Erejean. sfw. sadness, death, and a sacrifice of one – to save the life of all.
A loud flourish echoes along the top of Wall Maria. The signal. Jean looks up from the piece of metal he’s been toying with. Mikasa, Armin and Levi are following behind Commander Smith, faces stony and cold, their gear still whirring from cannonballing them up the wall. Levi throws Jean a quick glance when passing by, and there’s something like pity in it. Armin doesn’t speak, neither does Mikasa. Everything’s been said between the three of them. Jean still remembers the scent of white lilies, of rain and an empty grave, three days ago. Nothing left to bury.
Eren.
They line up on the wall, and Jean stands by their side. Armin touches his shoulder, his breath hitching as tears slide down his cheeks. He’s grown up, hair cut short like Mikasa’s. Jean remembers how he used to love her, and then stopped to devote his heart to someone else.
Hanji is the last one. They come with a basket full of shimmering silver that’s moving and trying to crawl up the walls of its cage. Levi takes the basket to hold it, eyes cast away, face dark from shadows and ice-cold hate. They all sacrificed so much, but… not enough. Not as much as –
Hanji takes the weapons out one by one, setting them on the edge of the wall. They look like silver beetles, thick as a fist, with feelers and a blinking red sensor on their blunt heads. The machinery inside whirrs and moves as Hanji touches every single one, activating them. Mikasa wraps her arms around Armin and holds him when he starts to cry. Levi leans against Erwin, whispers the name they’re all thinking about. The Commander wraps his only arm around his neck, kisses his hair. Hanji’s tears are silent when they watch the bugs rise into the air, gas evaporating from their bellies and catapulting them, the sky’s the limit for humanity’s greatest invention.
The Titans they lured to Wall Maria are glaring with hollow eyes and hungry red maws, spit flying, steam erupting from where they stumble into each other. All along the wall are hundreds of soldiers, opening baskets and letting out silver bugs into the air. The rest of them is in the Forest of Giant Trees, and all over humanity’s last safe haven are clouds of shimmering beetles swarming the sky, the sun reflecting on their bodies.
The mechanism is complex and Jean doesn’t understand it, but Hanji does, and all of them remember the sacrifice that it cost one of them. “We will construct a machine that will sit on Eren’s neck. When we need him out of the titan, when he’s going wild or things get dangerous – then the beetle cuts him out precisely. He doesn’t need to lose his limbs each time,” Hanji had said. They had all agreed, had seen the demonstration on the Titan puppets they’d been training with, back in older days. The silver beetle had worked perfectly. Eren had said it was cute and at least small enough so his Titan self wouldn’t be distracted. Jean had mocked him about the silver insect sitting on the nape of his neck for days, they’d fought about it.
They’d kissed before their last mission. He can’t turn back time now. He can’t wrap Eren in his arm and rip the beetle off and –
It was quick. Blood, flesh, no screams. Eren’s heart stopped, and his death had brought humanity victory. Too many Titans attacking him on the last mission. Levi had screamed “get him out, he’ll be eaten!”, and the beetle, conditioned to his voice, obeyed. In theory, things always work. In theory, there’s negative numbers and a peaceful word, love and kindness. The silver beetle twitched once, and then its sharp claws cut.
And they didn’t stop.
There was no corpse to bury, nothing left when the Titans lashed into him. Jean watched. He screamed his heart out, his soul and his living beating heart, cursed at the broken fucking world and at the key dangling around his neck, a simple talisman Eren had given him.
“To protect you, idiot.”
Just days later, the military forced Hanji to change the beetles. A few adjustments and the weapons were programmed to react to a certain body temperature and electrical signals.
Now Jean watches them attack, and he opens his hand to look at the piece of metal he’s holding. The key’s rusty and a little skewed, and Jean gently wipes it until it’s shiny again. While the beetles exterminate, while giant bodies fall like rotten trees, and while all the other soldiers are cheering, the Survey Corps stands still.
The Commander raises his left hand. He salutes. They all follow, fingers against their foreheads. Armin’s broken sobs and Mikasa’s quiet tears travel away with the wind swirling through their capes, and Jean lets his hand sink down to look at the bitemarks they are all carrying on their palms, deep red and just days old.
“Jäger,” Levi says into the wind.
‘You always wanted to protect others,’ Jean thinks and clasps his bitten hand around the key, the talisman he got from warm lips brushing against his own, and a voice whispering.
“To protect you.”