coolhandluke: (jedi dude)
2018-03-12 04:06 pm
Entry tags:

In a calm sea every man is a pilot [for gotyourselfapilot]

Sometimes, the easiest was to let someone else decide.

Especially when you had failed, and all the decisions you'd made in your life had seemed to lead up to one catastrophic moment. Luke had tried to atone. He'd tried to reach out. He'd tried, in his way, to be there for those he thought needed him most. And they... hadn't. They had let him drift away, shut him out, and he had let them. He'd grown up never hoping to know his family. The family he'd found had been a gift, a blessing, and when he had destroyed that, a light had just gone out for him.

But he was not his father. There was no impulse in him to go the other way, no rage to fuel a different sort of power, no reason for him to attempt to wrest control back. Instead, he'd gone dark by just disappearing, waiting for a sign he could return, until enough time had passed that he simply stopped waiting.

The map, though. The map he'd left when he was still hopeful that someone would call out, that someone would need him again. That he no longer believed himself to be useful or wanted to be called was a matter of self-preservation at this point. And it would take a lot for him to invite that sort of pain back into his being. Now he drifted, neither truly alive or able to die. Waiting. Not, any more, for a chance to be useful. But a chance to give up, for good.
coolhandluke: (Default)
2018-01-09 03:29 pm
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.