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#Toro Calican Lives AU
corellianhounds · 19 days
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Tidbit Tuesday
@storytellingdreamer tagged me to share a bit from my current work in progress— Here’s a snippet from one of the Sanctuary chapters of the Toro Calican Lives AU (since Sanctuary comes after The Gunslinger in this universe)
“Why is it so hard to keep that kid from stuffing live animals in his mouth?” Toro asked amusedly.
Omera chuckled. “Children his age tend to put anything in their mouths. Could be teething.”
“He’s always munching on something,” Cara added. “Stole half my food the other day. Maybe it’s a growth spurt and he’ll get to be bigger than the size of a shrimp. What say you, Mando?”
The armored man was quiet, looking out at the children.
“He hasn’t been with me for long,” the Mandalorian said carefully. “And I don’t know where he came from, but… I don’t think he would eat frogs if he’s never had to scavenge before.”
The levity of the front porch dissipated like the morning mist. Conversation died as the adults processed the sobering statement. Cara and Toro were alarmed, Omera stricken. The Mandalorian continued to watch his ward.
Carefully he stood and made his way over to the children, kneeling to their level as he picked the child up. Cara, fidgety since the Mandalorian’s statement, stood to leave, saying something about patrol. Omera quietly excused herself too to finish cooking dinner, leaving Toro on the porch with his thoughts.
They each had dinner separately that evening, and if Din noticed the extra food on his and the kid’s plates, he didn’t bring it up.
Thank you so much! ☺️💕 These WIP games always reenergize me
Tagging: Anyone who sees this! (I don’t know which of my followers write, I haven’t been reading a lot these days 😭)
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oloreaa · 3 years
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Toro would've probably showed off his jewellery collection to his adoptive brother Grogu and father figure Din which definitely happened after episode 5
Boy has the finest golden earring on Tatooine of course he has a little satchel with different hoops and studs so he can switch his look up every day😌😌 and Grogu would either yank at them or chew on them because they're shiny
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corellianhounds · 10 days
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Toro Calican Lives AU
Chapter 4 — First Impressions
Media: The Mandalorian
Rating: Gen.
Word Count: 14,119
Warnings: Canon-typical violence
Art Credit: Christian Alzmann, The Art of Star Wars: The Mandalorian
Series Summary: What would have happened if Toro Calican hadn’t betrayed the Mandalorian? How would the story have changed if he had lived?
Chapter Summary: Things are bound to change when you throw somebody new into the mix.
This chapter, though similar to canon, better develops some of the characters and circumstances leading into “Sanctuary.”
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Din gingerly stretched his arm up to assess the injuries he’d sustained. Over the past two weeks he’d been in multiple fights, electrocuted, dropped sixty feet onto his back, bodily hit four times by a mudhorn, shot by a modified MK, and had a speederbike shot out from under him going a hundred miles an hour.
The damage was taking its toll.
Purple, blue, and magenta bruises bloomed across his ribs and chest in a number of patterns and intensities. The ones from the Sandcrawler fall and the mudhorn were tinged green with healing around the edges, but newer ones criss-crossed his skin in Venn diagrams of pain. He’d been containing his movement as much as he could since Arvala-7: two ribs felt loose and his back ached with gravity’s pull every time he got out of bed. He hadn’t had proper enough rest after the fall and the tussle with the mudhorn to justifiably say he was back up to par, though for reasons unknown he didn’t feel as bad as he thought he should.
Shand’s second shot had hit the back of his pauldron, and while the blasterfire had been deflected, the force behind it had still traveled through the joint of his shoulder, which was to say nothing of the shot he’d taken square in the chest: the rifle bolt had felt like another hit from the mudhorn. In the privacy of the bunk he rolled his shoulder, taking note of at which angles it hurt most to move as he picked up the hand scanner and hovered it over his ribs to get a reading.
The screen blipped, the readout telling him there was no internal bleeding this time, so he set it aside and sifted through the analgesics in the hidden compartment by the head of the cot. Of the most recent injuries, Shand’s strike to the inside of his knee and the loose ribs concerned him the most. He hated wasting medical supplies, but the knee had been a bother even before the mercenary’s fight and he needed to be able to walk unhindered: with a steadying breath he lifted the lip of his helmet and knocked back the painkillers, then stooped to roll up his pant leg and swab a spot on the outside of his knee, injecting a half dose of bacta with the stimpak. The muscle strain and bruising in his chest and back would have to wait until they found somewhere to settle and he could rest properly— There were too many muscle groups working together for an injection to do much good while they were still on the move. Having his feet under him would have to do.
The kid stirred groggily in the hammock above the cot. Din could feel the critter’s big eyes watching him. It made him uncomfortable, but the kid either couldn’t tell or didn’t care. Instead he rolled over the edge of the hammock to dangle his feet above the cot and drop down onto the bedding. Din watched him from the side as he toddled across the blanket to him, perching by his thigh to peer under Din’s arm.
When the child reached his hand up to Din’s side, Din removed the autoinjector and shifted away from him on the cot, stowing the medical supplies in the compartment and letting his pant leg fall before picking the kid up. He put him back up in the hammock and shoved his boots on.
“Just for a minute,” he told the kid as he fastened his tunic and donned the armor he’d set aside. “We’ll get food when I’m done.”
Out in the hold it appeared the gunslinger had helped himself to a ration pack and was working his way through a biscuit while sat atop a footlocker. His bedroll nearby was still in a state of disarray, his bag half-packed. Toro nodded in greeting before going back to his work on the disassembled heavy blaster pistol in his lap, a torque wrench in one hand and the biscuit between his teeth. Mando passed him to get some food ready for the kid.
Toro rolled the toolkit back up and quickly reassembled the blaster. “So where’re we headed?” he asked.
“Sorgan,” Mando replied. The child took the ration bar Din gave him, happily chowing down.
“Never heard of it.”
“Backwoods planet near Savareen.”
“The old coaxium refinery?”
Din was surprised. “Yeah. It’s four quadrants up on the Core axis though; Sorgan is fairly isolated.”
“Do they have a Lodge?”
“Nope.”
“But you said—”
“I said, passage to the next system, and we’ll see where we go from there.” Mando picked up the pieces of the modified rifle left by the mercenary, looking over the build. He opened the gunlocker, setting them inside on the rack and rearranging other ordnance. “I also said the kid and I are laying low. You won’t always have a go-between for these jobs, and you may have to find different work between commissions. If you’re sticking around, we won’t be meeting with a broker until we’ve recovered and restocked supplies.”
“Yeah, that’s fair. My arm’s in pretty bad shape.” Toro tucked his chin, thumbing the tear in his shirtsleeve aside. Mando glanced out from behind the armory door: Toro had some blistering on his forearm and a shallow wound on his shoulder, probably from one of Fennec’s blades. Toro moved the arm without hindrance and he seemed alert. Mando stared.
“Is it still bleeding?”
“No, it stopped not long after we hit hyperspace.”
“… Can you move your shoulder.”
“Yeah, but it’s still an open wound; you have anything for it?”
Mando bit his tongue, stepping around his new crewmate to rifle through a cabinet attached to the bulkhead near the bow. “Bacta patch if you can’t walk it off.” He sifted through the medical cabinet, searching for the equipment on the charging dock. “Medical-grade expansion foam if it’s deep and you removed whatever you were stabbed with. You’ll have to get back to your base of operations or a med center if you think they hit an organ or artery. Cauterizing suture if it’s a slash as long as they missed any tendons.”
“I thought the point of patching wounds wasn’t to cause more damage,” Toro said with amusement.
Mando returned with the cauterizer, seeing Toro’s face sober instantly.
“Woah, hey, I’m not using that. What happened to good old fashioned stitches?”
Mando stopped in front of him, offering the cauterizer and a patch to cover it. “Each stitch is a potential infection site. Medical-grade cauterizer will kill bacteria and create a suture at the same time, and it’s faster to do in the field.”
“What if the blade was poisoned?”
Mando moved Toro’s torn shirt aside, examining his shoulder. “It wasn’t.”
“But what if—”
“It wasn’t,” Din repeated. “You’d know by now if it was, and you’re stalling. Here; cauterizer feels better if you do it yourself.”
Toro glanced back down to his shoulder before looking at Mando with suspicion. “What about a stab wound? Cauterizer’s not gonna get that deep.”
“We’re burning daylight, kid.”
“Humor me,” Toro argued. “So I know what you plan to zap me with in the future.”
Din sighed. “They’re… harder to repair than slash wounds,” he said. “Plastospray will work on anything except bone. If you’re trying to conserve your medical supplies it’s a waste to use it on a slash when you may need it for something more serious down the road. Blood seeps outward from a slash and you’ll be able to see what you suture back into place. Stabs displace deeper ligaments and tendons on the way in and if they hit an artery, the blood pools inward and you won’t have a gauge for how much you’ve really lost. You’ll die from the pressure buildup before anything else.”
Toro hesitated, looking back down to his shoulder. “You get stabbed often?”
“Enough for it to count.”
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Far down on the planet below, a rippling shudder passed through the air and rattled the bones of those in the fishing village, turning eyes skyward for the source. Omera watched as a heavy gunship coasted down beyond the village, skimming the tops of tsuga trees in the direction of Lau. It had been a long time since something of that weight class had entered the area; without a sufficient starport, Sorgan was largely forgettable to the rest of the Outer Rim and to Omera, that had been the appeal. Sorgan wasn’t supposed to be on anybody’s radar.
“Do you think they could help?”
Stoke glanced at Caben. “We don’t know who that could be.”
Caben rested his hand on the dredger, his other arm hanging across it. “It’s worth asking, don’t you think?”
“Not if they’re not planning to stick around long,” Stoke said, going back to his work. “And we’re needed here. The raiders were up at the springs last week. They’re getting closer.”
“We can’t sit here and do nothing,” Caben said seriously. “We need someone to back us up, Stoke.”
“We’re not “doing nothing,” Caben. If anyone leaves now there’s less people for the lookout.”
“What if we just went to Lau to see if the loggers could help? It’s better than not trying at all. Right, Omera?”
Omera surveyed the ponds in thought, realist and idealist arguing behind her. Neela and Fashol were tiredly sifting through dead krill in the eastern quad, chucking them into a bucket to be disposed of. The ash from the fires had clouded and poisoned the pond almost immediately after the attack, the blue-bodied crustaceans being choked out as the water turned grey. Entire ponds would need emptied and filtered, and the phytoplankton recultivated before they could even be reseeded with krill.
Between the ponds she could see the children pulling broken equipment out of walkways, their round faces somber. Winta’s especially had drawn into one of severe contemplation as she rigged up a pulley and rope to have three of the other children pull on it together, hauling one of the destroyed fishing droids out of the water. The expression she had was much too old for her young face.
“Caben’s right.”
Stoke and Caben, shocked for different reasons, jumped up to follow Omera as she wiped her hands on her apron and trekked back to the longhouse. Stoke spoke up first. “Omera, we don’t know who those people could be,” he hissed, looking around them for eavesdroppers. “What kind of crew needs a ship that big? You saw the guns on it.”
”Gunship means they could be mercenaries,” Caben said, perhaps a bit too excitedly. “Which means they could be hired.”
“Or gun us down for even asking…” Stoke said under his breath. “For all we know, the Klatooinians have been hitting Lau too and the loggers called in their own backup.”
“These raids have gone on long enough,” Omera said with finality. “If the bandits continue at the rate they have, we’ll have nothing to set aside for winter. There’s not enough ammunition to rely on hunting— And we need to conserve what defenses we have.” She started up the astromech and checked the power gauge, looking out again across the village. “This is the third time in seven weeks, and every time they attack they come further into the village.”
There was a burst of laughter out by one of the ponds; the three adults turned, seeing the children giggling amongst themselves as they stood from the mud. Winta had released the magnet on the droid once it was above land and the rope slackening sent them all to the ground in a tumble.
“We’ll pool the rest of what we made from the rainy season,” Omera decided. “Tell them it’s all that we have.”
As she readied the wagon, both men packed bread and pemmican into a satchel, listening as she gave them instructions and called on the other elders of the village for an impromptu meeting. Several of them were uneasy at the prospect of sending the men on their own through the woods, a fact Stoke supported, but Caben insisted that they’d bed down for the night in Lau and set out early enough the next morning to be back in the village by sunset. The bandits had only attacked three days ago and it seemed unlikely they would come back that quickly when the village had nothing to offer them.
One of the older men, a grizzled hunter by the name of Kolt, stepped away from the group as they discussed what Stoke and Caben might say to the loggers and potential ship crew. After the rest of them loaded the wagon and finalized the contributions to the purse he returned, a scattershot thrower and case of cartridges with him. He gave both to Stoke, and the solemnity of their mission was finally realized by those among them who’d had their hopes raised.
“Keep it on hand, come nightfall,” Kolt grunted. “Don’t shoot what you can’t see… But don’t hesitate if you need to use it.”
Stoke nodded, and with grim faces he and Caben set off for the long ride to Lau.
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Sorgan appeared beyond the viewport as a lush blue-green marvel, a far cry different from the barren Tatooine landscape. As they descended Toro watched meadows, springs, forests, and rivers span out beneath them, more green wilderness than he’d ever seen in one place. The Crest circled a quadrant in the northern hemisphere, made a circuit and doubled-back to land a few kilometers out past a town with communal buildings near a river. The town was purported to be a trading post, one of a few on an otherwise sparsely inhabited planet. The population was spread out, no centralized starports or industrial centers to speak of, but it looked like there were a few outlying rural communities on the scanner. They would be a day’s ride away if and when they picked back up: Toro thought back to the catalogue of picks he’d been given the choice of at the Guild lodge he booked Shand’s commission from, mulling over the names of those he saw on various posting boards for the Outer Rim. Sorgan may have bigger towns east of their location that had a wider variety of local listings. Even provincial farm planets were bound to have trouble.
Mando cycled through the landing procedures, bringing the Crest to stasis before lowering it into a camouflaged clearing surrounded by trees. “You don’t have anyone who’s going to come looking for you, do you?” he asked, pulling the yoke up level with the horizon line. He flipped three other switches and the ship lowered steadily to the ground, settling with a hiss of hydraulics.
Toro shook his head. “You and the kid are the only ones on this crate with criminal pasts chasing them,” he said with amusement. “Still not sure what that one did to warrant Guild interest.”
The child cooed, tapping the arm of his seat. Mando stood and gestured for Toro to move as he went back into the storage compartment behind the cockpit and sifted through supplies. “Anybody with a score to settle? Anyone you owe money?”
Toro snorted and spread his arms with a look that conveyed Please, are you serious? “Definitely not.”
“Parents, headmasters, commanding officers?” the Mandalorian pressed. “Anyone who would recognize you in a port and raise the alarm?”
“… No.”
Mando came back to the ladder descending to the hold with a bag over one shoulder as he picked up the kid. “Don’t sound too sure about that.”
The Mandalorian slid one-handed down to the cargo hold with his boots on the outer rails of the ladder. Toro climbed down after him, skipping the last few rungs to hop down. “No one’s following me. I told you, I’m on my own.”
Mando dropped the subject. He put the kid on one of the footlockers and restocked his munitions from the armory before pressing a command on his bracer to lower the ramp. A warm breeze flooded in with the light, bringing with it the scent of damp earth and moss and a wavering hum that sounded like it was coming from the trees. Mando stepped over Toro’s bedroll, strapping the pronged rifle to his back.
“Get your gear together.”
“You think we’ll camp somewhere else tonight?”
“No,” Mando said. He moved Toro’s bag to the side with his foot before going back to the kid. “It’s in my way; keep it together and out from underfoot.”
It took a moment for Toro to process what he’d said: he scowled and did as he was told. “I’m not a kid, you know. Don’t have to tell me to clean my room.”
Mando turned to stare at him for a moment longer than he really cared for. It was getting annoying.
“I know you’re not a kid,” Mando said flatly. “Which is why I expect you to keep your gear in order. You’ll have to leave at a moment’s notice more often than not and what you carry on your person may be the only resources available to you. If you can’t keep track of your own equipment, what makes me think you’ll be able to handle anything more important?”
“All right, all right, point taken.”
“Good.” The Mandalorian faced him again. “Here’s the plan: I’m going into town to find lodging. I’ll scope out the area and be back before long. Wait here and watch the kid.”
Toro snorted indignantly. “If you only brought me along to be a babysitter, I’m out.” Toro tossed his bedroll and pack to the side, looking expectantly at the Mandalorian.
Mando called his bluff. “Fine by me. Start walking.”
Toro’s eyes narrowed; his patience with the bounty hunter and every taciturn jab that morning was running out. He stepped up to face the Mandalorian, jutting his chin in accusation. “What’s the point in agreeing to work with me if you’re just going to keep me grounded, huh? There’s no reason to waste time with two trips to town. I’m ready to go.”
“I don’t need distractions.”
”You could use another set of eyes.”
”What I could really use,” Mando said through gritted teeth, “Is somebody who can follow basic directions without arguing with me every step of the way.”
Toro was getting frustrated. “I’ve already more than proven myself,” he said. “I had your back on Tatooine.”
“Which is why I trust you to watch the ship and the kid,” Mando bit back. “This is the biggest town in the quadrant— If they can’t sustain us for even a week of laying low, we need to find a better area before nightfall. I don’t want to keep track of more people than I have to, so either you stay here as lookout or you cut your losses and take a hike.”
Toro stared down the Mandalorian for a long minute, but Mando didn’t waver. He glanced over to the kid before he sat back against a crate with a stormy expression and crossed his arms. “Fine. We’ll be here.”
“Good. Lock up if you’re outside for long.”
The Mandalorian left down the gangplank. The child next to Toro immediately shuffled down off his perch and toddled toward the ramp; he hadn’t anticipated that the kid would realize Mando was leaving him behind so quickly and hopped up to snatch the kid before he could go far. The Mandalorian didn’t look back, and the hum from the trees fell silent as he disappeared into the forest. The kid whined as he squirmed in Toro’s grip, small clawed hands reaching out to grasp at air as he babbled something unintelligible.
“Don’t worry, kid, your old man will be back before long,” Toro said. He surveyed the hold for something to put him in to keep him corralled, but arranging the crates would take two hands to get them organized into something that would keep the boy penned in.
The kid continued to wriggle. Toro struggled to keep a grip on him, for the first time worried the kid had no sense of self-preservation when it came to being dropped from several feet in the air. He had to readjust his grip more than once as he distractedly scooted trunks together with his boot.
“Cut it out, kid, he’s coming back, just relax and— Ow!”
The kid dropped to the floor, Toro staring at his bleeding finger in shock. The child had bit him and was now toddling on small but surprisingly quick legs down the ramp into the grass.
“Hey!” Toro hollered again, wiping his finger on his trousers and hopping down to jog after the boy with a grumble. He caught up to the kid and picked him up before he got too far, carrying him under his arm like a sack of potatoes back to the ship and keeping his fingers out of reach.
“Listen,” Toro said, plopping him back on a footlocker. “He’s not just going to leave you, all right? He left the ship here too, so settle down.”
The boy’s long ears drooped like a wilted flower. His big dark eyes were the saddest thing Toro had ever seen, gazing out at the trees.
“What’s with the ears? Cheer up, you look like a Gungan. I told you he’s coming back,” Toro repeated. “Trust me.”
The solemn child huffed, folding his hands inside his sleeves and resigning himself to his position on the trunk.
Toro rolled his eyes, but the plaintive features of the little thing were enough to prod him into rummaging around in the galley for a distraction.
“Here.” Toro fished around in a thin plastifilm bag and held out some dried meat. “Eat something.”
The kid, forlorn until Toro mentioned food, perked up at the proffered snack and took it without a fuss. Toro sat back and stretched his legs, eyeing the boy for any other sign of an escape attempt, but the kid seemed satisfied to sit and gnaw on the jerky so Toro tossed the plastifilm bag aside and crossed his arms, looking around the cargo hold.
It was quiet for a long time, save for the sound of the wilderness as the kid worked his way through the cured meat, and eventually the boy got up to explore his surroundings, curiously poking at foot lockers and cubbies at floor level. Toro watched him explore before the boy eventually got a supply box open and amused himself with rolling the contents around on the floor, stacking them and knocking them down or organizing them into piles and patterns. He was especially intrigued by the folding camp utensils, managing to open them partway and arrange several forks in a feathered display on either side of a cleaning rod for a blaster barrel.
Toro chuckled, surveying the space again and wondering if there was a toolbox he could commandeer for a couple hours. He’d already made note of the head and the galley, as well as the carbonite chamber and racks. The captain’s berth occupied only a fraction of the lower deck in something Toro would closer consider a closet than a cabin, and now knowing where the armories and medical cabinet were he’d fairly mapped the entire hold, save for what utilities lay behind the access panels at the bow. Abovedecks was a different story, but he liked the greenery and breeze the open docking ramp afforded them so he figured he’d save further exploration for another time.
The carbonite chamber had especially been of interest: he’d heard of some bounty hunters transporting live captures in carbonite, but he’d never seen evidence of it for himself. Those were the kinds of rumors that slipped through from the more unsavory relatives who would find their way home on holidays or when they were in need of a loan; it was shared as gossip just as often as it was used as an overexaggerated threat of punishment for bad behavior. Seeing that not only had one been installed on the gunship, but that it had multiple racks for acquired targets validated Toro’s hunch that Mando was the real deal. Shand may have been right about the hunter doing more lying in wait when it came to tracking her, but Toro saw how the Mandalorian fought in the garage on Tatooine, and the Crest boasted a substantial array of weapons compared to that of an average traveler.
The thought of Tatooine brought him back to the kid, who was now shuffling through one of the crates that had been turned on its side. It was mostly clothes or camping gear so Toro left him to play with them. He had no idea what the kid was but he walked upright and seemed alert enough to be sentient, so Toro figured he must be some species from the outlying planets he’d never heard of. Whatever the case was, the Mandalorian was willing to kill for him so Toro would at least see to it that he stayed alive on his watch. Nothing in the woods would clear a dozen yards of the ship without getting a blaster burn for its trouble.
Pulling his pistol, though, Toro looked it over with a frown. It was only operating at about eighty-five percent efficiency, and the trigger wasn’t quite finessed to his liking; originally built with the intent of being pressure-sensitive in the first place, the hair-trigger was touchier now than before. His momentary patch-job would work as long as he was mindful of the sensor, but it was liable to make the housing run hot even without firing concentrated charges. To really fix it he needed a fusioncutter and at least one grounded clamp to keep some of the mechanical pieces inside the receiver from touching while he worked on it some more, and he hadn’t found either while poking around the ship.
Toro stood, going to the gunlocker and jimmying around the casing until he found the release; the doors retreated to the sides and Toro couldn’t help but grin.
”Now that’s more like it…” he murmured to himself. “EE-3 carbine, drum blaster, mortar gun…”
Toro whistled, impressed. His hand glided over the stock of the grenade launcher, and then he looked up to probably the largest pieces occupying the racks. Lifting the two-part assembly free, he latched the MK sniper rifle together, sliding the barrel into place on clean fittings. Long-range weapons didn’t appeal to him as much as short-range action did; he wouldn’t deny that it was a beautiful gun, but what use was an impressive kill if nobody was around to give you the credit?
From what he could tell, the rifle could operate as two different weapons depending on whether the extended barrel was locked in place or not. Without the sniper configuration giving it an additional eighteen inches in length, it could be further disassembled down to what was still a solid blaster rifle for short range combat. He could only imagine what the impact would feel like at close range.
OSS telescopic sight with an infrared detector… Short relay gas primer, reinforced condenser built into the receiver, induction coil in the stock… Modified was an understatement. No wonder the bolts packed a punch.
Toro turned it over. He was surprised by how light it was, considering the length, but he supposed Shand hadn’t been one to linger anywhere long, whatever her jobs were in the past. He could respect the desire to stay on the move.
“What do you think, kid?” Toro asked. He gripped it one-handed with the barrel raised, sitting into one side with the weight of the stock resting against hip. “Think Pops will let me have it? He may be good but even he can’t sight two rifles at once, ha.”
Though he wasn’t expecting a reply, there seemed to be a distinct difference in the kid’s lack of noise that gave Toro pause. He looked back out to the crates.
”Kid?”
The child was gone.
Swearing loudly and creatively, Toro set the rifle back on the rack and darted towards the ramp, jumping down to the grass all in the span of a second. He scanned the clearing for the boy and, not finding him, jogged for the trees.
Nothing.
Toro took a breath and jogged back to the ship, grabbing his gun and belt. He hit the white button to the left of the ramp to initiate its retreat and squeezed outside before it raised, buckling his holster in place and striding back into the clearing. Ship locked, he analyzed his surroundings.
The Razor Crest glinted in the late morning sun. Scrutinizing the gleam, Toro realized the light only reflected from the upper twelve feet or so. He crouched to the ground, surveying the earth. The clearing was almost entirely in the shade— Grass grew in patches here and there, and there was moss around the edges of the brush, but the rest of the ground was packed mud, and damp at that.
Carefully, he matched a line between the Crest and the spot where the Mandalorian had disappeared, and upon closer inspection was able to pick up on some very small, three-toed footprints. His own boots had smeared or obscured a lot of them in his haste, but there were enough for him to find the exact edge of moss the child had disappeared behind. With annoyance settling just this side of trepidation Toro picked his way through the woods.
“He couldn’t have gone far,” he muttered to himself. “But wherrrrrre would he have gone first…”
Whatever hum emanated from the trees rose and fell in varying degrees of pitch as he tracked, effectively drowning out any possibility of hearing a child the size of a mouse droid shuffling through the brush. To make matters worse, the boy had a brown coat and skin the color of foliage, so the chances of spotting him beneath the sun-dappling canopy were further complicated by the unfortunate, coincidental camouflage.
Toro’s shirt clung to his back as he walked, sticky with sweat, and it didn’t seem to matter whether he was in the shade or not because the heat was the same regardless. Wispy mosquitoes whined around him, constantly waiting for him to settle before sticking to his skin with pinpricks of annoyance, and his trousers chafed, snagging on thorns as he continued muscling his way through the brush. When he passed by a tree bearing the same lichen he’d seen twice before, Toro let out a frustrated yell and stomped back to the trail. He kicked a stone out of his way and smacked another mosquito, angrily scratching the welt it left behind.
He’d always hated the idea of camping.
Toro groaned, pressing the heels of his hands to his eyes and grinding them in frustration. “It’s really gonna set the old guy off if you lost his kid,” he said absently. “You look away for all of two seconds and he pulls an escape act… Might as well boot the kid outside yourself next time, steal the ship and pray that guy never finds you… Better chance at surviving than having to face him and fess up…”
The kid had to be going after the Mandalorian. There was nothing enticing enough to keep him out here, no berries or animals to draw his attention, and there were more than enough negative incentives to urge him back to the ship— Since Toro had yet to see the kid double back he had to assume he was on the search for the hunter. There was something resembling a foot path between the trees, but Toro didn’t know if the kid would have the intuition to follow it. He could only see it himself because he was at a height to do so.
The gunslinger slowed to a stop, considering that. He crouched down to the forest floor, feeling the earth dampen the knee of his trousers as he ducked his head. Soft, leafy ferns hovered roughly at the boy’s height by Toro’s reckoning, and below that was a shortened view of the look and distance of the trail. It was possible the kid was unaware there even was one; he could have strayed from the dirt path entirely.
That was a problem.
Toro could feel the muscles between his shoulder blades tightening with the tense concern that the kid had no idea where he was going and had simply gotten himself lost in the search for his guardian. Toro didn’t imagine the kid knew any more about the forest than he did, and there was no telling what he might run into.
Toro took a deep breath. Guess it was time to put those tracking skills to work.
He put one hand on his hip and surveyed the greenery, rethinking his strategy. Crouching back down and moving some ferns aside, he could see bits of displaced mud on top of leaves from where the boy’s robe had dragged, and as he moved the plants, individual fiddleheads retreated at his touch. Toro scanned ahead for already-furled stems, following them when they lined up with the child’s small, intermittent footprints. It was odd that though the kid’s path— what he hoped was the kid’s path— had strayed from the dirt trail, it was still going in the same general direction the Mandalorian had. Toro was doing his best to ignore Mando’s more obvious prints, knowing what he really needed to do was find the kid, but there was some relief in knowing he’d come across one of them at some point and at least solve half his problems when he did.
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The child brushed another feathery fern out of his eyes, walking on soft moss and enjoying the feeling between his toes. The forest was alive with hundreds of creatures, large chirping bugs singing in the trees and winged creatures hooting between the branches. Once or twice he saw brown, soft-furred animals with stripes peering at him from dens built into the gnarled roots of trees, but he sensed no ill-intent from them, only curiosity. Though he wished he could stay and explore further, he was determined to catch up.
His guardian was somewhere ahead of him, he was sure. The apprentice hunter was still far behind both of them, but the boy paid him no mind, content to see and smell the freshness of the forest. It was far more vibrant than anywhere he had been in a long time, and he hoped they’d be staying there for a while. The air was clear and breathable, the sun warm… He could rest and explore and his guardian would be able to heal.
As the boy climbed over stones and pushed through the thicket of grasses back to the even dirt path, he wondered if his guardian had truly meant what he’d said when he promised he’d come back to the ship. He knew starships weren’t homes for most sentient beings— Perhaps this was his guardian’s home planet and he had a dwelling somewhere away from the ship, and away from him.
The child shook his head, waving away both gnatflies and troubled thoughts. The Mandalorian wouldn’t have made the apprentice hunter stay behind too if that were the case. The young man from-Tatooine-but-not had no reason to remain there either, and he had the sense his armored guardian intended to teach the apprentice the same trade and life he led. The two men had talked briefly after they departed from the desert planet, his guardian pointing to various places and controls on the starship, and he’d seen the younger man picking apart a blaster that morning in the cargo hold similar to how the Mandalorian had maintained his own tools and weapons during hyperspace flights when it had still been just the two of them.
There was a glint up ahead, and he quickened his pace, reaching out with openness through the lights connecting the living creatures of the forest to see more clearly; with a chirp he renewed his pace, happy to have finally caught up on the warrior’s trail.
Only moments later did he realize he wasn’t the only one.
”A-ha! Caught you!”
Drat.
The child was briskly scooped up by the young man with dark hair, raised up into the air and firmly grasped to his side. He frowned, squirming at the handling as the man scolded, until he saw the same gleam through the forest the child had caught only moments before.
The Mandalorian was looking at them, unmoving as the man holding him continued speaking. Dimly he could register a change in tone, the younger man’s pitch rising as he too saw the older hunter, but the boy couldn’t have cared less for the conversation he only understood a part of anyway. The warrior approached with measured strides and the boy reached out, cooing happily as the armored man closed the distance, speaking sternly with his crewmate; said crewmate was still making excuses and holding the child in front of him, as if to ward off any potential retaliation from the Mandalorian.
“What?!” the indignant apprentice was saying. “You should be happy, this means he knows how to find you on his own. Here take him, look he’s tired.”
The Mandalorian sighed but plucked the boy away and settled him comfortably against the cool planes of his armor. The child took hold of the bandolier in one hand and tapped the center of the quiet man’s breastplate, happy to be back where he belonged.
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The logging community came into view around midday. Barges were docked upriver on the west side of town near a clearing in the woods; the bridge Mando, Toro, and the kid crossed was well-built with high enough clearance to give both timber rafts and the logger scows passage beneath. The air was clear and smelled of rich, black dirt, thick woods spanning as far as the eye could see.
Without a Guild lodge or more advanced information centers Din doubted Sorgan was used by hunters as a stopover, and he had hoped his and Toro’s presence would stir only curiosity. There were a few turned heads, and though people overall went about their business, something in the air didn’t feel quite right: as Din, Toro, and the child made their way to the common house between wattle fencing, the general chatter of town dissipated almost entirely.
The large rounded building was built of wood and woven, thatched reeds. Inside, a bar and a ring of sand encircled the central hearth, smoke rising to escape from the roof. Small tables were spread evenly around the room, diners and staff of various species milling about and conversing. Din kept his hands visible and his gait relaxed. It was entirely possible the town simply didn’t get many travelers.
A lumberman and a Twi’lek fisher played dice over next to the wall, out of the way of foot traffic. Two women and a man with dark, braided hair were in deep conversation close to the entrance, their boots well-worn and flecked with tsuga tree needles; they matched the muddy hooves of the bordok mules outside hitched to a post by the water trough with stun traps slung over their packs. A young father fed a child sitting on one table, the child’s smile bright despite his arm in a recent sling. At first, most of those in the common house appeared to pay them no mind, but subtle glances around the room traded unspoken words with their fellow townsfolk. The din of the common house hadn’t diminished, but there was a distinct change in what they were communicating.
One other person stood out: a stocky woman in armorweave and worn, blue-green armor sat by herself near the exit, eyeing them over a bowl of soup. Mando watched the rear cam in the head-up display inside his helmet, keeping his stride unhurried as he led the three of them to a table on the opposing wall.
The kid had wriggled down from Mando’s grasp upon entry to the town to walk on his own: Toro herded him to the right with his boot, skirting the felinx beneath a table that could probably eat him. The atmosphere of the pub was comfortable, the kind of place he expected on a planet like this one. It seemed like most people knew each other well enough to not pay them any mind, swapping tales and talking business over their plates. The bartender came to greet them, offering the local brew and asking if they were there for the midday meal before retreating to retrieve soup for the kid and something roasted for Toro. Mando declined anything to eat.
“You know, I’m starting to think you might be a droid,” Toro joked, stretching his legs and lacing his fingers behind his head. “Or do you just subsist off the nightmares of anyone who crosses you?”
The Mandalorian didn’t respond beyond what Toro assumed was a glare, but it still made him grin. The bartender returned with their food, setting down a flagon of swirling blue liquid between them. Toro dug in, pouring himself a cup.
“Really though, Tin Can, do you ever eat?”
Mando ignored him. He pushed the cup of broth over to the kid, helping him take a sip. “Tell me what you saw coming into town.”
“Rustic folk. Farmers and hunters, mostly, probably some fur and scale trappers.” Toro took a bite of meat, chewing around his words. The child pushed his bowl aside, leaning up on the table towards Toro’s plate with open interest. The gunslinger frowned and pulled his plate closer. “There’s probably a sawmill downriver.”
“Anything stand out to you?”
Toro dropped his voice low, confident that he’d landed on something to give the Mandalorian a little faith in him. “You’re in for a treat; you saw the woman at the front?”
Mando nodded.
“Pretty sure she’s an ex-shock trooper from one of the old Republic cleanup crews. Got a price on her head.”
“There’s no such thing as an ex-shock trooper,” Mando said. “Best just to leave her be.”
Toro stared, his food pausing halfway to his mouth. “That’s it? I just found us a job and you don’t want it?”
“Lower your voice,” Mando said. “If you want to confront a drop soldier, be my guest.”
”You aren’t going to back me up?”
Mando continued tearing apart hunks of bread for the kid. ”Do I look like I want to start a fight?”
“You walk in anywhere with armor like that, you’re basically asking for one.”
“We are here to recoup first and find lodging,” Mando said, his voice clipped. “Tangling with someone without a confirmed bounty the second we come into town isn’t a plan with much forethought.”
Toro frowned. “I saw her on the postings back in the Mid-Rim, Republic and ISB. Last name is Dune. If that’s not her she must have a twin.”
“You sure about that?”
“Yes,” Toro said confidently, gesturing with his skewer. “You can tell by the tattoos on her— Wait— Where is she?”
The hair on the back of Din’s neck stood up, instinct crowding to the forefront. Snapping around to follow Toro’s line of sight revealed an empty table, the woman nowhere in sight.
“Watch the kid,” he ordered, standing abruptly and brushing past the table. He could hear Toro protest behind him, but he was already unclipping his holster and heading out of the curtained archway.
Outside, the damp air was quiet. Din surveyed the land and switched on the footprint relay in his visor, seeing her tracks round the back of the public house. Cautiously he followed, listening for movement as he passed between two of the buildings. As he rounded the walkway between the fencing, though, the footprints came to an abrupt halt.
He whipped around in each direction, scanning for a heat signature, but as soon as he turned and looked up, two feet hit him square in the chest.
The trooper swung down from a crossbeam, landing as Din’s back hit the outer wall of the cantina with a thud. In a flash her right fist made contact with his faceplate, knocking him back again and dizzying his senses. Her second swing telegraphed broadly and he dodged just in time— Her fist connected with the wooden slats instead, rattling them with a bang. Din twisted to land a hit to a kidney, feeling his fist meet solid muscle, and he heard her grunt in pain. His left hand lashed out to wrap around her throat the same time he shoved off the wall, blocking her left downswing with his vambrace.
The trooper snarled and brought her right arm up, dropping a heavy elbow down to break his grip on her throat— The move sent him off-balance, and in that half-second opening she grabbed his shoulders and kneed him in the gut, hard. Beskar has no give to it and he felt the impact of her thick leg against each and every one of the injuries across his ribs and midsection. Pain exploded across his chest, radiating from the center of his sternum as she hauled him behind her to collide with the opposing wall.
Din shoved off and readied himself, pivoting to face her again. The woman swung wide and her fist connected with the jaw of the helmet, snapping his head to the side. A backhanded swing jerked him back to face her and he growled, blocking the third punch and grabbing her other forearm: with a sharp jut he headbutted her square in the face, hearing bone crack and sending her staggering back, but before he could grab his gun or blade she righted herself with a yell and barreled into him, pinning him to the wall with a crushing grip around his throat.
“Mando!”
Clutching the soldier’s wrists with an iron grip, Din jerked his gaze to the side, eyes wide as Toro came into view with his blaster drawn. Hearing the rookie’s hail, the woman turned too and yanked Din back out into the open with his back to Toro, putting him in the line of fire. Toro’s blaster shot glanced off Mando’s pauldron, jarring his shoulder. Toro cursed behind him and the woman grinned viciously, hauling the Mandalorian back with her by the edge of his breastplate.
Din dug his feet in, lurching back against her grip in anger. In the gap between them he struck out with one boot, shoving her off before drawing his blade the same moment the woman drew hers. Another blast of laserfire sailed narrowly past Mando, this time grazing the woman’s bicep. She cried out in pain, glaring at the rookie as the Mandalorian approached. Din struck out with the dagger, hearing it sing through the air, but shewasn’t so distracted by the apprentice that her attention faltered, and her armored forearm came up to block the vibroblade in a skitter of sparks before she lunged in a downward arc with her own. Mando ducked his head, catching her wrist and twisting it outward, digging his thumb into a pressure point to force the knife out of her hand. The move forced a gasp out of her and in a rage the woman brought her leg up again, kicking him back into Calican.
Toro stumbled under the weight of the Mandalorian, clumsily trying to brace himself to keep both of them from going down, but he only succeeded in coming to a knee as Mando’s impact buckled him. Dune, instead of retreating to draw her own blaster, had followed through with another kick to Mando’s chest and reached out with one hand, grabbing the barrel of Toro’s blaster before bringing her other forearm down against his wrist. Blunt force pain seared up his forearm as she wrenched the gun away.
A plume of fire cut through the air between the Mandalorian and the woman, his flamethrower finally forcing her back. Toro grabbed the trooper’s blade from the ground and darted around the blaze, quickly closing the gap as she turned her aim to him.
When Dune went to fire his blaster, however, the plasma cartridge immediately sent electrical discharge arcing over her hand. The trooper cried out and dropped it, barely having time to grab Toro’s right forearm above her in the incoming jab before Toro swung a sharp left hook across her jaw, dropping the blade from his right hand to catch it midair between them on the pullback with his left. Dune’s eyes widened in shock a half second before Toro slashed again, and this time he felt contact.
The trooper gasped, jerking back and pulling him with her; with a growl bordering on feral she pulled his arm down and twisted her body, dropping into a wide stance and hauling him up over her shoulder as if he weighed nothing. Toro landed square on his back, the air forced from his lungs in a rush, and he had to clumsily hook one leg up over her arm to keep from being pinned. It was a scuffle for status as they grappled with one another, Dune with bulk strength and Toro with sharp reflexes, the two of them rolling across the slick grass before landing in a locked contest of strength, each with a weapon in hand and fire in their eyes.
“Enough.”
The Mandalorian’s voice resounded like thunder, halting the fight with his blaster raised only a few scant feet from the side of the trooper’s head. The vibroblade beneath her chin hummed in the air. Her own blaster was jammed against Toro’s chest. The two of them glared at each other, panting from the exertion, neither wavering.
From behind all three of them came the distinct sound of someone snapping a stick, and all three slowly turned to see the green child perched in the grass behind the common house, half a skewer of roasted meat in each hand. His ears twitched as he chewed loudly, watching the adults with inquisitive eyes.
“… What is that thing?” the trooper asked, curiosity coloring her tone.
The boy took a large bite off the skewer and waved. Toro flexed his hand, still sore where the kid had bitten him.
“I think it’s a carnivore.”
The woman snorted. Mando lowered his blaster.
Toro slowly lowered the knife and clicked the safety on as the tension in the air dissipated. The pain was starting to register past the adrenaline.
Mando shoved his pistol in his holster. “You were supposed to wait inside,” he said irritably.
“This seemed like more fun at the time,” Toro groaned. The drop trooper grinned and pushed off of Toro’s chest none too lightly, standing and offering her hand.
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Calican and the trooper both looked marginally worse for wear coming back into the common house behind the Mandalorian. The folks inside seemed more wary than before, and when Toro stopped by the bar to order another plate of food, the cook and the rest of the staff suddenly found work elsewhere and wouldn’t meet his eye. When he tried to get their attention or flag one down there was just enough conversation to say they couldn’t hear him, and the bartender who’d taken their order before was methodically stoking the embers of the fire, facing away from him and turning the spit.
Mando set the child back down at their table as Dune gave the two of them her name, dropping her gloves and helping herself to Mando’s cup and the flagon of spotchka. Toro reluctantly slid what was left of his plate to her.
Cara Dune was built only slightly less solid than a freight train. Her dark hair was short and utilitarian, and the callouses on her knuckles spoke as much to a life of hard work as they did to fighting. She carried herself with the easy confidence of a woman who knew her role in life and had never been given reason to doubt it. Despite the blaster graze and slash from the vibroblade she appeared to be in remarkably good spirits, content to eat with only a casual regard toward both audience and place settings; Toro got the impression bone broth was cheaper than roast grinjer and not near as filling.
“I figured you had a fob on me,” she said, taking a drink and grimacing around the flavor. Toro could still see blood between her teeth while she talked and wondered how bad her fight was with Mando before he’d gotten there. “Not many other reasons for hunters to come out this far.”
“Fair enough,” Mando said.
“How did you get out here?” Toro asked, wrapping his left hand in his handkerchief and resting his knuckles against the cold jug. “This planet hasn’t developed transportation faster than those pack animals out front.”
“Old buddy of mine owed me a favor,” Cara said. “I crashed with him for a while before he dropped me off on his way out of the system.”
Toro looked around, once again unimpressed by scenery that had not changed in the past twenty minutes. “What are you doing in a place like this?”
She gave Toro a lazy smile, settling back comfortably into her chair as she regarded him. “That info’s on a need-to-know basis, Sunshine.”
“Sure, sure, but you’re a shock trooper, aren’t you?” Toro nodded to the bands on her arm. “I heard they were working for the New Republic now, spec-ops on Imperial holdouts, stuff like that.”
“I used to be,” Cara said. The sly smile no longer reached her eyes, and she seemed to regard him the way a dog views surprise company at dinnertime. “At least during the war. Right now I’m enjoying an early retirement. Or, was.”
“Why leave?”
“Well my platoon used to do real work hunting down war lords and arms profiteers,” she said, swishing the spotchka in her cup. “Rooting out the settler compounds while the Alliance hit the big guns. Things changed after Endor though and we got moved to the cleanup crews.”
Toro leaned in, both forearms on the table. “You were a mercenary?” he asked with visible interest. The Mandalorian nudged his boot beneath the table. Toro ignored it.
“Not in as many words,” Cara said. “We did our share of gutting the Imperial settlements. Instead of facing them head on like we were used to, we had to go in quiet and get the job done with as little demo as possible before hauling the worst of them back to Central and calling it a day.”
“Good work if you get it.”
“Yeah, well, that’s the trade-off,” Cara said. “The fewer warlords we found, the more we were relegated to being political muscle, protecting diplomats and suppressing riots. They kept pulling us back towards the Core— And I didn’t sign up to be a New Republic guard dog, so I got out.”
“Nothing out here is near as interesting as being a merc.”
“Licensed contractor,” Cara said evenly. “And like I said, I'm retired.”
“Why not stay on the move?” Toro asked genuinely. When she narrowed her eyes in suspicion he poured her another drink.
Cara turned to the Mandalorian. “He always this nosy?”
“Yes.”
Cara snatched up the cup. “Not having to take care of a ship or worry about Guildsmen—,” she nodded to Mando, “— appeals to more people than you think.”
“We hadn’t intended to start a fight,” Mando said. “When you left we thought you might’ve been trying to get the drop on us. We weren’t looking for you.”
“Good,” Cara said. She drained her cup, turning it upside down on the table before standing. “Keep it that way, and move along— I’ve been here two weeks, and if you’ve got your own hounds after you I don’t want them barking up the wrong tree.”
As she readied to leave, Toro realized something and cut her off. “Wait, how’d you know we were Guild?”
Cara gave him a strange look. “Neither of you blend in,” she said, “And there’s only so many jobs a Mandalorian can have.”
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The rest of the day was spent buying or trading for what supplies the town was able to offer; waterproofing wax, dry goods, and saddle soap rounded out most of the field supplies, and the Mandalorian picked up an extra canteen, in addition to a holopuck with a local atlas. The latter was difficult to come by since everyone they spoke to in town was reluctant to offer one up, and it took a more substantial fee to convince one of the traders to part with a spare. It was only after they’d received it Mando explained that it was likely only because that trader was from out of town— In most places, those who worked and lived off the land didn’t reveal where they trapped, hunted, or fished, should the people they gave that information to prove greedy or inconsiderate enough to try their own luck there as well.
Mando laid out the plan for the next day on the hike back through the forest, saying they’d find a town farther east in the morning: a territory dispute with the drop trooper wasn’t worth the trouble, and the eastern side of the mountains opened up into a coastline. Whether they stayed at a higher altitude or more towards sea level depended on what resources they could find regarding the Crest; Mando didn’t fancy more than a day’s ride hauling fuel if it came down to it.
Night fell as they traversed the woods back to the ship, supplies carted on a borrowed repulsorlift. Despite the fight with Cara Dune, Toro was restless after a day of menial work, and though the Mandalorian had shared useful information, he was about as talkative as the kid, which was proving to be not much at all.
“So what’re the rules?” Toro asked, finally cracking under the drudgery of stowing supplies. He hefted a canister up the ramp and put it in the hold to be arranged by the Mandalorian later. “With the helmet and all.”
The Mandalorian didn’t spare him a glance, eyeing the woods instead. He picked the kid up and set him down on the stack of storage units he’d commandeered, a lantern, handheld holoprojector, and the rough log set out on top. “It stays on.”
“Yeah, I gathered, but what else? What happens if it comes off?”
“If you try to take it, I kill you,” Mando said mildly.
“Oh big surprise.” Toro rolled his eyes. “You’re a walking armory. My guess is nobody but the kid gets within arm’s reach if they want to keep their limbs intact. C’mon, gimme the specifics. Do you have night vision? Do you eat everything through a straw?”
Mando didn’t respond, but considering Toro was still moving supplies for him he figured he had some wiggle room to poke the bear.
“Can I borrow it?”
The Mandalorian made a point of closing the logbook, finally turning to cock his head at the rookie and stare him down. “Kid, I don’t know you well enough to miss you if you were gone.”
“Ooh, someone’s got a sense of humor. Hey, Womp Rat, did you know your dad has a sense of humor?”
“Excuse us?”
Both Mando and Toro swiveled around at the sound of another voice, hands to their holsters; two men were approaching the clearing, still several yards away under the light of a wagon piloted by a droid. They were dressed in earthy blue and green clothes similar to the townsfolk, fitting in against the backdrop of the provincial planet. Toro eased back, getting his hand back under the crate.
“What do you want?” he hollered down to them.
“Sorry, didn’t mean to sneak up on you. Got dark faster than we anticipated,” the slighter man said, walking quickly towards the ring of lights set up around the ship once it was clear their presence wasn’t going to be welcomed with a blaster shot. “We were wondering if you could help us.”
The Mandalorian picked up the kid and strode away from the pair towards the bow of the ship to lift a panel under the engine, so Toro took it upon himself to meet them at the edge of the ramp.
“Town’s that way,” Toro said, pointing. He wiped his hands on a rag and tossed it aside, hands on his hips. “ ’Bout six kilometers.”
“No, we— Sorry, I’m Caben, this is Stoke— We weren't looking for Lau, we came to see if we could hire you. Our village needs help.”
“We have money,” the second man said.
“The log runners gave us directions,” Caben said, following after the Mandalorian but directing his plea between both of them. “They said we might be able to hire you, and whoever came on the gunship.”
Toro scoffed. He shook his head, going back to his work. “It’s just us,” he said proudly. “And you can’t afford us.”
“You don’t even know what the job is!”
“You wouldn’t have enough,” Toro said. “We’re Guild, we don’t do farm work, and we’re not staying here anyway.”
“It’s raiders,” Stoke said with an edge to his voice. His eyes flicked between Toro and the Mandalorian Caben was still trying to get around to talk to face-to-face. “Our farms have been raided three times in two months. We need them gone. The whole village chipped in everything they could.”
“We’re not mercenaries,” the Mandalorian said finally. He continued to prep the ship for lockdown one-handed, ignoring the farmers as the child watched.
“You’re a Mandalorian though, right?” Caben said, eyes wide as he took in the sight of the bounty hunter. “I’ve heard stories about your people— the legends, the hunters and fighters across the galaxy— If even half of what I’ve read is true—”
“Hey, look,” Toro said, cutting in. “We don’t need money, and I told you, we’re not for hire— At least not for this. Raiders or not, whatever you want us to do isn’t worth our time—”
“No, you look,” Stoke said, standing his ground against Toro’s dismissal. He met Toro in the middle of the clearing with squared shoulders. “We need help, and you’re the only people this area has seen besides tradesmen and trappers for four years. We’re lucky we’ve been able to hold our own in the middle of nowhere, but this is something we can’t fight by ourselves. It took us the whole day to get here, we can’t go home empty-handed—”
“And like I said, we’re not here to run off a few bandits for pocket change —”
Oddly enough it was the Mandalorian to interject next.
“You say you’re farmers?” he asked.
“… Yes?” Caben replied, unsure how to interpret the sudden interest. “Fishers, really. We farm krill.”
“In the middle of nowhere.”
“Yes?”
“Do you have lodging?”
The tone of Mando’s voice made Toro pivot on the spot, suddenly concerned the Mandalorian might actually be considering what the other two were asking of them. “Woah, Mando, you can’t seriously think— I mean I thought we were leaving—?”
Mando strode past him to meet the two farmers in the light. The space he took up made Stoke and Caben shuffle back a step in apprehension. “How large is your village?”
“About three acres in land near the river, a few more in timber,” Caben said excitedly. “A little over sixty people.”
“Any who can shoot?”
“Well— I mean it’s not— We’re mostly farmers,” Caben said, floundering. “We have slug-throwers, maybe a dozen people that can hunt, but even then, not enough ammunition. We can’t fight them in the open.”
The Mandalorian nodded. Toro’s bafflement and irritation rose.
“I can cover for that. You say you’re near the river?”
“Yeah.” The farmers nodded hopefully. “Seventy kilometers north of here at the river bend, give or take.”
“Good. We can take the ship and be there in less than an hour.”
“It’s— There won’t be anywhere to land something this big.” Caben shook his head for the first time, gesturing to the gunship. “The farmland is too soft and the trees are too thick. River runs on two sides past the timber, too. We were going to make camp tonight and travel at first light.”
The Mandalorian hummed in disapproval but weighed his options, assessing the ship.
“We can talk details on the way, but I’d rather not waste a full day traveling.”
“The mech has an autopilot and guidance system,” Stoke offered, gesturing to the wagon pilot. “There’s enough reserve power to get us back by morning, and enough of us to split up the watch and sleep in shifts.”
Mando considered it. “You willing to help load out?”
Caben and Stoke nodded eagerly.
“Good. Toro here will show you what to pack. I’ll need the credits you do have, and I’ll be back soon.”
The Mandalorian took the pouch of credits and finished notating instructions as Toro fumed, following him to the stern where the glow of the work lights cast shadows around them. “Mando what are you doing?” Toro hissed. “You said we weren’t staying here. This is chump change compared to what we can do. You should have told them to take a hike.”
“Let’s get one thing clear,” the Mandalorian said quietly. “You do not speak for me.”
The child’s ears flattened at his guardian’s tone. Toro gestured to the farmers, trying to keep his voice down even as his frustration built.
“Mando, this is insane, you and I can do better than this,” he said. “I thought we were leaving—”
“Calican,” Mando snapped. He loomed in the light of the Crest. “There’s only room on this ship for one captain. The last time you decided to make your own call on a job you nearly got my ship stolen and me and the kid— and yourself— killed. This is downtime built in to recover from that job. If you can’t handle my verdict, start walking.”
Toro ground his teeth at the reprimand, anger and irritation simmering under his skin. He had to tamp down his inclination to argue; this was far from the fast-paced hunting in sprawling cities and crime rings he’d anticipated when he signed on, but the recent memory of their job with Shand— and the tools of the trade he desperately hoped Mando was good for— stayed his tongue.
“What makes you think the job is worth the detour?” he asked, nodding past the hunter to the two farmers.
“Quartering us in the middle of nowhere to act as a deterrent for a week or two is a square deal,” Mando continued. “Can you handle that?”
“Will we move on after that?” Toro pushed. “Because as far as I can tell the only thing this planet has to pass the time is target practice.”
“Assuming you fix your blaster, that’s the idea.”
It’s only been a few days, Toro seethed. And he’s your only way off swamp-ridden rock.
The Mandalorian waited. Toro was coming to realize silent observation may be his mentor’s natural resting state, and it was more infuriating than anticipated. An argument, a fight— those he could navigate. Those were gratifying and gave him more to work with than the pointed stare and cold debate leveled at him now. It wasn’t that he took issue with the Mandalorian’s stubbornness as a character trait— It was the fact there was no telling where he stood in the bounty hunter’s regard at any given time. He had no way of reading the Mandalorian’s expressions, and not only had Mando disagreed with him on nearly everything that day, he seemed to have a more condensed arsenal of frustratingly sound logic backing up how he shut down Toro’s protests, and it frustrated Toro that he couldn’t articulate a strong enough rebuttal to stand his ground when the time came because it felt like he was being kept in the dark.
Mando’s decisions were justified. Toro just didn’t like them.
Toro had a feeling this decision would set the tone of their working relationship moving forward; he couldn’t help but remember what Shand said about the Mandalorian’s lack of personal connections meaning he could easily drop Toro at any time and cut his losses. Mando had clearly survived this far without him. If Toro didn’t suck it up and muscle through the next two weeks on Sorgan, he didn’t think he was going to like being stuck there for an indeterminable future.
After a long moment of deliberation, the tic of Toro’s clenched jaw finally settled.
“Fine,” he muttered. “What do you need?”
The Mandalorian nodded. “Pull this together from the ship.”
He gave Toro the list, some instructions for stowing the necessities, and the security protocols for locking up. Toro must not have been doing as well as he thought in hiding his dissatisfaction because without prompting, the Mandalorian handed the child off to Toro and followed up his instructions with, “Buck up and get moving. And watch the kid until I get back.”
“Hey, where are you going?”
“I’m calling in some backup.”
The Mandalorian retraced the trail leading to Lau before branching off from the woods and heading toward a spring. Din circumvented the town, briefly switching to the thermal imaging to orient himself before switching back to night vision. Though grateful for the first uninterrupted seclusion he’d had that day, he wasn’t able to fully relax knowing the kid was still back at the clearing, but he didn’t know what the drop trooper’s temperament would be at an unexpected arrival. Hopefully the rookie kept a closer eye on the kid this time.
Din still wasn’t sure what to make of the gunslinger. He was fairly sure Calican’s brash impulsiveness was a mark of youth and not one of a trigger-happy lust for bloodshed— He’d done surprisingly better in the fight against Cara than he had in the one with Shand (despite the fact Dune had at least sixty pounds on him), and he’d retained enough clarity of mind to hesitate when Din stepped in and brought the scrap to a stall.
However, the rookie’s inclination to jump feet-first into everything instead of hanging back concerned him. Din needed to be able to run point, and Toro had thus far not proven consistently capable of thinking first and acting second.
Din sighed, traipsing through the woods. The irony of taking on an apprentice whose ambition reminded him of his own at that age was not lost on him, and while it was clear Calican wasn’t bereft of talents or smarts, he lacked experience and patience and didn’t know when to apply the skills he had. The risks he took weren’t calculated.
He also didn’t have a near-indestructible suit of armor protecting him like Din had at that age.
As Din navigated the forest, he thought over their experiences and how they measured up to the mixed results of the past four days. Toro was sharp, and if he would just slow down and think, he’d figure out the answers he wanted faster and without having to rely on Din to break them down every step of the way. The arguing, the questions, the not-following instructions…
Toro wasn’t a kid. The immaturity at the core of his actions was the kind that resulted from the rookie still only thinking about himself first. If he couldn’t figure out how to work with Din— or anybody— as a team, he wasn’t going to get very far in life on credits alone.
Still, the gunslinger seemed to have some modicum of sense and a good awareness of his surroundings. He caught on quick to instruction once he relented to it, and he’d surprised Din more than once that day with the connections he’d been able to draw on the scant information available.
Toro had potential. Din knew he had high expectations, but if the rookie could prove his merit to him, he’d be able to work for anybody.
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Toro didn’t know what to make of the farmers, and he got the impression the stocky one didn’t much care for him either. Caben made small talk at least, enthusiastic as they loaded out the supplies and blasters Mando had left them with and asked several questions about the Crest Toro didn’t have all the answers for. The child had whined softly after the Mandalorian left, his ears drooping and his eyes going all big and sad again, but he thankfully stayed close to where the men were amidst the load out and didn’t wander off.
“So what’s it like working for the Mandalorian?” Caben asked as they strapped down the wagon.
Toro scoffed. “I work with him. We’re hunting partners.”
“Bounty hunters?”
“Yep. Just came from Tatooine before this. Finished up a job concerning Fennec Shand.”
Toro watched them expectantly from the side, but Stoke and Caben exchanged a look and shrugged. “Sorry, no idea who that is.”
“Fennec Shand?” Toro asked, shocked. “The assassin who worked for the Hutts? Wanted in eight systems at least?”
“Already told you, you’re the first outsiders we’ve seen in four years,” Stoke said. “We hardly hear anything as is.”
“Well let’s just say she’s bad news,” Toro said. “Pulled a double cross on her though. She almost escaped, tried to go after the kid here. Mando and I ambushed her and took her down in the middle of the desert. When we dragged her back to Mos Eisley she tried to make a break for it and we ended up in a shootout in the middle of the night.”
Caben was invested. Stoke couldn’t care less.
“What’d you do with her after that?”
“Ah, well we brought in proof that she was dead and the broker paid out the bounty to us,” Toro lied. “Got a pretty penny considering how high profile she was.”
“Thought you said you two weren’t mercenaries.”
“We’re not,” Toro said, looking back to Stoke. Stoke side-eyed him from his seat on the wagon.
“Mercenaries will kill anyone for a buck. Hunters have credentials. We bag the criminals on wanted listings. Verifiable criminals and all.” Toro continued to twirl his blaster in hand. “It gets pretty technical when you get into Guild bureaucracy, I wouldn’t worry about it if I were you.”
“Sounds cut and dry to me.” Stoke tied up his long hair and stretched his legs, leaning back against the trunks. “Pick a job, chase someone around, catch them and tie ‘em up, drag ‘em back and get paid.”
Toro rolled his eyes. “Yeah, if you simplify it like that.”
Stoke snorted. The croak of amphibians ebbed and flowed from the creek in the woods, the three of them falling quiet. The boy played in the grass with a silver ball, pushing it around the dirt between his feet.
Stoke spoke again. “Let me ask you this: if you two just got paid for a big job, why did you need to take our credits, even though we told you it was all our village had to spare?”
Toro froze, sweat running cool on the back of his neck. “Oh, Mando has his reasons,” he deflected. “He’s bringing backup, so you’re technically paying them, you know? We’re just coming to take a break between now and the next job.”
“Uh huh.”
“Gotta sleep at some point, you know?”
“Sure.”
The awkward silence settled again over the clearing. Toro’s leg bounced impatiently, looking around for something to do. Stoke narrowed his eyes.
“How long did you say you’ve been a hunter?”
“Long enough.” Toro quickly reached down and nabbed the kid by the back collar of his coat, bringing him up with kicking feet to turn him to the farmers at the back of the wagon. “Hey, do you have any idea what this thing is? Mando picked him up a while ago and we’ve got no idea what he’s supposed to be.”
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Cara stood her ground, arms crossed. Both the long-haired trapper and the stout cook from the public house were unarmed, but the argument grew louder, their voices overlapping.
“— don’t want you causing any more trouble!” the trapper barked. “We’re giving you until morning to clear out.”
“I’m far enough from town,” Cara said. “This land’s unincorporated.”
“Move out,” the bald one insisted. His broad hands flexed into fists. “Or you’ll be moved.”
Cara laughed humorlessly. “Try it, Dagosh, see what happens.”
“We’re being civil. This is exactly why we asked you to leave this afternoon—”
“If you hadn’t snuck up on me I wouldn't have shot at you—!”
Somebody off to Cara’s left cleared their throat. The two men jolted in surprise as Cara’s hand went to her hip holster.
The Mandalorian had materialized between the trees like a specter, silent and shimmering. Both men blanched at his sudden appearance, exchanging looks as they stepped back. The Mandalorian cut an intimidating silhouette, the flames reflected in his armor the only motion against the darkness.
The trapper nudged his friend and the two backed away further with a call of “By first light, trooper.” They mounted the speederbike hovering past the light of the campfire and kicked off in a hurry, brush swishing loudly as it was displaced by the retreating hum through the forest. Cara pivoted away from the Mandalorian and grabbed her duffel, shoveling supplies in to break camp.
“You here for a rematch?” she growled. She tore a blanket from the ground and stuffed it into a rucksack, packing the rest of her gear. “Or do you just like to spectate?”
“… They give you trouble?”
“Save your pity,” she snapped. Bedroll and mess kit found their way onto the pile with military efficiency, sparse belongings tacked together and stowed in canvas. The Mandalorian watched her toss the rest of her food over the grass before she shoved past him. “And get out of my way.”
The Mandalorian remained silent as Cara packed, and it unnerved her.
She thought about finding a soft spot between all that armor to shoot him. She needed to find somewhere new to bed down for the night and didn’t feel like watching over her shoulder while she did.
Cara had learned long before that poison nettles and occupied dens were far easier to spot in the daylight. She’d been fortunate enough so far to avoid both, but the creek wound further into the forest away from the cleared footpaths and she’d still need to clear brush before getting a fire going. The rest of the predators stayed away from the light.
He stood there the entire time she packed, but it wasn’t a large campsite— Even half a minute beneath the gaze of black steel made the skin down the back of her neck crawl. He hadn’t moved from the tree, watching her impassively.
If the rookie was waiting in the shadows, she’d shoot him too and not lose an ounce of sleep over it.
“What?” she finally snapped. “Where’s your sidekick? If you came to collect on my hide after all, I’ll give you a real fight.”
The Mandalorian tossed something at her. She caught it automatically.
Credits glinted up from the bag in the firelight.
“I have a counteroffer.”
Five humans and a child of indeterminate species trundled through the woods on a wagon with enough space left in the back for two. Toro had shot Cara a saucy grin and winked while they were discussing bedding arrangements, at which she scoffed and tossed her duffle bag onto the pile, climbing up to prop herself against her rucksack. The gunslinger, despite his flirtation, stretched the entirety of his lanky body longways down the wagon bed next to the cases on the other side. The Mandalorian sat upright towards the front near the villagers, and the child perched on his lap, eagerly watching the trees go by as moths fluttered around the hanging lantern.
Something started to unnerve the villagers the farther they traveled into the forest: while Caben directed the droid ahead along the trail, Stoke watched through the trees as fog crept in, clouding the shadows between bark. It was hard not to notice the antiquated slugthrower he carried on his lap, and Din was starting to wonder if there was more to the raids than simple smash-and-grab thefts of food and supplies.
”You plan on bird hunting this time of night?” the Mandalorian asked.
Stoke glanced back over his shoulder while Cara and Toro swapped stories. “Just cautious,” he said. “The raids have had everybody on edge. We’ve tried tracking the bandits, but we think they move camps throughout the week, and we can’t afford to venture too far into the woods— There’s too much work to be done back home, and the raiders have something with them.”
“… Something.”
The farmer’s frown deepened. He tried coming up with the right description and, failing that, nudged his friend. Mando looked to Caben.
“We’re not sure what it is,” Caben hedged as he turned and rested his arm over the back of the bench. “They’ve got something big with them that sounds like a machine, but it has these… big red eyes, I guess, that move through the woods past what we can see, even at midday. It’s big enough to shake the ground, and we keep finding its footprints around the raiders’ old campsites.”
“What do you mean?” Cara cut in. She and Toro were leant in behind them now.
“Just… Big footprints,” Stoke said. “Round like a lotus leaf, with two toes in front like a lizard. Size of this wagon bed. They go all around the forest and overlap the most at their old campsites. There’s branches and bark shorn off the trees too high to be any of the other animals marking their territory or looking for food.”
Mando and Cara glanced at each other, their earlier assessment at what should have been a simple job now morphing into concern.
”Where do the tracks go?” Toro asked.
”Around the outer edges of the village,” Caben said. “We can’t tell if they go into the river or not. The tracks… Well, they keep us corralled toward the ponds. We don’t have enough slugthrowers to fight the bandits, plus whatever that thing is.”
Mando’s own frown deepened. It was one thing to scare off a couple dozen raiders, but it was another thing to go up against something that big and unknown. He didn’t think the villagers were pulling their legs; the loggers in Lau had also been guarded and uneasy. Whatever creature was lurking in the woods had apparently been a problem for some time, and their earlier pleading was starting to take a different light.
“Footprints?” Cara was asking. “Not tire tracks or treads? Nothing like a vehicle?”
“They’re feet,” Stoke said flatly. “If it’s a vehicle, we don’t know what it is or where it could have come from. There’s nothing besides Lau and villages like ours for miles around here. No fuel, no roads.”
“What does it do? During the raids?” Toro asked.
“We’re… not sure,” Caben confessed. “Something explodes and the bandits charge out from the trees, from different directions every time.”
“We’re usually focused on getting people far enough away and taking cover,” Stoke muttered. His hands tightened on the long gun on his lap as he focused on the trail. “The second time they showed up, some of us fought back but not all of us made it. Two were killed in the fight, and another is still recovering from their injuries. We’ve buried more people in two months than we have in five years.”
“… There’s a lot of children,” Caben said softly. He was watching the child on Mando’s lap, who was now gazing up at the stars. “As soon as the blasterfire starts, we’re just trying to get as many people out of the way as we can. The faster we run, the more people there are left by the end of it.”
A flicker of cratered earth filled Din’s memory. He could almost smell the acrid cordite as the farmers talked.
“… I don’t like it,” Cara muttered.
Stoke snorted, unamused. “Yeah, you’re telling us.”
Quiet settled again around them, or as quiet as the soft hooting and buzzing of wildlife would allow. Mando settled the child in on one of the softer bags, covering him with the edge of a blanket.
“Tell us what you can about the village and the bandits themselves,” Din said. “Sound like we’ll need as much intel as we can get.”
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Notes:
I know the term ‘Venn diagram’ wouldn’t exist in Star Wars, I just don’t care. It’s a good line and I’m keeping it.
The name for Lau comes from the name of the water planet Damon tells Cee she was born on in the movie Prospect.
”I don’t know you well enough to miss you if you were gone,” comes from a story Rodney Crowell tells from his past about being completely wasted and meeting his then live-in-girlfriend’s father for the first time; After making a pretty bad first impression, Johnny Cash responded with the above line, and Crowell says it sobered him right up.
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corellianhounds · 2 months
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Toro Calican Lives AU
Chapter 3 — Refuge
Media: The Mandalorian
Rating: Gen.
Word Count: 1,024
Warnings: Canon-typical violence and danger
Art Credit: Seth Engstrom
Series summary: What would have happened if Toro Calican hadn’t betrayed the Mandalorian? How would the story have changed if he had lived?
Chapter summary: Bandits attack the village on Sorgan.
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Wooden windchimes clattered in the breeze as a woman with long, dark hair sorted through krill in the woven basket on her lap. It was a mild day for Sorgan, the sun warm on Omera’s back as she worked, keeping an eye on her daughter as she chased a frog between the ponds. She smiled, knowing she’d have to sift through Winta’s clothes later when she did laundry to keep from mixing any small critters or rocks in with the wash; Winta had a habit of bringing the outside in when she came in for dinner. Though she knew she’d have to fetch her daughter shortly to do chores, she was content to let her wander a while longer while the other children played. The majority of the harvest was already completed, and the children would all be called back before too long to clean and dehull krill before the sun got too hot.
The girl carefully crept up on the unsuspecting amphibian before pouncing, attempting to catch it unawares but ultimately failing as the frog hopped away.
A great mechanical groan emanated from the forest, hydraulics humming to life: a flock of herons took off in a flurry and Omera looked up in alarm, searching the woods for the source before seeing the glowing eyes of something big rise beyond the shadowed tree line. Seconds later a blast cratered the earth not ten yards from the farthest water’s edge, and she immediately honed in on the frightened face of her daughter as bandits charged from the woods beyond with a roar.
Villagers cried out in abject terror, scattering from the ponds and fleeing for safety. Omera leapt from her station and raced against the crowd, hearing her daughter scream for her above the cries of the village and din of blasterfire. Fear clawed up her throat— She muscled between the clamoring bodies of the other farmers and ran as fast as her legs would carry her, up over crates and between the reeds as Winta scrambled back and stumbled to her feet, running for her mother. Omera yelled her daughter’s name, calling to her as Klatooinian raiders broke the boundary of the village edge. They spread out between the ponds, destroying farm equipment as they stormed towards the centralized huts, firing off shots at the retreating farmers with indiscriminate regard as to where they landed.
Another large bolt from high up within the trees streaked down at the ponds themselves and shook the earth. Water exploded outwards in a spray, raining down around them. Flashes of hot light zipped past Omera’s head as she ducked, muscle memory taking hold as she ran through a hail of blasterfire and collided with her daughter. With a racing heart Omera wrapped her arms around Winta, pulled her down into a pond, and snagged a floating cage, upending it to pull it over their heads and keep them out of sight.
Bandits laughed and roared in triumph as they looted the harvest and supplies of the fishing village, hauling whatever they could carry back between the ponds towards the edge of the forest. Omera could hear the terrified cries of the villagers around them as Winta shivered, her small legs adrift in the water Omera tread to keep them both afloat. Winta whimpered against her chest and Omera fought the tears threatening her vision as she shushed her, stroking Winta’s hair and attempting to force her own muscles to cooperate so she could stabilize her labored breathing.
A dark figure stalked back between the ponds on the path above them, the shortened muzzle of the bandit leader twisted in a snarl as he roared in triumph. A cry of victory echoed back at him from the bandits now retreating to the woods. Winta gasped in fear again.
The bandit leader turned at the sound. Omera’s eyes widened as he surveyed his surroundings beneath a gnarled brow, and she had only a moment to whisper “Hold your breath” to Winta before she covered her daughter’s mouth and pulled her under the water.
Omera ducked down, twisting to press their backs against the wall of mud closest to the bandit and forcing her eyes open as laser fire shot down through the water. Winta struggled in her arms but Omera held her close and remained still as the water churned, seeing the red light burst and fizzle barely two feet in front of them. Again and again the raider shot, pausing only for a moment before another scattered spray of laser light rippled the water. The seconds dragged on as Omera counted in her head, seeing the bubbles escape from between her fingers as Winta struggled to remain calm.
Thirty seconds after the last shot, she knew she couldn’t keep them below any longer. She slowly swam out with Winta and guided her up with a finger pressed to her lips; she pointed to the shadow of the cage and Winta nodded. Mother and daughter broke the surface on a gasp of air, somehow managing to remain within the boundaries of the floating wooden cage, shafts of light now streaking through it. Omera could see nobody on the bank as Winta coughed and sputtered. The scent of thatch fire and brine filled their noses, but the air was silent.
Tossing aside the destroyed cage, Omera stood on the slope of mud, holding Winta up as they tried to catch their breath. Water ran in rivulets down their faces, their sodden clothes weighing them down. The bandits that had targeted the fishing village were gone as quickly as they had appeared, leaving behind a wake of destruction.
Omera had thought she was done with this life, done with running until it felt like her heart would give out as smoke and explosions rained down around her. As she clutched Winta’s trembling body in her arms, she surveyed for not the first time the losses they had sustained, anger hardening her resolve.
Her dark eyes flashed as fire burned in her chest.
Something needs to be done, she thought. Or there won’t be any of us left to rebuild.
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corellianhounds · 3 months
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Toro Calican Lives AU
Chapter 2 — Fate Steps In
Media: The Mandalorian
Rating: Gen.
Word Count: 879
Warnings: None
Art Credit: Brian Matyas on ArtStation
Series Summary: What would have happened if Toro Calican hadn’t betrayed the Mandalorian? How would the story have changed if he had lived?
Chapter Summary: Fennec’s body had to end up somewhere, and someone was expecting her in Mos Espa.
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A pit-droid pilots a repulsorlift dolly over the coarse span of Tatooine with two other droids in tow. Slauce Canyon was too well-traveled and the Wastes were too far for the three of them, even with the sled, to make it there and back before Peli got antsy and would threaten them with a variety of punishments she usually forgot to follow through with: after the bounty hunters’ shootout in the garage, Peli had hollered for them to drag the body off to wherever it would be missed the least. In these parts of Tatooine, that usually meant the Pit.
The Pit was a good place to rid oneself of incriminating evidence, and with the advantage of being so far out of the way and inhabited by a creature that promised an agonizing death upon your descent into the maw, it was the perfect garbage disposal of Tatooine, provided those who approached were either brave, reckless, or stupid enough to do so.
The advantage of pit droids is that they are programmed with few smarts and even less self-preservation.
Wind whistled from the canyon pass far behind them as the two droids bringing up the rear chittered to each other, occasionally looking back along the end of the ravine walls for signs of trouble. Once they’d gotten to open ground they were more wary of potential wildlife, but the last hours of night were quiet and still and the long trek across the sand had been made undisturbed. DUM-12 walked proudly with a club carried like a colour guard’s rifle, swinging his feet in a marching tempo with far too much gusto for the role he had designated himself to.
It’s just a stick, DUM-35 said.
<You’re just jealous I found it first,> DUM-12 said, as smugly as his processors allowed.
DUM-35 was envious, but he wasn’t going to admit that.
<Quiet back there,> DUM-60 chirped from ahead of them. <Did you hear that?>
The sled came to a halt as the droids froze, cocking their heads. The dark was as enveloping as the silence, and after a few moments at attention DUM-60 continued forward. They could see the edge of the maw coming into view under the light of the torch DUM-35 carried, and a sickly, humid breeze wafted across the desert.
<What do you suppose it’ll do when we get there?> DUM-35 mused. <Crunch it or slurp it?>
< I hope it gnaws on her for a bit,> DUM-60 said. He’d taken umbrage at the kick the mercenary had given him on her way to stuff them into the metal tool cabinet earlier that night.
<Just don’t stand so close this time,> DUM-12 advised. < I won’t pull you out if you trip.>
DUM-35 trotted ahead alongside the sled, looking down at the body. There was a small black case attached to its shoulder with a recessed red button, enticing him to wedge his grippers around it and tug it loose before the three of them finished disposing with the mercenary. He brought it up to look it over, shaking it to see if he could determine its function. Twelve jogged up alongside Thirty-Five and chirped negatively.
<What is that?> Twelve asked. < I want to see it.>
<Back off, I got it first.>
< I just want to see it—>
Thirty-Five yanked it away. <See with your eye, not with your hands.>
Twelve tried to use the club to knock it out of Thirty-Five’s hand. < I outrank you, give it here!>
<You already got a stick, you don’t get anything else—! >
<Both of you cut it out, you’re jostling the sled— >
Rocks and sand shifted beneath the squabbling droids until the one with the club conked the other over the head and hopped up onto the dolly with the black box, the second hot on its heels. They continued to squabble until they were up and over the other side, fighting over it like children and nudging the sled closer to the pit. DUM-60 was about to bark a command to stop their fighting when the *CRACK* of a gunshot echoed across the desert.
All three droids squawked and collapsed into clamshells, nervous optics darting around for the source of the shot. Another *CRACK* came from a distant dune, and this time the sand just inches ahead of them jumped as a bullet hit the ground. The three droids popped up with a yell and made a mad dash away from the sled, skittering back to the rocky canyon trail towards Mos Eisley.
Silence followed for several minutes while the body of Fennec Shand lay alone on the hovering repulsorcraft. The stars above watched as a figure in dark robes steadily approached the jagged rim of earth. He stopped at the sled and pulled it back until it no longer skirted the cavernous maw, surveying his surroundings and bringing it to a standstill. As he shouldered his rifle and stooped to inspect the mercenary’s body, he gently prodded the armorweave suit and the burns to her abdomen, assessing the damage.
After a moment of contemplation, the man in the dark robes scooped up the body of the mercenary and started off towards the plains circumventing the Pit of Carkoon, the quiet *clink* of spurs marking the figure’s departure.
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Notes:
In the original episode of “The Gunslinger,” Peli orders the droids to drag Toro’s body to Beggar’s Canyon. A look over the map of Tatooine places Beggar’s Canyon waaaaay out near Mos Espa, which seems like overkill. I chose the best closest option instead, which also puts us directionally closer to some more relevant locations for later
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corellianhounds · 4 months
Text
Toro Calican Lives AU
Chapter 1 — First Shot
Media: The Mandalorian
Rating: Gen
Word Count: 5,345
Warnings: Canon typical violence
Art Credit: Christian Alzmann, The Art of Star Wars: The Mandalorian
Series Summary: What would have happened if Toro Calican hadn’t betrayed the Mandalorian? How would the story have changed if he had lived?
Chapter Summary: Beginning in Season 1, an important thing to note is that I’ve swapped episodes 4 and 5 in the timeline and moved forward with the story from there. Mando steals the kid back from the Client and leaves Nevarro in a hail of gunfire, intent on finding somewhere quiet to lay low and stock up on supplies, and is forced to land on Tatooine following a dogfight just outside the desert planet’s orbit. We pick up here directly after Mando and Calican have subdued Fennec Shand.
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Toro’s shoulder screamed in pain as the mercenary wrenched his arm tight, her submission hold around his neck cutting off his oxygen. It was only when the Mandalorian stepped into view with his blaster raised that she let go.
“Nice distraction,” he said dryly.
Toro grunted and tried to get his bearings, rolling his shoulder to see if it was still in its socket and wincing at the twinge he knew would probably be there in the days to come.
But to see Shand sitting sullenly in the dirt did him a heap of good humor. He’d suck it up and walk off the pain if it meant saving face even a little bit.
“Yep, good work partner—”
The Mandalorian watched the mercenary carefully as Toro got to his feet. “Binders?”
Toro unhooked the brand new pair from the back of his belt. “Cinch-lock, top of the line,” he said.
The Mandalorian shook his head and untucked a pair of his own. “Magnacuffs are stronger. Ignore the newer models. Go find your blaster.” He tossed them to Shand, saying “Cuff yourself.”
Toro grumbled as he hooked the binders to his belt again and went in search of his gun. Leave it to Mando to throw away half his gear for the Sand People and insult the rest in front of a target. He could hear Fennec speaking behind him in a voice that sounded completely unbothered by her predicament, as conversational as if she were discussing the weather and without a trace of the exertion and dying adrenaline Toro felt after a fight like that.
“Karking she-devil,” he swore under his breath. He grabbed his blaster and stuffed it in his holster, heading back to the pair. “He could’ve at least gave her a warning shot for all the trouble I went to while he caught up…”
The Mandalorian was walking the mercenary down to the speeder bike when Toro rejoined them. “You know, I really should thank you. You’re my ticket into the Guild once we turn you in.”
“You’re welcome.”
Nightfall on Tatooine brought with it a bone-deep cold that was hard to shake. The Mandalorian had gone in search of the dewback at Toro’s behest which left him and the mercenary in a stare-down for an hour before Toro perched on the speeder-bike and stretched his legs. Fennec’s eyes narrowed to a blade-thin glare as she propped her back against the rock face, and waited.
Calican had been uneasy at the prospect of being left alone with Shand given the aptitude with which she’d bested him at close range, but so long as he remained vigilant and she didn’t find a way to slip free, he was fairly certain she wouldn’t do much while he still had the Tempest trained on her. The hair-trigger of the modified DL-44 fit snug against his pointer finger and weighed practically nothing. Even a warning glance off one of her limbs would do enough to get his point across, and Mando would be back before long. Truth be told, he wasn’t opposed to the idea of dragging Shand back to Mos Eisley, but he wasn’t about to share a seat with the Mandalorian. There was only so much dignity he was willing to sacrifice for a job.
Morning started to break not long after it appeared Fennec had woken up. She made a show of yawning and rolling her shoulders as best as she could, but remained seated and bound. Fennec looked out across the dunes.
“It’s been a while,” she said thoughtfully. “You think he got lost?”
Toro didn’t take the bait. Fennec continued to list her unhelpful observations.
“Oh look, the suns are coming up. That’ll feel good under all that new leather.”
“Quiet.”
“How long are you willing to wait for him? I imagine you’re probably impatient to see a broker by now.”
“Quiet.”
Fennec sat back as Toro watched the dunes, but the silence didn’t last for long. “There’s still time for me to meet my contact in Mos Espa,” she said with a hint of persuasion. “If you take me to them, I can pay you double the price on my head.”
“Oh, really?” Toro put a hand to his chest in mock surprise, oozing sarcasm like a slug. “And I’ve been personally summoned to officiate a Hutt’s wedding.” He rolled his eyes. “I’m not worried about getting paid.”
“What makes you so sure that Mandalorian is going to give you your share of the bounty? Those nomads are so few and far in between they have to work hand-to-mouth just for table scraps— I wouldn’t be surprised if he dropped you out of the loading dock and turned me in without you. They don’t have ‘friends.’ ”
“I said, Be quiet.”
Fennec shrugged. “All I’m saying is, there’s a reason you don’t see many around anymore. Mandalorians get picked apart by bigger hunters first and vultures second.”
“He’s not the one in binders. Probably accounts for something.”
“Your faith in him is admirable, but how much has he really done? He used you as bait last night, didn’t he?”
Toro grit his teeth, trying not to overthink the ambush. He’d heard the stories about Mandalorians, their alleged prowess on the battlefield, but as much as he hated to admit it, Fennec had a point; Mando had waited until nightfall before racing across the dunes to the ridge and just so happened to get shot off somewhere far enough behind him that Toro had to close in on Shand alone. He figured his partner was catching up, but it wasn’t until the assassin had him in a chokehold that Mando put a stop to it.
The Mandalorian also hadn’t put up much of a fight to stay with the merc hours prior. And it had been a long time since Toro had seen him go after the dewback.
“… What are you saying?” Toro asked suspiciously.
Fennec raised an eyebrow. “What do you know about that Mandalorian?”
“I hired him. He works for me.”
Fennec scoffed. “Seems to me like he’s the one calling the shots.”
“Shows what you know. I’m the one getting into the Guild when I bring you in. All I have to do is show up with you and I’m golden.”
“You think the Guild is going to welcome you with open arms if you walk in alongside a Guild traitor?”
That gave Toro pause. “… You know him?”
She shrugged, crossing her ankles. “I’ve heard things. Seems interesting to me that a Mandalorian in a brand new suit of beskar shows up here after the Guild on Nevarro got blown to hell last week by a hunter turned saboteur. From what I hear, the one matching his description sprung a target after he received payment and went rogue. Set off enough charges to level a street.”
“Hold up,” Toro demanded; he’d heard about Nevarro when he docked in Mos Eisley— The spacer chatter he picked up said something about a feud between local factions that garnered a lot of attention and collateral damage. “He took a bounty back? Why would he do that?”
“Who knows?” Fennec said. “Mandalorians are loyal to their own interests above all else.”
“How do you know all this?” Fennec wasn’t giving him all the facts, but Mando had done little more.
“You think this is the first time I’ve been on Tatooine?” She scoffed. “You know who I worked for. Information’s easy to find when you know where to look. I can help you take the Mandalorian down in exchange for letting me walk away. Turning him in would make you legendary; for a Mandalorian without much fight in him, what do you have to lose?”
Toro flexed the hand near his holster. “Why should I trust you?”
“You don’t have to trust me, but I’ve been in this game a lot longer than you have. Uncuff me—”
“Not a chance.” Toro shook his head. “I know what you’re capable of.”
“All the more reason to have me on your side,” Fennec implored him. “Uncuff me, we ride back together, and we get to Mos Eisley before he does. Corner him at his ship, take him down nice and easy, we part ways and you get the reward for live capture.”
Toro’s hand flexed in agitation as he shifted his weight. “… How can we be sure he’s the right guy?”
And finally, Fennec smiled.
“Word is he still has the target with him. I’d bet shillings to fillings we’ll find them on that ship.”
The wind whipped around them as they rode pillion across the Dune Sea. The mercenary navigated with easy maneuvering, skiffing sand off the crest of dunes and landing gracefully on the other side as they slithered towards the horizon. As the suns overhead bore down mercilessly, Toro held fast to Shand’s belt with one hand and to his sidearm with the other. It was set to stun but he hadn’t felt the need to reveal that when he insisted she drive and he rested the barrel against her ribs enough to be felt. Shand had given him a withering look for the trouble.
Toro mulled over the plan as he leaned with her into a turn, his thighs aching from the position they’d held for hours. By his estimate they’d make it back to the hangar sometime in the evening, and by the time the Mandalorian caught up it’d be well past nightfall. As long as they could get the mechanic out of the way and everybody neighboring the shop minded their own business with the usual Tatooine indifference, it’d be a quiet and clinical job. He was somewhat disappointed the first hunt turned out to be less flashy than anticipated but the more he thought about the name he would make for himself, the more enticing the prospect was. He could probably even get the armor off of the hunter in addition to the Guild purse.
The bike arced through the air as the canyon pass came into view and Fennec opened up the throttle. Victory and prestige was so close he could almost taste it.
Mercenary and rookie zipped through the streets of Mos Eisley as the suns descended, coasting to a stop outside an alley behind bay 3-5. The moisture vaporators rattled and hummed. Shand eased the bike into the narrow crevice between the old buildings, sandstone snagging their trousers and catching on Toro’s boots. Toro’s back protested at the strain of righting himself and dismounting, envious of Fennec’s apparent lack of discomfort; the mercenary glided off over the bike’s casing and surveyed their surroundings. Jawas chittered and laughed, scuttling past the mouth of the alley, and Fennec motioned silently for him to follow her lead. Just how he was going to vault up the sheer face of the outer wall, he was unsure.
Toro slunk behind Fennec on the terrace of a neighboring building, waiting for her cue. The mechanic was easy to get the drop on; Fennec landed soundlessly on the other side of the garage wall and crept up on her as she was realigning the laminar thrust buffer, firing a stun shot into her back. The older woman dropped to the ground and pit droids squawked and ran for cover— Toro dragged the mechanic to a storage closet while the mercenary dispatched with the droids.
However, as Toro exited the alcove between the mechanic’s office and the generator, the power to the entire hangar went out.
Lights winked off, every hum and clatter of machinery falling eerily silent. He whirled to the gangplank where Fennec had been just moments before and, finding it empty, cursed and wriggled out to make for the ship. He hadn’t accounted for the possibility that she’d simply steal the ship and jet off-planet, but now that she was here there really was no incentive for her to keep her word; it would be all too easy (and frankly within her best interests) to leave him for a very angry Mandalorian to find with the proverbial smoking gun, having practically handed off not one but two targets, in addition to his ship.
Movement to his right made him freeze mid-step and reroute his momentum, curling in without choice behind the free-standing tool cabinet. The *clink* of quiet spurs accompanied heavy footfalls.
The Mandalorian had returned.
Inside the ship, Fennec held her breath. Either the Mandalorian’s plan had been to come straight to Mos Eisley after catching up with the dewback the whole time, or he had friends with faster transportation somewhere out in the dunes. There wasn’t time to reassemble the MK— Shifting sand gave away his location, and his approach to the ship she couldn’t allow. Hopefully the rookie was well hidden. She had what she needed.
“Well, well, what do we have here?” Fennec said lazily, taking her time to come halfway down the ramp. “You found your way back to the roost after all.”
The Mandalorian stopped short at the sight of the kid in her arm, her blaster tucked into the boy’s side. The boy whined softly, and Fennec smiled.
“What do you want with the kid,” Mando said bluntly.
“Same thing I imagine every hunter wants with it— The price on both your heads rises by the day. All I’m asking for is some cooperation. Drop your blaster. Hands up.”
The Mandalorian complied.
“I have more pressing matters elsewhere that require your ship, and I know you don’t want anything to happen to this, hmm? So how about we make a deal?”
Statuesque, he watched her. She could see Calican creep from the shadows and come up behind Mando; she jutted her chin to him, then addressed the Mandalorian. “Your turn to cuff yourself. Nice and slow.”
“Let the kid go.”
“No,” she said simply. “Cuff yourself and you won’t get a blaster burn to the back. My partner is eager to bring you into the Guild himself— You and your quarry are both items of interest these days.”
“Doesn’t sound like much of a deal.”
“Would you rather both of you be dead, or just captured?”
Toro came level with the Mandalorian, the barrel of his gun resting in the middle of the hunter’s back. To his credit, the novice hunter had adapted well to the unexpected change of plans, remaining out of sight until he received the signal from Fennec. Calican reached around with one hand, binders proffered, and the Mandalorian took them with obvious loathing. His visor remained on Fennec as he locked in one wrist and Calican secured the other. “Bring him up,” she called.
Toro prodded Mando and the two trudged forward under Fennec’s watchful eye. Mando walked slowly, as much for the kid’s benefit as his own. The boy’s plaintive cries tugged at something in his chest. His mind turned; he needed time to think.
“You Mandalorians are a sentimental lot,” Fennec said. “You should know by now the only skin worth saving is your own.”
Din’s lip curled in a snarl. He could only look at the little boy in the mercenary’s arm and pray that if they made it out of here alive, he would forgive him.
The rookie’s face was inscrutable behind the wall of beskar. He hadn’t said a word in the entirety of the proceedings. If Fennec had been a hair faster, a touch more keen, she may have seen Mando’s cape ripple enough to cause some curiosity.
What happened instead under the darkness of a bay pitched black was the slightest shift in aim, the long barrel of Toro’s gun tucking between the Mandalorian’s ribs and bicep and firing straight.
Fennec grunted in pain— Plasma seared her side and sent her reeling off balance to her left; the gunslinger had shot her. She fell from the ramp into a roll, somehow still squeezing the kid to her chest with her good arm. Two more shots rang out above her and she pushed off the ground, rolling backwards with a growl beneath the belly of the ship.
The rookie yelled Shand’s name as he leapt off the gangplank of the Crest to follow her descent, leaving Mando bound and alone. Mando yelled after him but didn’t have time to figure out whose side he was on— He glanced down to the binders, thinking quickly. With a quick breath he braced himself and reached out with his bound wrists, bringing his arms back on either side of him, hard— The center links of the binders met the beskar plackart over his midsection with a loud SNAP. He twisted the nearly-severed metal, tore the bindings apart and grabbed his blaster, leaping with one fluid motion into the fray.
Toro ducked as a laser bolt sailed past his ear, feeling the heat from another as it scorched the paneling above him. Fennec’s footsteps faltered in the sand somewhere near the display console with the Mandalorian’s not far behind. Toro checked around the corner of the office wall, squinting in the dark, the details of the garage layout only visible between Shand’s blaster fire and ricochets. He scrambled out to double back towards the bow and raced around it, hoping he was fast enough to cut her off. Holding a gathering charge on the Tempest, he saw movement in the shadows near an engine hoist. The handle of the blaster was starting to overheat but he needed a clear shot: Fennec’s braid whipped around as she grabbed the oscillating arm and threw her weight back into it, and Toro fired.
Too late it seemed, as she turned just in time to see him and drop into a crouch. The overcharged shot sailed past her and Toro cursed, the gun’s frame arcing with electricity.
Mando grunted in pain as the arm of the hoist swung into his chest with a CLANG that reverberated in his ears. Fennec had held tension in it until he’d rounded the starboard side of the ship before letting go, and the taut cord snapped back, the hit sending him off kilter and rattling his teeth. It was hard to find her in the dark; even with night vision she was as lean and lithe as her shadow, and he needed clarity of details the thermal imaging wouldn’t give him at this range. Now Calican was off somewhere trading plasma with Shand shot for shot, and Mando still hadn’t seen the child.
Stumbling to his feet Mando shook his head again to clear it, breathing heavily. Movement caught his eye beneath the landing gear and he ducked below the ship, catching Calican’s boot in hand and yanking him back.
“Where’s the kid?” Mando growled, hauling Toro up and slamming him against the hull.
Toro’s head hit metal and he gasped in pain— His eyes, unfocused, widened at something beyond Din’s shoulder. “Behind you!”
Toro grabbed Mando’s forearms and sunk to the ground; Din grunted at the dead weight, dropping along with him to the sand.
Ionized light spattered off the hull. Toro scrambled away as the Mandalorian ducked, and Toro shot behind him again, managing to fire Fennec’s blaster from her hand— She hissed in pain and pulled a blade from her belt instead, whipping it in Toro’s direction before immediately flinging another at the Mandalorian. The clumsy throw was easy to block, glancing off his vambrace instead and ricocheting toward the tool cabinet— It pierced a canister, depressurizing in a plume of thick gas. Toro yelped in pain, scrambling back farther and shielding his face. Several canisters of liquified gasses clattered against each other and fell as he grabbed the work table and vaulted away. Fennec flung another knife and heard him grunt and stumble beneath the engine.
Mando’s whipcord shot out and caught one of Fennec’s ankles, pulling her foot out beneath her as he yanked her closer. The kid cried out in fear, and Din swore to himself that if the child was hurt he would kill Shand then and there without remorse. Fennec snarled, using her other boot to hook around the cord and plant it on the ground, hard, jerking him forward— As the line went slack she immediately brought both feet up and kicked him in the chest, sending him back into a stack of crates as he fell. She leapt to her feet and ran.
The Mandalorian stood and charged after the mercenary, the fury of lightning hot on her heels. He caught her at the stern, jabbed a well-aimed fist into her back and grappled for the kid; she doubled over, slamming a fist against the inside of his knee and buckling him with a yell. Her elbow cracked back against his helmet, and she took off towards the bow.
Fennec was starting to wheeze. Calican’s shot had lanced between her ribs at close range, and with every blow she traded with the Mandalorian she could feel herself breathing around fluid. At this point if she could get onto the ship and get airborne she’d consider it a victory, but every turn she’d taken around the crowded hangar had been met with a volley of blasterfire and near-misses. The kid wriggled against her weakening grip, her glove slippery with blood.
The silhouette of the Mandalorian appeared in front of her and she snarled again. The battering ram of approaching beskar halted in its tracks as she brought the kid up in front of her, her final blade jammed up against its side.
“If you take another step,” she seethed, “I will kill him.”
The Mandalorian was silent.
“Hands. Up.” Blood trickled from her nose and hair stuck to her face. She couldn’t hear any sign of Calican. She hoped the Mandalorian had snapped his scrawny neck. “If you so much as flex your wrist I’ll send this runt to the void. Don’t move.”
She circled him as he turned in place, keeping her eyes on his hands as she neared the gangplank. She backed up slowly, her breath hitching with every step. Her boot hit the edge of the ramp and she stepped up, back where she began not ten minutes before. She could do this.
“Why’s this kid so important anyway?” Fennec spit viciously. Her curiosity would never be satisfied if she didn’t know. “Why break the Code? He’s not worth taking on a warlord and his army alone. Nobody is.”
“… He is to me.”
There was a moment suspended in time where they watched each other, motionless, before a blinding flash of light illuminated the bay, blistering her vision white. Fennec yelled and dropped the child, instinctively shielding her eyes from the flash.
And in a moment of searing, violent clarity Fennec Shand froze, illuminated by a burst of sparks. The sharp report of a blaster echoed through the night as she crumpled, lifeless, to the ground.
Mando kept a firm grip on his gun as he watched her for any sign of movement, cautiously crouching over the child in worry. He’d lunged for him the second Fennec let go and he pulled the trigger— The boy’s robe was smeared with blood and Mando didn't know what of it might have been his, but now as he examined the boy it seemed like the mess was entirely external. The child cooed, reaching for him without any notable signs of distress, and Din felt the weight of grief he’d readied himself for lift from his chest. The boy tucked his face into Mando’s cowl, curling his fingers in the fabric.
Toro came into view from behind the mechanic’s work table, the expended flash cartridge in hand. As the smoke cleared Mando regarded the rookie warily, turning his pistol to the gunslinger as he tucked the child into his chest and away from Toro's sight line. Toro's hands raised in a show of good faith.
"She told me you were a Guild traitor," Toro said, his expression unreadable. "Said you took back a target. That bringing both of you into the Guild would make me a legend."
He looked down to the child in Mando's protective hold and he sighed.
"She didn’t tell me the target was a kid."
He looked down at Shand and nudged her with his boot. The mercenary didn’t move.
“Guess that’s the end of that,” Toro muttered. “Whole job’s a bust.”
Din's steely gaze didn't waver. The younger hunter had managed to double-cross and get the drop on a master assassin and come out still standing on the other side. It was a feat rarely seen from greenhorns fresh in the field, much less from a spoiled rich kid from the Inner Rim. The thought of Din shooting him didn’t even seem to be on his mind. Toro Calican looked marginally worse for wear, nursing a gas burn and a wound on his shoulder from Shand’s blade, but there was no indication the gunslinger was planning to fight any longer.
“You really did break my binders too, didn’t you?”
Despite everything that had transpired that evening, the look of mild despair and accusation on Toro’s face almost made Din want to smile.
“Thanks for paying attention.”
There was a clatter of noise from behind the two of them: the hunters whipped their blasters around just in time to see Peli Motto barging in waving what looked like a wide-barreled, old-fashioned slugthrower at the two of them, stumbling over debris and the squawking pit droids hot on her heels.
“—ck off my lot before I fill you with buckshot!” she screeched, coming into view. “Which one of you hit me?! Where is she?!”
Din holstered his blaster, angling the kid away from Peli’s aim. “Easy, lady, it’s okay. She’s dead.”
Peli’s eyes darted to the body on the ground and her hackles lowered enough for her grip on the gun to slacken. “Oh. Oh good, okay. What about that one?”
Din looked back to the sheepish rookie.
“… I don’t think he’s going to be a problem.”
It took a hefty sum of credits from the kid and about an hour of baby therapy from the other kid before Peli largely forgave the two hunters for the ruckus they'd caused. Toro offered up the speeder bike in addition to a few gold centicreds for her work on the ship, which went a long way toward earning his way back into some measure of Peli's good graces. Before long she was back to disguising her usual good humor and mild chicanery with her brusque customer service attitude and gruff foremanship, ordering the droids to drag off the body while it was still dark and making Mando and Calican do some heavy lifting while she cleaned up the kid. She even managed to get a few jokes in at Toro's expense, prodding him when she thought he wasn't working hard enough and pushing him to stay busy.
When it came time for them to depart, she waved them off with a disinterested salute, hollering, “What are you waiting for, a kiss on the cheek? Get outta here!”
Toro chuckled as the mechanic went back to the entrance of the bay to barter with some passing Jawas. He turned to Mando as he packed the rest of his gear
"So listen," he started. "I know the job was a wash, and- You know, the whole deal with Shand, I…”
He huffed, putting his hands on his hips. The child amused himself toddling after the scrap mouse hopping in circles around him.
"I'm sorry the kid got put in danger." The apology sounded like it tasted bad, but he gave it anyway. "But... Look, I could really use the mileage. You're good at what you do, and- and at the first sign of a problem you can dump me at whatever port you want, but I think we can work together, and I want to keep hunting. I’ll do anything you tell me to. Anything to get off Tatooine."
Mando knew it was coming, and he shook his head. "I'm not planning to take Guild work anytime soon." He knew Karga (if the covert hadn't killed him) would have suspended his credentials and flagged his Guild ID after he escaped with the child. The dogfight with Riot Mar and even Shand's knowledge of his breach of the Code solidified his status as a wanted man, to say nothing of whatever the Imps wanted the kid for; Din had thought he’d have more time to hole up somewhere before word started to travel. Now there were too many conflicting interests involved for them to stay anywhere but off the grid. "The kid and I are laying low for a while."
"Please," Toro implored him. "I need something to turn in to the Guild— Even proof that Shand’s dead won't get me much. They won’t believe me. I can take other contracts, build a reputation, I don't care, but I won't get far either way by myself."
"Freelance doesn't come with Guild resources or insurance." Mando continued to pack supplies. "They're gutter jobs for a reason and they don't guarantee pay if the client gets stingy once the job's done."
"Learning any trade takes experience," he argued. "If I get a reputation, the Guild's more likely to give me more work.
"You can't eat credibility."
Toro slammed a hand against the hull in front of the Mandalorian, blocking his path. "I already told you, I'm not worried about getting paid— I have my own money." The boy's eyes blazed with determination. "I'll pay my way if I have to, and you can have whatever we make on commissions. I promise. I’ll do whatever it takes. I just need this job."
Mando’s visor slowly turned to the younger man, waiting long enough for some of that fire in his eyes to die down. Toro’s jaw was set, but he dropped his arm back to his side.
“Answer me this,” Mando said after some deliberation. “Why do you have to be a hunter? Because if there’s anything else you can possibly do, do that instead.”
For the first time since the beginning of their conversation, Toro looked like he wasn’t going to tell him what was on his mind. Din scrutinized his expression, gauging his response.
“I have my reasons,” Toro said evasively. “If you really think I’m not worth your time, I’ll find somebody else.”
But then Toro unhooked the pouch of credits from his belt, holding it up.
“But I know I can pay you for passage to the next system.”
Mando weighed his options. Calican had a few redeeming qualities (as well as an envious amount of expendable cash on his person), but his double-cross was still fresh on Din's mind. The possibility of him doing more damage down the road wasn't something he wanted to gamble on. The mess with Shand had nearly cost the child his life, and Mando had only barely saved the boy from Nevarro a week ago. He normally traveled alone.
The child by Toro’s feet tripped and flopped onto one of Toro’s boots.
… Normally.
The boy looked up at the hunter with a grin, righting himself and climbing up onto his boot with both hands dug into the fabric of his pant leg. Toro smiled right back, balancing the kid on his foot a few inches off the ground, much to the boy’s amusement.
Din cocked his head, watching him.
“… Okay,” he decided. “Passage to the next system. We’ll see where we go from there.”
Toro whooped in triumph even as Mando stooped to pick up the kid and brushed past him to board the Crest. Toro stuffed the rest of his belongings into his rucksack and called out confidently after Mando.
“You won’t regret this, partner!”
The Mandalorian stowed his gear, carrying the child with him as he remotely initiated the preflight checks. The rookie hurriedly grabbed his pack, boarding the gangway with a grin.
“Let’s hope not,” Din muttered to himself, and he climbed the ladder to the cockpit.
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Notes:
A big thank you to @oloreaa, whose enthusiasm, encouragement, and willingness to listen while I talked ideas out is a big part of why I stayed motivated to finish and post this AU and chapter <3
The name of Toro’s gun comes from the model of airsoft pistol his prop in the show is based around
I don’t know if the term “baby therapy” is more a widely recognizable term or if it’s just one I’ve heard my own friends/family use often enough that it makes sense to me, but it’s meant to imply the level of calm and happiness one gets from cuddling a happy baby for an extended period of time. I don’t necessarily think it fits in with the in-universe style of writing I use for SW, but I couldn’t think of a more concise way to convey the idea lol
Next chapter >
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corellianhounds · 4 months
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Hey there :D I saw the blurb you posted by chance when I was in the mando tag, and I'm really intrigued! I cannot really read stuff at the moment since I have exams going on buuut I'm looking forward to when I do have time to do so! From what I've seen I really like it :D (also happy new year ☺️)
Hey, thank you so much and happy new year! I’m guessing it was probably the one with Toro Calican and Fennec from yesterday; I’m happy you liked it enough to say something ☺️ To be honest it started out as an idea I had for a bunch of funny moments in an alternate timeline where Toro didn’t end up betraying the Mandalorian and had lived instead, but then I thought about it too much and got invested in seeing what WOULD have happened if that were the case 😂 So now there’s actual thought and plot involved, and I’m very invested in what people will think of the ending lol
Anyway I’m glad you liked that snippet. Toro turned out to be very fun to write for and I think it’ll be a good AU to play around in
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corellianhounds · 4 months
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This is just a quick list of the finished fics I’ve posted here and on AO3. Check under the #hounds speaks and #my writing tags for essays, criticisms, meta analysis, and general thoughts.
Banner and grey dividers courtesy of @/saradika-graphics
Mudhorn divider by @/thecutestgrotto
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The Mandalorian
• Geroya: One-shot. 1k words. Gen. Set pre-show, leading into Season 1. Worldbuilding, filling in the spaces within canon.
“The children of the covert have a game they play when Beroya comes back to Nevarro.”
• Fate Sometimes Steps In: One-shot. 1k words. Gen. Set after “The Gunslinger.” Filling in the spaces within canon.
The time that passes in the liminal space between life and death is one few people can claim to recall. Fennec is guided back from the brink of the void by another who very nearly shared the same fate.
• Gaa’tayl: One-shot. 3k words. Gen. Set pre-show.
Paz Vizsla heads up the scouting party to rescue three children separated from the covert.
• Stranded In the Desert: One-shot. 3.1k words. Gen. A missing/added scene to the beginning of “The Passenger.”
The Mandalorian treks across the desert with a foundling and one of the Fallen in tow.
• Nightfall: One-shot. 1.8k words. Gen. Set during Order 66, an alternate take on the child’s escape.
What circumstances could have compelled Grogu to heal someone for the first time?
• The Exodus: One-shot. 5.7k words. Gen. The third act of “The Sin” from the covert’s perspective, retconning the later idea that only Paz Vizsla and the Armorer escaped Nevarro.
The covert on Nevarro wouldn’t have risked the entire tribe to save only one of their own, not without contingency plans in place.
• The Oldest Profession: One-shot. 4.9k words. Gen. Set prior to the show.
The Mandalorian is forced to find lodging through unconventional means during a long hunt.
Toro Calican Lives AU
An alternate universe where the eponymous gunslinger in Season 1 lives past his first hunt to have a more meaningful role in the show’s story. Series, WIP.
• Chapter 1 — First Shot: 5.3k words. Gen. An alternate ending to “The Gunslinger,” where the timeline diverges from canon and runs parallel to it.
Toro Calican makes a different choice.
• Chapter 2 — Fate Steps In: 879 words. Gen.
Fennec’s body had to end up somewhere.
• Chapter 3 — Refuge: 1k words. Gen.
Bandits attack Omera’s village.
• Chapter 4 — First Impressions: 14.1k words. Gen.
Mando, Toro, and the kid make landfall on Sorgan.
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Rogue One
Soldier, Princess, Farm Boy, Spy
Comparing and contrasting four of the heroes of the Rebellion. WIP.
Chapter 1 — Similitude: 1.9k words. Gen.
Jyn and Leia meet as children.
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Original Trilogy
• Bar Talk: One-shot. 2.7k words. Gen. Set a short time after Return of the Jedi.
Luke struggles with issues of self-doubt and faith. Lando’s good at helping people see things objectively.
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Analyses & Criticisms
The Mandalorian
• Theory about Mando’s parents
• Mando lets Karga live, “The Sin”
• Peli Motto’s intuition
• Character analysis: Toro Calican
• Theory about Boba Fett’s original connection to Fennec Shand
• World-building: The covert on Nevarro
• Script analysis: Gor Koresh, and Mando’s justified violence
• Loose story threads: Minor changes to “The Passenger”
• Character analysis of Mando: Protective vs Worrisome
• Strengthening characters: Cara Dune and Carson Teva, criticism of “The Siege”
• Peli Motto’s regard of Boba Fett
• Wasted Potential: Jack Black on Plazir 15
• Analyzing Mando’s fighting style — “The Prisoner”
• Analyzing Mando’s motivations: Criticism of “The Heiress”
Reblog with Character Analysis on Bo-Katan
• Analyzing Mando’s fighting style and motivations, Mando’s lack of agency as a character and being sidelined as a protagonist — Criticism of “The Heiress” and “The Rescue”
• Inconsistencies and weak world-building regarding where Mandalorians should live, Season 3
• Criticism of the writers’ usage of Bo-Katan’s character, end of Season 3
• Criticism of Mando settling down, end of Season 3
• Comparing and contrasting Din Djarin to Aragorn and Éomer of LotR
The Book of Boba Fett
• De-aged Boba Fett scenario
• The Marketability of Star Wars Merchandise: Production design and its ties to storytelling
• Kill Your Darlings: “The Gathering Storm”
The Original Trilogy
• Spitballing a Bail Organa lives AU
Andor
• Racial disparity in who gets to live: Criticism of Andor with suggested changes
• Short character analysis: Davo Sculdun
• Luthen’s ruthlessness and Cassian’s potential response
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Original Character Ideas
• Someone from Fennec’s past shows up on Tatooine
• Peli Motto’s ex-husband
• Koziol and Bobo: an informant and his enforcer
Silliness
• Kung Fu Panda parallels
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