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Chapters: 6/? <<<<<<<
Fandom: Materialists (2025)
Rating: Explicit
Warnings: Creator Chose Not To Use Archive Warnings
Relationships: Harry Castillo/Original Female Character(s)
Characters: Harry Castillo, Peter Castillo, Claudette Castillo, Original Female Character, Salaria De Freitas (Original Female Character), Lucy Mason (Materialists)
Additional Tags: Romance, Dating, Falling In Love, Hurt and comfort, Humor, Angst, Harry Needs a Hug, Vulnerability, Lessons in loving, Black Female Character, Original Female Character(s) - Freeform, Female Character of Color
Series: Part 1 of Dance Series
Summary:
took a long peek at the Behemoth draft script and I know i am going to salivate with the way Pedro will emotionally portray this character. my goodness i can't wait.
âBeing in a gladiator arena or hanging from a harnessâthat stuff pales in comparison to learning how to play the cello and making it look co
"To Gilroyâs eyes, it was a seamless transition. âPedro Pascal, heâs taking center stage for the first time in his whole career. Itâs his adventure. Itâs his moment,â he says. âItâs really time for the audience to see how right they were to invest in him as a movie star.â
Behemoth! holds a special place in the actorâs heart due to what he learned about himself while making it. âI chose early to have a clear separation from [my] work and life,â he says. âAs Iâve gotten older, Iâve realized that the line between work and life is less and less visible. In pragmatic ways, the energy of work needs to stay where it is, on set or onstage, and youâve got to go home and youâve got to chill out.â When filming ended, âI had a stronger perspective on my own personal circumstances and my own understanding of confronting loss. Iâm always talking positively about every work experience that Iâve ever had,â Pascal admits, âbut this was something different. This was a personal and intimate and creatively bursting environmentâŚand I miss it a lot.â
For Gilroy, making the movie that brought him and Pascal togetherâdespite their preconceived notionsâstruck a similarly emotional chord. âIt sounds so trite, but I never made a movie about anything I loved before,â he says. âAnd I was already deep into making it before I realized that that was true.â
This is the closest to Pedro as we'll get according to Gilroy.
This is the moment the real ones have been waiting for. This interview perfectly captures Pedro's journey. from people assuming he's flighty and superficial or even talentless. When really he just knows how to be a "movie Star" I hope he gets an Oscar Nom and even a win. I am so ready because he deserves.
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Do you see the resignation on his face? The way he HATES all this glitz, the emperorsâ greed, how he just wants to come home quietly to his wife and not be paraded around like a lion in a gilded cage, killing because itâs what heâs told to do otherwise he puts his wife in danger. How sad he is that all this glory and recognition is for his brutality, when he doesnât want to be brutal anymore?
Din and Grogu head into town on Nevarro for supplies, but find an unexpected celebration awaiting them. Hijinks ensue. Fluff, father-son shenanigans, and Din & Greef friendship. ~3800 words. Written for @red-velvet-panda, thank you for such a fun prompt with so many hilarious ideas!
--
The blurrg made quiet little whuffing noises as she trotted along the lava flats. Today was meant to be a brief stop in the market, picking up only a few things, so Din had left the younger blurrg at home as she would not be needed for carrying their supplies back. Grogu laughed at the wind in his ears and the bouncy motion of the blurrg, sitting securely between Dinâs legs.Â
Din knew they could always get a speeder instead, but why waste the credits when they already had blurrgs? Besides, heâd grown fond of their galumphing gait, slower than a speeder but fast enough for their needs. The ride into town always gave him time to remember old friends.
The morning sun spilled over the lava flats, gilding ridges and crevices and creating deep blue shadows. There had been no new lava flows recently, no flickers of molten rock amongst the crags, but the rocky formations held a forbidding kind of beauty that Din had started to associate with home.Â
Grogu burbled a question up at him, a long stream of syllables Din thought he had the idea of. âNo, itâs just a short trip today. We have a lot of chores to take care of back at the house.â
Groguâs ears dipped down in disappointment, but the kid knew better than to argue.Â
Hm. Din reconsidered, noting Groguâs newfound maturity in not whining or fussing. Maybe a few of their maintenance chores could be pushed off until tomorrow⌠Grogu did always love the market, whether it was trying to sneak off with the best fruits, touching every shiny thing he could reach, or babbling at the stall keepers.Â
They crested the hill and looked down into the city.
âWhat the ââ
Even from a distance they could tell things were different. Far more ships and speeders than usual were lined up outside the city gate. Music, faint and piping, carried across the flats. Bright flags festooned the main gate, their colors flashing through the main streets. And the crowds of people â everyone from the city and the homesteads must be here to make such a throng.
Grogu squealed with excitement. Even the blurrg rumbled with curiosity. And they still needed supplies.
âWeâll go check it out,â said Din. âBut we canât stay long.â
--
Of course, within five minutes of tying up their blurrg at the city entrance and hitting the market, High Magistrate Greef Karga had spotted them and was imploring them to stay longer. If possible his robes were even finer and more ridiculous and resplendent than ever. His entourage dipped and bowed and scurried around him.
"You made it!â Greef bellowed.
"Made it to what?â Din asked as a horde of small children in colorful hoods barreled past them, waving flags and streamers. âWhat is all this?â
âItâs the first annual Nevarro Day Celebration! I sent you a formal invitation, didnât you receive it?â Greef asked as a passing mother handed him her baby to bless. He kissed the little Rhodian on its head, to her delight, and she went on her way beaming.
âIt⌠might not have been received,â Din said delicately. There had been a blinking message on his receiver the night the bounty hunter had broken in, but the whole thing had been blasted in the scuffle, and it hadnât exactly been his top priority when they got back from Nal Hutta and needed a whole new roof.Â
âWell, Iâm glad you and Grogu are here anyway. Wouldnât be a celebration without you two,â Greef said, clapping Din on the shoulder. âThis festival is for all Nevarrans to celebrate our world and its liberation. That includes you two, you know, and all the Mandos whoâve stayed.â He patted Grogu on the head and Grogu leapt into his arms, giggling.Â
Din considered. âI guess you could call us Nevarrans, couldnât you.â What else did one call it when one lived somewhere for the past few years and called it home?Â
Grogu nodded, looking pleased with himself.Â
âSee? Kidâs a proud Nevarran Mandalorian,â said Greef. âNow go on. Enjoy the faire! Iâve got various duties to attend to, of course, but Iâm sure Iâll see you both throughout the day. After all, youâre hard to miss.â
âSo are you,â Din pointed out, gesturing to his voluminous glittering robes, and Greefâs guffaw rang out even through the voices of the crowd.
â
Din and Grogu had seen many intense things in their years together. The most vicious underworlds. The fiercest criminal rings. The worst the Empire could throw at them. Most recently, the cruelty of the Hutts.Â
But theyâd never seen this maelstrom of kids and families and crowds teeming in the streets, everyone wearing their most colorful outfits, the kids screaming for more sweets, the parents seesawing between proud delight and exhausted annoyance, the market swollen to three times its normal size with creature exhibits and craft stalls and fried food stands and⌠and rides?
Grogu chattered with excitement at a dizzying structure with little swings dangling from it, spinning kids around in circles in the middle of the city square. To Dinâs surprise he couldnât see a bit of hover tech on it. It all seemed to run on gravity. âYou want to go on that?â Din asked doubtfully. âBut we have the Rising Phoenix. And you can jump with your powers.â
Grogu scolded him roundly, getting into his face and waving one little hand. It was clear that somehow it was different than flying or leaping, at least in Groguâs mind. Din sighed. It was a small battle to concede. âFine. But donât forget, youâre short. Youâll have to sit with me.â Grogu nodded impatiently at him for stating the obvious.
They climbed the steps to the swing entrance after a brief wait in line. Din recognized a couple of the kids from town getting off the ride, a few human children and one helmeted Mandalorian foundling whose mother was standing back at the exit waiting for him. She tilted her helmet towards Din and shrugged, her hands wide as if to say âI donât get it either.â He nodded. Kids.
The ride operator looked them up and down. âYouâll have to hold the baby,â the scrawny teenaged Mythrol said.Â
âThatâs fine,â Din said as Grogu let out an indignant squawk. He followed the teenager to their swing and buckled them in. âI know youâre not a baby, kid,â he told Grogu consolingly. âBut they donât know that.â
Grogu made his annoyed face, complete with downturned ears, but didnât have time to get more annoyed about being called a baby before the ride started. With a jerk the ride sprang to life, hauling them into the air. Grogu swung his feet with glee, grabbing Dinâs hand and raising it above his head as they began to arc a wide loop over the market square. The buildings swung and swooped around them as cheery music blasted.
Din tried to look down at Grogu â it was nice to see him so excited, so carefree â but a dizzy wave passed over him as their swing kept spinning. The hell?
He practiced rotational drills with the Rising Phoenix when he could, of course, but this â not having any control over the spin â this was different. He turned his gaze back to the horizon, trying to keep it fixed on a single point, but it just spun them round and round. When the ride finally ended and lowered them back to the ground, Din let out a long breath. It took him a beat to get back up, still carefully holding Grogu. The kid turned in his arms to look up at him.
"Ba? Ba!â Grogu crowed, clearly wanting to go again.
"No, once is enough,â Din said, patting the kidâs back. âAnd we still need our supplies. Thatâs enough fun.â
--
It was not nearly enough fun for Grogu.
To Dinâs credit, they did get the supplies they needed. A weekâs worth of fresh herbs and veggies to throw into their dehydrated pog soup stores, since their own vegetable garden was at a low ebb right now. Fresh-baked bread, three still-warm loaves. Dried sausage. Refills of powdered soap for the refresher and for their laundry. A six-pack of tubes of meringues because Grogu had a sweet tooth like nothing else. Wood oil for the stock of his new amban rifle.Â
That shouldâve been the end of it. But Grogu found a way to convince him of just a few more minutes, just one more market stall, just one more snackâŚ
So many snacks.
First he got the kid a skewer of fried lava bugs, each with a different seasoning. They found a quiet corner and Din took a bite of each flavor, raising his helmet just enough for a good mouthful. They were pretty delicious, actually - one spicy, one cool ranch, one smoky sweet, one of bright herbs and citrus. The fried coating was addictively crunchy, especially on the legs.
Next was a bowl of goat ribs, deep-smoked and smothered with three different sticky sauces, spangled with stone pepper slices and shreds of cave onion. Under the ribs was a pile of mashed twice-fried yucca, loaded with cheese. Din tried to get Grogu to stick to using the flimsy disposable fork that had come with the dish, but the kid dove in headfirst and practically drenched himself in sauce. Din helped him with a few bites. The sauce clung to his gloves despite his own best efforts.
That was really going to be the end of it. Until Greef reappeared, bright-eyed and laughing up a storm, bearing a bowlful of goatsmilk ice cream drenched in chocolate and caramel and sprinkles and a vast plume of whipped cream. âJust who I was hoping to find!â Greef proclaimed, pressing the massive bowl into Dinâs hand. He leaned in and whispered, âYou gotta get rid of this for me. The sweetest little old shopkeeper wouldnât take no for an answer and it would be dreadful for my reputation if I didnât humor them. But Iâve already eaten four ice creams today and I think I might die if I try for another. Iâm not as young as I used to be.â
âThis is your festival,â Din muttered under his breath. âYouâre the High Magistrate. Your word is law!â
"It doesnât work that way, Mando! Politics are a delicate game ââ
Slurrrp. Grogu was halfway though the bowl and somehow, he had gotten ice cream in his ears.
âKid ââ
"I knew you wouldnât let me down!â Greef said, and bustled on to his next engagement. Din just sighed, then found a free table to set Grogu on. He stuck a spoon in the ice cream and took a few bites. All right. It was delicious as hell. They worked on it together, Din lifting his helmet for each bite.
âOkay, kid,â Din said as he tossed the empty ice cream bowl into the trash. Grogu clambered up on his shoulder, wiping ice cream off his face and licking it off of his palms. âWe gotta start heading back.â He glanced to the kid, catching just a hint of his face through the far edge of his visor. âYou understand?â
Grogu gave him the biggest, wettest, saddest eyes in the galaxy, and his little face crumpled.
Din held firm. Donât give in. Youâre stronger than this.Â
Grogu looked as if everything he had ever loved had just been incinerated.
Youâre in charge here. Itâs good for the kid to not get everything he wants.
Grogu sighed, the tiniest breath of air, just barely audible through the hubbub of the crowd. He tilted his head, then glanced out at all the things they still hadnât looked at - crafts, creatures, more rides. He held out one small clawed hand, and his lower lip trembled.
"Da?â
Dank farrik!
â
They made their way through the bustling crowds. Grogu clapped and waved at a baby rancor in a pen feasting on unidentified meats. Din raised a hidden eyebrow at a pool holding a three-meter-long creature that reminded him unpleasantly of Nal Huttaâs dragon-snake. Grogu hid his face in Dinâs shoulder when they passed an arachnid the size of a blurrg, even though it was restrained behind transparisteel.Â
They left the menagerie and wandered through stalls of goods. Din stopped and picked up a finely woven childâs hood with a wide oval shape, big enough to accommodate Groguâs ears should they find themselves in fierce sun or rain or snow. Heâd been bothered by their last snowy mission realizing he had nothing to keep the kidâs ears warm. Grogu perched on the sellerâs table, touching each bolt of fabric and purring when he found ones that were extra soft. The shopkeeper was entranced and gave Grogu a blue-green toffee, which the kid promptly devoured.
A clanging sound led them onto the next stall, where a shifty-looking Pantoran was presiding over toy blasters and targets for a shooting contest. He spotted them coming up and shook his head, waving his arms. âOh, no, no no,â he said, tapping a sign beside him. NO MANDALORIANS.
âExcuse me?â Din asked, his voice measured.Â
The Pantoran stammered, âWell, it ainât fair, is it? You all are the best marksmen in the galaxy! We want the regular folk to have a chance here.â
âUh-huh,â Din deadpanned. âAnd my son?â
The Pantoran pointed to Groguâs mudhorn sigil, proudly displayed on his rondel. âWell, heâs a Mandalorian too, ainât he?â
He had them there. Din loomed silently for a moment over the Pantoran, then kept walking, grinning slightly to himself. Grogu giggled at his shoulder. He couldnât blame the guy, not really. It wouldnât have been a fair match at all.
They stopped in at a temporary toy stall run by a young Toydarian. Din was startled to recognize the logo on the wall. âYou folks are a long way from Batuu,â he said.Â
âOh, youâve visited us in the Outpost? Well, my grandmotherâs looking to expand the shop to other worlds,â the young shopkeeper said, flitting between the rows of toys, her wings shimmering. âAnd she and the High Magistrate go way back.â She winked.
Din chuckled. âIs that so?â He supposed nothing surprised him anymore.
The Toydarian giggled. âYou didnât hear it from me.â She glanced at Grogu, who had climbed into a basket of plushies. âNeed a new toy for your son?â
Din hesitated. Grogu did have plenty of toys. But â
Grogu held out a simple wooden figure that was, unmistakably, a Mandalorian. A helmet with a carved and painted T-visor, pauldrons, cuirass, greaves. A little fabric cape. It wasnât Din â that would be ludicrous â but with a childâs imagination, it could well be.
Grogu gazed up at Din with the figure in his hands, his eyes shining. Din swallowed.Â
âYeah,â he said, voice cracking, âweâll take that one.â
â
âOkay,â he said as Grogu polished off the last of a cloud of airy, filamentous candy. Din smacked his lips, still tasting berry and vanilla. âWe gotta get our blurrg home.â The sun was already low in the afternoon sky. How had he let the day get away from them so? If they stayed out much later, theyâd have the reptavians to deal with, and that was more than he wanted after a long day like today.
Grogu tapped Dinâs pauldron and pointed. Din followed his kidâs direction, landing on a ride of little round hover vehicles all twirling madly. âWhat, you wanna go on that?âÂ
Grogu nodded, his eyes blazing with determination. Din huffed. Well, he knew the kid was a daredevil.
They waited longer than Din was prepared to, but by the time he thought about bailing on the line, they were already halfway through it and Grogu looked just as determined as ever. His kid was practically vibrating with excitement, waving his new Mandalorian toy and jittering. Though maybe that was all the sugar heâd eaten.
They reached the front of the queue and were ushered into a little round car with a simple waist seatbelt. Grogu scooted next to Din and Din draped an arm over his shoulder just in case the kid didnât like it. The Twiâlek kid running it lifted her hand and waved, and started the ride going while madcap jizz music blared.
Oh.
Oh he did not like this at all.
If the swings had been bad, the hover whirls were a hundred times worse. Their surroundings spun and whorled and blurred around them. This wasnât the rotational drills with the Rising Phoenix. It wasnât a barrel roll in the Razor Crest or the N-1, where he knew exactly what to expect and was in control the entire time. It was pure unadulterated madness, and Din was suddenly acutely aware of every fried bug, ice cream soup, goat chunk, yucca blob and cotton cloud candy in his stomach, bouncing and swirling aroundâ
Donât. Puke.
He couldnât. He was wearing his helmet. He was in public. Grogu was pressed into his thigh by centrifugal force, squealing with delight with his arms waving, his little Mando toyâs cape fluttering. Din had to keep it together.
He melted into the back of the hover whirl, pressing his arms against it as hard as he could, breathing rapidly through his nose, trying to find a reference point on the horizon to focus on. He gagged once, mouth filling with saliva, and choked his gorge back down through sheer force of will. He tried briefly to close his eyes but that made it much worse, and he kept them open the rest of the ride until they watered.
The hover whirl came to a blessed and merciful end. Dinâs head kept spinning regardless, the contents of his stomach sloshing around. He stared at the horizon, willing it to stop spinning.
âBa?â Grogu asked curiously. Din managed to glance down at him, swallowing hard.Â
âUrp ââ
He kept it all down.Â
Barely.
â
The sun was setting as Din slowly made his way to the city gate, Grogu snoring against his shoulder, cradled in his arms while still holding fast to his Mando toy. His stomach had finally settled, though he had decided to swear off candy and ice cream for the foreseeable future. And no more hover whirls.
Lights in the city streets twinkled on, spanning the thoroughfare with warm gold. The mood was changing from the clang and clamor of daytime to a hushed and quiet anticipation as tired families lined the streets, looking up as if waiting for something. Din could appreciate the change in mood, but they had things to do. Heâd already tarried far too long.
Greef appeared again, still surrounded by his entourage. He looked a little tired too, but his smile stretched warmly to the wrinkles at the edges of his eyes. He nodded to them.
âLooks like you and your son enjoyed the faire.â
Din smiled, patting the slumbering Grogu on the back. âYeah, I think we did. Kid had a good time.â
âThatâs what itâs all about, isnât it, Mando?â Greef mused. âRemember this place years ago? Not exactly a town to raise a family in.â
âNo,â Din agreed. âThings have changed.â He nodded towards Greefâs finery. âWeâve changed.â
âYes, we have,â Greef agreed. He reached out, brushing Groguâs ears slightly. Grogu sighed and turned over in his sleep, smiling slightly. âIâm glad you both have found a home here. All of this would never have happened without the two of you.â
Din thought of protesting. But then he thought of coming back to Nevarro with Kuiil and IG-11 and Cara for Groguâs sake, of coming back with Mandalorians to fight and defend the planet, and he had to admit that maybe Greef had a little bit of a point.
He clasped Greefâs arm in a firm handshake. âMaybe so,â he said. âBut it wouldnât have happened without you either, High Magistrate.â
Greef smiled warmly at him. âMaybe so,â he echoed. âGood to see you both. I hope you can come by town more often.â
âWeâll do what we can,â Din said. âWeâve been busy with work for the New Republic. But Iâm pulling back for now. Things⌠got a little close out there. Maybe itâs time to focus on home for a while.â
âI like the sound of that,â said Greef. One of his attendants hurried up to him, whispering into his ear. Greef nodded. âWell, Iâm needed for the grand finale. Iâd ask you to stay, but I can tell when you need to get going. Just keep an eye out as you go, all right? It should be quite the sight.â
Din tilted his helmet forward in a nod. âWe will, Greef. Until next time.â
âUntil next time, Din Djarin.â
And then the High Magistrate was gone, whisked away for his duties, and Din made his way back to their blurrg.
â
They had barely crested the first hill when the fireworks began.
Din turned their blurrg back to face the town. Showers of blue and green and red and gold and white filled the air, explosions of color and sound echoing over the darkening lava flats. Grogu woke with a start and began to ask a question, until his voice faded away while watching the bursts of light flare against the deep blue night. Din set Grogu up on his knee and the kid leaned back against him, one hand pointing out each array of light as it bloomed, the other hand still clutching his toy tightly against his chest.Â
âPretty neat, huh, kid?â Din asked.
Grogu couldnât answer. He was transfixed, fireworks playing across his wide dark eyes, his mouth half-open with wonder. Din pulled him closer.Â
âGuess what?â Din asked.
âBuh?â Grogu asked, unable to tear his eyes away.
âWe can come back next year.â He let out a long breath. âEvery year. You and me.â For as long as Iâve got. âYou know why?â
Grogu turned around, looking up into his visor, and threw his arms around his chest.
Din bent over his son, holding him close. He closed his eyes as the fireworks boomed and blasted overhead, echoing off the canyons and the flats, a celebration he could feel in chest and bone and beskar. âBecause,â he said. âItâs home.â
Sobbing forever about how in 2x05 The Jedi Din tells Ahsoka to wait for him, that heâll be back with Grogu⌠And our man goes to his ship, tells Grogu haltingly itâs time to say goodbye â but gently rocks Grogu in his hammock, then winds up cradling him for hours, and when he finally starts heading out with him, sets him back on the bench to adjust his robes just so to make sure that Grogu looks his best (and take a little more time)âŚ
And thatâs when Ahsoka shows up like âI have been waiting â oh jeez. Oh crap. Theyâre father and son arenât theyâ
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The desperation in which Din felt to find Grogu and beat Moff Gideon's ass was so great he broke THEE CREED.
"Moff Gideon, you have something I want. You may think you have some idea of what you are in possession of, but you do not. Soon, he will be back with me. He means more to me, than you will EVER know."
Din said bitch I am not the 1 or the 2. You have MY SON.