iprotectyou (
iprotectyou) wrote2017-05-05 11:00 pm
Entry tags:
OOM: The Job
The job pays well, at least. That's the only good thing about it.
The intel Baze was given was shaky at best, and while his target goes down without a fight, the Selkath bodyguard she employed is a surprise. An aquatic species resembling a catfish with aqua-colored skin, the Selkath fights viciously, tackling Baze from above and mauling his arm with venom-tipped claws.
Baze bellows, swinging his repeater cannon up and around to fire upon the creature. He pumps blaster bolts into him, stumbling away when the Selkath disengages. Baze didn't expect the claws. To a Selkath, use of their retractable claws is dishonorable, a sign of madness. Baze's arm burns, and he grits his teeth against the pain. He knows he has to find an antidote, and fast.
He staggers back home, back to Chirrut.
The intel Baze was given was shaky at best, and while his target goes down without a fight, the Selkath bodyguard she employed is a surprise. An aquatic species resembling a catfish with aqua-colored skin, the Selkath fights viciously, tackling Baze from above and mauling his arm with venom-tipped claws.
Baze bellows, swinging his repeater cannon up and around to fire upon the creature. He pumps blaster bolts into him, stumbling away when the Selkath disengages. Baze didn't expect the claws. To a Selkath, use of their retractable claws is dishonorable, a sign of madness. Baze's arm burns, and he grits his teeth against the pain. He knows he has to find an antidote, and fast.
He staggers back home, back to Chirrut.

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He takes his heartbreak out on the shirt. Buttons go flying.
Carefully he pulls the blankets of the bed up, and he really doesn't have time to hesitate, he doesn't... but he pauses, just for a moment, to press a kiss to Baze's forehead, tasting bitterness and salt. He settles his hands against Baze's face, wishing he knew if Baze was looking at him.
"Baze? Baze, listen to me. I have to go get treatment. I will be back as fast as I can. Don't... don't go without me, Baze. Don't you dare." Chirrut chokes out.
Then he rises, grabbing his staff and the purse with his limited supply of coins, and takes off at a run.
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He wants to tell Chirrut not to be silly. Of course he won't.
But he can't guarantee that. Not with his breathing ratcheted up and the pain blinding him and the nausea. Not with his heart slamming against his ribs so hard, he fears it will stop.
But he can try. Baze Malbus is a fighter, and will always fight, especially when he's being forced to leave Chirrut behind.
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He wishes, fervently, that she didn't live on the other side of the city.
He has to backtrack twice, both times to avoid Imperial patrols. Neither of them were particularly large but he can't afford any delay today. Baze is dying. Baze could be...
He tries not to think about that either.
When he reaches the tiny shop with its rattly beaded curtain, he's panting hard enough to make words impossible, giving the girl he was hoping to find plenty of time to pepper him with questions.
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With each tortured breath, his panic rises, and his faith cracks. He wants to cry out for Chirrut, scream his name, say goodbye. Baze can't even press his hands to his venom-squeezed heart.
Chirrut left him. Chirrut left him to die.
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He could cry. He could fly against every Imperial he encounters, destroying them with the strength of his anxiety and rage.
He goes around.
Finally, the familiar staircase with it's multitude of unsavory odors. The hallway, with the hole in the tilework halfway down just waiting for the day he puts his foot in it and twists his ankle.
He bursts into the apartment, barely putting any care into remembering to close the door, and hurries to Baze's side.
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No.
Baze's shirt is ripped across as he pulls it off of Baze's chest, stooping to press his ear against the sturdy frame of his ribs. No heartbeat. No heartbeat, he can't...
That glow, that sense of Baze nearby, keeps him from utter despair. It's a near thing.
It takes every slivered shred of his training, of his faith, to continue functioning at all - he firmly pinches Baze's nose shut as he seals his mouth to Baze's, ignoring the blood he can taste, ignoring the laxity of his jaw, to force air into Baze's lungs. One breath. Two.
Then locking his fingers together, he places them over Baze's heart, and shoves his body weight into Baze's chest. Again. Again. Againagainagainagain... something cracks under his hands. He ignores that too - he can apologize for damaged bones later.
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He gasps back into sweet, sweet life, his head tilted back and his back arched. He goes limp again, and for a brief moment, breathes peacefully. Then his heart starts pounding and his breathing ratchets up again and the poison coursing through his veins makes itself known to him.
But it doesn't matter. Chirrut is back, and Baze is glad.
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He hopes it tastes even worse.
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"Chirrut," Baze slurs, his tongue still heavy. He forces the words out, despite exhaustion, despite everything. "Y-You came back for me."
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That had been close. Close enough that he can still feel the Force roiling with the near miss.
"You bantha." The anger is still there, but nearly swamped with relief. Baze's shirt is getting soaked, but that's alright. His eyes are just leaking.
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Baze wants to reassure him, to tell him that it's okay to cry, that Baze himself is okay. But he can't find the words, and his blackened tongue is still maddeningly thick. He pets Chirrut, massaging his neck and back, and takes comfort from the fact that his friend is here.
Baze is still in excruciating pain, still nauseated, but he's alive to feel it. That was too close. He's fairly certain that he died, and was leaving, before Chirrut forced him back by force of will. Baze does not credit the Force for saving him. That was all Chirrut.
"I'm okay," Baze forces out, coughing and jostling Chirrut on his place on the larger man's chest. "I'll be okay."
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He sighs. Unwillingly, he leans back onto his heels, and considers his mental tally of things to do.
"You'll be better once your clean and I've treated your wound properly. That cloth probably isn't very clean to begin with."
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"Fine," he grumbles, and fumbles for the cloth. His fingers are still clumsy and half-paralyzed, so he doesn't manage to remove it. Chirrut bound the wounds rather tightly, even in the heat of the moment and with a scarf.
Baze is grudgingly impressed; his friend certainly knows how to keep a cool head. It's better than Baze would have done, and he knows it. He sighs, and holds his arm out to Chirrut. "I can't get the scarf off."
Thankfully, words are coming easier to Baze now that he can breathe again--even if he can only take shallow breaths, and his chest aches like fire with each inhale. Something has happened to his ribs, something he doesn't remember. Chirrut should. Baze will ask him about it later.
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"Don't mess with that, we'll get there. Just don't fight me." Huffs the man who'd fight the temple's entire infirmary staff any day of the week. He goes for Baze's boots instead, plucking at knotted ties and braced clamps.
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He's bursting with words. He wants to apologize again, wants to tell Chirrut that he's sorry for almost leaving, wants to tell him how much he would have missed him and that Baze is so glad he came back.
"Chirrut," Baze says, drawing another shallow breath. Pain lances through him. "What happened to my ribs?"
That wasn't what he meant to say. Apparently, later is now.
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He finishes tugging one boot off and starts in on the other.
"I cracked them." The words are flat, not an apology. "I'll make sure nothing is fractured, and tape them up."
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"Oh," Baze says, with another huff of painful breath. That does make sense. Chirrut would have had to pound on his chest pretty hard to bring Baze back, he realizes. And how difficult that must have been for a blind man, much less Chirrut, who is much smaller than Baze.
He wants to roll over, to lean on his side, so he can better see Chirrut, but Baze doesn't dare move. For one, it would be painful, and for two, it would interrupt Chirrut in whatever he's doing to make Baze more comfortable.
"I'm sorry," Baze says, finally.
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"I'm not angry at you." This is... mostly the truth. He's just angry, fear and stress transmutating into something more pure. Baze is just part of it. The closest part.
"Here, we'll get these on you - pants first, I need to clean that wound." He's holding a deeply mismatched set of clothing. He pauses, frowning, halfway back to the bed.
"I... I don't think we have anything for pain, I... didn't think, I'm sorry. I'll get some later, and food..."
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Baze grunts as he struggles to his feet. He crosses to Chirrut with a plodding tread, and takes the clothes with his good hand. "Thank you," Baze says, swaying on his feet. He starts to strip from his jumpsuit, his hand catching on one of the pockets. "I don't need anything for the pain. I just don't want you to leave again. I... I can't. I can't bear having you gone."
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"... You do know I'd always come back, don't you?"
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"Maybe I will," he says, instead of answering Chirrut's question. But, unfortunately for Baze, it's a question that deserves an answer. He faces his friend, wishing not for the first time that he could see Baze's sober expression. His tone will have to carry it forward for him.
"Yes," he says, with the strength of his faith in his voice. He may not believe in the Force anymore, but he believes in Chirrut. "And I will always come back for you."
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"Good, you wouldn't like it if I had to hunt you down." Chirrut tugs Baze back towards the bed, insistently. "Now, sit down, lie down, I don't care but you might - I'll go fetch the kit and I'll put a proper bandage on that arm."
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When Chirrut does return with the kit, Baze lays a hand on his arm. "If you have to leave to get food before the markets close," he says, the words slurred from exhaustion, "I won't stop you. Just wait until I fall asleep."
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It's a slight falsehood. There is, however, enough for Baze.
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