Lonely Luke Skywalker (
coolhandluke) wrote2018-01-09 03:29 pm
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Entry tags:
Ahch-To, Baby
There were a lot of things Luke hadn't asked himself in the years since arriving on Ach-To. Some because he didn't want to know--or imagine--the answers. Some because there was no reason to borrow more trouble than he already had, and the litany of regrets was already long enough. Some because, well, they just weren't thinks that Luke Skywalker ever thought of.
Like the fact that he looked like some old Jedi hermit, complete with beard and unkempt hair and dingy robes. It hadn't exactly been part of the plan, but then, there hadn't been anyone to comment, or even a mirror.
That was the outside, however. Inside, something in Luke had died long ago, stopping in its tracks. Meeting himself, he would have assumed wisdom and calm, if a little eccentricity. But that hadn't been why Luke had come here, and it hadn't been what he'd found. No, it wasn't the Jedi Master who had retreated. It was the scared farm-boy, who'd flown too high and been brought crashing to ground. It was Luke from Tatooine, who had tried to be Master Skywalker, the hero, and failed.
That was what he'd been running from. That expectation, and his failure at it. That, and the disaster he knew his presence would bring to what was left of what he and the Rebellion had built, if Ben knew where he was. Better, he'd thought, to close himself off and shut down before he hurt anyone else. By his own hand, or by leading Kylo Ren to exact revenge.
It was not so simple a thing, however, to die. Unwilling to take any more lives, including his own, he lingered. Unwilling to open himself up to the Force, he nevertheless existed within it, his body sustained by it as much as by the food he caught. For awhile it seemed that he would just continue, in a sort of limbo of his own making, unwilling to make a move that would upset the galaxy even further than his presence already had.
Until she came.
Rey held a mirror up to him, one he wasn't always willing to gaze into but one from which it was impossible to escape--not least because she simply wouldn't go away. At first resentful, he quickly became resigned.
And then, suddenly, he became expectant. Not hopeful--he would not go so far as to say that--but there came a morning when he realized he would be disappointed to find her gone, given up. Despite his fear, despite his warnings, he wanted her to persist.
Maybe because he hadn't. And as much shame as he felt over that fact, the shame was at least an emotion. And as much as he'd tried to suppress those over the past years, the irritation at her arrival had begun to wear away at his resolve like grains of sand until emotions he'd thought long buried began to unearth themselves.
The truth was, Luke Skywalker was every bit the mess he looked. And yet, the longer she stayed, the less he could find it within himself to resent it. He'd been too long alone, and too long waiting. It only stood to reason that he'd bend to the first wind that came.
Wasn't how this had all started, to begin with?
The sun had barely risen when he took position, waiting outside the hut she'd claimed, unwilling to seem too eager but having to quash a small stirring of impatience, just the same. Warnings not to get too close, too attached, flickered in his mind's eye like a glitched holovid. But Luke had never once detached from anything--and if going to the most remote location he could find hadn't done it, he didn't know that it was worth trying, anymore.
Like the fact that he looked like some old Jedi hermit, complete with beard and unkempt hair and dingy robes. It hadn't exactly been part of the plan, but then, there hadn't been anyone to comment, or even a mirror.
That was the outside, however. Inside, something in Luke had died long ago, stopping in its tracks. Meeting himself, he would have assumed wisdom and calm, if a little eccentricity. But that hadn't been why Luke had come here, and it hadn't been what he'd found. No, it wasn't the Jedi Master who had retreated. It was the scared farm-boy, who'd flown too high and been brought crashing to ground. It was Luke from Tatooine, who had tried to be Master Skywalker, the hero, and failed.
That was what he'd been running from. That expectation, and his failure at it. That, and the disaster he knew his presence would bring to what was left of what he and the Rebellion had built, if Ben knew where he was. Better, he'd thought, to close himself off and shut down before he hurt anyone else. By his own hand, or by leading Kylo Ren to exact revenge.
It was not so simple a thing, however, to die. Unwilling to take any more lives, including his own, he lingered. Unwilling to open himself up to the Force, he nevertheless existed within it, his body sustained by it as much as by the food he caught. For awhile it seemed that he would just continue, in a sort of limbo of his own making, unwilling to make a move that would upset the galaxy even further than his presence already had.
Until she came.
Rey held a mirror up to him, one he wasn't always willing to gaze into but one from which it was impossible to escape--not least because she simply wouldn't go away. At first resentful, he quickly became resigned.
And then, suddenly, he became expectant. Not hopeful--he would not go so far as to say that--but there came a morning when he realized he would be disappointed to find her gone, given up. Despite his fear, despite his warnings, he wanted her to persist.
Maybe because he hadn't. And as much shame as he felt over that fact, the shame was at least an emotion. And as much as he'd tried to suppress those over the past years, the irritation at her arrival had begun to wear away at his resolve like grains of sand until emotions he'd thought long buried began to unearth themselves.
The truth was, Luke Skywalker was every bit the mess he looked. And yet, the longer she stayed, the less he could find it within himself to resent it. He'd been too long alone, and too long waiting. It only stood to reason that he'd bend to the first wind that came.
Wasn't how this had all started, to begin with?
The sun had barely risen when he took position, waiting outside the hut she'd claimed, unwilling to seem too eager but having to quash a small stirring of impatience, just the same. Warnings not to get too close, too attached, flickered in his mind's eye like a glitched holovid. But Luke had never once detached from anything--and if going to the most remote location he could find hadn't done it, he didn't know that it was worth trying, anymore.
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But Kylo Ren wasn't her concern, not now. Luke was, as was her mission to bring him back. Though really, if she were honest with herself, it was less about the mission at this point and more about making him understand why he was needed, even if he only thought of himself as some dour old man.
"Wanting a holovid to come to life is asking the impossible. I'm not asking you for the impossible. You're a person. And your story means something to these people. Flawed or not, just seeing you stand besides General Organa will be enough to stir something inside of them, something that will keep them fighting. And they need to keep fighting. This isn't about the Jedi or the Sith. This is about the Resistance and the First Order. And we can't continue to resist the tyranny of the First Order if we don't have a reminder of what we're fighting for."
Though she generally wasn't one for hand-holding and usually minimized physical contact whenever possible, Rey actually scooted closer to Luke, giving his hand a quick squeeze as though to emphasize her point. "I have been listening to you. You're a man; no more, and certainly no less. But don't you see that that's part of your influence? You had humble beginnings and stumbled across something far greater than yourself; these people, Leia's people, need to remember that the same can be said for them. Otherwise... we've already lost."
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He shook his head, as much to clear it as to negate her words.
"They don't need me for that. I'm not what they're fighting for, nor should I be." He disengaged his hand from hers, and placed it on her shoulder. "There are other men--and women. I'm not the man you need. They need to fight for themselves, for what's good and right. Not for me, or some fantasy out of a legend."
He heaved a sigh, dropping his hand. He suddenly felt tired, as if he'd fought some sort of battle. He looked away, out over the ocean.
"You mentioned... doing something."
The turn the conversation had taken was not one he welcomed, and it was either change it, or end this. And she had already voiced her objection to being left alone. Well, she'd have to compromise.
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Almost, but not quite. She couldn't see his worn look on a younger man, that exhaustion and nihilism in the face of someone thirty years younger. But the hope she'd envisioned on his younger self looked equally out of place on Luke's face, and that made Rey more than a little sad.
He was never going to see things her way. Not because he couldn't, but because he didn't want to. She supposed she could understand that, since she was just as willfully stubborn.
Frustrated but not entirely defeated, she sighed as well as she followed his gaze. She could continue to attempt to hammer in her point, but it she kept going at it too hard, she might just ruin whatever tenuous relationship they'd managed to build up. She'd fail Leia if she couldn't bring Luke back, but she'd fail Luke if she ended up pushing him away. And again, for all the respect she had for Leia, Luke was her immediate concern.
"What was Tatooine like?" she asked softly. "I never really got to visit other planets before finding my way to the Resistance."
Or maybe she had, but those memories have been swept away along with her parents' faces, and so she chose not to dwell on that too hard right now.
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And he was grateful that she'd accepted it, because suddenly it seemed a very lonely island. The prospect of the day ahead without company, while familiar, seemed suddenly empty. What did he do all day? He couldn't remember. And if she left, if he drove her away, he'd have to think about it.
"You're not missing anything," he said gruffly. "I grew up on a moisture farm. The closes settlement was almost an hour away, and wasn't much at that. If you went anywhere, you had to watch for Tusken Raiders or krayt dragons, and if you went into town--which my uncle would never let me do--you're contending with the various forms of corruption the Hutts controlled." He shrugged. "Maybe it's different now. I've avoided going back as much as possible."
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While it was nice to just take in the quiet sometimes and get lost in her own thoughts... sometimes it was nicer to do that with someone sitting nearby.
"I'm assuming it was largely desert, then, if there was need of a moisture farm. Your Tusken Raiders and krayt dragons sound like my Teedos and nightwatchers. And this town sounds like the Niima Outpost, only I never had an uncle to keep me out of it."
She lingered on that thought just a fraction too long before pretending she hadn't and continuing. "Maybe Tatooine has just been renamed Jakku." It was a joke, of course, even if there wasn't much in the way of humor there. She just couldn't help noting how similar their places of origin had been... though in her case, she likely hadn't originated on Jakku. Probably. Maybe.
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There was no way for him to understand what was going on within him at this moment. The loosening of everything that had calcified over time.
"It's probably a good thing I wasn't allowed in Mos Eisley," he mused, with hindsight. He glanced at Rey. "You're remarkably unimpressed by the ocean for someone who grew up where you did."
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"It impressed me, if that's the word you want to use. I was just more impressed by you at first, instead." She glanced away again, smirking just slightly before shaking her head. "I still am, in my own way. Impressed by both. But you already said you don't want to hear about that."
Looking out over the choppy waves, she asked, "Does it ever quiet down, or is it always like this?"
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"You get used to it," Luke said dismissively. He arched an eyebrow. "Han took you to Maz's." It wasn't exactly a question, but a small smile played around the corners of his mouth. "It figures. I met him in a cantina where the first person I spoke to tried to kill me."
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"That was where I found your lightsaber," she mentioned, voice a little quieter. And where she'd had a series of visions she couldn't begin to understand, though given that she'd seen the foreboding figure of Kylo Ren before ever having met him, they still bothered her. "I'd left it behind, but it still found its way back to me."
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He shook his head, lost for a moment in nostalgia, until she spoke again.
"Now that... that's something I can't explain," he mused, almost to himself. He'd refused to acknowledge the saber when handed to him. Refused to entertain the natural curiosity at its presence on the island, in the hands of this girl. He was breaking his own self-imposed exile by entertaining it now--almost as if he'd forgotten to keep it in place. "I don't know how Maz got hold of it. Last time I saw it..."
He trailed off again, lost in another type of memory.
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She also tried not to think of how long ago it had been since Luke had been her age. That made her feel odd, though she had no rational reason as to why.
"She didn't tell me how she got it," Rey explained. "But then I was sort of... preoccupied at the time, so I might not have been listening. It's all a little hazy." Except it wasn't. She just liked to pretend that it was hazy, since it felt as though she somehow had less responsibility that way.
"I only know that it had called out to me, and no matter how hard I ran... well, I still wound up with it, in the end. Maybe it just knew that I would be able to reunite it with you, though that might be giving it too much credit, for it not being sentient."
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"I would not be too quick to dismiss the motives of the Force, when it comes to that," he said finally. "Though I would be equally hesitant to assume I knew what those motives are." The idea that the Force wanted him reunited with the weapon sat uneasily with him. "It was passed on to me by Obi-Wan. It has now passed to you." He didn't want it back.
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"I didn't want it," she murmured with a frown, looking away. "I didn't want any of this. I didn't want what it would do to my life, keeping me away from Jakku for so long and throwing me in the middle of all... this."
But even as she said it, she looked around, and even the lonely island that Luke had chosen for his self-imposed exile was a far more hospitable place than Jakku. "I still say that, whatever the Force might ultimately have had in mind, I was meant to find you and bring that lightsaber back to you. What you do with that is entirely up to you."
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Maybe, he thought, not this. Not poking at an old sand bear, light years from anything like her purpose or family.
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Now it gave her a sense of purpose, and she'd never had that before. It was exciting. But it wasn't without a sense of irrational guilt as she wondered over whether her family was currently wildly scanning the deserts of Jakku in search of her.
But even Luke had found his father after having left Tatooine, a father that he'd been told had died years before. Maybe staying on Jakku had been the very reason she hadn't found her parents.
"I just... wanted to feel as though someone cared about me," she murmured softly. "Staying on Jakku was all I knew to do to achieve that. Leaving meant possibly never coming face to face with anyone who would know anything about the little girl who'd been left with Unkar Plutt years back." It was why she'd always tried to never directly antagonize the ugly Blobfish, since he'd been the only link she'd had to her life before being a scavenger.
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Somehow that was far worse than what Vader had done to him. And whoever it was either had their reasons or didn't deserve her. Either way, waiting for them didn't seem like the answer.
"Do you still feel that?" he asked, belatedly surprised to hear the words coming out of his mouth. "That no one cares?"
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At Luke's question, Rey fell silent for a moment before slowly shrugging. "Honestly? I'm fairly certain no one would notice if I stayed here and never came back. Except maybe Finn, if he wakes up from his coma. And you, of course, but likely because you'd be wondering when I was going to hurry up and leave."
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Of course she thought that. He'd done everything he could to discourage her.
"That's... not true," he said after a moment. "If I seem in a hurry to get rid of you, it's..." He stopped, the words catching in his throat with unaccustomed emotion. His right hand clenched at his side. "I've removed myself. From the fight. From the... from anywhere I can negatively impact anyone ever again." He held up a hand, as if to forestall her protestation of that. "I didn't do it to drag anyone else out with me. I don't want you gone because I want you to go away. I want you gone because you should be anywhere else."
He heaved a sigh and sat back, staring at the sea. It had taken a lot, that admission, and he was still unsure if he should have voiced it. It was too raw, after all these years, admitting he was lonely. However indirectly.
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Except... his words quickly made that clear that that wasn't entirely true. It wasn't as though Luke had any reason to try and be nice to her; honestly, Rey would be surprised to find that he still knew how to be "nice," at least in the sense of empty etiquettepl. That sort of thing happened after spending so long in isolation.
But if he'd just said he didn't want her gone because he wanted her to go away, did that mean...? "So... you don't want me to go away?"
It might not have been the best thing to take away from his comment, but the thought of actually being wanted was so bizarre to Rey that she didn't quite know how to wrap her mind around that. The Resistance needed her, yes, but that was largely because of what she was capable of. Luke had made it clear that he didn't need anyone. Whether or not he wanted anyone, though, was still a question.
She hesitated for a moment before shifting a little closer to him, tilting her head to look at him and wanting him to meet her gaze. "If that's the case, then maybe I'm exactly where I should be."
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He shifted uncomfortably on the stone wall and his eyes slid to hers and away again.
"I told you," he said after a moment, his voice rough. "There's nothing for you here."
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And she wanted Luke to feel the same way.
"There's you," she told him softly as she slowly reached out to lightly touch his hand. "That's more than I've had for most in my life."
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Now, with this disruption, he was equally unable to process the feelings or to push her away. And it was getting harder, the worse his unbalance got. He needed to meditate on this. Find a way to, if not close the door, deal with what was coming through.
He didn't want to feel safe. He didn't deserve it.
"Rey, no," he said quietly. "You can't... you shouldn't put your faith in me. Whatever you think I can give you..." He shook his head. "I can't."
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That was something that Rey had needed a little time to accept, herself. She wished she'd been able to recognize Han Solo as the good thing he'd been in her life while he was still around.
She wasn't going to turn a blind eye to what Luke was, or what he could be to her.
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He'd believed that, once. Time and again, he'd accepted the unexpected into his life--after, sometimes, a short struggle--and believed it to be for the best. Until Ben. Until what had come his way had been himself, and that had been disastrous.
He couldn't accept the responsibility for ruining another life. Not again. And this girl, this fiercely independent soul, was looking to him for guidance he couldn't give himself. And he was leaning in, despite all his training and his defenses. Which, it turned out, were for naught. He was rusty. And tired. And she had no idea either how dangerous he was to her, or how much a danger she posed to his equilibrium here.
"The lesson is over," he said unnecessarily, standing up abruptly. "As is this conversation." He stood for a moment, head bowed, struggling with how to apologize when he wasn't sure what for, or why he needed to get away. "The... demonstration today has left me in need of time to meditate. I suggest you occupy yourself with your exercises."
There. That would have to be polite enough for now. He didn't know what he'd do if she followed him, so he didn't look back. Instead, he strode off away from the dwellings, lamenting the fact he'd shown her his own private valley.
But it wasn't her he needed to get away from. The hollow feeling followed him, dogging his attempts to walk it off or meditate. It was the difference between mere absence, and lacking. Somehow, she'd blown a human-shaped hole in his composure, and the stiffness of his awakening humanity pained him. The patterns of his normal life here no longer made sense, though he tried to go through the motions.
He kept seeing her eyes, hearing her words. Feeling that little tug towards her as he remembered the warmth rushing in to meet him as he opened himself up to her probing senses. He could not allow himself to feel that again. It shook his resolve. To what, he was not yet certain.
He spent the rest of the day avoiding her, though returning again and again to their conversation in his mind. And at night, lying on his pallet in his stone hut, he waited for sleep to claim him, not aware that it was not entirely his conscious mind which was holding on...
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As she'd picked up their dishes and washed them, though, she'd tried to take it as a hopeful sign that Luke was going to go and meditate about what they'd talked about today. Maybe it would be the first step in him deciding to come back to the Resistance with her. And maybe it was the start of a regular occurrence of such intimate talks between them.
One of those meant more to her than the other, and it wasn't the one that should have.
But she kept telling herself that she was only happy that Luke was possibly finally coming around, because she had to believe that her pleasure was the selfless sort. After all, that was what being a Jedi was about, wasn't it? Selflessly acting towards the greater good?
The fact that it meant she and Luke could continue their friendship even after the First Order was finally gone was just a bonus.
But as the day went on and turned into night, Rey began to grow worried, not having seen Luke again. She didn't think anything had happened to him, but it was still a little concerning that he wouldn't come by to say anything else to her throughout the day. As she lay in her hut and stared up at the ceiling, she could feel her worry eating at her the more she told herself she was being foolish; it was almost like a physical entity that was keeping her from sleep.
It took a long time for her to realize that not all of these feelings were her own, and she looked towards the window, in the general direction of where she knew Luke slept. Or where he was trying to sleep. Or where he was dreaming. It was hard to tell, but it felt almost as though their earlier connection had opened up again, and she could feel things that were coursing through his mind, hazy thoughts and regrets and emotions that were far too mature for her own mind.
It was all too tempting to peek into his head, to make her presence known as she tried to sooth over his uncertainties. But even though this connection had formed accidentally, she didn't want him thinking that she'd been poking her nose in where it didn't belong. That might sever the trust between them, and she didn't want that.
So she did what a normal, non-Force-sensitive person would do when they were worried about the well-being of a friend. She got up and left her hut, a blanket draped over her shoulders to protect from the slight chill in the night air as she moved towards where she assumed Luke was sleeping, or trying to sleep, or pretending to sleep. She hesitated for a moment at the door before knocking just loudly enough to be heard over the crashing waves, hoping she hadn't alienated him earlier and wasn't currently doing anything to alienate him further.
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