âBrother, may I have some coinâ

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âBrother, may I have some coinâ

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06.21.31 - pennie re-enters the narrative
Connie and Ginnie Pentarra were not my favorite people in the galaxy. They had never tried to kill us like Pennie had, but they displayed more ordinary manners of cruelty. Connie was pretty much your typical mean girl, which I guess they have in the Outer Rim, too, and Ginnie wasnât mean but she wasnât nice eitherâher general refusal to care about anything was often just as bad as unkindness.
But they were Fannieâs sisters, so I could handle their nastiness. After all, I had been pretty nasty at various points in my life, so I couldnât judge Fannie for still loving them. Not when whatever compelled her to do so was the same thing that drove her to still love me, too.
All the same, I thought it was pretty bad that they hadnât reached out to Fannie all this time. It had been almost six months since sheâd been banished from their home, and they hadnât even bothered to check on her.
But, as it turned outâŚConnie and Ginnie had a pretty good reason why they hadnât been able to find time to call.
âPenâawen has gone mad,â Ginnie told us, with her usual straight-faced expression.
Fannie and I exchanged glances.
âWell...sheâs always been mad,â I said pointedly. âIn both senses of the word.â
âGinevrah means that Penâawen has gone insane,â Connie repeated. âShe is no longer sound of mind.â
âThat has also always been true.â
âBen, stop,â Fannie murmured. âIâI think theyâre being serious.â
âWell, so am Iââ
âBen!â
âPenâawen has lost the ability to care for herself,â Ginnie said. âIt has fallen upon Coneeyla and I to act as her nurses.â
I quit joking around, then. They really were serious.
âButâŚwhat about your mom?â I asked. âSheâs not helping you take care of her, too?â
âOur mother does not understand that Penâawen has entered an altered state,â Connie said with a tired bitterness. âShe believes her to be possessed by evil spirits, and will not go near her.â
âBut where is Bunnie?â Fannie cried, lurching forward. âWhere is she?â
ââBunnie?ââ Connie echoed.
âShe means Pennieâs kid,â I supplied anxiously. ââBunnieâ was the name we gave her.â
âThey mean Loâruhamah,â Ginnie said to Connie.
âAhâŚLoâruhamah,â Connie repeated.
âWhat?!â Fannie shrieked, so shrilly I jumped in my seat. âLoâruhamahâsurely that is not the name Pennie gave her!â
âFan, calm down,â I said quickly, placing my hand on her thigh. âPennie had the right to name her kid whatever she wanted. Itâs not that bad a name, is it?â
âBen, you donât understand,â Fannie said, her eyes wide. âLoâruhamahâit means âunloved.â Pennie named her daughter âUnloved.ââ
Oh.
That was a bad name.
I turned back to Connie and Ginnie, narrowing my eyes.
âWhereâs the kid,â I asked quietly.
Neither sister spoke.
âWell?â I demanded.
Connie set her lips in a straight line. She looked at Ginnie.
ââŚWe donât know,â she said at last.
Fannie uttered a weak cry.
âWhat do you mean you donât know?â I snapped. âHow could you not know?â
âWe just donât know,â Connie replied harshly. âThe child was already gone when we found Penâawen.â
Fannieâs breath became more audible as she trembled and fell forward, clenching her fists around her skirts.
âWe first discovered Penâawenâs decline when a stench was reported in the far end of the hallway,â Ginnie said stoically. âNo one had seen her in the two weeks after you left Ryloth. We thought she had died.â
I felt sick to my stomach.
âGinevrah and I resolved to enter the room together,â said Connie. âIt was locked. We did not have Faânakhraâs light sword, so we had to axe in the door.â
âPennie was not dead,â Ginnie said, âbut there was blood, filth, and refuse around the room, and Penâawen lay there on the ground.â
Fannie lifted her head, looking pale. âBut where was Buâwhere was the baby?â
âThe child was nowhere to be seen,â said Connie. âWe thought perhaps Penâawen had killed her, but there were no remains.â
I felt even queasier.
â...What about the blood?â I asked.
âIt was Penâawenâs,â said Ginnie.
âHow could you tell?â
âBecause it had dried in streaks down the inner sides of her legs,â Ginnie said, in a way that only Ginnie Pentarra could say that sentence.
Then I really did almost throw up. I found the wastebasket under my desk with my feet and pulled it closer just in case.
âBut the baby,â Fannie whispered. âYou couldnât find her?â
âWe searched the entire house and the entire grounds,â said Connie tiredly. âBut we could not find the girl. We asked the servants, and they knew nothing. We asked Penâawen, when she could speakâŚbut she does not speak as one who is awake to the world.â Connie paused. âAnd we asked our father. He provided no information.â
âWhich doesnât mean he doesnât have any,â I said darkly.
âWhether he does or he doesnât, there is no way for us to obtain it,â Connie said thinly. âSo we abandoned the search for Pennieâs daughter. We had no choice. We had no leads. Tollah alone knows what happened to her.â
Fannie began to chant dazedly. âThe Force is with me, the Force is all, the Force is through all...â
I reached blindly for her hand. I hadnât exactly seen myself as Bunnieâs dad, not in the way that Fannie had seen herself as Bunnieâs mom. But I could certainly remember how it had felt to hold her in my armsâŚthe way her tiny fist had curled around her fingerâŚthe flower-petal softness of her skin. The little dimple under her lips as she had hiccuped, and the fine lashes fluttering upon her cheeks as she had slept. For something to have happened to her, and to not know what it was...to not even know if she was alive, or in what manner her life had been snatched away...it was a horror that settled deep in my stomach.
...And Pennie. I couldnât help but feel awful for her. âMadnessâ wasnât exactly a psychiatric diagnosis, so I couldnât be sure what had befallen her...but I thought about the terrified young woman I had held close to me in December, who had already been so frightened and helpless (and, yes, dangerous) even when she had still been in touch with realityâŚand could not begin to imagine what she was going through now. I had never experienced psychosis, if that was what Pennie was experiencing, but Iâd definitely had my fair share of adverse psychological states. Mine had never lasted longer than a few hours. To be stuck like that for days...weeks...months...
An involuntary shudder rippled through me.
âBut in answer to your original question, Faânakhra,â said Connie softly, bringing me back, âGinevrah and I are willing to attend your wedding. We do not approve of your mateââ
âConeeyla does not approve,â corrected Ginnie (which, mind you, did not mean Ginnie approved of me, only that she didnât disapprove)â
ââbut given the things that have happened,â Connie continued, ignoring her, âI think it is important for the three of us to stay as close as we can while we may.â
âThank you, Connie,â Fannie mumbled, still rocking slowly in her seat. âThank you both.â
âBut,â Connie added, âif we do come to see youâŚwe will have to bring Penâawen.â
Fannie stopped rocking.
âShe cannot be left alone,â Ginnie explained. âAnd there is no one here who would take care of her.â
I stared at Connie and Ginnie in disbelief.
â...Well, that, uh..complicates things,â I said. âI donât, um...really think Pennie shouldâŚbe present at the wedding.â
âPerhaps one of us could stay behind to take care of Penâawen,â Ginnie suggested, âand the other sister could attend the wedding. Then at least one of us could come.â
âYes, we could do that,â Connie agreed.
All four of us were silent.
Then we all looked at Fannie. It was kind of her choice.
Fannie looked at each of us in turn, her brown eyes wide.
âWell, I...â she began. But whatever she was about to say was cut short.
âFannie?â
Fannie froze.
So did I.
I knew that voice.
âSheâs awake,â Ginnie murmured to Connie.
She.
She.
And suddenly Pennie Pentarra came tumbling into view.
Only...she didnât. Because whoever this was, she was not the Pennie Pentarra I was familiar with.
âFannie!â Pennie cried again, a huge smile on her face as she pushed past the other two and filled the hologram. I jerked backward on instinct and threw my arm in front of Fan, as if to protect her from the mere sight of her sister. Fannie and I glanced at each other, scared and stupefied.
I had never heard Pennie call Fannie by her nickname before. I had never seen Pennie smile like that before. She was bouncing up and down and speaking excitedly in Twiâleki, and though I couldnât understand her, amidst the waterfall of speech I heard her say the words âJedi schoolââand Fannie looked like sheâd been hit by a stun ray.
â...I-I donât go to the Jedi school anymore, dear,â she said, nearly losing her voice on her last word. âI...finished my training years ago, remember?â
Pennie didnât respond. She had turned to look at me, and tilted her head.
I stiffened up. I could still remember the way sheâd looked at me from every moment on after she and I had ended thingsâwith a hatred so intense, thereâd been almost a glee to it. But Pennieâs face was blank as she looked at me now. She turned back to Fannie and asked her a question, throwing her finger out toward me. Fannie looked pale.
â...Th-this is Ben, sweetie,â Fannie said, with trembling kindness, the kind I knew she resorted to when she had nothing else to grasp for. âDo you...remember him..?â
Pennie stared at me, and I stared back, terrified she would remember me, and everything that had happened between us. But Pennie only shook her head. And then she beamed wide, and started talking animatedly about something else.
Fannie interrupted her.
âPennie, dear, whereâs your child?â Fannie asked, the sweetness of her voice stretched thin. âWhereâs your baby girl?â
Pennieâs blank expression came back. Connie looked tiredly at Ginnie.
âYourâŚyour daughter?â Fannie tried again.
Then Pennieâs face lit up, and she rushed out of view. Fannie and I looked at each other. A few seconds later, Pennie returned, rocking something in her arms, and Fannie and I leaned forward to see what it was. Pennie held it up.
It was not a baby.
âYes, dear, thatâs the...thatâs the little dolly I made for you when you were six,â Fannie said faintly. âWhereâs your real child, sweetie? The one you bore?â
Pennie stared at her, her eyes round as moons. I couldnât remember ever seeing Pennieâs eyes so openâI was so used to seeing them in a half-lidded squint. Now that they were open, I could see how much they were like Fannieâs.
âDo you...remember you have a daughter?â Fannie faltered.
Pennieâs expression did not change. After a moment, she seemed to get bored of the conversation, and wandered away, humming to herself.
Fannie looked at me desperately, at a complete loss. I slowly turned back to Connie and Ginnie.
â...Is this how she is all the time?â I asked.
âThis is how she has been for the last three months,â Ginnie said. âBut what you have witnessed is a great improvement. When she first regained consciousness, she was violent and vulgar and screamed incessantly.â
âYes,â Connie agreed with a harrowed groan. âWe had to restrain her at first. At least now she is manageable, and merely irritating.â
âShe seems to behave like a child,â Fannie said uncomfortably. âHow old does she think she is?â
I had the same question. Pennie and I hadâŚkind ofâŚslept together in December. Sort of. Whatever weâd done, weâd done it more than once. She had been twenty then; she was twenty-one now. Watching her act like a little kid, and being able to remember the nights I had spent with her...it made me feel very weird and very gross.
Connie turned and shouted off-view. âPenâawen!â she bellowed. âHow old are you?â
Silence.
Eventually, Connie turned back around.
âSheâs not answering,â Connie told us. âShe doesnât always answer when you speak to her. Also, Ginevrahââ She switched to Twiâleki to talk to Ginnie, and jerked her chin backward.
âYes, I will take her,â Ginnie said, rising. âPenâawen!â
âTake her where?â I asked uncertainly.
âTo the bathroom,â Fannie whispered to me. âConnie asked Ginnie to take her to the bathroom.â
I blinked.
âShe canât even do that herself?â
âWhether she cannot or will not, it is easier for us all when we manage it for her,â Connie said dryly. âYou remember, Faânakhra.â
âYes, I remember,â Fannie murmured.
Connie fixed her eyes on me again. âIt is just as we told you, Ben Solo. Penâawen has lost the ability to care for herself. Did you think I was exaggerating? Do you really think I would stoop to this level of humiliation, if I had any choice at all?â
Normally, I would categorize that remark as Connie being mean. She had told me herself she didnât like her sister. In fact, she had gloated over Pennieâs self-destruction, seeming to find a sadistic entertainment in it. But now Connie just seemed...tired.
And it wasnât as if anyone was forcing her to take care of Pennie. The girlsâ mom had removed herself from Pennieâs life entirely. Connie could have done the same.
I thought about the day after the gentlemenâs banquet, a year and a half ago. How Connie had spent the entire day by Fannieâs side. And how she had thanked me for saving Fannieâtwiceâeven though she had spoken cruelly to both of us during the trip, and continued to do so afterward.
â...You love your sisters a lot, donât you, Connie,â I said quietly, and Connie jerked upright as if sheâd been caught in a crime.
Slowly, she melted back into a neutral state.
âLove has nothing to do with it, Ben Solo,â she said emotionlessly. âThey are my sisters. That outweighs any feelings I may have or lack.â She glanced backward, in the direction Ginnie had gone. âYes, I used to be able to deride Penâawen for her foolish choices, back when she was capable of making them. But...now that she cannot make her own decisions anymore, there is nothing left for which I can mock her.â
She sighed and shook her head bitterly. âI have not been able to sleep with a man, since I became my sisterâs nursemaid,â she grumbled.
âŚWhich, knowing Connie, told me that she really did love her sisters.
After a minute, Ginnie returned and sat down, and Pennie bounded afterward and flounced into her sisterâs lap, giggling. For once, Ginnieâs expression shifted away from its usual flatnessâshe looked physically uncomfortable, but also unwilling to exercise her agency. She sat perfectly still and straight as a board, and Pennieâs face obscured hersâPennie wasnât a kid, after all; she was shorter than Ginnie, but not by much.
Connie seemed to pick up on Ginnieâs discomfort, and, to my surprise, rushed to her aid. âGet off your sister, you worm,â she barked at Pennie. I flinched, but Pennie seemed unfazed. She slipped down into the space between Connie and Ginnie, singing a nonsense song to herself.
âConnie, you shouldnât be so unkind to her,â Fannie reprimanded.
Connie scoffed. âWhy should you be so concerned? She has hurt you the most out of any of us.â
âJust because she has hurt me doesnât mean that anyone should hurt her back,â Fannie said quietly.
I found I couldnât take my eyes off Pennie. Her behavior was incredibly unsettling. She was a fully-grown woman, even if she was only New Republic drinking age, and the signs of her recent pregnancy were still visible on herâthe altered shape of her breasts and the dark lines on the loose skin of her stomach. To see her acting like a child...it just looked wrong.
Pennie pointed at me again and spoke, and I reeled back like Iâd been shot. It didnât seem as if she recognized me anymore, but it still felt unsafe to be the object of her attention.
âShe says youâre staring at her, Ben,â Connie said.
âS-sorry,â I said, trying to look away. âShe, umâŚdoesnât speak Basic anymore?â
âShe understands Basic,â said Ginnie. âBut we have not heard her speak it. It seems her mind is smaller than it was before. Two languages is too much for her now, and Twiâleki is the language we all learned first.â
Pennie looked to Fannie and pointed at me again to say something. I really wished sheâd stop pointing at me. I also wished I could understand what she was saying. I knew there was a translation feature on the holocall software somewhere; I just had to hope Fannieâs holopad wasnât too old to handle it. I propped the holopad up against a mug on the desk and tried to get it running.
Judging by Fannieâs response, Pennie must have asked her who I was. I wondered if she had asked who I was in relation to Fannie, or...if she had simply forgotten about me already in the time Ginnie had taken her to the bathroom.
âBen is my mate, dear,â Fannie replied reluctantly.
Pennie said something else and cocked her head.
âWellâŚno, dear, he isnât,â Fannie said, embarrassed. âHeâŚhe is a human. ButâŚit is still okay for me to love him, and I am about to marry him very soon.â
Pennieâs eyes grew wide, and she was silent for a while. For a second, I worried she had finally remembered who I was...but that was not the case. The translation subtitles went up just in time for Pennie to ask, in a faltering little voice:
...But once you are married, will you ever come back home?
Fannie drew in a sharp breath, her eyes filling with tears (so we really were on a running streak of Fannie crying every day).
âN-no, darling, I canât come back home,â she stammered. âIâm not allowed.â
Why not? Pennie asked.
Why not, indeed. I had a flashback of the trial on Ryloth, when Fannie and I had been dragged by guards before Ruut Pentarraâs throne. I remembered the look of maniacal relish in Pennieâs face as she had stood by her father, cradling Bunnie close to her, and Pentarra had told Fannie she could never return home. Fannie had screamed and cried and reached her arms out toward the baby, and Pennie had laughed and laughed, telling her she would never allow her daughter to leave the walls of this house, and never allow Fannie to re-enter. I had clutched Fannie close to me as sheâd sobbedâŚand as I had looked back up again, Pennie had turned to me and given me a smile so malicious I sometimes saw it in my nightmares.
But Pennie was no longer interested in me at the moment.
Why canât you come home? Pennie asked her sister again, like a little girl asking why the sky was blue. Why not?
Fannieâs lower lip trembled, and tears spilled from her eyes. âBecause, dear, Father will have me killed if I return.â
But Ruut Pentarra was not the one who had wanted us dead. âI will have you killed if either of you ever return,â Pennie had crooned. âThe only reason I do not give the order now is because I know Faânakhra will suffer so much more if she lives. Say goodbye to my child, dear sister! Say goodbye! May you spend the rest of your days in torment, knowing who she has for a mother!â And she had lifted Bunnieâs little fist and waved it at us as the guards had seized us againâFannie screaming and sobbing, me cussing and kicking.
But why will Father have you killed? asked Pennie now. Why canât you come home?
The mention of execution did not bother her. She simply wanted to know why her sister could not come back.
Fannie parted her lips and made a small noise, but no words came out.
Why canât you come home, Fannie? Pennie repeated. Why canât you come home?
â...I...I donât know,â Fannie said finally, staring at her sister in anguish as the tears continued to fall. âI donât know, darling; I just donât know.â
Pennie frowned, lifting her doll to her mouth and chewing on one of its lekku. It looked like a very old doll, and it looked like it had been chewed on a lot. She finally pulled it back out of her mouth to speak.
âŚCan I come and see you, then, Fannie? Pennie asked. Can I come and see you get married?
Fannie whimpered, speechless. She turned to me, desperation in her eyes.
I looked at her, too, then slowly turned to Connie.
ââŚHow sure are you that Pennie isnât just faking all of this?â I asked, narrowing my eyes.
âBen,â Fannie choked out. Connie half-blinked.
âNoâseriously,â I insisted. âConnie, you know what sheâs capable of. What if this is all just some elaborate stunt to...to crash our wedding or something?â
Ginnie squinted skeptically. âYou believe, Ben Solo, that she would spend five months feigning madness to such an end?â
âI honestly believe Pennie Pentarra would do anything,â I said frankly.
Once again, we all fell quiet...except for Pennie, who babbled incoherently to her little doll. The translation subtitles were unable to pick up anything that made sense, but a few words managed to make it through: âspecial,â âfavorite,â âplaytime,â âsecret.â She smiled at the doll and made a shushing noise with her finger to her lips, then dropped her hands into her lap as her face went slackâand then she lost all signs of awareness, staring off into space.
My heart grew heavy. I thought about the time she had cowered and cried in the corner, and I had gotten down on my hands and knees to approach her.
âNo, no, no, no, noâŚ!â
âPennie...itâs just me. Itâs Ben. Weâre safe in our room. Itâs only us hereâŚâ
â...I agree with Ben,â said Connie at last, and I shook away the memory. âPenâawen is a desperate person, and has been for some time. Perhaps she does yet have her mind, and is simply choosing not to exercise it. In which caseâŚI would kill her myself, if such a thing ever came to light, as I have taken upon myself great personal costs toâŚâ She suddenly looked down at Pennie, who was still staring at nothing, and wrinkled her nose in disgust.
Ginnie looked down too, then stoically reached off-view and pulled Pennieâs hands out of her lap. I have told you, Penâawen, she said in Twiâleki. You must not do that in front of others. It is considered inappropriate.
Fannie and I exchanged mortified glances.
Connie scoffed and rolled her eyes. By Tollahâs lekku, she muttered under her breath. Even with the mind of a child sheâs a whore.
âConnie, please,â Fannie said, sounding hurt. âPlease donât say such things. That is a truly horrible way to speak of her. I really donât think she is in control of herself.â She hesitated. âBesides...Ben can understand you. He just put on the translations.â
âOh, I assumed he had them on from the beginning,â Connie said brazenly, turning to me. âSo then, Ben Solo, you did not hear what I called you when you first announced you were marrying my sister?â
âNo,â I said indifferently.
âShall I repeat it?â
âNo,â Fannie and I said at the same time.
Connie looked disappointed.
âFannie,â said Ginnie, and we both looked at her. It was unusual for Ginnie to initiate communicationâusually she was only responding to or adding onto what someone else had said. âIf Pennie retains this state a moon from now, you may want to take the chance to see her. We do not know whether she will decline again and become hostile.â
And if she does, Connie muttered, I will put her down like a rabid animal.
Fannie shot her a stern look.
StillâŚI thought I caught a glimpse of fear in Connieâs eyes.
Fannie looked away from Connie, then down at her knees, twisting the ruffles of her skirts with her fingers. After a minute, she looked up againâŚand asked maybe the craziest thing she could have possibly asked.
â...If you brought her here...Ginnie, Connie...â she asked quietly, âDo you...think she would be well enough to stand by my side at the ceremony?â
Connie and Ginnie exchanged glances. My mouth fell open.
âFannie,â I said sharply, shaking my head. âNo.â
Pennie still seemed unaware we were talking about her. She leaned her head against Connieâs shoulder, and Connie tried vainly to shrug her away.
âWhy not?â Fannie said, her voice shaking a little as she looked at all of us. âShe seems harmless enough.â
âYes, so long as she can keep her hands where they ought to be,â Connie muttered.
âFannie, youâre crazyâyou are actually insane for this,â I said, chopping the air with my hand emphatically. âWe canât take on a risk like that! Itâs enough of a risk to let Connie and Ginnie bring her to the wedding at allâsomeone else will have to keep an eye on her while theyâre standing up there with you, you know.â
âNot if Pennie stands with them,â Fannie insisted softly.
âAre you kidding me?â I cried. âShe could ruin the wedding! Worst case scenario, sheâs faking this whole thing and has some evil scheme sheâs been plotting up this whole time. Second worst case, she really is mentally ill and has a meltdown and ruins the wedding that way. Third worst case, we just have a woman with the mental capacity of a toddler in the wedding party, and itâs really, really weird and awkward for everyone.â
âShe canât help what state of mind sheâs in,â Fannie argued. âAnd people have children as part of their weddings all the time.â
âBut sheâs not a child!â I said. âSheâs a mentally unstable adult who has literally threatened to kill us while she was still in her head. So who knows what she could do now!â
Fannie was silent.
Then she turned to Connie and Ginnie.
â...Perhaps you and Pennie could come a week before the wedding,â she told them. âI could watch over her for a while, and give you both some rest. We could observe her during that week, and if she still seems subduedâŚthen perhaps she could stand with both of you at the wedding.â
âFannie, youâre insane,â I said through gritted teeth.
Fannie turned to look at me. âBen, you have said that to me for many reasons as of late,â she said tersely. âBy now, I am quite used to you telling me I am out of my mind because you disagree. The statement is beginning to lose its weight.â
âWell, Fan, I really mean it this time,â I snapped. âThis is crazy. This is bonkers. This is the worst decision I have ever seen you make. Look, I know how much you love your sister and wish she could be at the wedding, but this isâIâm sorryâthis is stupid. You are being stupid.â
Fannie glared at me.
âBen,â she said, softly but sternly, âI would like my sisters to bring Pennie here. And, if she seems placid enough, I would like her to stand with me at my wedding.â
Oh, so it was her wedding.
âReally?â I snapped. âReally, Fan? You want the girl I basically cheated on you with to stand next to you at your wedding?â
âSheâs my sister, Ben,â Fannie said, becoming angry. âOf course I want her by my side at my wedding. Itâs not my fault you decided to do with her what you did!â
âOh, yeah? What about all the stuff she did even before that?â I argued. âWhat about how she drugged you and put you in that stupid costume and tried to pimp you out?â
âYou didnât seem to still be holding that against her when you decided to sleep with her,â Fannie said darkly.
Ginnie remained impassive as always, but a slow smile spread across Connieâs face. She was eating this up.
...Which annoyed me so much, I quickly reined myself in.
ââŚYouâre right,â I told Fannie sullenly. âIâm sorry. Youâre right. Iâm sorry.â
âOh, come now, Solo, where is your spine?â Connie jeered, trying to rile me back up again. âYou would fold before a woman so easily?â
What a parasite she was! I whipped around and called her something I shouldnât have, and Connie immediately looked to Fannie, performing deep emotional injury. âDid you hear what he called me, Faânakhra?â she pouted.
âYes,â grumbled Fannie. âNext time, try not to deserve it.â
My jaw dropped, and I threw Connie the smuggest look Iâve ever worn in my life.
âOh, stop it, Ben; be nice to my sister,â Fannie said, exasperated.
Connie hurled back a real squinchy smile.
âFaânakhra has made up her mind,â Ginnie said solemnly, bringing us back to the subject at hand. âBenâŚwould you like to contend again? Without simply insulting Fannieâs intelligence or sanity?â
âThank you, Ginnie,â Fannie murmured.
I sighed.
â...Well, I think Iâve already made every argument I can,â I said. âItâs just...Iâm already stressed out of my mind making sure the wedding goes okay. And bad things always seem to happen to me. I just donât see how this could possibly not end up in total disaster.â
âNone of us know what will happen,â Ginnie said simply. âYou are correct to assess a significant risk, but Fannie is willing to accept whatever risks there are.â She looked at me pointedly. âSoâŚdo you support Fannieâs decision, Ben Solo? Or do you veto her resolution? The final say is yours.â
Ginnie looked at me, waiting. Connie looked at me, too. And then, so did Fannie. All three of them looked at meâPennie was the only one who didnât. She had dropped her head into Connieâs lap, and seemed to be either asleep or just bored.
I looked back at all of them, perplexed.
â...I have the final say?â I echoed. âButâŚwhy?â
âYou are her husband,â Ginnie said, like it was obvious. âOr you will be, soon. You are the head of your future household. Therefore, the final decision belongs to you.â
I looked at Connie, bewildered, whoâfor all her nastinessâstared expectantly back at me without a hint of irony. I turned to Fannie, thinking sheâd protest, but she only watched me solemnly and waited for me to speak. I looked at Ginnie again, whose gaze was piercing, though I donât think she intended it to be.
I began to feel uncomfortable. I had no problem opposing Fannie when she and I were on equal footing. She and I had fought about a lot of other stuff until weâd worked things out in the end (although, now that I thought about it, she usually had let me determine our final compromise). But this time she had said her piece, and now she was leaving it entirely up to meâand her sisters also seemed to think it was up to meâand it justâit justâit just didnât feel right. My palms began to sweat and my knee began to bounce rapidly up and down.
â...Well, okay, sure, but we donâtâŚâ I stammered. âI mean, I think I know where youâre coming from, but weâŚâ My gaze bounced between the three of them.
ââŚFannie and I are peers,â I managed at last. âShe and I make decisions together. Neither of us have the final say. I-I-I donât think that I specifically should have any sort of...â
âBen,â Fannie said quietly, and I turned to look at her. âYou have already heard my opinion. I will not change my mind. I submit the final decision to you. Do you agree? Or do you not?â
They all continued to look at me.
âWell, no, I...I donât agree,â I said, feeling my heart start to rise in my throat. âBut I...I...I donât...â My voice shorted out on me and turned into kind of a squeak.
â...What are we going to do, Ben?â Fannie asked softly.
They were all staring at me. I began to feel, not only nervous, but scared...though I couldnât place why.
Another minute passed.
The women began to prompt me.
âYou seemed quite adamant before that you did not want Penâawen at the wedding, Ben Solo,â said Ginnie.
âIt is well within your right to disregard Faânakhraâs wishes, if you think she is being foolish,â added Connie.
âI trust you, Ben,â Fannie said simply, her gaze resolute. âYou have heard all I have to say. We will do what you think is most wise.â
I looked down at the wastebasket between my feet, beginning to panic. Why was it up to me? Sure, I had argued against Fannieâs ideas, and I had called them stupid, but if we were going to go with my ideas I wanted it to be because Fannie was behind me, not because she was under meâorâorâor whatever this wasâ
Ginnie cleared her throat.
Connieâs eyelids lowered.
Pennie lifted her head sleepily.
âBen,â Fannie murmured.
My blood was pounding in my ears. I couldnât take it anymore.
âWeâre gonnaâweâre going to do what Fannie wants to do,â I blurted out finallyâthen shut my eyes and dropped my head into my hands, panting for breath.
If anyone thought that was weird of me, they didnât make any comment on it.
âThen it is settled,â said Ginnie.
âWe will come in two weeksâ time,â said Connie. âAnd bring Penâawen with us.â
âAnd Pennie will stand with you both at the wedding, if she is able,â said Fannie.
Pennie yawned and said something, too, but I donât know what.
My shoulders heaved as I stared into the wastebasket below.
The rest of the call was a haze. I couldnât wait for it to be over. The sisters all caught up on how they had been doing besides the Whole Pennie Situation, and Fannie shared with them about the darkness that had come over her. Connie and Ginnie listened, and for a while, I almost began to believe they were capable of unsullied support...until Connie made a rude remark about Fannieâs weight, which she had almost gotten through the entire call without doing, and I threatened to strangle her through the hologram, which I had also almost managed not to do. It was at this point that Fannie hurriedly initiated goodbyes, and brought the call to an end.
âYou really need to try to be nicer to them,â she told me as I powered down the holocam. âThey will soon be your sisters, too.â
âBut theyâre not nice to you,â I mumbled.
âThat may be so,â Fannie acknowledged with a sigh, âbut at the same time...I cannot deny the sacrifices they are now making for Pennie.â She shook her head. ââŚI still canât believe Pennie will be coming here. I had prepared myself never to see her again.â
ââŚWell,â I said with a numb sort of irony, âyou did say you wouldnât feel right having Connie and Ginnie at the wedding without Pennie.â
âAnd you said you wanted to know what she was like when she was a child,â Fannie added with a humorless laugh. âShe wasnât quite like that. She is very obviously unwell. ButâŚshe is far more like her younger self now than I have ever seen her in recent years.â
She sighed again and leaned into my chest. âOh, BenâŚwhy do strange things keep happening to us? AndâŚfor goodnessâ sakeâŚwhat in the stars happened to Bunnie?â She hid her face in my shirt.
I didnât know what had happened to BunnieâŚbut I had some guesses. Or maybe they were more like paranoias. I was too afraid to really think about it.
âIâm used to strange things happening to me by now,â I said instead. âAnd I guess youâve had a lot of strange things happen to you, too.â I exhaled deeply and squeezed her tight. âAt least now we can face all the strange things together.â
âOr, perhapsâŚby joining our fatesâŚthe two of us will now experience twice as many strange things as we have before,â Fannie murmured.
Now that was a terrifying thought.
Force, I hope not. I donât know how much more of this I can really take.
I've yet to finish setting up help-
IT'S SHOWTIME! Come one! Come all! To the puppet theater! Reblog with 1 troll (or a duo) at a time to be judged by the puppeteer and his marionette Pennie! Specify if you'd like them judged while he's on break for a truer reaction or before the show to see if he'll try to get them alone! (Adult ocs only as he can be incredibly violent and is a devout follower of the church.)
Who is your favorite ship from your characters
{We love all our ships with all our hearts! We would never change them for anything in the world! We do have some that are our golden childs, but that doesn't mean that we see any ship as lesser than the other.}
{Both MunK and MuunY agree that on our top lists are Koreshâ Rodmeo and VenterXPygmlo, which probably got the most history in our blog.}
{Art by MunY}
{Art by curi0dity}
{MunY has a special love for the Ship of TybeltâLarkra, The bro's that are too in pale for their own good.}
{old art by MunK}
{And despite the blog no longer being as active, MunY also has a special place in their heart for the Ship of Tybeltâ¤ď¸Pennie - Who belongs to @ask-these-fantrolls}
{art by MunY}
{On MunK's side, she has a special spot in her heart for Lutkaaâ¤ď¸Kapris, despite them not being that active on the blog, They like how they have written their story and drama.}
{And despite them not being an active blog either, MunK also has a special spot for the ship of Risataâ Dyonis, who belongs to @faygoandfireworks}
art by MunK
{And of course we could not end this post without the top ship. The one that started this blog and the golden stars of the whole cast.
RisataâGicomo}
art by MunY

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@pennieheart
Wanna call and watch a movie tonight? CJ and her sister are going out tn and I work early so Iâm sitting this one out.






