in a sparkling pyramid, her conversation with Luthen low and carefully bland, the kind of discussion rehearsed for any wandering ears. Nothing dangerous. Not in this room. Not tonight.
The music swelled as a new cluster of guests entered, drawing subtle attention toward the grand staircase. Mon turned only slightly, lifting her glass to her lips with studied disinterest.
Then she saw her.
The glass didn’t fall, Mon Mothma was far too disciplined for that, but her knuckles turned white against the stem, her breath caught mid-motion.
Eira stood at the edge of the mezzanine, poised in a gown that was unlike anything Mon had ever chosen for her. Deep violet-black silk with a subtle shimmer like starlight caught in oil, sleeveless, low cut, with a delicate structure that flattered and exposed in equal measure. Her hair, usually pinned or braided in demure fashion, was down, brushed smooth and parted to one side, the long chestnut waves soft against her shoulders, glinting faintly with gold as she moved.
And move she did, not like a student, not like a shadow bred for political correctness, but like someone meant to be seen. There was a power in her stance, a certainty that didn’t belong to the girl Mon had raised, not entirely. Her head was high, her back straight. She didn’t glance around in search of familiar faces. She didn’t hesitate.
She commanded the space.
Beside Mon, Luthen had gone still. She felt rather than saw him turn toward her, his voice just above the hum of the string quartet.
“What is she doing?”
Mon didn’t answer at first. Her lips parted slightly, just enough for a breath that didn’t seem to reach her lungs. She watched as Eira reached the ballroom floor and then stopped, not to greet anyone, but because something, someone, had caught her attention.
And then Mon saw who.
Across the room, flanked by a small group of lower officers who all seemed suddenly irrelevant, stood Director Orson Krennic. His cape perfectly draped, his posture relaxed, his white uniform luminous against the colours of the room. But his focus, his entire attention, was locked on Eira. And when she looked back at him, when she held that gaze, something in Mon’s chest went cold.
The look they shared didn’t belong in this place. In this setting, with these people.
It didn’t belong anywhere. Given who he is.
“Should I be worried?” Asked Luthen coldly.
“No,” Mon said, too quickly. Too sharply. Her voice a little too loud for the space between them. She caught herself and softened, added, “No. It’s only a fascination with her. He will move on soon enough when he inevitably leaves Coruscant.”
Luthen raised an eyebrow.
Mon didn’t explain any further.
She couldn’t. Not when she wasn’t sure what she was witnessing.
Orson Krennic did not look away.
Even as conversation resumed around him, as glasses clinked and music climbed through another waltz, his gaze remained fixed on her. He raised his drink to his lips with slow precision, finished it, and set it down on a passing tray without glancing at the server. Then he moved.
Not abruptly. Not with fanfare. But with the quiet confidence of a man who had always known exactly where he was going.
⁘⁘⁘⁘⁘
Eira felt it first in the change of the room. The subtle hush that followed him. The way people shifted, parted, tracked his movement with polite curiosity edged in wariness. He passed admirals and senators, military aides and economic dignitaries, without so much as a nod. They faded behind him like background noise. Like they didn’t matter.
Because they didn’t.
Not to him.
Not right now.
Her pulse skipped, then quickened. She had known he would come to her, had known it from the moment their eyes met, but the reality of his approach sent a flush creeping up her neck all the same. She could feel it, the attention, the weight of dozens of glances turning her way, of people drawing silent lines between them.
A student. A senator’s daughter. And Director Orson Krennic.
Her fingers curled against the silk at her side.
When he stopped before her, he didn’t speak at first. He simply looked at her. His expression was calm, unreadable, but something shifted behind his eyes. A flicker of private satisfaction. Not smug. Not victorious. Just quiet confirmation of a hypothesis proven true.
Then, with a grace that seemed almost at odds with the severity of his uniform, he bowed. Not deeply. Just enough. A single measured gesture that acknowledged her presence in full. Not as a child. Not as a tool. But as an equal.
Eira’s heart slammed once in her chest.
The string quartet faded to a new measure. Slower now. More intimate.
The world around them seemed to narrow to a point.
“You look beautiful,” he said at last, his voice low and smooth, the syllables meant for her alone.
Eira blinked, steadying herself against the heat blooming along her collarbones. She didn’t look away, didn’t flinch from the weight of his gaze. “I didn’t wear it for you,” she said, her tone even, but soft.
Orson’s smile returned, not the gleaming kind he offered in courtrooms or command briefings, but the smaller one, the real one. The one she now recognized as genuine. “Good,” he replied, the word rich with something that almost felt like pride. “I wouldn’t have wanted you to.”
The distance between them thrummed with potential, like a wire drawn too tight, like the air before a storm. He saw her.
And not as a shadow, not as a pawn. But as something whole. Something becoming.
Then, without breaking eye contact, Orson extended his hand.
The invitation wasn’t dramatic. It wasn’t even especially formal. It was simple, offered palm-up, gloved fingers slightly curled, a question unspoken between them.
Eira stared at it.
Her heartbeat thudded in her ears.
She could feel the room again, the eyes, the questions, the speculation churning just below the surface of every watching guest. If she took his hand now, if she moved toward him, it wouldn’t be forgotten. Not by the senators. Not by the officers. Not by Mon.
And not by him.
This was the moment. The pivot. She felt it in her chest, in her blood. If she stepped into it, there would be no returning to who she had been.
He had said she could burn. And this, this was the match.
Synopsis: In a galaxy caught between silence and rebellion, Eira Mothma, a gifted student, catches the attention of Director Krennic. As curiosity and control collide, so does the tension between duty, desire, and the fate of a secret weapon.
🔹 Pairing: Director Krennic / OC (Eira Mothma) (Female)
🔹 Rating: Mature (no explicit content)
🔹 Word Count: 3220
The fabric whispered around Eira’s ankles like smoke as the tailor moved it around, nodding his approval before making a minor adjustment to the left shoulder seam. Eira stood still on the raised platform, spine straight, arms at her sides, her gaze fixed on the burnished mirrors lining the far wall. The gown she wore was pale, indistinct. It neither clashed nor caught the eye, and in that way, it was perfect. Perfect in the way Mon always ordered Eira’s dresses, unassuming, decorative, never dangerous.
Like old wallpaper.
“Miss Mothma,” the seamstress chirped. “Please lift your right arm.”
She did so absently, her gaze snagging on her palm. The crescent-shaped scabs were still angry, uneven. Her middle finger brushed across one without thinking. A faint sting bloomed. A week's worth of bruised silence, now healed over in brittle skin.
She should’ve seen it coming. Mon warned her. A man like Orson Krennic didn’t play games he couldn’t rig. Every delay she’d endured, the cold caf, the slow-loading pads, the missing assignments and scares, had been his doing. She’d grown complacent in her quiet little academic life, where the only things that ever truly mattered were formulas and deadlines. She had forgotten the galaxy didn’t play fair, that there was more out there.
The dress blurred into the pale marble beneath her, into the walls, into the very air. She hated how easily she disappeared. Hated that she’d been taught to do it so well, could vanish into the background like instinct.
And for what?
Was this who she was meant to be? A ghost in satin? A well-mannered shadow?
“Dreadful color.”
The voice was quiet, disapproving. And it wasn’t the seamstress.
The hairs along the back of her neck rose.
Eira turned sharply.
Director Krennic stood only a few feet away, arms clasped behind his back, his white uniform pristine even beneath the soft overhead lights. His gaze swept over her with cool, clinical disdain.
“That shade washes you out,” he said, stepping closer. “Hides you. Makes you forgettable. But I’ve seen that flicker of fire. I’ve seen what you look like when you're in control. When you're not trying to disappear.”
He gestured to the dress, then to her. “This isn’t it.”
He was in front of her now, close enough that the tailor behind her murmured a polite excuse and vanished behind the curtain without a sound.
As soon as the fabric fell shut, something inside her snapped.
The fury that had sat curled low in her chest all week rose fast, without warning, and before she’d even realized what she was doing, her hand struck out.
The slap cracked like a shot. His head barely turned from the force of it, but her palm stung like she’d hit stone. She pulled her arm back again, ready to do it again, harder this time, but he caught her wrist mid-air, swift and sure, his grip like steel beneath leather.
“You only get one.”
His voice was low. Not angry. Not mocking. Just... final.
And it made something twist, slow and sharp, behind her ribs. “You caged me like an animal.” She spoke through her teeth.
Her heart pounded. She could feel his breath now, barely, but it brushed her skin when he spoke. His hand still closed around her wrist, firm and unwavering. There was no pain, but she couldn’t move.
He turned her hand over, palm up.
Her fingers curled slightly on reflex and her arm tried to jerk back, but he didn’t let her pull away. His thumb moved slowly, across the scabs, the motion deliberate. Not kind. Not cruel. Just real.
“You do this,” he said quietly, “because it’s the only way you’ve been allowed to speak.”
Her breath hitched.
“Instead of being noticed, admired, respected… you’ve learned to bleed in silence.”
Her gaze darted up to his. “You don’t know me.”
His eyes didn’t leave hers. “Don’t I?”
His thumb shifted, tracing one of the deeper marks. The skin burned faintly under the pressure, fresh heat layered over old ache. Her muscles tightened, but she didn’t pull back this time.
“If you stopped hiding,” he murmured, “you wouldn’t need to break skin just to remember you exist.”
Her fingers twitched. He felt it. His grip adjusted only slightly, just enough to still her.
“You think I caged you,” he said. “But the bars were already there. I just turned on the lights so you could see them.”
A sharp exhale escaped her lips.
“I saw you be free once,” he said. “On that dance floor. When you looked at me without fear.”
Her hand trembled in his, but still she didn’t move. “That fire,” she said finally, low and flat, “you put it out.”
His expression didn’t shift. But his voice, when it came, was quieter.
“I never meant to extinguish it,” he said. “Only to test its strength. But perhaps I underestimated what it needed to survive, and for that I am sorry.”
There was a strange sincerity to the words. Almost an apology. Almost.
Eira laughed once, bitter. “Are you apologizing?”
He didn’t flinch. “Don’t get used to it.”
There was the faintest edge of something, humor, maybe, at the corner of his mouth. But his eyes never softened.
“You don’t need to apologize,” she said, straighter now. “You won. I broke. That’s what you wanted.”
Her voice was steady, even as her heart kept hammering against the inside of her chest.
“That night in the transport… I thought I was going to die.”
The words hung there, blunt and cold.
“I thought you were going to have me killed. Just to protect some formula, that you gave out, that you didn’t expect me to figure out. But now I understand, it wasn’t about the information. It wasn’t just about that. It was about fear, about showing me how I’m the bug beneath your boot.” The words came out with venom now.
Orson said nothing. But his grip never loosened.
“I’m not proud of what happened,” she said. “But I won’t lie about it either. You shattered something. And I still have nothing to give you. No rebellion. No plot against the republic. Just me. A girl you cornered for sport, because I am smarter than you gave me credit for.”
His gaze held hers. Steady. Unblinking. Something burned faintly behind it. “I wish I preferred you extinguished,” he said. “Contained.”
He took a breath.
“But I don’t.”
And that, not the words, but the truth in them, frightened her more than any surveillance or threat ever had.
For a moment, there was nothing but the low buzz of the ceiling light and the strange quiet that comes after a storm, when everything in the air has shifted but nothing yet knows what to do with it.
Eira stood still in the gown that washed her out, with his hand still loosely holding hers, as though some unseen current ran through both of them now, low and steady, pulsing beneath the surface.
Then, softly, almost gently, he asked, “Do you want to disappear forever, Eira Mothma?”
Her breath caught.
“Is that truly what you want? To blend, to obey, to take up no space at all? To be remembered only as someone who never made her mark?”
His voice wasn’t cruel. It wasn’t even sharp, it was almost sad. But it stripped her raw just the same.
“You’re a shadow in this room. Not because you have to be,” he said. “But because you were told that’s the safest way to exist. I’m offering you something else, a different way to live. You could burn if you wanted,” he said, almost to himself. “I think you could be capable of extraordinary things if you were set free.”
The words struck harder than a slap. Not cruel. Not condescending. But devastating in their clarity.
A truth she didn’t want him to see.
Then
The chime above the shop door sounded.
Orson didn’t look away, but Eira turned slightly, just enough to glimpse the figure stepping into the room, and felt the temperature shift before Mon even spoke.
“Director Krennic.”
Her voice was calm. Dangerously so. The kind of tone used in senate chambers when polite language barely concealed the blade beneath.
And in that moment Orson finally let her go.
Mon Mothma stepped fully into the tailor’s suite, her expression carved from stone and civility.
“I was under the impression,” she said, walking toward them slowly, “that your duties as Director of Advanced Energy Research did not include micromanaging the wardrobe selections of Coruscant’s university students.”
Orson didn’t flinch. If anything, he straightened, the hint of a smile rising like smoke on his lips.
“Senator Mothma,” he said. “You underestimate how many departments I now find myself involved in. It seems brilliance demands oversight from all corners.”
Eira felt Mon move to her side, a hand resting lightly on her back, not in possession, but in protection.
“And yet you still find time for theatrics,” Mon said. “How efficient of you.”
“I’m efficient by necessity,” Orson replied.
Mon’s eyes hardened. “Leave Eira out of your power games.”
“I’m not playing,” he said. “At least not with her.”
Eira’s throat tightened. The implication in his tone curled under her skin.
“You need to leave Director. You are not welcome here,” she said, crossing the room with slow, deliberate steps. “Not in this shop, and certainly not near my family.”
Orson opened his mouth, but Mon continued without pause. “After what you’ve subjected Eira to in the past several days, your surveillance, your games, your abduction of her transport, I’m curious what your superiors might think, should I bring this to the Judiciary Committee? Or to the Senate directly perhaps?”
Her eyes narrowed. “Because from where I stand, it looks remarkably like you’ve begun stalking a young academic under the guise of military interest.”
Orson smiled, the barest flicker of it. “Senator, I believe you’re being paranoid.”
“And I believe,” Mon countered, stepping closer, “you’re being reckless. If you think for one moment that I won’t use every legal and political resource at my disposal to protect this girl, then you’ve miscalculated again.”
Eira stood frozen between them, pulse hammering. She’d never seen Mon like this before, so perfectly poised, yet crackling with veiled fury.
“I suggest you leave,” Mon said, her voice now low and final. “Now.”
A tense silence stretched, and then, slowly, Orson inclined his head.
“Of course, Senator.” Orson gave a short bow. “Miss Mothma, I hope I have given you something to think about.”
Then he left.
And the moment he was gone, the air felt thinner, as though some pressure had been released.
But the imprint of his presence, and his words, remained. Loud and clear in Eira’s ears.
Coruscant – Krennic’s Private Transport
The door to his transport sealed with a hiss behind him, muting the chaos of Coruscant to a dull throb outside.
Orson didn’t speak. He didn’t move. He sat with one gloved hand curled against his jaw, fingers flexing in slow, unconscious rhythm, as if resisting the urge to strike, or to reach, or perhaps to hold. His gaze remained pinned to the blurred lights of the city as they streamed past, but his thoughts… his thoughts lagged behind.
In the fitting room. In the presence of a girl. In the quiet, searing protection of Mon Mothma’s fury.
When the transport docked at his private home, he rose without a word. The door slid open, and the stillness of his residence met him like a wall, vast, echoing, pristine.
No aides. No attendants. No voices to fill the silence.
Just the soft hiss of climate control and the cold whisper of boots across obsidian tile.
He peeled the gloves from his hands with mechanical precision, each finger tug deliberate, measured. They were tossed to the console table with less ceremony than usual. The cape followed, shrugged from his shoulders and thrown carelessly across the back of a chair, where the heavy fabric slid partway to the floor and was left.
The top of his uniform jacket was unzipped by a few inches before he paused, jaw tightening. He exhaled through his nose and turned toward the bar.
Two fingers of Eshan dark reserve, poured into a heavy crystal glass. The movement was practiced, elegant, without thought, but when the drink met his lips, he didn’t taste it. He swallowed, sharp and fast. Just enough to dull the restless heat still crawling beneath his collar.
He carried the glass into his office.
The door whispered open in response to his presence. Lights rose, pale and sterile, bathing the clean lines of the room in neutral tones. He didn’t sit right away. He stood for a long moment before the console, staring at the blank screen as if it might speak first.
Then he set the glass down, unemptied, and lowered himself into the chair.
His fingers moved across the keys with calm familiarity, but slower than usual, the grace of habit overtaken by something more deliberate. The screen flickered. A faint wash of static gave way to the soft monochrome glow of surveillance footage.
Interior Transport Camera – Eira Mothma File 27.1935A
She appeared like a held breath. Tucked into the corner of the seat, too small for the space, her shoulders drawn tight as wire. He watched her hesitate, fingers drifting toward the panel, then freezing. Her lips moved, faint, and though the feed had no sound, he could still hear the words she’d whispered.
“I don’t know where I am.”
She didn’t cry.
She didn’t scream.
She just sat there, still as stone, digging her nails into the flesh of her palm like it was the only way to keep from unraveling, like she had been so trained to show nothing that she couldn’t show her fear in the moment.
His head tilted slightly. He leaned in.
He had seen fear before. Seen people fall apart in far less threatening conditions, dignitaries who wept at closed doors, scientists who begged and broke at the first sign of failure. But this… this wasn’t collapse. It was endurance. Quiet and awful. Something inside him twinged as he watched her reaction to her circumstance.
He hadn’t expected this reaction from Eira or Himself.
Orson’s hand drifted back to the glass but didn’t lift it. His fingers only tightened around the crystal rim.
The next file blinked to life without him prompting it.
The footage was darker. Interior lighting only. She stood at a wide window, arms wrapped around herself, hair unbound. She didn’t move. Didn’t speak. Just stood there, silhouetted against the city light like some half-finished painting. The girl who had once glared at him in a university room, who had danced without flinching under the eye of the elite, now looked hollowed out by silence.
A shadow of a girl with fire in her.
Orson’s brow furrowed.
He watched her like someone trying to find a hidden pattern in a code, something misaligned, off-frequency. She had asked him once if he ate breakfast. Mocked him. Measured him. No one did that. Not to him.
And now she wouldn’t even move.
He sat back, slowly, as if unsure whether he was satisfied or disturbed.
This wasn’t what he meant to do. He had wanted to shake her. Just enough. Rattle the cage and see what fell loose, watch her break and spill her secrets. But instead, he looked at her.
Really looked.
And saw someone who had withstood more than she ever should have. Someone who hadn’t run, even when he’d made her feel hunted.
He reached forward and killed the feed with a flick of his wrist. The screen snapped to black.
Darkness spilled back over the office, swallowing the images, but not the feeling.
The drink remained untouched. His grip on the glass left a faint tremor in the reflection.
Still.
Alone.
With a name in his head that refused to leave.
Eira Mothma.
Coruscant – Mothma Residence, Eira’s Room - Late Evening
The door to Eira’s room closed with a soft hiss behind her, sealing the quiet in with her.
Eira stood motionless for a long time. Wondering, waiting to see if Mon would come to her. The ride back had been quiet, unnervingly so.
Looking around her room Eira began to see it as if for the first time. The room was beautiful. Coldly so. Towering ceilings framed in soft metallic trim. Golden fixtures catching low ambient light. Textiles folded with care, placed with symmetry. It was all too perfect. A portrait drawn in someone else’s hand. A life rendered in tones of ivory and gold that didn’t belong to her.
She didn’t belong here.
She drifted toward the vanity and lowered herself into the chair like her limbs had weight she hadn’t earned. Her hands came to rest on the surface, flat, tense, trembling slightly. Not with fear. Not anymore.
It was something else.
The restraint. The fury.
The imprint of his voice still reverberating in her skull.
“I wish I preferred you extinguished”
She could still feel the leather press of his glove against her skin, how measured the contact had been, how deliberate. But behind the words, beneath the practiced cadence, there’d been a flicker. Something she hadn’t imagined. A spark, almost like—
Recognition.
He had seen her. Truly seen her. Not as a student. Not as Mon’s daughter. Not as a quiet political orphan. But as something potent. Capable. Dangerous.
“…the bars were already there. I just turned on the lights so you could see them”
Her gaze dropped to her palm. Small scabbed crescents curled across the flesh, stark against her skin. She touched them lightly with her thumb. They stung.
But the pain felt honest.
More real than anything she’d felt in days.
It was a reflection. Not just of what had happened. But of who she had become since all this began, since the shadows turned suffocating, since her silence stopped being protection and became permission.
“I think you could be capable of extraordinary things if you were set free.’
She rose.
Walked to the tall window.
The city stretched out before her in a million blinking lights. Cold geometry. Infinite sprawl. She stared into it as if the shapes might answer her.
He was out there somewhere. Orson Krennic. Watching. Thinking. Plotting. She could feel it, not just suspicion now, not even calculation. Something heavier. Hungrier.
Mon had called him dangerous. She was right.
He would destroy her, if he could.
But silence had not saved her. Obedience had not protected her. Playing small did not mean survival, all of it had only made her easier to forget, easier to push, easier to trap.
And she wasn’t going to be trapped ever again.
She reached up, slid one pin from her hair. Then another. And another.
The strands fell around her shoulders, loose and uneven from the tight twist she’d kept them in. Her reflection in the glass shifted with it, softer, but rawer. More real. More hers.
“I won’t let anyone do that to me again,” she said quietly to her own reflection. “Not him. Not anyone.”
Notes: I am re-uploading as Tumblr nuked my old account. I am currently writing Part 2 ❤️
Synopsis: A new magical transfer comes to Sunnydale High, and ends up discovering a magical connection with our favorite Watcher. OC is 19+ (Not a Minor), Age Gap, Slow Burn-ish (with a little preview thrown in there during the Bandy Candy Episode). I'm really hoping that all my edits in my saved version of this were done properly lol, and I don't have a bunch of edit marks, duplicate paragraphs and such haha.
There is 20 chapters for Part 1 that I will be uploading.
🔹 Pairing: Rupert Giles / OC (Rose Murphy) (Female)
🔹 Rating: Mature (Part 1 gets a little spicy, but Part 2 will be where it is at lol)
🔹 Word Count: 2218
Catch Up: Previous Chapter
Chapter Five:
Rose’s eyes fluttered shut, the heat of the magic surging through her like wildfire. Even if they were open, time would have slipped away unnoticed. All she cared about was this moment, wrapped in Giles’s touch. The magic between them felt electric, alive, every brush of his fingers on her skin heightening the sensations.
She couldn’t judge how long they had been performing this spell together, but the intoxicating flow of magic left her breathless. She craved more, every moment a heady blur of heat and desire.
“Ripper, I want more,” Rose whispered, her voice low and husky, her head tipping back as a bead of sweat traced a slow path from her neck to her chest, disappearing beneath the loose button-down shirt she had pulled from the floor earlier.
Giles’s breath skimmed her skin, cool against the fire licking inside her. “Your wish is my command, Guinevere,” he murmured, his lips brushing her ear, sending shivers through her.
Rose gasped, her body quaking as his fingers traveled along her bare legs, his whispered Latin words weaving the spell tighter around them. The magic surged, sending waves of heat through her, and a soft moan escaped her lips as she arched against him. Her head fell back, resting against Giles’s shoulder, his body a solid wall of warmth behind her.
“That’s my little witch,” he whispered, his lips brushing against the delicate shell of her ear. His breath, hot and teasing, was followed by a gentle tug of his teeth on her earlobe.
Rose’s breath quickened, each exhale sharp as his hand moved higher, his touch igniting a trail of fire up her legs. In a swift movement, she pushed herself from his chest, turning in his arms to straddle him. As their spell dissolved into the air, she ran her hands over his bare chest, feeling the rhythm of his heartbeat beneath her fingertips.
Her hands slipped into the hair at the nape of his neck, pulling him closer until their lips finally met in a slow, searing kiss. Giles’s fingers roamed up her spine, curling into her hair, tugging just enough to pull her lips from his.
His gaze burned into hers, his eyes intense and full of longing. “Beautiful,” he whispered, his thumb brushing across her cheek, tucking a loose strand of hair behind her ear. “Bloody beautiful.”
“Careful, Ripper,” Rose teased with a sly grin. “All those pretty words might go to my head.”
“Good.” His voice was low and rough, and then he closed the distance between them, capturing her mouth in a deep, heated kiss.
“GILES!” Buffy’s voice pierced the air like a sudden gust of cold wind.
Rose jerked away from the kiss, her eyes wide with shock as she turned to see Buffy standing in the doorway, mouth agape, eyes wide. Willow and Xander stood behind her, equally frozen in disbelief.
“Oh God! They didn’t—” Xander began, quickly stopping himself.
“What the bloody hell are you three doing here?” Giles demanded, a flicker of irritation crossing his features as he turned toward the intrusion.
Buffy stepped further into the room, her expression a mix of confusion and disgust. “We came to tell you something’s wrong with the adults, but clearly… you’re part of the problem.” Her gaze darted between Giles and Rose. “Wait, why aren’t you wearing clothes?!”
“Oh God. They did!” Xander shrieked, throwing his hands over his eyes while Willow turned and buried her face in Xander’s shoulder.
Rose stood, pulling the oversized shirt down to cover more of her legs. “You have terrible timing,” she said, her voice dripping with frustration. “We were just about to—”
“Don’t finish that sentence!” Buffy pointed a warning finger at them both. “We are going back outside, and when we return in two minutes, you both better be dressed!” She spun on her heel, storming out along with Willow and Xander and slammed the door behind her.
Giles let out a soft chuckle. “Seems someone’s got their knickers in a twist.”
Rose sighed, glancing around the room for her clothes. “You know she’s not leaving until you help her, and you still owe me that bath, so...”
Giles groaned, rolling his eyes. “Fine.”
When the door reopened, Giles was dressed in jeans and a white tee-shirt, a cigarette dangling from his lips, a small hoop earring gleaming in his left ear. His eyes were rimmed in dark eyeliner, his look completed with worn biker boots.
Rose, however, had transformed herself into something more provocative. She wore Giles’s shirt, now tied in a knot at her waist, revealing a glimpse of skin just above the waistband of her tight black leather miniskirt. Her cheeks were flushed, dark eyeliner rimmed her green eyes, and her lips were painted a sultry shade of red. High-heeled pumps completed her ensemble.
“Rose, you’re so… not you,” Willow said, her voice full of concern as she approached her friend.
“What are you talking about, Willow? This is me,” Rose replied, clicking her tongue.
“My little witch,” Giles murmured, his arm snaking around her waist to pull her closer.
Rose smirked, slipping her hand under his shirt, her fingers trailing across his skin just as his lips claimed hers in another fiery kiss.
“Ew!” Buffy groaned, wedging herself between them and shoving them apart. “Giles, stop!”
“It’s Ripper,” he corrected, nonchalantly taking a drag from his cigarette.
“Oh no, he’s young Giles. Bad Giles,” Willow muttered, eyes wide with panic.
“So all the adults have reverted to their younger selves, but why is Rose acting like a hormonal teenager, too?” Xander asked, frowning. “She’s already one.”
Rose stuck out her tongue at Xander and reached for the chocolate bar on the table, only for Willow to snatch it away. “Hey! That’s mine, bitch!”
“Oh, here comes the catfight!” Cherred Giles.
“No, no catfights, no more chocolate!” Willow declared, glaring at Giles as he smirked. Willow’s voice dropped as she continued. “Rose hasn’t had a typical teenage phase. Her parents travel, she had to grow up fast. Maybe she’s never had the chance to feel like this, to… let go.”
Xander’s eyes widened. “We don’t know how much she might have eaten, but if she ate as much as I did...”
Rose rolled her eyes, hopping up onto Giles’s desk, crossing her legs in dramatic defiance. “What do you need Ripper for, anyway?” she drawled. “We were just in the middle of something very—”
“Nope, stop right there!” Buffy interrupted, her hands flying up. “Giles, those chocolate bars, you’ve been eating them too, haven’t you? We think someone’s casting a spell through them.”
Giles leaned against the desk, his arm draped possessively over Rose’s shoulders. “It wasn’t us!” he shot back, looking indignant.
“No, why would I think it was you two? Hey, no more touching!” Buffy snapped, her eyes flicking between them in exasperation.
“But he’s so… touchable,” Rose teased, plucking the cigarette from Giles’s lips, taking a slow drag before blowing the smoke out in his direction.
“I think I’m gonna be sick,” Xander groaned.
“Willow, Xander, take Rose with you to the Bronze and stay there until I come find you. Ripper, you’re with me.” Buffy’s voice was sharp, cutting through the haze of lingering magic and tension in the room.
Rose slid off the table, the cigarette between her fingers smoldering. With a flick, she stubbed it out on the edge of a plate, her eyes narrowing as she sauntered toward Buffy. The dim light cast long shadows, making her look wild and untamed. “And who do you think you are, telling me what to do?” Her voice dripped with challenge as she raised her fist, her fingers curling into a threatening posture. “I should show you who really has the power here.”
Before she could act, both Willow and Xander rushed forward, each grabbing one of her arms, tugging her toward the door. “Ripper!” she called, her voice laced with fury and desire.
Giles’s grin was feral as he lit another cigarette, watching her with an intense gaze. “I’ll find you later, love. And we’ll pick up exactly where we left off.” His words hung in the air, a promise of things to come.
As Willow and Xander half-dragged her into the courtyard, the cool night air hit Rose’s skin, making her shiver. Willow, always the practical one, looped her arm tightly through Rose’s, preventing any escape. “Rose, you’ve got to snap out of this,” she urged, her tone desperate.
“There’s nothing to snap out of,” Rose replied, her voice low and defiant. “For the first time, I feel free.”
“But you were... undressed,” Xander interjected, his face pale as he tried to process what he’d just witnessed. “With Giles. As in, no clothes at all.” His voice cracked. “Wait, you guys didn’t actually... you know, do it?”
Rose smirked, her lips curling wickedly. “I never kiss and tell,” she purred, a gleam in her eye. “At least, not the first time.”
Xander’s face drained of all color. “First time?” he stammered, horror dawning on him. “Wait, if there was a first time, then that means... oh god... was there a second time?”
Willow spun Rose around, her expression panicked. “You didn’t actually sleep with Giles, did you?” Her voice was almost a whisper, laden with disbelief.
“It was magical, Willow.” Rose’s voice softened, and a warm flush crept over her skin as the memory of Giles’s touch swept through her. “He was my first.”
“OH GOD!” Xander screamed, clutching his head in disbelief.
Rose’s expression remained distant, dreamy. “He was so gentle.”
“WHY?” Xander practically shrieked, looking like he might pass out.
“Rose,” Willow’s voice cracked with worry as she looked into her friend’s eyes. “Please... please tell me you were safe?” Her question was almost a plea, her hand gripping Rose’s tighter.
Rose yanked her arm free, crossing her arms defiantly. “Yes, Mom! We were safe. Satisfied?”
“Oh, thank God,” Willow muttered under her breath, her shoulders sagging in relief. “I mean not thank God. Bad, Rose, bad!”
Xander, on the other hand, was muttering to himself. “I need to bleach my brain... and my eyes... and my ears.”
Rose had enough. “You know what? I’m bored with this,” she snapped, turning on her heel. “I’m going to find Ripper.”
Willow stepped forward, taking Rose’s arm. “Come on, let’s get to the Bronze, I’m sure Giles… Ripper will be at the Bronze.”
Rose wrenched her arm free. “His magic calls to me.” Rose’s eyes darkened, her gaze intense as she leaned in close to whisper, “Oblivisci.”
Immediately, a blank expression washed over Willow and Xander’s faces, their former concern melting away.
“There was a crowd, and you lost me. Go to the Bronze and wait for Buffy,” Rose instructed, her voice smooth and commanding. Without hesitation, they obeyed, moving off into the night like sleepwalkers, their footsteps fading into the distance.
The night air was crisp, carrying a faint chill as Rose turned her gaze to the dimming horizon. “Suscipe me ad animam meam.” Her voice was barely a murmur, but the words sparked a ball of light into existence, flickering like a ghostly flame. It hovered in front of her, casting a soft glow as it guided her toward the warehouse district where her Ripper waited.
By the time she reached the old building, the sky had fully surrendered to the night; the stars obscured by dark clouds. Inside the warehouse, the echo of muffled voices bounced off the cold concrete walls, leading her through shadowed corridors. When she finally entered the dimly lit room, the sight of Giles, towering over a man handcuffed to a railing, sent a thrill through her.
“Ripper!” Rose’s voice broke the tense silence, light and filled with excitement as she ran toward him.
Giles’s eyes glinted with a predatory gleam as he looked up, his lips curling into a smirk. “Guinevere,” he murmured, pulling her into a heated kiss that sent a shiver of warmth through her despite the coldness of the room.
The man handcuffed to the railing sneered, his voice dripping with disdain. “Who’s the little tart?”
Giles shot him a dangerous look, his jaw tightening. “You keep your filthy eyes off her,” he growled, his arm tightening possessively around Rose.
With a teasing smile, Rose stepped toward the man, her tone dripping with mock sweetness. “This lil’ tart could strip the skin from your bones, piece by piece.”
The man’s expression faltered, “The power radiating off of you, it feels a lot like Ripper’s…” a flicker of recognition darting through his eyes. “Srodna duša,” he muttered under his breath, his gaze flicking between Rose and Giles.
Giles’s brow furrowed, his grip on Rose tightening. “What are you on about?” His voice was low and menacing.
Ethan smirked, his amusement evident. “Oh, this is better than anything I could’ve dreamed. Fate’s a real bitch, Ripper. The guilt is going to eat you alive, old friend.”
Before Giles could respond, Buffy’s voice sliced through the thick tension, her steps quick as she approached. “Rose? What are you? No more touching you two!” she commanded, pulling Rose away from Giles once more.
Ethan’s grin widened as he watched the scene unfold. “Good luck with that,” he muttered, his voice laced with wicked glee.
Notes: I am re-uploading as Tumblr nuked my old account. I am currently writing Part 2 ❤️
Synopsis: A new magical transfer comes to Sunnydale High, and ends up discovering a magical connection with our favorite Watcher. OC is 19+ (Not a Minor), Age Gap, Slow Burn-ish (with a little preview thrown in there during the Bandy Candy Episode). I'm really hoping that all my edits in my saved version of this were done properly lol, and I don't have a bunch of edit marks, duplicate paragraphs and such haha.
There is 20 chapters for Part 1 that I will be uploading.
🔹 Pairing: Rupert Giles / OC (Rose Murphy) (Female)
🔹 Rating: Mature (Part 1 get's a little spicy, but Part 2 will be where it is at lol)
🔹 Word Count: 1917
Catch Up: Previous Chapter
Chapter Four:
“Your head, I trust is doing okay? You didn’t have any trouble in class today?” Giles asked, placing a steaming cup of tea in front of Rose before sitting down with his own.
“No, everything’s fine. By the next morning, it was like it never happened,” Rose replied, her fingers lightly brushing the warm porcelain. “Thank you.”
“You’re very welcome.”
Giles took off his glasses, setting them down on the table before leaning back in his chair. His gaze lingered on her for a moment, as if studying her. “You have magic.”
“So do you,” Rose responded, her eyes narrowing slightly as she took a sip of tea.
“Magic is not something I dabble in anymore,” he said, a sigh escaping his lips as he glanced away, the weight of his words filling the space between them.
“Could’ve fooled me,” Rose replied, her tone teasing, yet pointed. Giles raised an eyebrow, clearly intrigued.
“I’ve been around magic my entire life,” she continued, “and I’ve never felt anything like what I feel coming off you.”
Giles’s brows furrowed as he tried to process her words. “You can feel magic?”
“Not normally. My aunt can see auras, she’s described it to me before. But this... This is different. When I first entered the library, I could feel you. It’s like your magic was waiting for me.”
His throat bobbed with a swallow, and Rose’s eyes tracked the movement. The tension between them grew palpable, as if the room had grown smaller. “And what exactly do I feel like?” Giles asked, his voice dropping slightly, almost hesitant.
“Raw. Powerful,” Rose whispered, leaning in just a bit. “It clings to you like static, like it’s waiting for you to open the gates.”
“The spark,” Giles whispered under his breath, but Rose heard him. She felt her pulse quicken as the memory of that first jolt of energy between them flashed through her mind.
“I think it was your magic reacting to mine,” she said softly. “Like when we did the healing spell.”
Giles’s eyes darkened, his expression serious. He took a slow sip of tea, seemingly buying time to collect himself. “When I did magic, before I became a Watcher, it never felt like that. That spell… it was-.” His words hung heavy in the air.
Rose couldn’t help but agree. “Intense,” she ventured, her voice softer now, the word feeling almost too personal, too revealing.
Giles chuckled lightly, though his gaze remained locked on hers. “Yes. Intense.”
A warm flush crept up Rose’s cheeks, and she quickly busied herself with her tea, hoping to hide her growing embarrassment. She cleared her throat and forced herself to stay focused on the mystery before them. “I’ve used that spell a hundred times, and I’ve never had a reaction like that. Have you ever used it before?”
Giles shook his head. “No. But somehow, I knew what to say. It was… strange.”
Rose leaned forward, her curiosity piqued. “It shouldn’t have worked like that. I was only trying to borrow power from you, to boost my own. But instead—”
Giles finished her thought for her, his voice quieter, yet intense. “It was more like we were connected. Like my magic was already yours… and yours was mine.”
“Exactly.” Rose felt a shiver run through her as she leaned back in her chair, her eyes never leaving his. “Have you ever experienced something like that before?”
“No,” Giles said, his voice barely above a whisper as he set down his tea. The silence between them was thick, neither of them moving for a long moment.
Rose broke the silence, her pulse quickening. “Buffy is clearly the Slayer, and judging by how she was treating me today in History, I’m guessing you didn’t tell her about me.”
“I didn’t,” Giles admitted, his eyes searching hers.
“Why not?”
Giles paused, leaning forward slightly. His gaze felt heavier, more personal. “When you first arrived, I thought you might be a threat. But after the attack… I realized you’re not dangerous to Buffy. If anything, she could be dangerous to you.”
“Buffy? Hurt me?” Rose’s voice was filled with disbelief.
“No, not intentionally. But there are things about her world that you may not be ready for.” He hesitated, his expression conflicted. “There’s a lot to consider.”
The way he was looking at her, the weight of his words, it felt like more than just concern for Buffy. Rose shifted in her seat, the tension thickening between them again. “Is that a normal occurrence around here? Vampires attacking the school?”
Giles chuckled softly, the sound breaking some of the tension. “I wish I could say no.”
“My aunt said Sunnydale was a supernatural hot spot, but I thought she was exaggerating.”
“Well, we are sitting on a hellmouth,” Giles said, his voice matter-of-fact.
Rose blinked. “Oh. Well, if that’s all,” she replied sarcastically, laughing lightly. Giles’s answering smile only made her more aware of the warmth in the room, the closeness between them.
“So,” Rose said, trying to shift the conversation back, “a Watcher, huh? How does one fall into that role?”
Giles smiled, leaning back in his chair. “Three generations of my family served the Watchers Council.”
Rose raised an eyebrow. “I always thought you guys were just some kind of boogeyman. You know, if you didn’t behave, the Watchers would come snatch you away.”
Giles laughed softly. “I’ve never heard that one before.”
“It’s true,” Rose replied with a grin. “The elders would threaten us with stories of Watchers, especially if we dabbled in dark magic.”
“Well, they’re not exactly fans of that,” Giles said, his smile fading as his voice grew more serious. “That was before my time with the Council. Back when I was… rebellious.”
“Rebellious? You?” Rose teased.
“I was quite the rebel actually,” Giles admitted, surprising her. “I had a band. And we… dabbled in magic. Dark magic. Until it nearly destroyed us.”
Rose’s playful smile faded as she saw the gravity in his eyes. “But you gave it up.”
“A dear friend convinced me, for my own wellbeing,” Giles said, his voice soft. “And I became a Watcher.”
“And now here you are,” Rose said, her tone gentle, her eyes locking with his.
Giles smiled. “Yes. And now you’re here, and things feel… different.”
Before Rose could respond, the doors to the library swung open.
“GILES!” came the sudden shout as the library doors swung open, the spell of their conversation shattered in an instant. Rose quickly pulled her gaze away from Giles and turned toward the sound.
“Rose?” Xander followed closely behind Buffy and Willow, each of them holding boxes marked ‘Milkbar’ in large, bright letters.
As the trio approached the table, the tension in the air dissolved, leaving a lingering sense of something unfinished between Rose and Giles.
“It’s after school,” Xander said with a grin. “Why are you still here? Not that I’m complaining, it’s always nice seeing you around. At the school, I mean.”
Rose smiled, trying to steady herself after the intensity of the last few minutes. “Ms. Murphy and I were just discussing a book she’d checked out,” Giles said, adjusting his posture and tone back to something more professional. “We must have lost track of time.”
Buffy, however, was already focused on the boxes in her arms. “This works out great for us because we need to offload these. So, Giles, how many can I put you down for?”
Buffy reached into one of the boxes, tossing a chocolate bar to Giles, who caught it and inspected it curiously. “Chocolate?” he asked, eyebrows raising.
“Yeah, Snyder’s making us unload them for band uniforms.”
“You’re not in band.” Giles spoke bewildered.
“Nope, so please, dig out your checkbook,” Buffy said, then turned to Rose. “Wait, didn’t you get one?”
Rose shook her head, feeling a bit more like herself again. “I didn’t, but I’ll definitely take some of those off your hands. I have a weakness for chocolate.”
Buffy’s eyes brightened. “I’ve never heard prettier words.”
They distributed a few chocolate bars, the atmosphere lightening as Buffy, Xander, and Willow chatted about Snyder’s latest unreasonable demands. As the students eventually left with their now lighter boxes, Rose and Giles were left alone once again.
The sudden silence that followed their departure felt heavier than before, the lightheartedness gone as if it had been swept away with the students.
Giles reached for another cup of tea, his movements slow, deliberate. Rose remained seated, her fingers tracing the rim of her own cup, her thoughts swirling back to their earlier conversation. She could feel the lingering energy between them, even now, something unspoken, undeniable.
“So…” Rose began, her voice quieter now, “what now?”
Giles set down his cup, his fingers resting against the edge of the table, his gaze locking with hers once again. “I’m not sure. It’s… complicated.”
“So you aren’t going to tell Buffy about me,” Rose said, her voice soft, yet steady. It wasn’t a question.
“No,” Giles admitted, leaning back in his chair, his hands coming up to pinch the bridge of his nose. “There’s something about you, Rose. Something that tells me you’re not here to harm her, or anyone, for that matter. I would like to know more before I open that can of proverbial worms.”
Rose could feel her heart rate pick up slightly at the weight of his words, the unspoken trust he was placing in her. “I’m not going to hurt anyone.” She whispered. “I just want to get through high school, graduate, and move on with my life.”
“And you will,” Giles said, his voice soft, yet firm. His eyes never left hers, and she could feel the sincerity in his words. “I believe that.”
Her breath caught for a moment at the intensity of his gaze. The space between them felt charged again, much like before, only this time, there was no interruption, no sudden noise to pull them back. It was just the two of them, sitting across the table, the air thick with something unspoken.
“What are you hoping to study?” Giles asked, his tone a touch lighter, though the tension between them remained.
Rose smiled softly, trying to focus. “Education. I want to be a teacher.”
Giles’s lips quirked into a smile of his own, but his eyes remained intense. “How… ordinary,” he teased lightly.
Rose laughed, the sound escaping before she could stop it. “Well, I’ve been called a lot of things over the years, but ordinary was never one of them.”
Giles’s eyes widened slightly, his hands lifting as if to placate her. “No, I didn’t mean that. You’re anything but ordinary,” he stammered, clearly flustered. “I just thought, given your background, you might—”
“Want to be a doctor? A firefighter? An astronaut?” Rose teased, enjoying the rare sight of Giles looking so off-balance.
He chuckled, the sound low and deep. “Not quite what I was going to say. But those with power tend to seek more of it. It’s… human nature.”
Rose tilted her head slightly, her eyes narrowing in thought. “Yeah, well, I’m not your average witch,” she said, her voice softer, more serious.
Giles’s gaze darkened, his expression unreadable as he studied her. “No,” he agreed quietly, “you’re not.”
The words hung between them, heavy with meaning. Rose could feel the pull again, the strange, undeniable connection that seemed to spark whenever they were close. It wasn’t just magic, it was something else entirely. Something more.
Notes: I am re-uploading as Tumblr nuked my old account. I am currently writing Part 2 ❤️
Synopsis: A new magical transfer comes to Sunnydale High, and ends up discovering a magical connection with our favorite Watcher. OC is 19+ (Not a Minor), Age Gap, Slow Burn-ish (with a little preview thrown in there during the Bandy Candy Episode). I'm really hoping that all my edits in my saved version of this were done properly lol, and I don't have a bunch of edit marks, duplicate paragraphs and such haha.
There is 20 chapters for Part 1 that I will be uploading.
🔹 Pairing: Rupert Giles / OC (Rose Murphy) (Female)
🔹 Rating: Mature (Part 1 get's a little spicy, but Part 2 will be where it is at lol)
🔹 Word Count: 3842
Catch Up: Previous Chapter
Chapter Three:
Though it seemed unusual for Sunnydale’s homecoming to take place so late in the school year, Rose wasn’t one to complain. She was more than happy to have an excuse to dress up and enjoy herself. The invitation from Willow to join her group had been a welcome escape from listening to Harmony’s endless talk about her dress. Now, Rose found herself climbing into the back of Oz’s van along with Xander and a girl named Faith she hadn’t met before. Willow sat in the front passenger seat beside Oz, the couple engaged in soft conversation, their hands brushing occasionally.
“Thanks so much for inviting me,” Rose said as she settled into her seat, the cool leather beneath her bare legs sending a shiver through her. “If I had to listen to Harmony talk about her dress one more time, I might’ve shoved it down her throat just to shut her up.”
Faith, perched on the edge of the seat with an air of casual confidence, shot Rose a grin and a playful punch to the arm. “I like this chick,” she said, her voice husky, the kind that commanded attention.
“Sorry about not doing the limo thing,” Willow turned slightly in her seat, apologetic but cheerful. “Buffy and Cordelia needed some alone time to work out their issues.”
Rose smiled and waved it off. “Totally fine. You all look amazing, by the way.”
The van was dimly lit, the soft glow of the dashboard casting a faint light on everyone’s faces. Rose glanced over at Willow and Faith. Willow’s simple, sweet dress and Faith’s sultry, edgier outfit were striking against the backdrop of the van’s interior. But it was the guys in their tuxes that really threw Rose off. She hadn’t expected Oz or Xander to clean up quite so nicely.
Xander, catching her eye, looked her over with an exaggerated, wide-eyed stare. “You’re one to talk. Have you seen yourself?”
Rose’s cheeks burned, and she dropped her gaze to her dress, a long-sleeved black number with intricate lace woven tightly around her form. The soft, delicate fabric clung to her body, revealing just enough skin to send a thrill of confidence through her. Underneath, a simple black balconette bra and high-waisted underwear gave her an air of sophistication while still feeling provocative. She tugged at the hem instinctively, trying not to fidget under the weight of Xander’s compliment.
Faith, smirking, leaned back and crossed her legs. “Sex on legs, that’s what you are. So, who’s the lucky guy you’re trying to impress, huh?”
Rose froze, heart skipping a beat. “No one,” she blurted out, far too quickly.
Willow’s eyes lit up with playful curiosity as she twisted around in her seat again. “I bet it’s Robin! He’s always trying to get you to sit with him in chem class.”
Rose shot her a pointed look, but her lips twitched with a smile. “Will, you know I only have eyes for you in chemistry.”
Willow giggled. “I know.”
Faith, however, wasn’t letting up. “There’s gotta be someone. Whoever he is, he won’t be able to take his eyes off you.”
Rose spent the rest of the ride fighting the rapid beating of her heart. She hadn’t intended for her outfit to make such a statement, but Faith’s words lingered, making her wonder if everyone else would see right through her as well.
When they finally arrived at the homecoming party, the warm evening air enveloped them as they stepped out of the van. The high school gym had been transformed, decorated with fairy lights twinkling above and tables draped in silky fabrics lining the edges of the room. Music pulsed through the air, vibrating the walls and floor beneath them, as students gathered in clusters, laughing and chatting.
Rose walked into the crowd with her friends, but soon, Xander and Oz offered to grab drinks, and Willow went with them, leaving her alone with Faith. The crowd shifted around them like a sea, and Rose felt the energy of the room as she scanned her surroundings. Bright colors, laughter, and the clink of glasses echoed all around. Yet, a faint tingle buzzed at the back of her neck, a sensation that made her hyper-aware of everything.
“So, hot stuff,” Faith leaned closer, her voice lowering, “which one is he?”
“I don’t—” Rose’s words died in her throat as her eyes fell on Giles across the room.
Dressed in a dark suit that seemed a perfect contrast to the casual chaos around him, Giles stood near the punch table, his gaze fixed solely on her. The intensity of his eyes sent a shockwave through her body, making her heart skip a beat. Her skin prickled with awareness, as though the very air around them was charged with something electric and primal. Everything else in the room faded into the background, the lights, the noise, even the people. It was just the two of them, caught in a current that was impossible to explain.
That magical connection she had felt since they first met surged, growing stronger. Her breath hitched, her body instinctively drawing toward him, despite the crowded room between them. Her mind buzzed with thoughts she couldn’t fully form, her pulse loud in her ears.
Faith’s voice cut through the haze. “Ah, I see. You’ve got a taste for the old Watcher.”
Rose snapped her gaze away from Giles, her eyes wide. “Taste? No, I haven’t… I haven’t tasted anyone. Wait, Watcher?”
Faith raised an eyebrow, her lips twitching into a sly smile. “Wait, you don’t know? Huh. Thought they’d have told you by now.” With a shrug, Faith’s eyes flicked past Rose before she turned and walked away.
Before Rose could fully process what Faith had just said, she heard the sound of someone clearing their throat behind her. “Ms. Murphy.”
She turned slowly to face Giles, his presence so close now that the rest of the room dissolved into white noise. He towered over her, and yet, despite his imposing figure, there was a quiet softness in the way his eyes roamed her face. The air between them felt charged, as though something was unsaid, something they were both skirting around but neither had the courage to acknowledge.
“Mr. Giles,” Rose replied, her voice soft, almost breathless. “I’m surprised you got dragged into this. Doesn’t seem like your kind of thing.”
Giles chuckled, a rich sound that vibrated through her. “It’s one of my many mandatory chaperone duties.”
The awkwardness hung between them, heavy and palpable. Rose’s gaze flickered to his hands as he removed his glasses, a nervous habit, one she had noticed long ago. His hands were strong but delicate, fingers steady as they polished the lenses. For a brief moment, she wondered how those hands would feel against her skin, but she quickly banished the thought, her cheeks flushing at the inappropriate image.
“I’m glad you’re here,” she managed, her voice faltering slightly. “Here for the students, I mean.”
“Yes, the students,” Giles echoed, though his eyes lingered on her longer than they should have. He stuttered as he slipped his glasses back on, trying to regain his usual calm. “You look… very nice tonight.”
“Thank you,” Rose said, her pulse quickening. “You look quite dashing yourself.”
The compliment seemed to catch him off guard. He straightened his tie and cleared his throat again, his gaze flicking down to her dress for just a second longer than necessary. “I was wondering if we could talk about that previous conversation, if your… date can spare you?”
Rose’s breath caught in her throat, the suggestion hanging between them. “I don’t have a date tonight.”
Giles blinked, clearly surprised. “Oh. I… just assumed. Given how… well, never mind. Would you like to accompany me to the library?”
Rose nodded, offering him a small smile, and the two walked out of the gym together, the distance between them growing shorter with each step.
As they left the gym, the shift from the pulsing beat of the music to the quiet hum of the school’s hallways was stark. The fluorescent lights above flickered faintly, casting a soft glow over the empty corridors. The sound of their footsteps echoed in the silence, each step punctuating the growing tension between them.
Rose walked beside Giles, her fingers brushing lightly against the fabric of her dress as if to anchor herself. The cool air outside the gym was a sharp contrast to the warmth of the crowded room they’d just left. She felt every inch of space between them, though it seemed to shrink with every passing second. Her heart pounded in her chest, and she had to focus on her breathing to keep it steady.
Giles was composed, his posture rigid but graceful as ever. His hands, however, betrayed him, he kept fidgeting with the cufflinks on his sleeves, as though trying to find something to do with them. The air around them buzzed with unspoken words, but neither of them seemed ready to break the silence just yet.
They reached the library, and Giles held the door open for her. “After you, Ms. Murphy.”
“Thank you,” Rose said softly, her voice barely above a whisper as she stepped inside.
The library was dim, the only light coming from the faint glow of the lamps on the tables. The familiar scent of old books and polished wood filled the air, comforting and grounding. Rose glanced around the room, taking in the quiet serenity of the space. It was a place of solace for her, one she had come to associate with Giles. His presence seemed to fill every corner, making it feel like a sanctuary.
Giles walked past her, heading to the main table where he set down the glasses he’d been holding. He leaned against the edge of the table, his fingers drumming lightly on the surface. Rose could see the tension in his posture, the way his shoulders were drawn tight, as though he was carrying the weight of something he didn’t quite know how to express.
She approached slowly, her heels clicking softly against the wooden floor, the sound like a steady heartbeat in the quiet room. “You said you wanted to talk about something?”
Giles looked up at her, his eyes catching hers for a moment before he quickly averted them, staring down at the books on the table instead. “Yes, would you like some tea?” he began, his voice low and measured.
“You asked me here for tea?”
“Would you believe me if I said yes?”
“No, but I would appreciate a cup of tea, before we have what I am guessing is going to be a very awkward conversation.”
Without a word, Giles disappeared into the office, and a few minutes later emerged with two steaming cups. He handed one to her with a careful smile, his fingers briefly grazing hers as she took it. The touch was fleeting but sparked something between them, a tension that lingered even after he pulled away.
Rose sat on the edge of the table now with cup in hand as she watched Giles closely, the silence between them growing heavier. Rose lifted the cup to her lips, inhaling the warmth of the tea, though it did little to calm her jittery nerves. She felt as though they were circling something neither of them wanted to address, yet it hovered just beneath the surface.
Giles cleared his throat, his voice softer now. “Rose... about the last time we spoke.” His voice trailed into silence as he looked to struggle for words..
“I see you were doing a bit of light reading, Watcher.” Rose spoke clearly as she nodded to the demonic tombs on the desk.
“Hmm, what was that?” Giles questioned.
“Faith, she called you Watcher.” Rose turned herself around to sit on the table and faced him.
“How odd,” he replied with a simple shrug, taking a tentative sip of his tea.
“Yes, it is, because I’ve only ever heard someone referred to as a Watcher when there was a Slayer involved.” Rose’s eyes narrowed as she watched Giles try to maintain his composure. She caught the slight tension in his jaw, the way he shifted his weight ever so slightly, taking a step back.
“I’ve never heard of these terms before,” Giles said, feigning casualness, though his voice wavered just enough. “Did you read them in a book somewhere?”
Rose rolled her eyes, lifting her cup to her lips for another sip. “You’re lying again.”
“Am not,” Giles responded automatically, though there was a stiffness in his tone now. “I have no clue what a Watcher is. Or a Slayer.”
“Slayer!” came a gruff voice from the entrance.
Both Rose and Giles turned swiftly to see two figures, an imposing man, dressed like an outlaw cowboy, and a sharp-eyed woman standing close by his side. The man’s presence filled the room with danger, and Rose immediately tensed.
“Can I help you?” Giles asked, setting his cup down on the table with a deliberate calm, though Rose could sense the shift in his posture, alert, protective.
“Yeah,” the cowboy sneered, “we’re looking for the Slayer. A little birdie told us she might be here.”
Giles stepped forward, deliberately placing himself between Rose and the strangers. “There’s no Slayer here,” Giles replied firmly, his voice low and measured. Rose set her cup down slowly, slipping from the table and keeping herself hidden behind Giles.
The cowboy grinned, revealing a hint of fang. “That’s a shame. But I reckon we’ll have to make do with you two. I am getting quite hungry.”
In an instant, the threat crystallized. Rose felt her pulse spike, her magic responding instinctively. As the man took a step forward, Giles subtly shifted, pushing Rose back with a firm but protective motion.
“Stay behind me,” he muttered under his breath as Rose moved to step out from behind Giles, her voice low and daring, “Because if you don’t, I’ll make sure you regret it.”
Giles’s eyes flickered with concern as he tried to grab her arm, but she twisted free, her senses sharpening with a mix of adrenaline and magic. She could feel the dark, raw energy pulsing just beneath her skin, aching to be unleashed. She wasn’t afraid. Not this time.
The vampire sneered, his eyes locking onto hers. “You think you can take me?”
Rose’s smile was cold. “Oh, it’s not a thought, it’s a fact.”
She didn’t give him time to respond. With a sharp flick of her wrist, a gust of wind erupted from her hand, sending the vampire flying backward with a violent crash. The force rattled the shelves, and books tumbled to the floor. But the vampire wasn’t down for long. He rose slowly, a savage grin splitting his face as his partner, a lithe woman with bloodstained lips, lunged toward Rose with deadly speed.
In a flash, Rose ducked, feeling the vampire’s hand rake the air just above her head. She retaliated instantly, driving her elbow into the vampire’s ribs with a satisfying crack. The female vampire hissed, but Rose didn’t give her the chance to recover. She summoned another wave of magic, throwing the creature against the nearest bookshelf.
The male vampire was on her next, his cold hand clamping around her throat, lifting her off the ground with brutal strength. Rose gasped for air, her vision dimming at the edges as she struggled against his iron grip. Her fingers twitched, crackling with magic, but it was sluggish, slow. She had overexerted herself, and now the consequences were catching up with her.
“Not so tough now, are you?” the vampire hissed, his face inches from hers, his fangs gleaming.
Rose’s heart pounded, her lungs screaming for air, but through the haze of panic, she could see Giles moving, fighting to get to her, his eyes filled with fear. The sight gave her a burst of energy. With a guttural scream, she thrust her hand forward, releasing a surge of raw magic directly into the vampire’s chest. He roared in agony, dropping her as he staggered back, smoke rising from where her magic burned through his skin.
Rose hit the ground hard, coughing and gasping for air as the vampire stumbled, clutching his smoldering chest. But there was no time to rest. The female vampire was back on her feet, eyes blazing with fury as she charged at Giles, who had just managed to grab a stake.
“No, you don’t!” Rose yelled, her voice raw, forcing herself to her feet. Her legs wobbled, but she steadied herself, hands raised, ready to send the last of her energy into a final spell.
Before she could cast it, the female vampire had already thrown Giles against the wall, her sharp nails slashing at his arm. He grunted in pain, barely dodging her next attack. Blood dripped from his sleeve, staining the floor.
“Rupert!” Rose’s voice was frantic now, her energy ebbing, but she couldn’t let him face this alone. She willed the last of her strength into the air, summoning the remnants of her power. Her eyes locked on a jagged shard of wood from the shattered chair, her breath shallow as she whispered, “Surge et quaere signum tuum…”
The shard launched across the room like a bullet, piercing the male vampire’s heart. He let out a strangled gasp before crumbling to ash, his body dissolving in the dim light. But his female counterpart let out a shriek of rage, redoubling her attack on Giles.
Time slowed. Rose saw the fangs inching closer to Giles’s throat, the predator’s eyes wild with bloodlust. With no other choice, Rose hurled herself forward, tackling the vampire just as she prepared to sink her teeth into Giles. They tumbled to the ground in a blur of limbs, Rose’s fingers clawing at the vampire’s throat as they rolled across the floor, a feral growl escaping her lips.
“Rose, get clear!” Giles shouted, but Rose barely heard him. Her only thought was survival, the primal instinct to fight, to kill. Her magic was spent, but she wasn’t powerless. Using pure strength, she kneed the vampire in the gut, earning a brief reprieve as the creature recoiled.
In that instant, Giles was there, plunging the stake into the vampire’s chest with brutal force. The vampire screeched, her body convulsing before collapsing into a heap of dust at their feet. Silence followed, broken only by their ragged breathing.
Rose collapsed against the wall, her limbs trembling with exhaustion and her head pounding. Giles was beside her in an instant, his hands running over her arms, her face, checking for injuries. “You’re hurt…”
Rose tried to wave him off, her head spinning. “I’m fine…” But the pain flaring in her side suggested otherwise. Her ribs ached from the impact, and her vision swam from the blow to her head earlier.
Giles crouched beside her, his hands shaking slightly as they hovered near her head. “Rose… you’re bleeding. We need to—”
“I can heal,” she whispered, her voice faint. “Just… need some help.”
Without hesitation, Giles took her hand, his touch both gentle and electric. The connection sent a spark through her, a rush of warmth that cut through the pain. His fingers tightened around hers, and together, she began the familiar chant.
“Sana hanc cutem,” Rose murmured, her eyes fluttering shut as the magic flowed between them.
Giles’s voice was steady beside her, his words soft but strong. “Haec ossa sana, haec vulnera sana.”
The warmth between their joined hands intensified, spreading through Rose’s body like liquid fire. The pain in her ribs dulled, the dizziness receded, and her skin tingled with renewed strength. She felt Giles’s power flooding into her, overwhelming and intoxicating.
When she opened her eyes, Giles’s face was inches from hers, his breath mingling with hers, their hands still clasped. The intensity in his eyes made her heart pound, an unspoken desire crackled in the air between them, more tangible than the magic that had just healed her.
For a moment, neither of them moved. The world around them seemed to still as the tension simmered in the air, charged with something far more dangerous than magic.
“Heavens,” whispered Giles.
Rose’s eyes fluttered away from his, falling to their still-joined hands. The faint traces of joint magic still radiated between them, a subtle ripple in the air, and an almost imperceptible glow illuminating their skin. She had borrowed power before, participated in countless coven spells, but nothing had ever felt like this. If she didn’t know better, she’d swear it felt like the euphoric aftermath of an intimate encounter.
“What in God’s name...” Giles muttered, his gaze also drawn to their entwined hands. Neither of them made a move to pull away. Their fingers lingered, electricity crackling between them, an unspoken bond holding them together as their eyes locked once more.
“GILES!”
The spell shattered. In an instant, their hands parted, and Rose shuddered at the loss of contact. The magic inside her recoiled, yearning to reconnect, but she forced her hands to remain still against the cold floor. The void left by his touch was almost painful.
“Are you okay?” Buffy Summers’ voice cut through the haze. “What happened here?”
“There was a couple,” Giles began, his voice unusually calm, though a hint of tension betrayed him. “I think they were on drugs or something.”
Rose noticed the conflicted look in his eyes and slowly, carefully, began to rise to her feet. “They attacked us,” she added, her voice trembling, not entirely from fear, but from the adrenaline still pulsing through her veins. Buffy seemed to mistake the quiver in her voice for fear, her eyes widening in concern.
“They knocked me out,” Rose continued, “but Mr. Giles must have been able to fend them off.”
“I was able to deal with them,” Giles said softly, his gaze flickering between Rose and Buffy, as if uncertain how much truth to reveal. “Scared them off.”
“Giles, you’re bleeding,” Buffy pointed out, her eyes dropping to his hand.
“Oh, I’m fine,” he said quickly, almost absently. “What, umm, happened to you two?”
Buffy glanced down at herself, noticing for the first time her torn dress and the grime smudging her skin. “Oh, car trouble,” she mumbled, clearly unsettled.
“Well, it seems like we’ve all had a night,” Rose said, taking a tentative step forward, testing her balance. The lingering magic made her feel both heavy and weightless, but she managed to steady herself. “I’m going to go wash the blood out of my hair. Mr. Giles, I’ll come talk to you about that book on Monday if that’s alright?”
“Yes. Yes, of course,” he replied, his voice a little too quick, his eyes lingering on her for just a moment longer than necessary.
As Rose turned to leave, she could still feel the pull of their connection, an invisible thread that tied them together, stronger now than before. But for now, she had to let it go.
Notes: I am re-uploading as Tumblr nuked my old account. I am currently writing Part 2 ❤️
Synopsis: A new magical transfer comes to Sunnydale High, and ends up discovering a magical connection with our favorite Watcher. OC is 19+ (Not a Minor), Age Gap, Slow Burn-ish (with a little preview thrown in there during the Bandy Candy Episode). I'm really hoping that all my edits in my saved version of this were done properly lol, and I don't have a bunch of edit marks, duplicate paragraphs and such haha.
There is 20 chapters for Part 1 that I will be uploading.
🔹 Pairing: Rupert Giles / OC (Rose Murphy) (Female)
🔹 Rating: Mature (Part 1 get's a little spicy, but Part 2 will be where it is at lol)
🔹 Word Count: 1714
Catch Up: Previous Chapter
Chapter Two:
Since Rose had started at Sunnydale High, she found herself irresistibly drawn to the library. Every time she pulled into the school parking lot, her eyes would instinctively seek out the car she knew belonged to Rupert Giles. And without fail, she’d soon be seated at the large wooden table in the center of the room, surrounded by textbooks, but her mind was often elsewhere.
Giles rarely said more than a few words to her during these quiet sessions, but she was acutely aware of his presence. His gaze seemed to linger on her, even when his eyes were focused on something else. She felt it, that charged attention, like a subtle hum in the air. Not that she minded. If she was being honest with herself, she was watching him too. She couldn’t help it, there was something magnetic about him, something that tugged at her senses and made her heart race when he was near.
It wasn’t just the way he moved, although she had certainly noticed the graceful way he handled books, his fingers brushing across the pages in a manner that made her wonder what they might feel like against her skin. No, it was deeper than that—there was an energy around him, one that stirred the magic within her, making her fingers tingle whenever he was close.
But she knew better than to let herself dwell on such thoughts. He was older, her teacher in some ways, and her fascination was likely nothing more than a schoolgirl crush. Still, she couldn’t deny the way her pulse quickened when she saw him, the way her body responded to the unspoken connection between them.
Today, however, she had a purpose. As she strolled into the library, the familiar scent of old leather and parchment filling the air, she felt a determination settle in her chest. She needed a meditation spell, something to help her clear her mind and focus. Catching up on two months’ worth of assignments was starting to take a toll, and she was in desperate need of clarity.
Giles wasn’t in sight when she entered, but the shadow moving across the floor from his office told her he was nearby. “Good morning, Mr. Giles,” Rose called out, wanting to alert him to her presence so he wouldn’t be startled by her rummaging through the shelves.
Giles appeared in the doorway, a coffee cup in hand, its humorous inscription reading, ‘This Library is a Mess, We Should Be Ashamed of Our Shelves.’ his eyes moved over her, a subtle tension rippled in the air. She could almost feel his gaze lingering on the flow of her dark maxi skirt and the way her oversized sweater hugged her figure before rising to her face. He visibly pulled back, clearing his throat. “You’re wearing glasses.”
“Really? No wonder I can see where I’m going,” Rose replied with a smile, pushing the frames up with her finger.
A chuckle escaped him, and he rubbed the back of his neck, clearly embarrassed by his remark. “I meant, I’ve never seen you wear them before. They, ah, look good.” His cheeks flushed ever so slightly, and Rose had to suppress a grin.
“Thanks. My eyes weren’t up for contacts today. All this studying is taking a toll.”
“It’s quite impressive, catching up on so much in such a short time,” he said, his voice carrying a hint of admiration.
“I know, right?” She smirked, moving toward the center table where she dropped her bag on the table’s top.
Giles tilted his head, watching her every movement with that familiar intensity. “Quite an impressive feat,” Giles said, his eyes softening. “I must say, I’m surprised at how well you’ve managed. It’s almost... magical.”
“Speaking of magic I was actually hoping to look through some of your occult books. Willow wasn’t kidding when she said you’ve got quite the collection.”
“Yes, we do. Though I must say, the occult is a rather… unique interest for someone your age,” he said, attempting to sound casual as he took a sip from his cup.
“I’m nineteen,” Rose replied. She wasn’t prepared for the way Giles immediately choked on his tea, coughing violently as a fine mist sprayed into the air.
“Are you okay?” Rose hurried over, placing her hands on his shoulders as he struggled for breath.
“I…yes…just went down the wrong pipe.” Giles coughed again, face red as he tried to regain his composure.
Rose smiled, her hand lingering on his arm longer than necessary before she stepped back. “You sure you’re alright?”
Giles nodded, still a bit out of breath. “Quite. I just… wasn’t expecting; Nineteen?”
“Yes, sorry to disappoint?” Rose teased, trying to lighten the mood.
“No, just surprising.” He gave a dry laugh, though his eyes betrayed the tension still between them. His eyes flicked back to hers, something unreadable passing between them. “I think I’m okay now, at least physically. My pride, on the other hand, may be slightly bruised.”
“I wouldn’t worry about it too much,” Rose teased, her lips quirking up. “Now, how about that book?”
“You’ll find what you’re looking for in the far section,” Giles finally said, clearing his throat and regaining some of his usual formality. “End of the aisle, second shelf from the top. The title is Malosi, I believe.”
Rose gave him a playful look. “Samoan?”
“You know Samoan?” He looked impressed.
“No, but I know enough to recognize it.” She moved toward the bookshelves, glancing over her shoulder as she disappeared between them. Giles was watching her again, his eyes following her every step.
When she returned with the book in hand, he was still seated at the table, his glasses perched on his nose. She placed the book down in front of him, leaning in slightly as she did so, catching a whiff of the faint spice of his cologne. “I didn’t take you for the type to be interested in health and vitalization spells.”
“I’m full of surprises,” Rose replied, her voice dropping slightly as their gazes locked for just a moment too long.
Something flickered in his eyes, something that made the air between them feel charged. Rose stepped back, breaking the moment, but she couldn’t ignore the way her heart raced or the heat that crept up her neck. She had come here for a spell, but what she found was something much more dangerous, an attraction she wasn’t entirely sure she should ignore.
Rose couldn’t shake the charged air that lingered between them as she settled into a chair across from Giles. The book Malosi lay open between them, though she barely glanced at it. She could feel his eyes on her again, like they always were, and the weight of his gaze sent a shiver down her spine. She tried to focus on the pages, the delicate script of spells she had seen a thousand times before, but all she could think about was the way the air seemed to have turned electric.
“So,” Giles said, his voice breaking the silence. “A spell for health and vitalization?”
Rose nodded, though her mind was elsewhere. “Yeah, something to clear the fog. I’ve been drowning in schoolwork, and my brain’s just... fried, and I’m getting desperate.”
He leaned forward slightly, his expression softening. “I understand the pressure of catching up. But... magic can be unpredictable, especially if you’re using it to force something as natural as mental clarity. You sure you want to try this? Hypothetically, of course.”
The way he looked at her, concerned but intrigued, made her heart stutter. She gave a slight smirk, shrugging casually. “What’s life without a little risk? Hypothetically, of course.”
Giles’s lips quirked in the ghost of a smile, his eyes twinkling with something that felt dangerously close to admiration. “Indeed. So you know enough about Samoan to recognize it?” Giles asked from behind her.
“My parents traveled a lot, so I picked up bits and pieces here and there. Kind of had to.”
Giles seemed to hesitate before asking, “And what do your parents do?”
Rose paused, her fingers brushing against the worn cover of the book she was searching for. “They’re in business. They will help failing companies get back into the green. Once they were done, we would move on to the next place. Made getting a recorded education a little harder. I would have been at university already, but my Japanese class credits didn’t really transfer well.”
“But you are here now, in Sunnydale, because of our superb public education system?”
“My aunt lives here. She offered for me to come and stay with her. Besides, I’m an adult, and as much as my parents didn’t want me coming here, they didn’t really have much of a say in the matter.”
“And your interest in the occult?” Giles asked, his gaze intent, searching her face for answers.
Rose’s lips curled into a playful smile. “Buy a girl a drink first, Rupert.”
Giles visibly relaxed, a chuckle escaping his lips as he leaned back in his chair. “Fair enough. I suppose I have been rather forward.”
Rose took a seat across from him, setting the book down with a satisfying thud. “Well, I’ll make you a deal. You answer one of my questions, and I’ll answer one of yours. Seems only fair, right?”
Giles considered her offer, then nodded. “Alright. Ask away.”
Rose tapped her fingers on the table, feigning contemplation before settling on her question. “Why Sunnydale? You don’t exactly seem like the small-town American librarian type.”
Giles hesitated, his eyes flickering with something unreadable. “My wife was from here.”
Rose raised an eyebrow. “No ring. Try again.”
Giles looked momentarily stunned by her boldness. “We are divorced.”
Rose stood, grabbing the book and her bag. “Well, when you’re ready to give me the truth, I’ll be here. But in the meantime, I think I’ll take this with me.”
“You can’t leave with that book,” Giles called after her as she made for the door.
Rose lifted the book over her shoulder, not bothering to turn around. “When I get an honest answer, you can have your book back.”
With that, she pushed through the doors, leaving Giles standing alone, his gaze lingering on where she’d just been.
Notes: I am re-uploading as Tumblr nuked my old account. I am currently writing Part 2 ❤️
Synopsis: A new magical transfer comes to Sunnydale High, and ends up discovering a magical connection with our favorite Watcher. OC is 19+ (Not a Minor), Age Gap, Slow Burn-ish (with a little preview thrown in there during the Bandy Candy Episode). I'm really hoping that all my edits in my saved version of this were done properly lol, and I don't have a bunch of edit marks, duplicate paragraphs and such haha.
There is 20 chapters for Part 1 that I will be uploading.
🔹 Pairing: Rupert Giles / OC (Rose Murphy) (Female)
🔹 Rating: Mature (Part 1 get's a little spicy, but Part 2 will be where it is at lol)
🔹 Word Count: 2037
Chapter One:
It was the first day of classes, well, the first day of classes for Rose, that was. For everyone else, it was already about two months into the school year. But she was here now, and that was all that mattered. As she stood at the edge of the school grounds, her backpack hanging casually from one shoulder; she tilted her head slightly to take in the sight before her. The sprawling brick building loomed, its tall windows glinting under the soft morning sun. A subtle smile crept across her lips, barely noticeable, but there. Her long, and deeply coloured red hair lifted in the gentle breeze, catching the light as it danced in the air like fiery waves.
“Rose Murphy?” a voice called out from somewhere nearby, piercing the stillness around her. It was still early enough that the grounds remained devoid of students, their usual chatter and laughter absent from the air.
Rose turned, her green eyes narrowing as they scanned the scene for the source of the voice. After a moment, she spotted a girl with similarly red hair, though lighter and softer, waving cheerfully as she skipped toward her. “You must be Rose! It’s so nice to meet you!”
“Hi,” Rose responded cautiously, giving the girl a quick once-over. She was dressed in a fuzzy pink sweater and flared bellbottoms with stripes that stood out boldly against the muted tones of the schoolyard. The ensemble was a sharp contrast to Rose’s fitted blue jeans and cream-colored camisole, which peeked from beneath her worn, dark brown leather jacket. “How did you know who I am?”
“Oh, yeah. Guess that is kind of creepy, huh?” The girl grinned without a hint of awkwardness. “I’m Willow, your official tour guide for the day! I’m supposed to show you around, help you get your books, and make sure you’re up to speed. No getting lost on my watch!”
Rose arched an eyebrow, unconvinced. “That still doesn’t explain how you knew who I was.”
Willow’s giggle was light, and she waved it off casually. “You look way too cool to be from around here. Plus, I’ve never seen you before, so I took an educated guess.”
Rose exhaled a soft sigh before her lips curled into a reluctant smile. “Well, nice to meet you, Willow. And yes, I’m Rose.”
“You’re going to love Sunnydale! How about we start with my favorite spot?”
Rose chuckled under her breath. “It’s going to be the library, isn’t it?”
Willow’s face lit up as she clapped her hands together. “Yeah! How did you guess?”
“Just a hunch. You seem like you’re... um...” Rose hesitated, trying to find the right label.
Willow grinned wider. “A nerd?”
Rose pressed her lips together, then nodded slightly. “I mean, yeah... I’m a nerd too, so no judgment. I love books!”
Willow laughed again, brushing it off with ease. “Could’ve fooled me. I’m sure Cordelia will try to eat you alive.”
Rose blinked. “Eat me?”
“Well, not literally,” Willow said, waving her hand in dismissal as she motioned for Rose to follow. “She’s the popular one, and you look like you belong in her crowd, not hanging with little ol’ me. But she’s not that bad. A bit vain, maybe, but she’s even helped with...” Willow trailed off, eyes darting nervously. “Well, never mind. You’ll see. Anyway, if you love books, you’ll love Giles!”
Rose’s curiosity piqued as they stepped into the bustling halls of the school. “Who’s Giles?”
Willow’s eyes brightened. “He’s the librarian! He has this amazing collection of occul... umm... books.”
Rose stopped mid-stride, her right hand twitching slightly at her side. “Were you going to say ‘occult’?”
Willow’s voice jumped an octave, her words suddenly rushing out. “Yeah, but, you know, only if you’re into that kind of thing? It’s just a fun, academic interest for some of us. Totally harmless. Not real. Nope, not real at all.”
Rose’s fingers flexed as an odd sensation crawled up her spine. “No, totally not real,” she muttered before she curled her fingers into a tight fist as they approached two large, wooden doors under a sign that read LIBRARY. The heavy, magic-laden air prickled at Rose’s senses the moment she crossed the threshold. The magical energy here was thick, almost suffocating. Her Aunt’s warning echoed in her mind, Sunnydale was saturated with supernatural forces. It would make her spells easier to cast, but also more dangerous for her if she was caught.
“Giles!” Willow called out, leaning casually against the large reception desk.
A smooth British voice responded from somewhere deeper in the room. “Willow?”
“I’ve got a new student with me! We need books!” Willow replied cheerfully.
A moment later, a head popped out from behind a doorframe near the desk. An older man with salt-and-pepper hair and wire-framed glasses appeared, his face warm yet slightly distracted. “Ah, excellent!” He stepped out fully, his gaze immediately settling on Rose.
Rose couldn’t look away. This man, Rupert Giles, practically oozed magic. Even without her Aunt’s gift for seeing auras, Rose could feel it. The tingle of raw power hung around him like static in the air. She could almost taste the sharp edge of dark spells lurking just beneath his composed exterior.
“Rose, this is Rupert Giles. Giles, meet Rose.”
“That’s odd. I received a note about a new student, but I don’t believe the name was Rose...” Giles adjusted his glasses, his eyes narrowing as they scanned her closely.
“My given name is actually Guinevere, but I never use it. I go by my middle name, Rose.”
Giles murmured something under his breath, Windos sēbros, his sharp gaze cutting into her as if searching for something hidden beneath the surface. Rose met his eyes, wondering if he could sense what she did, magic, pulsing like a heartbeat.
“What?” Willow asked, glancing between them, completely oblivious to the intensity of their exchange.
“The White Phantom,” Rose whispered, feeling the weight of Giles’s gaze press into her. There was a moment where the air between them seemed to shimmer, thick with unspoken understanding.
Willow blinked, oblivious to the tension. “Oh! Like Arthurian stuff! My brain immediately goes to you know the sword in the stone, not um Phantoms. So, your name is Guinevere? Like the Guinevere?”
Giles gave a small, distracted nod, but his attention remained fixed on Rose. His voice softened, turning speculative. “The White Phantom, a figure from Welsh folklore. It was a magical being of great power.”
Rose shifted uncomfortably under the weight of his words, her right hand twitching once more at her side, a tell-tale sign that the magic inside her was stirring. She wasn’t sure what Giles could sense, but she could feel the way the atmosphere around them was charged. He knew something. And from the look in his eyes, he was trying to figure out just how much.
“Neat!” Willow exclaimed, still smiling brightly, unaware of the brewing storm of magic around her. “I always thought Guinevere was just a queen, but folklore makes her way cooler. Magic and mystery? Totally beats royalty.” She chuckled, trying to lighten the mood.
Giles blinked, seemingly pulling himself back to the present. “Yes, well. Books. You’re here for books.” He cleared his throat, visibly shaking off the strangeness of the encounter. “Willow, I assume you have Rose’s schedule?”
“Sure thing!” Willow handed over a slip of paper that had been stuffed into her pocket. Giles smoothed it out and began reading through it.
As he did, his eyebrows raised slightly. “Quite the ambitious course load. It seems you and Willow will be seeing a lot of each other, judging by the overlap in your schedules.” His gaze flicked back to Rose. “Quite the academic, I see?”
Rose offered a slight smile. “I guess you could say that.”
Willow nudged her playfully. “She’s part of the club! It’s not very glamorous, but there are lots of late nights and over-caffeinated study sessions.”
Giles’s eyes lingered on Rose for another moment, as if he was still trying to unravel some hidden mystery about her, but then he sighed and nodded. “Right, well, let’s get you your books.”
As Giles disappeared into the shelves with Willow, Rose was left standing alone at the counter, her fingers idly tracing the surface of the old, worn wood. The library smelled of aged paper, dust, and something else, something faintly metallic, like the scent of a spell that had been cast long ago and lingered in the air, forgotten by everyone but those who could sense it.
She could hear hushed voices coming from deeper within the stacks. Willow’s tone was light, as usual, but Giles’s voice had taken on a more serious edge. Curious, Rose instinctively raised her hand to her ear and began to trace the familiar rune, one she had learned as a child when she wanted to eavesdrop on her parents. Her finger moved quickly, drawing the symbol with practiced ease. A warm sensation bloomed just behind her ear, and suddenly the quiet murmur of their conversation became clearer.
“She seems normal to me, Giles. No horns, no pointy teeth,” Willow was saying, her tone teasing but reassuring.
“I’m not so sure,” Giles muttered. “There’s something... familiar about her. Something I can’t quite place.”
Willow laughed softly. “I’ve only been with her for like ten minutes, Giles. I didn’t exactly start our conversation with, ‘Hi, are you a demonic creature here to kill us all, or just really into AP math?’ She seems pretty normal to me.”
Giles was silent for a beat. “Perhaps. But there’s a reason I feel like I’ve seen her, or someone like her, before.”
“Well, if she starts going all yellow-eyed and blood-sucky, I promise you’ll be the first to know,” Willow joked, though her words were met with a contemplative hum from Giles.
Rose let her hand drop, wiping the rune from her skin and cutting off the conversation. Her heart beat a little faster in her chest. Giles’s suspicions were more than just casual curiosity. He knew there was something off about her. He just didn’t know what yet. She would have to be careful.
A few minutes later, Willow and Giles reappeared, their arms stacked high with books. Rose had busied herself thumbing through a book on ancient Sumerian languages, though her mind was elsewhere.
“Well, I think we’ve got everything,” Giles said, though his voice carried a hint of reluctance. His expression was tight, as though he wasn’t entirely satisfied with leaving things where they were.
“Sorry!” Willow chirped, hiding behind a mountain of books. “I might’ve grabbed a few extras.”
Giles began signing out each book, his movements quick and precise. As he pushed the last one across the counter toward her, Rose reached to take it. The moment her hand came close to his, a sharp arc of electricity crackled between their fingers, lighting up the small gap between them with a visible spark. Rose jerked her hand back, shaking it as the sensation of numbness shot up her arm.
“Ow.”
Giles’s eyes widened slightly as he stared down at his own hand. “I—I’m terribly sorry, Rose. Must have been some static from the stacks. Are you alright?”
“Yeah,” Rose replied, flexing her fingers. The feeling was already returning, but the jolt had been more than just static. She could feel the lingering buzz of magic still in the air between them. “Just lost feeling for a second there.”
Giles’s gaze flicked to Willow, then back to Rose, his expression unreadable. “Well, it was a pleasure to meet you, Rose. The library is always open if you need anything. And do let me know if there’s anything... unusual you require.”
Rose forced a smile, though the underlying tension between them was hard to ignore. “Thanks, Mr. Giles. I think I will be hiding in here quite often enough.”
Willow helped her gather the books, and soon the two of them were heading back down the quiet halls of Sunnydale High. As they walked, the distant hum of students echoed faintly through the halls, but Rose’s mind was elsewhere, buzzing with thoughts of Giles, the spark, and the strange magic that seemed to hang over him like a dark cloud.
Synopsis: In a galaxy caught between silence and rebellion, Eira Mothma, a gifted student, catches the attention of Director Krennic. As curiosity and control collide, so does the tension between duty, desire, and the fate of a secret weapon.
🔹 Pairing: Director Krennic / OC (Eira Mothma) (Female)
🔹 Rating: Mature (no explicit content)
🔹 Word Count: 5697 (sorry, I didn't wanna split it up in order to keep the tension of each day 🫠)
The campus halls were quieter than usual when Eira arrived, too quiet.
Her boots clicked softly on the polished stone floor as she stepped under the archway. The scanner at the gate read her chip, then buzzed twice, a fraction too long. A flicker of red before the light went green and the gate released.
Her pulse jumped.
Two stormtroopers stood just inside the entrance, not the ceremonial kind that posed for parades. These were armed and still, watching everything without turning their helmets. They didn’t look at her as she passed.
That, somehow, made it worse.
She moved quickly, hugging her bag closer, eyes downcast, until she turned the corner into the main student wing and heard her name.
“Eira!”
“Hey, Mothma, wait up!”
She barely had time to register before they were there, a cluster of students spilling in from the hallways, robes brushing past her, data-scrolls under their arms.
And then came the questions, rapid and overlapping.
“Is it true?”
“I saw you on the feed this morning, with that Imperial Director. Dancing.”
“He’s old enough to be your—”
“Is he actually your mentor now?”
“Are you two, like… a thing?”
“Did he kiss you?”
“My father hates—”
“Is he a good in bed?”
Eira stopped dead in the middle of the corridor, the knot of them closing around her like a net.
Heat rushed to her face before she could stop it. She could feel it, creeping up her neck, burning the tips of her ears.
Half a dozen bright, curious faces leaned toward her, not cruel, not even particularly judgmental. Just fascinated. Casual.
Like everything that had happened last night, every look and word and impossible moment, had been reduced to gossip they could pass around over lunch.
And she stood there, caught between wanting to vanish and not knowing how to move.
“I was at a political function,” she said, forcing her tone into something flat, neutral. “That’s all.”
“You looked amazing though,” someone said brightly. “Like… not like yourself.”
“She always looks like that,” another voice chimed in, but the way they said it wasn’t quite a compliment.
Eira gave a small, tight smile that didn’t reach her eyes. “I have class,” she said quickly, using the excuse like a shield.
She turned and slipped out before anyone else could grab her attention, her steps quick and clipped. She chose one of the side corridors instead of the main one, her bag clutched close to her chest. The chatter behind her faded, but the sound still rang in her ears as she walked faster, past the murals and empty supply lockers until she reached a quiet half-circle alcove near the solar wing.
It was nearly deserted at this hour.
Only when she sat down on the edge of the low bench did she let out the breath she had been holding.
Her reflection stared back at her, no makeup, hair pinned up in a knot that had started to come loose. The girl from the gala, the one in gray silk, the one who had found the courage to dance with a dangerous man, was gone. Replaced once again with this skittish thing that tries to blend in. She wasn’t entirely sure she knew that girl in the reflection anymore.
She looked away and pulled out her datapad.
Nothing loaded.
A spinning icon flickered across the screen.
System security audit. Please wait.
Her mouth tightened. She tried again.
Blocked.
By the third try it finally opened, but it was enough to throw her focus off balance.
By the time she made it to lecture hall, she was five minutes late. Not because she had wasted time, but because someone had stepped deliberately into her path, fumbling with their satchel until she’d been forced to stop. Another minute had been lost at the checkpoint outside the elevator, security scans that hadn’t been there last week. And another three minutes when the lift shuddered and stalled between floors, leaving her standing there alone with nothing but the hum of the machinery and the feeling of being watched.
When she finally walked into the classroom, her new professor didn’t even glance up from his screen.
He didn’t need to.
She knew, without a single word, that he had already been informed of every step it had taken her to get there.
--Day Two--
University Cafeteria – Early Morning
The smell of caf met her halfway down the hall, sharp and bitter, and for a moment it felt like rescue.
One cup. That was all she wanted. One hot cup and five uninterrupted minutes to sit somewhere quiet. Maybe then the tension behind her eyes would let go.
But the second she rounded the corner into the café alcove, the relief she’d been holding on to dissolved.
The line was twenty deep.
And it wasn’t moving.
Students stood shoulder to shoulder, shuffling forward an inch at a time while at the counter the same girl kept repeating her order, louder each time. The droid barista just stood there, motionless, caught in a cycle of system checks.
The smell of caf felt suddenly heavy.
She hesitated, bag strap biting into her shoulder. For a moment she almost stayed, tried to convince herself she could wait it out. Then she spotted the gleam of white armor at the end of the corridor.
Stormtrooper.
That was all it took.
She turned on her heel and walked out without a word.
Level 7 – Quiet Study Lounge, Midday
By noon, the headache had settled in behind her eyes like a tight band.
She found her way to one of the smaller study lounges, a narrow, curved room she usually had to herself, and let her bag slide from her shoulder. Her datapad hit the low table with a soft thud, screen flickering awake to her notes on quantum field stabilization.
She pressed her fingertips against her temples for a moment, then tried to focus. She was tired, so very tired today.
But before long, the quiet she’d come here for was gone.
First, the bench beside her shifted under someone else’s weight.
Then the other side.
A student she barely recognized leaned forward to ask whether the Imperial data connection was working for her, their voice too loud in the confined space. Another dropped a datapack with a heavy thump onto the table, muttered a quick apology, and sat down with an exaggerated sigh that seemed to last forever.
The chatter that followed wasn’t loud, but it never stopped. A steady, needling hum.
Eira shifted, sliding farther down the bench, hoping to reclaim just a sliver of quiet.
Her datapad glitched.
Only for a moment, a blink of distortion across the diagrams on her screen, but enough to blur the data and force a restart.
She let out a slow breath through her nose.
It had happened yesterday too.
She waited for the system to recover, tried again.
Another flicker. Another stutter in the code. Barely noticeable unless you were looking for it.
Unless you were her. Unless you were someone who had gathered the attention of a powerful imperial officer.
Someone passed behind her chair, close enough that the brush of air made her flinch. Not a touch. Just proximity.
Through the glass wall of the lounge she caught sight of another stormtrooper, white armor bright against the muted corridor. He walked in step with two officers she didn’t know, all of them silent, all of them looking straight ahead, as if they had had this posting for years, and that she was not their target.
How many had she seen today? Six? Seven?
She hadn’t seen a single stormtrooper inside these halls for months. Now, they were everywhere, just out of reach.
The noise in her head built, restless and static, scattering her thoughts no matter how hard she tried to pull them back.
Uncaffeinated. Uncentered. Surrounded.
She sat back in her chair, eyes on the screen in front of her, but none of the lines of text would hold still.
She didn’t know exactly what this was supposed to teach her.
But she knew it wasn’t an accident.
And she knew who had set it in motion.
--Day Three--
University Cafeteria – Early Morning
Eira arrived ten minutes earlier than usual.
She had a plan.
Today, she was going to get caf, no matter how many delays or troopers stood in her way.
But when she turned the corner into the lower commons, her steps slowed.
Her heart sank.
The café was closed.
The gates were down, the lights inside dark. A handwritten placard leaned crookedly against the door…
System Diagnostics – Temporarily Offline.
No explanation. No timeline. Just closed.
In a building with redundant power grids, backup systems for everything, and a reputation for running like clockwork, somehow the only place she had been counting on this morning had simply shut down.
Her mouth tightened as she stared at the sign. She didn’t even try to hide it this time.
Turning sharply on her heel, she strode toward the lifts, her bag bumping against her hip. The low buzz of conversation from the clusters of students nearby followed her like a draft, hushed, speculative, but no one spoke to her. She saw the glances out of the corner of her eye, saw the way they quickly dropped their gazes again.
She didn’t care what they were saying. Not this morning.
All she wanted was to make it to class without another obstacle in her way.
But as she passed the edge of the atrium, voices carried just enough for her to catch a few words.
“…extra security is ridiculous. What are they even guarding?”
“…heard there was some kind of leak. Maybe someone hacked the records?”
“No, no, someone said a student went missing. Or killed. They’re just not telling anyone.”
Eira’s steps slowed for a heartbeat, the words hanging there behind her.
None of them knew. They were just guessing, filling in blanks.
She knew better.
Every checkpoint. Every delay. Every shadow in the hall was there because of her.
The lecture was already in motion when she arrived.
Professor Hollen barely acknowledged her entrance, his voice droning over a projection of layered energy diagrams. Eira slipped into her seat, activated her datapad, and tried to focus.
She lasted maybe two minutes before her name was called.
“Miss Mothma.”
She looked up, surprised. “Yes?”
The Professor didn’t even glance at her. “Your assignment didn’t upload properly. File was corrupted. I need a new submission by end of day.”
Her brow furrowed. “It was submitted before the deadline. I even watched it finish.”
Hollen didn’t shrug. He didn’t even pause. “Then I suggest you try again. Because otherwise it is failure.”
There was no room for protest. Not here.
The tightness in her chest grew as she dropped her eyes back to her pad. She opened the storage directory, navigated to the submission folder—
It was empty.
No diagrams. No equations. Not even the auto-saved drafts. Everything she had worked on for the last two weeks, gone. She opened another folder.
Empty.
Another.
Blank.
No.
Her jaw clenched.
Her thumb jabbed at the reset controls. She forced the device into diagnostics mode. The cursor blinked back at her, oblivious. Still no files. The memory showed wiped. Clean. Nothing in storage. Not even in trash.
Someone had been inside her datapad. Every folder she opened was blank, every draft she had saved was gone, and the hollow, empty directory was as cold as the feeling that crept slowly through her chest.
Her pulse began to pound behind her eyes, a steady, unpleasant throb that grew louder the longer she stared at the screen. It was like hearing the ocean through a shell, a dull roar building and building. She placed the pad down, her hands curled slowly inward until her fingernails pressed into the soft flesh of her palm. She could feel the sting of it, the faint crescent shapes biting into skin, and she tightened further, as though if she could just hold herself still she could stop the trembling that wanted to start in her shoulders.
This wasn’t a glitch. It wasn’t bad luck. She knew that with the same clarity that she knew how to breathe. This had been done deliberately. Someone had gone into her files and wiped them clean, not just the finished work but the drafts, the auto-saves, every piece of school work was gone. It wasn’t carelessness on her part. It wasn’t coincidence.
And she didn’t need to guess who had ordered it.
Director Orson Krennic.
Even thinking the name made her throat tighten. The thought of him stretched out like a shadow, long and cold, settling over every corner of her work and her life in a way she hadn’t wanted to admit until this moment. She had thought, perhaps foolishly, that these past few days had been a test brought on by his boredom and interest, a way of letting her know that he was watching, that he could pull strings when he wanted to. She had told herself it was a game, a way for him to make sure she understood her place.
But this was not a game.
This was different.
The screen in front of her blurred as she sat there, the blank file directory burning into her eyes. This wasn’t just an inconvenience or a reminder that she was being followed. This was her work. Her classes. Her future. Every late night she had spent at her desk had been erased as easily as if it was dust, and she knew exactly whose hand was to blame.
Her breath came slowly, through her nose, held in her chest until it ached and then let out just as slowly, trying to find a calm she didn’t feel. Her face stayed carefully still, because the only other option was to let everyone in this room see the frustration, the helplessness, the anger tightening in her ribs.
Deliberately, with a kind of precision that cost her effort, she reached down and turned off the datapad. Her fingers wanted to slam it shut, but she refused to let herself.
She rose from her seat, the legs of her chair scraping softly against the floor.
The Professor’s voice never faltered as he moved on to his lecture. The projections above the dais turned slowly, lines of energy patterns spinning as if nothing had happened, as if everything she had just lost was invisible to everyone but her.
Eira grabbed her things and stepped carefully past the rows of desks and out into the aisle. The echo of her boots followed her to the door, loud enough that she knew everyone could hear, but she didn’t stop, and she didn’t care.
She didn’t know where she was going. Only that she needed to leave before the hollow feeling in her chest widened into something unbearable.
By the time she reached the lift, the sharpness of her anger had dulled into something heavier. It sat deep, behind her ribs, like a weight that wouldn’t let her breathe.
The delays, the stares, the soldiers in the hallways, the checkpoints, even the smallest inconvenience like a closed café, she could ignore all of that. She could keep her head down and pretend none of it touched her.
But this was different.
This was her work.
And now, with a cold, steady certainty, she understood.
If he wanted to, he could take everything from her. That Mon’s concerns were warranted, that the words she spoke meant something—
“It’s what he does, he likes control,”
“And possibly… to be seen exerting it.”
--Day Four--
Residential District – Promenade Level 218
The sun never really rose on Coruscant.
It just got brighter with natural colour rather than artificial ones.
A dim silver glow filtered through Eira’s window as she tied her hair back and pulled on her boots. Her schedule was clear today, no lectures, no labs, no assigned rotations. For once in a rare occurrence, the day was hers.
And she was going to reclaim it.
She left without breakfast. She hadn’t touched much food the past few days, not with the hovering presence of shadows behind every corridor and stairwell. But today, today she had a plan. She was going to breathe.
Her feet knew the route by heart. A short walk, three levels down, left at the silver statue of T’lan the Educator, down the slope of an open-air market corridor that always smelled faintly of candied spiced fruit. She’d been coming here since she was fifteen.
The café sat tucked beneath an overhang of sun-burnished steel and flowering terrace vines, always quiet, always half-full with murmuring patrons and fresh-baked aroma drifting toward the plaza.
Only today, it was closed.
Her steps faltered.
Bright red signage stretched across the doorway:
“CLOSED FOR MANDATORY STERILIZATION – IMPERIAL HEALTH REVIEW IN PROGRESS.”
Her eyes scanned the windows, empty. Not a single figure behind the glass. No cleaning droids. Not even the emergency lights.
The entire place had been shut down.
Eira stared at the sign.
The plastic material of it rippled slightly in the wind, so bright and new it hadn’t even gathered dust. Like it had been printed today. Like it had been hung up just for her.
Her hands curled at her sides.
Her breath caught.
A bubbling surge of something near fury scraped her ribs, but she didn’t move. Not yet.
A flicker of motion caught her peripheral vision.
She turned her head slowly, casually, and saw the woman seated on a nearby bench, angled just enough to face the café entrance. White crisp uniform. Neutral expression. No datapad, no drink, no pretense of purpose.
Too still. Too deliberate.
Eira’s jaw tensed.
She wasn’t guessing. She knew.
ISB.
Planted there, no doubt, to record her reaction. Study her composure. Wait for something, a scene, an outburst, a slip.
She could feel the woman watching her.
She could feel the entire street watching her.
Eira forced herself to breathe slowly, in through the nose, out through clenched teeth. Her nails dug into her palm, hard, enough to remind herself not to scream.
Not yet.
She turned away from the door and walked down the street.
Each step echoed like defiance.
She would not give them the satisfaction.
--Day Five--
Coruscant Mid-Sector Transit Hub
The air outside the transport depot was unusually still.
Eira shifted the strap of her satchel higher on her shoulder and glanced at the time on her datapad. She was early, forty full minutes ahead of her usual schedule and the morning skyways hadn’t fully come alive yet. The hum of traffic was there, faint and steady, but it hadn’t yet built into the usual layered rush of voices, engines, and movement that swallowed the city after sunrise.
For a moment, the quiet felt like a small relief.
When the transport slid to a stop at the curb, its silver hull reflecting the pale light of morning, she stepped forward automatically. Same model. Same ID stenciled cleanly above the cockpit. It should have been just another part of her routine.
Except it wasn’t.
She slowed, one step short of the door.
Her driver wasn’t there.
A polite Rodian who never said much beyond a quick nod and a quiet radio broadcast in a language she couldn’t follow, was gone. In his place stood a human man, broad-shouldered, his Imperial-standard uniform so precisely pressed it looked as though it had just come from a factory.
Gloved hands. Mirrored glasses.
And no expression at all.
He didn’t say her name. Didn’t even bother with a greeting. Just inclined his head slightly and gestured toward the open door of the transport.
“You’re heading to the university this morning, correct?”
Her fingers tightened around the strap of her satchel as she caught sight of the blaster holstered neatly under his coat.
“Yes,” she said, keeping her voice even. “Where is my usual driver?”
“Sick, now get in,” he replied. “Let’s not waste time.”
The words weren’t sharp, but there was no warmth in them either.
A chill crept up the back of her neck and lingered there. For a brief moment she thought about turning around, about the fact that no one else was close enough to see this for what it was.
But she stepped forward anyway.
The interior of the transport was spotless, stripped of even the faint clutter she was used to seeing. She climbed in and took a seat, her hands resting on her knees, the strap of her bag still hooked tightly around her fingers.
The door sealed behind her with a hiss that sounded final in the stillness.
Coruscant Skyways – En Route
The hum of the engine didn’t sound right.
It was subtle at first, lower, deeper than she remembered. Not the steady, even tone she had grown used to hearing every morning. It felt heavier somehow, like the sound was being held back, throttled in a way she couldn’t quite name.
She slid into the seat farthest from the cockpit, tucking herself into the corner as though the extra space would help. Outside, the city began to flow past in streaks of gray-blue light and steel. For the first few minutes everything looked normal, the familiar line of the Upper Mid-Tier skimming the edge of the academic zones.
And then the course began to change.
It started with the faintest shift in altitude, so small she almost didn’t register it. A gradual dip. Then another. The turns began to stretch out too wide, and the windows outside filled with different shapes, harder, blockier.
The Senate district’s careful glass-and-gold skyline were gone from view.
Now the towers were darker, more industrial. Less polished.
She sat up straighter, the uneasy feeling coiling in her stomach.
Her hand reached for the console built into the wall, tapping it open for the route display.
Access denied.
The two words blinked back at her in red, impassive.
Her breath caught.
The transport dipped lower, leaving behind the bright upper levels of the city and pulling them into a maze of narrow corridors. Outside the window the light dimmed as the towers thickened, their facades giving way to dark storage complexes. Cranes arched like skeletal arms over wide loading bays, their cables swaying faintly as cargo containers were lifted and stacked in endless rows. The faint, metallic sound of trams clattering on their rails carried through the sealed cabin, echoing from somewhere deep between the buildings.
She pressed the call button, her fingers stiff against the cool panel. It took effort to keep her voice steady. “Excuse me. This isn’t the route to the university.”
The driver didn’t even turn his head.
“Security reroute,” he said, his tone as level and impersonal as a recorded message. “Detour through Sector Ninety-Seven. Standard procedure. Nothing to worry about.”
His words were smooth, but they settled wrong. Every instinct in her told her there was plenty to worry about.
She swallowed and sat back, trying to keep her breathing even, though her throat felt tight. Sector Ninety-Seven was not an academic district. It wasn’t even a standard industrial zone. She knew exactly what it was. Military.
The steady beat of her heart began to climb, so fast and hard she could feel it in her ears, a faint pulsing that made the space around her seem smaller. The clean lines of the transport interior felt like they were closing in. The walls, which had always felt harmless, were suddenly too close.
Her hands found the edge of her satchel almost without thinking, pulling it closer to her lap. Her fingers, clumsy and cold, fumbled until they brushed over the thin metal stylus Mon had given her years ago, an emergency comm hidden in plain sight, disguised as an ordinary writing tool.
Her breath caught as she curled it into her hand.
Click.
Nothing.
She tried again, her thumb pressing harder this time.
Still nothing.
The tiny indicator remained blank, lifeless, and with each failure she could feel her breath coming faster, shallow and uneven.
Heat pricked at the corners of her eyes, sharp and unwelcome. It wasn’t sadness. It was fear and something that burned just as strong, anger. The kind of anger that came from feeling small and powerless, a kind she had never experienced before. The weight of helplessness settled heavy in her chest, pressing her down until even her hands began to shake around the thin metal stylus.
She forced herself to stop. To hold still. To think of Mon’s voice, calm and firm in her memory, If you ever feel unsafe, you send the signal. Don’t wait. Don’t try to decide.
She exhaled slowly, counting the beats in her head as her thumb found the small key at the side.
Three quick taps. A pause. One more tap. Then a long press, holding it until her breath began to ache in her chest.
A faint vibration stirred against her palm, so soft she might have missed it if she hadn’t been gripping it so tightly.
And the tiny red light at its tip turned on.
Just as the vehicle began to slow, drifting into a wide, empty berth beside what looked like an abandoned cargo station, no lights, no signage, just metal and shadow. The moment the shuttle settled, the driver rose and stepped out without a word, the door sealing shut behind him with a finality that made her stomach drop.
Eira sat up straighter, her voice catching. “Where are we?”
No answer. Just the soft click of the locks engaging as he walked away.
Panic bloomed, sudden and suffocating. Her breath came too shallow, too fast. The cabin felt smaller by the second, walls pressing inward. Her fingers twitched toward the door control, then froze as LOCKED flashed.
Her heart pounded in her throat.
Then, a flicker. Her stylus blinked once, a steady blue light.
The comm chirped in her ear.
“Eira?” Mon’s voice, steady as stone, honed like a blade.
A chocking gasp left her lips. “I don’t know where I am,” she whispered, barely able to form the words. “The drive…he took me off-route. I think it’s a military zone… the driver said something about Sector 97. There is no signs. Nothing. He… he locked me in, and left.”
“We have your beacon. Don’t move. Don’t panic. We’re coming.”
The line cut. Silence reclaimed the space like a wave closing over her head.
Two minutes passed. They dragged like an hour.
She remained frozen, fists clenched in her lap, too afraid to cry, too afraid to scream, afraid even to breathe too loudly, as if the wrong sound might shatter her control.
Her thumbnail pressed hard into her palm until she felt the skin give way. A sharp sting, then warmth. When she glanced down, a thin well of blood had begun to rise, dark and precise.
She latched onto it, anchored herself to the pain, to the proof of sensation. The blood meant she was still here. Still real. Still alive.
And that is what she held onto for the next twenty minutes.
Then finally there was a light.
A low, rising hum cut through the stillness, followed by the clean, clinical glow of Mon’s private shuttle sweeping in fast. Blue landing lights sliced through the gloom, casting sharp, sterile angles across the metal around her.
A shrill alert echoed from the cockpit as an emergency override took hold.
The side hatch hissed open.
Mon sat framed in the doorway or her shuttle, composed, fierce, radiant with controlled fury.
“Get in.”
Eira didn’t hesitate. She moved.
Later – Mothma Residence, Upper Levels
The doors hissed shut behind them, sealing out the world.
Eira barely made it two steps before her knees buckled. She sank to the polished floor in silence, not bothering with the nearby bench. Her body trembled violently, the adrenaline leaving her hollow and raw. Every nerve felt flayed open, her breath ragged, uneven.
She had held it together for as long as she could.
But the moment Mon stepped forward and knelt beside her, reached out and gently took her hand, her thumb brushing away the smeared blood where crescent wounds bloomed fresh on Eira’s palm, “Eira dear…”
And then something inside Eira gave way.
Not with a scream.
Not with a wail.
Just a single, broken sob that cracked from her chest as she folded forward, burying her face in her hands like a child too tired to pretend anymore.
Mon’s arms wrapped around her in the quiet. No political mask, no senatorial poise, just warmth and grief, and a mother’s desperate need to shield something precious.
“I thought it was just pressure,” Eira whispered through her hands. “I thought he was… just doing it to bug me. Test me. But this, this wasn’t surveillance. This was something else...”
Mon held her tighter. “And now you see the stakes.”
Eira lifted her head, tear-tracked and stunned. “I shouldn’t have danced with him. I shouldn’t have spoken back. I should’ve kept quiet.”
Mon’s voice was barely more than breath. “No. Eira, you shouldn’t have to be afraid to do anything, that is the real problem.”
Mon said nothing more, only held Eira tighter, silently aching for the girl who still had no idea how much power she carried, or how close the fire was getting.
The sun filtered through the high windows in pale shafts of light, catching dust motes and turning them into stars. Eira stood at the glass for a long time, arms wrapped around herself, her forehead just brushing the cool pane.
She hadn’t dressed.
Not really.
Just a soft tunic and leggings, the sort of thing she’d worn as a child in the quiet, protected corners of Mon’s household when she felt like an intruder on a life that wasn’t hers. She hadn’t eaten her appetite having vanished with the hiss of the transport doors the day before.
Every sound in the apartment felt louder than usual, the click of the heating unit, the distant hum of traffic, the quiet, deliberate footsteps coming down the hall.
Mon didn’t knock. She never did in moments like this.
She entered gently, carrying a cup of steeped leaf brew and a folded shawl.
“You should sit,” she said softly. “You haven’t sat down since sunrise.”
Eira nodded once, but didn’t move.
Mon joined her at the window instead, wrapping the shawl around Eira’s shoulders before offering the cup into her hands.
The tea was warm, floral. Comforting.
“How did you meet my parents?” Eira asked after a moment. Her voice sounded small, even to herself.
Mon looked out the window, lips curving into something between a smile and a sigh. “I met them in the old Chandrilan embassy hall. I was barely eighteen, already married. Your mother was visiting for a diplomatic conference, and your father had slipped in with her, pretending to be staff just so he could stay close without drawing attention.”
Eira glanced over, startled.
“Why would he do that?” she asked. “Was he not supposed to be there?”
Mon’s eyes crinkled with quiet memory. “Your father hated attention. Hated it. But your mother was the a diplomat. A brilliant speaker. She could win over entire committees with a look and half a sentence. You are a lot like her, you know.”
Eira looked down at her tea, cheeks flushed. “That sounds nothing like me. People always say I’m too quiet.”
“Because that is how I taught you to be Eira, but yet here you are,” Mon replied gently, “scaring men twice your age—”
“He isn’t scared of me.” Eira interrupted.
“I don’t believe that for a second, and neither should you. You refusing to be intimidated by someone like Orson Krennic, makes men like him scared. Eira you’re quieter than your mother, yes. But don’t ever mistake that for weakness.”
There was a silence then, comfortable at first, then heavier.
“I miss them,” Eira whispered. “Even though I barely remember them.”
“I miss them too.” Mon’s voice softened further, touched by memory. “Before they died… before everything turned to what we live in now… a man came to them. A Jedi.”
Eira’s head turned sharply. “I thought they were just myths?”
“That’s what those who now control the record of history would like you to believe,” Mon said, her tone careful. “He was one of the last. He came to them asking for help, and they gave it. No hesitation. Even knowing the risk.”
“Why?”
“Because they believed in the galaxy their daughter would inherit.”
Eira swallowed hard. “Is that why—?”
Mon looked at her, something almost unreadable in her expression.
“Yes. Your parents reached out to me in those final days… they wanted me to know that he had seen something in you. That he believed you were meant for more. That you had a future worth protecting. We all knew the risk of what his being there meant. That’s why they made sure you wouldn’t be alone.”
She reached out and tucked a strand of Eira’s hair behind her ear.
“Your father made sure, that if anything happened to them, that you would come to me, he wanted me to keep you safe. To make sure you had the chance to become who you were meant to be.”
Eira closed her eyes. Her chest ached.
“I don’t know who that is,” she said quietly.
“You will. Everything that happens to us, happens for a reason, perhaps you may soon discover what it is the universe needs you to do.”
Mon’s hand rested over hers on the cup. “But until then, we protect what we can. We stay quiet, when we must. And we endure. Because one day, the fire that burns in us, inside you, will be allowed out into this world. And we’ll use it to burn all of this to the ground.”
Eira nodded slowly, understanding the meaning behind Mon’s words. Words that could all be summed up into one.