Lonely Luke Skywalker (
coolhandluke) wrote2018-01-09 03:29 pm
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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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She knew that was a bit ridiculous of her to say, given that this whole conversation had started because they'd both realized they'd been fantasizing about one another in such a realistic way that only the Force can be to blame, but she meant it. With a small shrug of her shoulders, she told him, "Fast or slow, I don't mind so long as it lasts as long as we can manage it."
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A dream.
"The realities of that new world weren't a snap. Maybe you'll understand, one day. If you find your parents. Though I hope, for your sake, that path is different for you than for me."
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"You're breathing," she pointed out patiently, swallowing around the complicated mess of emotions that always cropped up when she thought of her parents. "You're thinking. You're living. So no, you're not done with change. And even if you are, it's clearly not done with you."
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She kept her eyes on him as she moved just a little closer to him, hugging him again. "This is all all right, Luke," she told him quietly. "We're allowed to believe that. We have to believe that, if we actually want this to work."
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He was quiet for a long moment, mulling that over. What did it mean, to want a future? To want a relationship? To allow his heart to beat, his spirit to rejoin the flow of the universe?
Without knowing it, at first, tears began to roll down his cheeks. It was not, exactly, despair. More an overflow of emotion he was no longer capable of dealing with.
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"It's all right. I'm here, and I won't leave you, not unless you want me to." And not even then, really, considering how stubborn she's been on that whole matter this entire time.
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Dark enough that he was considering letting her stay. Letting this happen.
"That isn't up to me," he said sadly. "But you say..." His brow furrows. "Leia sent you?"
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A little confused by the sudden mention of Leia, Rey blinked and replied, "She did, yes. She couldn't exactly come herself, since she had a Resistance to lead. And I'm... well, I'm probably the most expendable person she had."
Rey knew that wasn't entirely true, that she'd volunteered for this specifically because she wanted to learn more about the Force. But as for why Leia would agree to that otherwise, it was anyone's guess.
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He wondered what that meant. Not only that Leia was reaching out, after those years of walling herself off to him until he stopped reaching back, but that she had sent Rey.
How would she look at Luke now, when he was continuing to fail her?
"She knows me better than anyone in the universe," he continued after a moment. "If she sent you, it was because she knew you'd be able to get through to me. That I wouldn't be able to ignore you."
And she had to have known that Rey would remind him of her.
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Could that have been true? Had Leia sent her because she saw something in her that would appeal to Luke? Had she even known that it would appeal to him in that sort of way?
No, she decided. Whatever reason Leia might have had for sending her beyond just the fact that she'd had to send someone, it couldn't have been because she'd foreseen the pair of them getting along quite this well. No one could have been perceptive enough to have seen that coming.
So instead of touching on any of that, Rey only looked at Luke for a moment before softly remarking, "You tried, at first. But... I guess she was right. Eventually, you just couldn't." She managed a bit of that former smile again, mentioning, "Maybe she could just tell how stubborn I can be when I want to be."
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"Leia's very strong with the Force in her own right," he said. "Maybe she could see as much of herself in you as I do." To someone else, that might have seemed an odd thing to say, but for Luke it just was. His crush was brief enough and long enough ago that he didn't think about it anymore, but it still remained that Leia was the most formative female presence in his life. Anyone he responded to was going to have a lot in common with her. He looked down at Rey again. As he started to get more comfortable, the tension around his eyes was starting to ease. "And she knew I could never keep myself isolated, without effort."
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Now it looked as though she might have a fairly big reason to smile on a regular basis, if things turned out well.
"You think I'm like Leia?" she asked, genuinely surprised. "I can't see that. But then, I suppose you know her better than me." His features were smoothing out, and Rey fancied that she could see what he might have looked like as a younger man. It wasn't his more youthful appearance that lightened her heart so much as the fact that he was showing he really was capable of levity. She couldn't help but think he needed more reasons to look like that, and it made her happy to know that he was looking at her with that sense of calm.
"Do me a favor. Don't put too much effort into that whole isolation thing. You wouldn't be the only one who would get unbearably lonely."
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But she could sense Luke's continued uneasiness and was sensitive to it, so she maintained her patience, keeping her voice soft as she stepped in closer, trying to get him to meet her eyes again. "Luckily for both of us, then, I don't want to get rid of you."
Giving his hand a gentle squeeze, she murmured, "I'm the one who came looking for you. And now that I've found you, I'm not going to give up on you so easily. If you genuinely tried your hardest not to be found, then it looks like the Force had other ideas."
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"I'm not sure this is what the Force had in mind."
His left hand is caught in hers, and reflexively he raises his right to trace the edge of her face. It's only after he makes contact that he remembers it's not flesh, and he freezes, metal fingers clenching a little in consternation. What a time to start feeling self-conscious...
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She was instinctively tilting her face towards his hand when he seemed to suddenly freeze, and she blinked as she tired to figure out what was wrong. She eventually realized that his hand was cool and stiff against her face, and she remembered about his prosthetic. She was used to machines, more comfortable with them than people, in some ways, and so it didn't bother her at all, but she wondered if he thought it would, or even if it still bothered him after all these years.
Slowly, she brought her free hand up, lightly settling against the back of the metal one he had along her face. She made no move to keep him there, but more importantly, she made no move to pull him away, instead simply smiling up at him.
"I've heard people say the Force works in mysterious ways. Maybe they're right."
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"Then again," he said softly, "one of the things I've been trying to teach you is that we shouldn't rely on the Force for everything." He wasn't ready to admit that Ben turning on him was part of some grand scheme.
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But then, choice automatically meant that something wasn't inevitable, and she'd been trying to tell Luke as much ever since he'd first refused to leave the island. So if it wasn't fate....
"Then maybe we're just lucky," she pointed out fondly. "I can live with that, too."
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"So here's the part," he said, "where I admit... I have no idea what comes next." He meant, of course, that he wasn't sure where to take this newfound connection, and more immediately, what the next move was beyond just standing staring at each other. But after a moment, he realizes how that might have sounded and a pinkness creeps up his roughened cheeks. "I mean... for us. No, I mean... for the day?"
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"I, ah... I wouldn't be able to tell you," she admitted, though she didn't sound nearly as self-conscious about it as he seemed to feel, given the way his cheeks had colored slightly. "I'm still new to the concept of friends. Beyond that...." However much beyond they were, she still had no idea where to go next, and she said as much with a shrug.
"But the day's only just started, so we can figure it out? Maybe you can take me to where we sat yesterday? That little valley with the flowers? It was nice there, quieter."
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Pausing, he grabbed a few canteens, and headed out the door, glancing back as if to check and make sure she was coming--or, in fact, still here.
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In this case, that was to spend more time together. At least, that was what she thought was the most logical step. Luke's reaction didn't make her think otherwise, though she couldn't help wonder over that sense of relief she got from him.
She didn't remark on it, though, instead following along with Luke as she wondered vaguely over just how they'd pass the time. "Let me," she offered, reaching out for some of the canteens, though if pressed she'd admit that she just wanted to make sure at least one of his hands was free in case he wanted to take hers as they walked.
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