You know how it can be in Starfield with a follower/NPC. Even with a mod like "Better Follower Behavior", followers don't always behave better. You move your Captain next to them and they jump backwards six feet like you've tried to give them the cooties.
But every now and again, you have them walk through a door or ship's hatch, and they'll turn and look at each other. You'd best believe I hit that photo mode button like lightning, maybe I'll leave their expressions as is, maybe I'll give them an emote. But I hate to waste a golden opportunity.
i'm just not on social media much anymore. i use bluesky for networking for the voice acting/audio drama stuff, but it's maybe looking at it for 10 minutes, and then i have to turn everything off.
but, i have been working, albeit slowly, on my stuff. i've drafted the next chapter for To the Shore, which should get posted friday. go me! but, this little wip-snip isn't from the next chapter, but the one after.
the next chapter is called Advent, and marks about the 3/4s mark. high price is, at least for me, the emotional climax for the story, and starfield in general. after that, it's downhill to the unity. though, with hwa, nothing will be that clean or easy.
if you wanna read To the Shore from the beginning, check it out here.
wippy-snippy
âWhatcha doing there?â Sam asked as he walked into her room. He pulled up the easy-chair and sat down.
Hwa looked up and saw that he had shaved and trimmed his beard, and his hair was freshly washed. His dark golden waves looked brighter, probably because he hadnât yet put on his hat, which flattened down his hair, muting both the waves and blond streaks. At least at home on Ternion, she got him to leave off his hat more frequently, though he once said that he felt more naked without it than if he was actually naked. Heâd wear that stupid hat to bed and into the shower if he could.Â
To her eyes, he was the most beautiful person sheâd ever met.Â
âIâve been thinking. Iâve been doing a lot of thinking. Stuff like this,â and she spread her hands out over the food. âI started hoarding food becauseâŚwellâŚâ
He nodded, âI know why. In case someone took food away. In case you had to bug out,â he said softly.
She nodded, âItâs silly, isnât it? I mean, no one at Constellation would deny me food, right?â
He shook his head, âNo, itâs not silly at all. Itâs what you knew. It was the only thing you knew.â He leaned down and stared into her eyes, âYou didnât know who to trust. I donât think you even knew how to trust when you arrived.â
âYeah,â she whispered, then sighed. âI had started going through this right before we left, but,â she paused and picked up a package of Chunks cheesecake and stared at it intently, then continued, âIâve been thinking that this stash is a symptom of something that doesnât exist anymore.â
âLike what?â
âInsecurity.â
âDoes that mean you feel more secure?â
Hwa stared at the food for a while before speaking again. âI feelâŚhonestly, I donât know how I feel. This whole feeling thing is pretty new for me,â she snorted derisively. âBut, I do know that this doesnât serve a purpose anymore,â she announced, determination in her eyes. âDoes that make sense?â
âA whole truckload of sense,â he smiled softly. âIâm really proud of you, you know,â he said. She shrugged nonchalantly, but was secretly pleased. It was a small step, a silly step, but a step nonetheless. There was a part of her that was actually proud of herself, but it was something she could neither articulate, nor even admit. At least, not yet.
âSo, if youâve decided, why donât we dump the food into the pantry on the Solar Flare,â he suggested, âtake it back to Ternion. No point in wasting good food.â
She inhaled and held her breath, her eyes raking over the scattered food packages. It took her a couple minutes, but she finally exhaled, âGood idea.â
Sam stood up and gave her his hand to help her up off the floor. It was a gesture he always made to her, and even though she didnât need it, this time, she took his hand and let him help her rise up.
Never shared my old Starfield doodles of Sam and Cpt Max
Sam and Cora were incredibly endearing characters, I wish Bethesda had gone more in-depth into the companions and their stories. Iâd have loved to have been able to find that book for Cora. I was checking every shelf until I learned it was never implemented..
Chapter 4 of Through the Star Field for You is live!
Read on AO3 â
Ash touches down in Akila expecting a dusty errand. What she gets instead:
đ¤ A hostage standoff
đ A daddy issues showdown
đĽ A gang shootout
đ An artifact-induced collapse (romantic tension intensifies)
âŚand maybe a little emotional whiplash.
Sam Coe is funny, heroic, and far too soft on our girl, whether he wants to be or not.
Ash is sharp, brave, and definitely not catching feelings. Nope. Not even a little. Certainly not while bantering in bars, surviving shootouts, and accidentally winning over his daughter. đ
If you like:
slow burn space cowboys
Starfield canon woven into deep emotional ties
a strong female lead with secrets of her own
âŚyou might just love this one.
đŤ I update this Starfield fic + my Witcher Eskel romance fic every weekend
đ Reblogs help so much and make my space nerd heart happy
Chapter 4-Akila Landing & Family Baggage
The dusty skyline of Akila stretched below them like a faded paintingâbone-dry hills, golden light flaring off rooftops, and the spired silhouette of Freestar Collective flags flapping over the gates. It reminded her of Texas in some weird way. The Frontierâs landing gear hissed as the ship settled into the pad with a muted clang.Â
Ash braced herself as the hull adjusted to atmospheric pressure. Her shoulder bumped against Samâs in the cockpit, but neither moved away. The silence between them was almost comfortable now. Almost.Â
Sam cleared his throat. âHey⌠about what you heard earlier.â His voice was low, worn smooth around the edges. âThat comms call with Lillian. I didnât mean for you to⌠well, hear that.âÂ
Ash tilted her head. âSam, your ex-wife called you a âwandering dust-licker with a martyr complex.â Pretty sure I wasnât supposed to hear that either, but here we are.âÂ
He grimaced. âYeah. Thatâs her being⌠generous.âÂ
âIâve heard worse,â she said lightly, though there was no mockery in her tone.Â
Sam gave her a sidelong glance, watching her profile as she stared out the viewport. âStill. You didnât sign up for domestic baggage.âÂ
Ash shrugged. âEveryoneâs got baggage. Yours just happen to yell over open comms.âÂ
He barked out a laugh, scrubbing a hand over the back of his neck. âYouâre not wrong.âÂ
She offered him a half-smile, then nodded toward the city below. âSo. This is your hometown?âÂ
He leaned forward, elbow propped on the console as if the view required commentary. âAkila City. Home of well-made guns and self-righteous politics. And me, apparently.âÂ
Ash narrowed her eyes. âWait. Walter said you're some sort of celebrity here or something?âÂ
He grimaced again, like it physically pained him to talk about. âSolomon Coe was my great-grandfather. He's the Founder of the Freestar Collective. Bit of a legend around here. They built statues and everything. Real heroic rebel stuff.âÂ
Ash blinked. âSooo... youâre basically space cowboy royalty?âÂ
He scoffed. âMore like a walking PR problem. Local celebrity with a bad attitude.âÂ
âYou ever get mobbed by admirers at the market?â she teased. âOr wake up to find someoneâs named their pet Ashta after you?âÂ
Sam chuckled, leaning back in his seat. âYouâd be surprised. Got asked to sign a bra once. Lady was seventy if she was a day.âÂ
Ash burst out laughing, covering her mouth. âYou didnât.âÂ
âOh, I did. Canât disrespect the elders.âÂ
Ash was still giggling as she stood, grabbing her gear. The shipâs ramp began to lower with a hiss of steam and metal.Â
âWell,â she said, slinging her bag over her shoulder, âif we run into more fangirls, Iâll be sure not to shield you.âÂ
"Rude." Samâs grin softened into something warmer, quieter. âReckon Iâm more worried about how youâll do around all this.âÂ
Ash met his gaze. âI can handle a crowd, Coe. Besidesâyou're the one with the groupies.âÂ
He hesitated a second longer than necessary, then stepped aside to let her go first down the ramp.Â
âYou lead the way then, hotshot.âÂ
Ash descended into the wind and sunlight of Akila.Â
***Â
Akila City hit Ash like a wall of dust and sun-bleached wood. The air was dry, and the streets were streaked with half-dried mud from last nightâs stormâmore muck than sand, and more sullen than lively. No animals roamed the paths, no wandering livestockâjust a low buzz of tension hanging in the air.Â
As they came around the corner past the General Store, she caught sight of the barricades firstâcrates, barrels, hastily thrown-up steel mesh. Armed lawmen crouched behind cover, weapons drawn, all eyes fixed on the two-story stone face of GalBank.Â
âWhat the hell?â Ash murmured.Â
Sam was already moving. He picked out the oldest of the lawman, a grizzled man in a long coat with an iron-set jaw and a faded silver badge. Sam approached, hands visible but confident.Â
âMarshal Blake,â Sam called. âWhatâs going on?âÂ
The lawman straightened just enough to scowl. âWell, if it ain't Sam Coe. Weâve got ourselves a hostage situation. Don't suppose you came to pick up the badge again?âÂ
Sam smiled and shook his head. âNo, I'm here on Constellation business. How many inside?â Sam asked.Â
âThree robbers, heavily armed. Went sideways fastâone of the tellers took a hit to the leg. At least five hostages still breathing. They're holed up behind the main desk.âÂ
Ash moved closer, eyes scanning the scene. Her voice was even. âYou got anyone trying to talk them down?âÂ
Marshal Blake looked her over, unimpressed. âLady, I donât know who you are, but weâve got trained men on this. Last thing I need is a civilian making it worse.âÂ
Sam stepped in, but Ash raised a handâcool, calm. âIâm with Constellation,â she said. âNameâs Ash. Iâve talked people out of worse. You send in a squad with rifles, someoneâs going to die. Let me try first. I'm sure you know Constellation's reputation.âÂ
Blake squinted at her. âYou trained for negotiations?âÂ
âNo,â she admitted. âBut Iâve been in hostage situations before.âÂ
Sam was watching her now, head tilted, something unreadable in his expression.Â
âYou walk in there and they panic, itâs on you,â Blake warned.Â
âUnderstood.âÂ
âNo weapons. Open comms only.âÂ
Ash handed over her pistol without hesitation. âDeal.âÂ
She turned to Sam, gave him a look that said trust me, even if she wasnât entirely sure she trusted herself.Â
âYou sure?â he asked quietly.Â
She nodded. âThey need someone calm. And we need in that bank.âÂ
He gave her a crooked, not-at-all-comfortable smile. âDonât get shot.âÂ
Ash crouched beside the bank where the comm box was attached, just outside the doors. She opened the comms, which was already crackling with the sound of angry, nervous breathing on the other end.Â
âThis is Ash with Constellation,â she said, voice low and even. âThe Marshall said you wanted someone not on the Rangers' payroll. Iâm here to help you walk out of this alive.âÂ
Then a voice snarled back. âWe didnât mean to shoot him, alright? He reached for the damn alarm!âÂ
âOkay,â Ash said gently. âSo letâs not make it worse.âÂ
âGood. That means you still have a shot at walking out without blood on your hands.âÂ
Another voice chimed in, younger, shakier. âWe didnât come here to kill anyone.âÂ
Ashâs tone didnât waver. âThen donât. Youâve got a window right now to de-escalate. Nobody else is hurt, and if you cooperate, that makes a difference.âÂ
âTheyâre gonna throw us in a cell either way.âÂ
âProbably,â Ash said honestly. âBut a short sentence is better than a body count. You cooperate now, youâve got a case for leniency. Judges look at stuff like that.âÂ
No response.Â
She pressed her advantage. âBe real with meâhow many hostage takers have you heard of getting out with a ship full of credits and not getting shot in the back?âÂ
A long pause.Â
âYouâve got no clean escape. This isnât a movie. Itâs three of you and a room full of scared people in there and itchy trigger fingers out here. You push it, people dieâand then the only thing youâll get is a bullet or a longer sentence.âÂ
The static shifted. Then: âIf we come out now, they wonât shoot us?âÂ
Ash turned to Blake, who gave a curt nod. âTheyâll hold fire,â she confirmed into the mic. âHands up. No sudden moves.âÂ
A beat.Â
âAlright,â the voice muttered. âWeâre coming.âÂ
Two minutes later, the doors creaked open. Three sweaty, dust-streaked figures shuffled out, hands raised. One was crying. The others looked more numb than angry.Â
The marshals swarmed in behind them. The hostages were rushed out, mostly unharmed. The whole street exhaled.Â
Ash's legs felt weirdly loose now, like the adrenaline was only just catching up.Â
Marshal Blake gave her a look of grudging respect. âNot bad, Constellation.âÂ
Ash shrugged. âThey needed an outside perspective and someone to be real with them.âÂ
Sam walked up beside her, expression soft.Â
âDidnât even raise your voice,â he said, admiration clear in his tone.Â
Ash looked over at him, a flicker of mischief behind her exhaustion. âSee? I can keep my cool.âÂ
He smiled a little warmer than necessary. âI noticed.âÂ
The sounds of the city started to return around themâboots on wood, murmurs rising. But for a moment, Ash just stood there, grounded in the stillness, with Sam beside her and the sun finally breaking through the clouds overhead.Â
***Â
The hostage situation was over, but the adrenaline still lingered like smoke. Across the square from GalBank, an outdoor bar had reopened its counterârough wood tables shaded by rusted tin awnings, the smell of fried something hanging on the breeze.Â
Ash nursed a local lager, the bottle sweating in her hand. Sam sat across from her, boots propped on the edge of her chair like it was second nature, one arm hooked over the backrest.Â
âWell,â he said, tipping his bottle toward her, âyou made quite the impression back there.âÂ
Ash arched a brow. âYou mean I didnât get shot. High bar.âÂ
âNah. I mean you talked down three twitchy kids with automatic rifles and didnât even break a sweat.âÂ
She smirked. âThat you saw.âÂ
He laughed, low and warm. âFair. StillâMarshal Blake hasnât stopped grumbling about how you made him look bad. Thatâs basically a medal in Akila.âÂ
Ash glanced around after yet another local said hi to Sam. âEveryone here seems to know you.âÂ
Sam shrugged. âSmall town. Big Coe legacy.âÂ
âYou ever get tired of being recognized?âÂ
He took a long sip, eyes scanning the rooftops like they held old memories. âUsed to love it. Then I started getting into troubleâbar fights, midnight races, one very unfortunate incident with a crate of stolen spice and a goat. The shine wore off.âÂ
Ash laughed into her drink. âPlease tell me the goat survived.âÂ
âThrived. Lived better than I did for a while.âÂ
They lapsed into a companionable silence, broken only by the lazy clink of bottles and the distant buzz of post-crisis cleanup. Eventually, a lawman gave the all-clear nod from the bankâs front steps.Â
Sam stood, downing the rest of his drink. âReady?âÂ
âLead the way, your majesty,â Ash said, sweeping an arm with mock reverence.Â
Inside GalBank, the tension had drained. Dust floated in shafts of afternoon light. The vault lay open nowârows of old safes humming quietly.Â
They each held a key, matching it against the lock numbers on the doors.Â
âUsed to come down here as a kid,â Sam said absently, testing another door. âHide from my dad. Pretend I was on a treasure hunt.âÂ
Ash glanced at him. âDid you ever find anything?âÂ
He gave her a sidelong look. âYeah. Trouble. Every time.âÂ
Her key slid into a lock at the far end. It clicked.Â
Inside: a single folded note, old and worn, the ink still sharp.Â
Ash read it once, then again. Her expression shifted.Â
âSam,â she called, voice soft but clear. âOver here.âÂ
He joined her, taking the note from her hands. As he read, his face hardenedâshoulders going taut, jaw clenching like it hurt.Â
âI know where this leads,â he said quietly.Â
Ash studied him. âWhoâs Jacob?âÂ
Grimacing, he said, "Not important."Â
"Um, well, he took the maps and left a note saying to come get them from him in person. I'd say you two have history and id say it's not great. I have a right to know what I'm walking into."Â
Sam hesitated. Then, with visible reluctance: âMy father.âÂ
Ash blinked. âThe one who left the note?âÂ
âYeah.âÂ
âYou didnât want me to know.âÂ
âNo,â he admitted. âDonât want anyone to know about our bad blood. Especially not you.âÂ
Ash leaned a hip against the vault wall, watching him. âYou think Iâd judge you for daddy issues? Try growing up on a dig site surrounded by spiders the size of your face and a dad more obsessed with relics than raising his daughter.âÂ
He looked at her, and something in his posture softened. A smile tugged at the edge of his mouth, genuine and a little helpless.Â
âYou ever gonna stop surprising me?â he asked.Â
Ash tilted her head. âSomeone has to keep you on your toes lest the 'celebrity' go to your head.âÂ
He laughed.Â
The moment stretched between themâquiet, charged, just long enough for both of them to feel the shift.Â
Then Sam folded the note, tucking it into his pocket. âCome on. If weâre going to face Jacob Coe, we might as well do it before I change my mind.âÂ
Ash fell into step beside him, her shoulder brushing his.Â
âDonât worry,â she said. âIâm good at translating grumpy old men.âÂ
He gave a wry smile. âThen youâre about to meet the final boss.âÂ
They left the vault together.Â
***Â
The house was nicer than Ash expectedâpolished sandstone walls, dark paneled windows, a real wood door with inlaid brass. It sat a few blocks up from the main square, tucked behind a trimmed hedge and a privacy gate that seemed more decorative than defensive.Â
Sam stared at it with the same expression one might reserve for a hangover or a loaded weapon.Â
âYou good?â Ash asked, stepping beside him.Â
He didnât answer at first. Just reached up and knocked.Â
Moments later, the door swung open. A tall man filled the thresholdâsilver hair swept back, sun-lined face, arms folded like he was born disappointed. His gaze landed on Sam and narrowed.Â
âWell,â Jacob Coe said. âDidnât expect you to come knocking like a goddamn vagabond.âÂ
Samâs jaw ticked. âNice to see you too, Dad.âÂ
âYouâve got two minutes,â Jacob said, turning without invitation and walking back inside.Â
Ash followed Sam in, noting the clean lines and expensive furniture. Everything looked curated. Cold.Â
âYou got the note,â Jacob said flatly, not turning around.Â
Sam stepped forward. âWhat the hell were you thinking? Leaving a message like thatâdragging strangers into our crap?âÂ
Jacob rounded on him. âYou think I want strangers poking into this mess? Maybe if youâd answered one of my calls or brought my granddaughter byââÂ
Samâs voice rose. âOh, Iâm sorry. Was I supposed to call to argue with you? Because that's all we ever do. And if you think I'm bringing my daughter here to get twisted up by you like you did me, you've got another thing coming!âÂ
Jacob barked a bitter laugh. âI only want what was best for her!âÂ
âLike hell you didââÂ
âEnough,â Ash said, firmly but not loudly. She stepped between them and touched Samâs arm, grounding him with a light pressure. He flinched at first, then slowly exhaled.Â
âMr. Coe,â she said, meeting Jacobâs eyes. âWeâre not here for a family reunion. Weâre here for the maps.âÂ
He crossed his arms. âAnd why should I hand them over to the both of you?âÂ
âBecause weâll keep showing up until we get them,â Ash replied, calm as still water. âAnd because dragging this out just gives both of you more chances to say something youâll regret.âÂ
Jacob didnât speak, but his eyes sharpened. Listening.Â
Ash pressed on. âYou hand over the maps, we leave. You get your house back. Your peace and quiet. You get to be the bigger man. And maybe, someday, if things start to shift⌠it goes a long way toward showing Sam youâre capable of giving instead of pushing.âÂ
A flicker passed across Jacobâs expressionâtoo fast to pin down. Regret, maybe. Guilt. Something human.Â
âAnd Cora,â Ash added, softer now. âYou want to see her again? Bridges only build one direction at a time.âÂ
Silence stretched. The old man sighed, then walked to a locked drawer near his desk. He retrieved a thin black leather folder and slid it across the table toward Sam.Â
âThatâs everything I had. Coordinates, notes. Take it.âÂ
Sam looked stunned for half a breath, then scooped it up. âThank you,â he said, clipped but not cruel.Â
Ash turned to follow him out.Â
At the door, Sam paused, then turned back. âYou didnât make it easy. But⌠thanks.âÂ
Jacob gave a short nod. âDonât make it worse.âÂ
Outside, the sun had slipped lower, casting long shadows over the clay-brick street. They walked a few paces in silence.Â
Then Sam reached out and gave her hand a quick squeeze.Â
âThat was... embarrassing. But you were good in there,â he said. âBetter than I deserved.âÂ
Ash squeezed back. âDonât get used to it.âÂ
He smirked.Â
She winked.Â
And they walked on.Â
***Â
The descent into the valley came with a hush that raised the hairs on Ashâs arms. Even the wind had gone still. The outpost sat low, tucked between two broken ridges like it was hiding from the sky. A few prefab buildings leaned at odd angles, reinforced with rusted scaffolding and slats of scavenged metal. Ash counted two turretsâone on the far ridge, another mounted high above a solar array.Â
âShawâs gang,â Sam said, voice barely audible. âThey hole up here between jobs.âÂ
Ash dropped to one knee and raised her new rifle, the one they'd bought together this morning with her signing bonus. âCozy.âÂ
He crouched beside her. âNot sure cozyâs the word I'd use. You ever take down an automated turret?âÂ
"Nope," she murmured. âFirst time for everything.âÂ
Sam gave her a sidelong look. âRight. Academic with a body count.âÂ
She shrugged. âIâll take the left ridge. Cover me?âÂ
His grin was grim and quick. âAlways.âÂ
She moved fast and low, navigating the rocky incline with practiced grace. The scope found her targetâfirst the snipers patrolling the rooftops, then the turretâs exposed energy core. She timed the shot between its idle rotations. One hit. Sparks. Smoke. It sputtered out like a dying breath.Â
Sam moved when she didâsweeping in from the opposite side as gunfire cracked in the air. A hail of bullets tore into the path where sheâd just stood. Ash dropped behind a low wall and returned fire, taking out the second turret with a clean double-tap.Â
A gang member rushed her from the flankâshe picked up her pistol and fired with one hand without hesitation. The old sidearm Sam had given her kicked harder than she expected, but the outlaw dropped.Â
Sam vaulted a crumbling platform, tackled another fighter mid-swing, and elbowed him in the gut hard enough to knock the wind out of him. He dispatched the last one with a sweep and a shot to the thigh.Â
They swept through the camp, picking up ammo and provisions along the way, until every last outlaw lay unmoving.Â
Ash met him near the entrance to the cave, breath still quick, adrenaline still hot.Â
âClear,â he said, spinning the chamber of his pistol to check rounds.Â
She raised a brow. âIs this like a normal day in Akila city, shootouts and family feuds?âÂ
âOnly the good ones,â he shot back, running a hand through his dust-streaked hair, then re-situating his hat.Â
Ash holstered the pistol and looked past him, toward the gaping dark mouth of the cave.Â
âLetâs see what was worth bleeding over.âÂ
Sam nodded, falling into step beside her.Â
They crossed the threshold together.Â
***Â
The silence in the cave felt oppressive.Â
Ash moved ahead of Sam, her boots scuffing softly against the stone. The deeper they went, the more the walls seemed to narrow and smoothâunnaturally so, like something had shaped them on purpose. Not tools. Not hands.Â
The light came firstâsoft, flickering, like starlight caught in water.Â
Then the hum.Â
Subtle, melodic. A vibration that settled into her bones, her teeth, her lungs.Â
Sam stopped beside her, his breath catching as the artifact came into view. It sat at the heart of the cave, nestled in a cradle of stoneâglowing faintly, its surface shifting like liquid metal and glass.Â
He didnât move. âAin't that a thing of beauty?âÂ
Ash stepped closer. Her fingers tingled. Her head buzzedânot pain, but⌠recognition.Â
Sam's voice came quiet. âYou get the honors.âÂ
She turned to him, hesitating.Â
âYou sure?âÂ
He nodded, though his throat worked like it cost him something. âGo ahead.âÂ
Ash approached.Â
Each step felt heavier than the last, like gravity knew what she was about to do. The air thickened. She stretched out her handâÂ
âAnd the moment her skin touched the surface, the world fell away.Â
Music.Â
Not just sound, but color. Meaning. A symphony of stars echoing through her skull.Â
Light.Â
A burst behind her eyes, ancient and blinding. She wasnât just in the caveâshe was everywhere. Orbiting distant moons. Walking through dust storms on Mars. Lying on a rooftop under a double sunset with a man whose face she couldn't fully see.Â
Memory.Â
Not hers. Fractured glimpses of other versions of her. Other lives. Other choices.Â
And Sam.Â
Again and againâreaching for her.Â
She opened her mouth to scream, but there was no breath to give it shape.Â
Then... nothing.Â
***Â
The glow faded.Â
Ashâs body slumped to the stone like a marionette with its strings cutâhard and graceless, her limbs splayed, her chest barely rising.Â
Sam caught her before her head struck the ground.Â
âHey,â he said, panic fraying his voice as he dropped to his knees. âAshâAsh, come on.âÂ
She was too still. Too pale.Â
He cupped the back of her neck, easing her onto his lap, his thumb brushing gently along her temple. Dust clung to her lashes. Her skin felt clammy under the cavernâs cool air.Â
âAsh,â he whispered, softer this time. âYou gotta wake up.âÂ
No response. Just that eerie, cavernous silence. The kind that made you feel like the world was holding its breath.Â
Thenâher lashes fluttered.Â
âWasâŚâ Her voice cracked, rough and low. âWas that your idea of a first kiss? Sleeping Beauty... whatnot.âÂ
Sam barked out a laugh, all breath and relief. âWasnât gonna say it, but you do make a damn dramatic damsel.âÂ
Ash blinked up at him, trying to focus. âDid I pass out?âÂ
âRight after touching the glowy death rock. Yeah.â His voice wavered on the last word. âDonât ever do that again.âÂ
âI think I saw the whole damn universe,â she muttered.Â
He tucked a loose strand of hair behind her ear, his hand lingering on her cheek.Â
âYou scared me,â he said quietly. âOne second you were thereâand the nextâŚâÂ
Ashâs brow furrowed. âYou were calling me.âÂ
âDamn right I was.âÂ
She swallowed hard. âI didnât think I was coming back.âÂ
Samâs jaw flexed. âYeah, well⌠you did. And youâre not alone.âÂ
They looked at each other and, for a second, neither reached for a joke or a mask. Just two people reeling in the aftermath of something vast and unexplainable.Â
Ash reached up, touching his wrist lightly. âYou okay?âÂ
âHell no,â he said, but he smiled. âBut youâre awake. So Iâll live.âÂ
A silence stretchedânot empty, but full.Â
Then, gently, he helped her sit up, keeping a steady hand at her back.Â
Ash glanced toward the artifact, its light now a dull.Â
âI donât know what it did to me,â she said. âBut it felt⌠familiar.âÂ
Sam nodded, his fingers brushing down her arm as if grounding her. âWhatever it was, weâll figure it out.âÂ
Together hung between themâunsaid, but thick in the space.Â
She didnât pull away.Â
And he didnât let go.Â
***Â
Ash and Sam stepped into the fading light, the air sharp after the caveâs dense stillness. The sky was blushed gold, clouds tinged rose, and the surrounding ridges cast long shadows across the ravine. Ashâs breath still hitched a littleâresidual from the vision, from the moment she nearly didnât wake.Â
Sam stayed close, not touching, but near enough that she could feel the heat off him.Â
Then the shout came.Â
âWell, hell,â a womanâs voice rang out, smooth and vicious. âLook what crawled out with the treasure.âÂ
Ashâs head snapped toward the mouth of the ravine. There, flanked by at least half a dozen gang members, stood a tall woman with short-cropped hair, a long coat, and a rifle slung casually across her shoulder. Shaw.Â
Sam muttered, âFigures.âÂ
Ash raised both hands slowly, palms out. âLetâs not turn this into something messy.âÂ
Shaw snorted. âDarlinâ, this was messy the moment you stepped on our turf. Whatever you found in that cave belongs to me.âÂ
âIt was never yours,â Ash said evenly.Â
âDoesn't really matter what you think.âÂ
Ash glanced at the men surrounding Shawâtired, edgy. Not quite itching for blood, but primed. She pitched her voice low, calm. âYou fire on us now, it ends ugly. The kind of ugly that gets remembered. But if you walk away, no one needs to know you were even here.âÂ
Shaw raised a brow. âYou tryinâ to talk me down?âÂ
âI talked down three twitchy robbers this morning before Iâd had coffee,â Ash said. âYou really wanna test my win streak?âÂ
Shaw smiledâslow and dangerous. âGot a mouth on you.âÂ
âSheâs got more than that,â Sam said coolly. âWalk away, Shaw.âÂ
"Well well, Sam Coe. Akila's prodigal son returns." Her and the men behind her laughed.Â
The two groups stared each other down.Â
And then the ground shook.Â
A scream tore through the silenceâa shrill, ear-splitting roarâand out of the brush behind Shawâs gang came the first Ashta, all scales and claws and primal fury.Â
âShit!â Shaw barked, spinning around just as the creature pounced.Â
Everything exploded at once.Â
Ash dropped into a crouch and pulled her pistol. Sam was already firing, cutting down an Ashta bounding from the ridgeline.Â
Chaos reigned.Â
One of Shawâs men was dragged off screaming. Another shot blindly into the trees.Â
Ash darted forward, grabbing Shawâs arm and yanking her out of the path of a charging Ashta, before shooting it between the eyes. âGet to cover!âÂ
Shaw shoved her off with a growl, but retreated behind a rock outcrop. âWeâre square,â she shouted. âWeâre damn square!âÂ
Sam and Ash moved as oneâback to back, dodging claws, firing in short bursts, covering each other like instinct.Â
The fight ended as fast as it began.Â
Five Ashta lay dead. The rest scattered into the underbrush, leaving blood and churned dirt in their wake.Â
When the dust settled, Shaw and her remaining crew were already backing offâbloodied, but alive.Â
Shaw gave Ash one last lookânot a glare, not quite. Something closer to appraisal.Â
âNext time,â she said, voice rough. âI wonât be so polite.âÂ
Ash gave a half-smile. âNext time, maybe you bring better back up.âÂ
"I did. You already killed them." Shaw barked a short, humorless laugh, then disappeared into the trees with her crew limping behind her.Â
Ash let out a long breath and looked at Sam.Â
âJust once,â she said, âIâd like a quiet walk out of a cave.âÂ
Sam smiled, blood-splattered and winded. âThen you probably picked the wrong job.âÂ
They stood in the silence that followedâalone now, and alive.Â
And for the first time in hours, the sky above them felt wide again.Â
***Â
The hum of the ship was softer nowâless engine, more heartbeat.Â
Ash stood at the galley counter, her damp hair wrapped in a towel, steam still clinging faintly to her skin. Clean, finally. The grit of the cave, the smoke from the fight, the copper tang of bloodâtheyâd all been rinsed away.Â
Sheâd stowed her gear, changed into something loose and soft. Now she sat cross-legged on the common room floor, a datapad balanced between her and Cora, who was already giggling at a story involving a clumsy robot and a very opinionated cat.Â
ââjust then the cat hit the override switch with its tail,â Ash read, eyebrows raised dramatically, âand the whole cargo bay went whooooosh into vacuum.âÂ
Cora snorted with laughter. âThat cat is so me.âÂ
Ash nudged her with a foot. âYou launching cargo bays out the airlock on weekends?âÂ
âMaybe,â the girl said smugly. "Don't tell dad."Â
"I won't if you won't," Ash replied with a wink.Â
Sam leaned against the doorframe, arms crossed, just⌠watching. There was a softness in his face that hadnât been there when they left Akilaâa quiet, unguarded quality that flickered to life when he found the two of them like this.Â
Ash looked up, caught him looking, and tilted her head.Â
âYou staring, cowboy?âÂ
He pushed off the frame and wandered over. âJust appreciatinâ the view.âÂ
Cora rolled her eyes. âUgh. Adults. Gross.âÂ
Ash laughed. âYouâre not wrong.âÂ
He gave Coraâs shoulder a gentle squeeze. âAlright, bug. Time for you to finish your homework. Don't think I didn't notice the assignment you skipped.âÂ
Cora mock-groaned but handed over the datapad. âFine. But that essay is so boring.âÂ
âIt still has to be finished,â Sam shot back.Â
âDictator,â she muttered, padding toward the aft hallway.Â
When she was gone, Ash stood, stretching her arms overhead. âSheâs quick,â she said. âReminds me of someone.âÂ
Sam arched a brow. âCareful. I might take that as a compliment.âÂ
âTake it how you like,â Ash said, brushing past him toward the cockpit.Â
A beat.Â
âYou ever flown this bird?â he asked.Â
âNot really,â she admitted. âOnly a brief lesson from Sarah. It was mostly me watching her tap buttons while lecturing me about patience.âÂ
He stepped behind her as she dropped into the pilotâs chair. The stars stretched out in lazy arcs across the viewport. âThen itâs time for a real lesson.âÂ
"Lets start off with steering." He reached around her, fingers tapping commands on the dash. His arm brushed her shoulder, then settled casually along the back of the chairâclose enough that she felt the warmth of him, smelled the lingering trace of soap and something woodsy.Â
Ash adjusted her grip on the controls, acutely aware of how near he was.Â
âYou smell good,â she said, not looking at him.Â
A pause.Â
Then his grin, slow and amused, beside her ear: âDonât go distractinâ your instructor now.âÂ
âSorry,â she murmured. âCanât help it. Iâm very responsive to olfactory cues.âÂ
âBig words,â he teased. âYou tryinâ to flirt or pass a science exam?âÂ
âLittle column A, little column B.âÂ
He didnât move away. Instead, he shifted just slightly to guide her hands over the flight stick, his breath warm on her neck as he murmured course adjustments. Together, they guided the Frontier into a wide, graceful arc around Akilaâs outer orbit.Â
Stars spilled across the glass. The world fell away behind them.Â
For a few minutes, it was just the hush of space and the quiet tension between themâsomething steady and building, like the stretch before gravity lets go.Â
âYouâre a natural,â Sam said softly. âFlyinâ like itâs in your blood.âÂ
Ash didnât answer right away.Â
She just looked out at the stars, wonderingâmaybe it was.Â
And beside her, Sam stayed where he was, close but not pressing, his presence a steady tether in the blackest sea.Â
***Â
Sam hadnât moved far. He leaned against the console, arms crossed, content to watch.Â
âYou sure you havenât flown this thing before?â he asked.Â
Ash smiled faintly. âWhat, and ruin my reputation as an amateur?âÂ
âSerious question,â he said, stepping forward. âYou fly like youâve done it a hundred times.âÂ
Ashâs fingers hovered over the throttle. She stared out the viewport, brows furrowed just slightly.Â
âFeels like I have,â she said quietly.Â
Before he could answer, the comms snapped to lifeâSarahâs voice, sharp and urgent, filling the cabin.Â
âSam, Ash. Weâve got a situation. Message just came inâBarrett may be trouble. We need you both back at the Lodge ASAP.âÂ
Ash jolted upright. The atmosphere shifted in a breathâwarmth replaced by alert tension.Â
Sam stepped toward the console, already checking their course. âWhat kind of trouble?â he asked.Â
âNo details yet,â Sarah replied. âBut itâs urgent.âÂ
The comms cut.Â
Ashâs fingers were already moving, flipping switches, plotting coordinates. Sam hesitated only a secondâthen stepped back and nodded.Â
âTake us in.âÂ
She looked at him, surprised. âYouâre sure?âÂ
âYouâve got this,â he said. âFly us home.âÂ
Ash adjusted the course with practiced ease, guiding the ship into a sharp curve toward orbit exit. The stars shifted, the blue haze of the atmosphere giving way to the shimmer of re-entry.Â
Sam watched her from the co-pilotâs chair, pride clear in his expressionâbut something else, too. Wonder. Maybe even awe.Â
âYou really fly like itâs second nature.âÂ
Ash didnât meet his gaze. Her eyes stayed on the horizon as it rolled into view.Â
âIt doesnât make sense,â she murmured. âBut⌠it feels like something I lost. And now itâs coming back.âÂ
Sam didnât speak.Â
He didnât need to.Â
The ship slipped through the stratosphere, cutting back toward the Lodge and whatever waited for them below.Â
***Â
The warmth of The Lodge hit Ash like a balm.Â
Worn wood beneath her boots. The low hum of conversation in the next room. Somewhere, someone was playing soft guitar over the speakers. After the sun-scorched firefight and whatever strange current had passed through her body in that cave, this place felt... grounded. Human.Â
Sheâd barely said a word after returning. Just slipped the new artifact into the Armillary, where it joined the others with that now-familiar hum and slow orbit. The second it settled into place, her shoulders slumpedânot in defeat, but fatigue. Muscles aching. Fingertips still tingling like she'd been holding onto lightning too long.Â
âHey,â Sarahâs voice cut through the quiet, gentle, observant. âYou alright?âÂ
Ash nodded once. âFine. Just sore. Long day.âÂ
Sarah eyed her, unimpressed. âYou look like hell.âÂ
âThanks.âÂ
âHang on.â Sarah disappeared down the hall and returned with a sleek metal tin. âMuscle balm. Lavender, eucalyptus, and something from Neon Iâm not allowed to ask questions about. Run a bath. Use a scoop. Twenty minutesâno more, or youâll see God.âÂ
Second soak in one day. Worth it.Â
Ash cracked a tired smile and accepted it. âMuch appreciated.âÂ
âSeriously. Twenty-one minutes and youâll start floating.âÂ
âIâll set a timer.âÂ
Across the room, Sam stood near the hearth with Walter, drink in hand, posture relaxed but eyes still sharp. He wasnât fidgeting exactlyâbut he hadnât stopped watching the hallway since Ash disappeared into it.Â
âShe dropped like a stone,â he said, voice quiet enough not to carry far, but just loud enough for Walter to hear. âTouched the artifact, then justâout.âÂ
Walter frowned. âOut, like unconscious?âÂ
Sam nodded once. âYeah. Not breathing weird or anything. Just⌠gone. Cold, dead weight. Woke up a minute later, making jokes.âÂ
Walter glanced toward the Armillary, then back. âYou think she saw something?âÂ
Samâs thumb ran along the edge of his glass. âWouldnât be the first time. But it felt different. Like something hit her, deep.âÂ
Sarah rejoined them, keeping her voice down. âNoelâll run a few tests tomorrow. She didn't show any signs of system failure?âÂ
âNah,â Sam said, but there was a flicker of something else behind the word. âShe just looked⌠off. Pale. Like whatever it was took more than it gave back.âÂ
Sarah gave him a knowing look. âYou care about her.âÂ
Sam didnât flinch. Just took another sip and said, âSheâs one of us.âÂ
Walter didnât say anything, just raised a brow and offered a faint smile that said he wasnât buying itâbut he respected the game.Â
A little while later, Sam knocked lightly on Ashâs door, a steaming cup of tea in his hand.Â
He didnât expect her to answer. Not immediately, anyway.Â
So when the door cracked open, and she appeared, towel wrapped around her like a makeshift robe, wet hair curling at her shoulders, he blinked.Â
âHey,â she said, leaning a shoulder to the frame, expression sly. âYou stalking me?âÂ
He held up the cup. âAn offering. Thought you might want a post bath tea.âÂ
Ash smirked. âYou bring the good stuff or is this Lodge standard?âÂ
âCustom blend,â he said. âMint, cinnamon, pinch of cardamom. Donât ask me how I know that.âÂ
She laughed under her breath and took it. Their fingers brushed for a second longer than necessary.Â
âYouâre full of surprises, Coe.âÂ
âDonât go telling anyone,â he said, stepping back.Â
Ash leaned against the doorframe, watching him retreat. She took a sipâhot, sweet, grounding.Â
He turned once at the end of the hall, caught her eye again. Something unspoken passed between them.Â
She closed the door, smile lingering, and let herself sink onto the bed. The ache in her muscles had eased. Her chest still fluttered with whatever residue the artifact left behind. But under it all was a quiet steadiness.Â
She fell asleep thinking of Samâs handsâbrushing hair from her face in the cave, holding out tea in the hallway. Steady hands.Â
The kind you could hold on to if everything else slipped away.Â
short little Starfield drabble that popped into my head (weirdly enough..) while playing mass effect đ
General audiences, spoilers ensue for Starfield main quest and ending!
---
Maybe they're right.
It's hard each time, her need to be honest guaranteeing the most painful reception by her once and future friends. But maybe they really are right: maybe she is more it each time through.
Each time she's broken into pieces, some of them sprinkled across the galaxy, some of them staying with her.
How many trips through before there's nothing of her left at all?
Or, how many trips until there's nothing good left of her?
Maybe this is why she keeps doing it, to prove her own humanity to herself by continuing to choose what's right, what's good.
She supposes maybe she'll ask the Hunter next time she sees him. Lurking around the spaceport in New Atlantis, or visiting the bars in Akila City again. Sticking out like a sore thumb, just waiting for his moment to be a massive pain in her ass. Again.
The past few trips through the Unity, as much as it has hurt, she's avoided closeness with her Constellation colleagues. Sam is always the hardest to maintain distance with and more than once her resolve has been broken by his casual charm. Despite herself, and despite knowing the pain she will inevitably bear, she's managed to fall for him again more often than not.
But without fail, the relentless curiosity she loves about him tears him away. He and Cora are never ones to deny the draw of the unknown.
Listlessly wandering the starfield without them, and then furthermore watching the rest of Constellation depart to seek their answers, has always lacked in appeal. Inevitably, she goes through yet again.
And so it has been, enough times that she's lost count.
For all of the Sams and Coras, the Sarahs and Barretts and Andrejas that she's known, the starborn spacefarer can only imagine how many times they are now finding themselves similarly stuck in this loop. The odds are impossibly small she'll ever encounter any of them again. She wishes she could warn them, but she knows it wouldn't work anyway.
Stepping into yet another galaxy mired in conflict, she wonders why none of the new universes she's joined aren't already sprinkled with the good of their sacrifices by the time she gets there, then realizes yet again that it's a few people versus infinity: the odds are not stacked in their favor.
Just once more; for old time's sake, she thinks, contemplating the impossibly beautiful rings of light and stars. She's exhausted. This will be her last go at it: once she's chosen the microbe or aceles, once she's helped Sysdef take the Fleet down yet again. Once she's found all the artifacts and helped constellation find the secrets of the Unity. This time, this time; she'll be done.
Vague considerations of retirement plans flit through her head as she strides up to and through the ring one more time, no hesitation in her movements. Maybe she'll get a little dream house on Nesoi, or open a restaurant in New Atlantis. See if Sergeant Yumi or Commander Tuala is single. Weird that she's never asked them that in all this time.
Once she regains consciousness, the bridge of her Guardian slowly coming into focus, instead of grav jumping to Alpha Centauri, this time she lands the ship.
She steps out onto Vecteran soil one more time. Barrett and Lin are still there, confused that she's apparently back. She should be on her way to New Atlantis with the next pieces of the artifact that will set this whole trip into motion one more time.
Neither of them seem to notice she didn't arrive in the Frontier, or that her spacesuit isn't that of a typical Dusty. They never do.
Her smile is a little crooked, it doesn't quite reach her eyes. She's about to open her mouth to respond when something happens.
Something different.
âŚbut it's never different?
A familiar hiss of hydraulics and the Guardian VI that lands next to hers almost reminds her of the Hunter's, but he doesn't usually show up until after she's been to Neon chasing Walter's black market artifact deal.
They all watch the ship land in silence, tension in the air given the recent pirate attack. The arc around the ship almost seems to sparkle a faint robin's egg blue as it rotates around and the wings tilt to touch down.
A moment later, a starborn exits the side door, dark black Venator armor seeming to absorb all the light around it as the lone figure strides confidently down the wing.
Lin and Barrett don't know yet to draw their weapons, but she does, or at least she would, if she hadn't just gotten back and found herself unarmed once more.
Wish I'd grabbed that shitty pistolâŚ
Her regret morphs into confusion even as she prepares herself to use solar flare, her fingers twitching in anticipation, power drawing up her body and muscles tensing. Watching the figure approach, on second thought, she decides one might describe its walk as more of a mosey, were the figure not so imposing and her hackles already raised.
What fresh hell is-
The figure stops short when it sees her, then does a quick pair of halting half steps before beginning toward her with intent, the shade withdrawing from the visor of its helmet, revealing a face.
The features are a little more scarred and weathered than she remembers, but she'd recognize those baby blues anywhere.
"Sam?" her voice is nothing more than a hoarse whisper that still manages to crack into a million pieces on a single syllable.
Chapters: 12/?
Fandom: Starfield (Video Game)
Rating: Explicit
Warnings: Graphic Depictions Of Violence, Major Character Death
Relationships: Sam Coe/Spacefarer | Player Character, Cora Coe & Sam Coe
Characters: Sam Coe, Barrett (Starfield), Andreja (Starfield), Sarah Morgan (Starfield), Seren Jones OC
Additional Tags: Alternate Universe - Canon Divergence, What-If, I'm putting my spacefarer through heartbreak, Major and i mean major character death, Angst with a Happy Ending, Angst with a capital A, Starfield endgame spoilers, Possible Soulmates
Series: Part 2 of Starborn Odyssey
Chapter 12: Key to Escape
Summary:Â Seren sees how much the Key is different in this universe and decides to help this ragtag group with information that could win the war against the UC.