emiri (
emiri) wrote in
pencilcase2012-07-13 01:28 am
open rp post
fast and loose role-play
free and easy love, that's how it's s'posed to be!
want to thread with one of mine but aren't in the same game? want me to do something with one of yours in bakerstreet? can't find a good recent bakerstreet meme but want to thread anyway? want to explore au scenarios together? annoyed that i dropped that character you really wanted a thread with?
well drop me a comment here with whatever scenario (or link to a meme) you want, specify the character you want, and we can thread the merry day away!
any active or retired character from the muse list with two stars or more is fair game!
homeless characters are slightly different in that most of them don't have journals or icons set up, so you may have to give me a day or so to do that. and in some cases, a couple more days to canon review if i haven't in a while.

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... Anakin? [Ahsoka pads over closer to him-- not as close as they once used to stand, but still close enough for friends.]
You look awful. [There's no point in beating around the bush about it. Not that Ahsoka has ever done that about anything.] What's wrong?
[Because something is wrong. She can sense it more keenly than ever, now.]
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He could, but he's foolish. He knows how little she's really going to relent. Throughout the years, she's had to do that a lot in his presence. There's little chance that he can fool her now.]
I believe I've identified the Sith Lord who's evaded us for so long. [These are similar to the words he might have said to Windu for a reason: it's like a script. Saying it out loud means something.]
It's Chancellor Palpatine. [Only out of some likely displaced sense of pride does he bring himself to look at her. He wants to show that he can handle this, but she knows his opinion on Palpatine. She knows that he's always been there for Anakin. And now, he's promised him the world, promised him everything—
Including the ability to hold on to all that he never wants to lose. The mere thought almost makes him tremble with discomfort, but he doesn't. No, there is simply a recurring sense of tension in his body.]
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... What?
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Anakin, that can't be right.
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... You're serious.
[If Anakin is right-- her brain connects the dots. Realising all the far reaching implications that has. An unpleasant feeling she can't quite identify yet knots itself in her stomach.]
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After a beat, before he responds, she goes on. She goes on, and he straightens, tension bleeding away from his body all at once.]
I wish I could say that I'm not right, Ahsoka. [There's a hint of lightness to his tone here, but there's so much fatigue behind it that he can't lean into it. He wants to. He wants to be the Anakin she knew most of the time, rather than the one that had been in pain.
(But when hasn't he been? Recently, it feels like it's all the time.)]
He offered to train me in the ways of the Force. To show me things that the Jedi Masters would never tell me. He—[It would be so easy to stop here, to tell her nothing more. Admitting that he's tempted frightens him. Admitting that what he wants is to prevent death is hard, so he stops short of that precise admission.]
Ahsoka, I want more. Is that so wrong?
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Finally, slowly:]
... I don't think wanting more of anything is inherently wrong, on it's own. Normal people do that every day.
But... at the same time, it isn't the Jedi way, either, is it? What I'm saying is-- the question of whether it's right or wrong is irrelevant. Right, wrong, or neither... you can't have both.
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I've always wondered if I want too much. I know what I'm meant to do, but I can't bring myself to actually do it. If I give up on this, I'm afraid—[He breathes out a shaky sigh. No, there is no resolve here. It's clear that Anakin's mind is muddled, lacking any clarity or stability. The weight of his years of training is crushing him, and he can hardly breathe.
He sees one future, but worries that he can't bring it about. He sees another future, with Padmé, and feels certain.]
It would be a lie to say that I always wanted to be a Jedi. Long before you quit, I was resolved to do so. I didn't feel as if it was the place for me. I couldn't forget where I came from. [Ahsoka has seen many times that he still hasn't forgotten. He cannot be the ideal Jedi no matter how much power he has.]
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... I don't understand.
[Because she doesn't, not really-- though she's trying her best. She knows about Anakin's past, about his troubles letting go. But Anakin is talking around things rather than about them-- which isn't atypical for him, when there's something painful on the table. But what is atypical is seeing him so uncertain. The Anakin she knows has always been decisive, confident, sure of himself. It's a strange moment for Ahsoka-- realising that the adults in her life that she looks up to are sometimes just as uncertain as herself.
The really baffling thing, though, is that it seems Anakin's come to her of all people for advice. She knows why Anakin wouldn't go to any of the other Council Masters. But why not Obi-Wan? The two of them have always been inseparable, in her mind. And Obi-Wan surely has much more wisdom and experience than herself. But-- that doesn't matter, does it? Because he's here, anyway. So she has to try.]
... What is it that you think you're meant to do? ... And what do you want to do?
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If anything, that's part of why he's here instead of with Padmé.
And unfortunately for Obi-Wan, Anakin has come to view him as someone in favor of the Council instead of in favor of him. It's a problem, especially with his future seeming so ... nebulous.]
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Her words are good ones, and perhaps, they are the important ones. His entire life, he's been a slave to the Order: he's been their ideal of what a Jedi should be, while constantly being reminded of when and where he keeps failing. All along, he hasn't had the answers. And yes, he made some mistakes. He knows what they would think of Padmé. He isn't foolish. But then, when he looks at Padmé, he can't think of anything else he wants in the world.]
I've been having dreams, [he admits, the words spoken as if he's finally giving some solid answers.] Padmé dies in childbirth. Chancellor Palpatine—he told me he could teach me how to keep her from dying. Master Yoda told me to accept life or death, but if I'm as strong as they all say I am, why can't I access that side of the Force?
[He knows it's selfish to think that he can only save the woman closest to him, or at least the woman who's alive that's closest to him, but he can't help it. Yes, he wishes he could bring back all the clones they lost. He took their deaths in stride (as much as Anakin takes anything in stride), but it feels like this is just ...
It's asking too much of him.]
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With the most logical first, perhaps, her brain thinks. With some trepidation:]
Anakin... wouldn't Senator Amidala have to be pregnant in order to die in childbirth?
["So the solution there is easy," she hopes to follow up with. "Don't get her pregnant."
Somehow though, something tells her she isn't going to be able to say those words next.]
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He had told Padmé that the news of their children coming was one of the greatest and happiest moments of his life. He hadn't been lying, but the creeping, uncomfortable fear in the back of his mind had always been there. It hasn't left him, not since that day. Not since before that day, as the dreams had begun long before he returned to Coruscant. (She thought him dead. Where would she be without him?)]
Heh, well ... [He doesn't quite shrug, but he is awkward. This is awkward.] She is pregnant. No one knows that I'm the father. [Unless they use their deductive reasoning skills, which people apparently never use in Star Wars Land until it's too late.]
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[There it is. The answer she somehow knew was going to come.
Her words are somehow vaguely reminiscent of Obi-Wan-- but she doesn't manage to inject into it any of the disappointment that Obi-Wan might. In contrast, she just sounds-- and feels, in the Force-- incredibly worried for him. And Padmé, as well.]
I wish you'd told me earlier. I understand why you didn't, but... well, it's weird if I say congratulations now. [When Padmé's life might be on the line.] ... I guess that explains the visions ...
But how does Chancellor Palpatine know...?
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He told me a story about an old Sith lord. ["When" would probably be a wise question here, but that would require a natural transition.
Anakin doesn't seem to favor those very much.]
He could stop the deaths of everyone around him. I didn't bother to conceal my thoughts about Padmé. Why would I? [And if he's trained in the Force, that says everything.
And confirms everything, too.]
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[The words are noncommittal, but it's clear from her tone that she's skeptical. If stopping death were possible, the Jedi would know about it, she thinks.]
Well, putting that aside for a second-- you know that almost nobody dies in childbirth these days, right? It's pretty rare. Especially in women who are otherwise healthy and have access to good medical facilities. So if you're getting visions about it happening to Padmé, there has to be a pretty specific reason.
Have you tried meditating on your vision? If you can find out why the birth goes wrong, you might be able to stop it from happening all together.
[Without resorting to anything drastic.
Meditating on unpleasant visions is hard. But that advice led to Ahsoka saving Padmé's life once. So why should it not work again?]
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He makes a noncommittal sound before he goes on.] All I hear when I meditate is the voice of Obi-Wan. It's clear that I'm not there. And she's crying, like her life is passing from her and she can't hold on. [Anakin does his best to add some foundation to his voice to sound stronger.
He fails, instead verging on his tone quavering.]
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... What if we meditated on it together? Sometimes two minds are better than one. Let me help.
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That might not be a bad idea.
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Do you want me to light the candles...? I keep a few in the back, for just in case.
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That sounds good. I'll just ... sit here. [Here being near the shelf he's by, where he pushes aside some of the holovids so that he can press up against it. Some part of him is still antsy, wanting to move (because he's always on the move), and he has his doubts.
But he came here for Ahsoka's help. They have to try to do what is ... sensible.
(Anakin Skywalker is also the least sensible person alive.)]
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Here. [She pads back over, sits opposite him and sets the candles down, lighting them with ease. The hut's already comfortably dark-- she doesn't turn the lights on during the daytime. Onderon's plenty bright, so she can open a window if she has to. It saves electricity.
She shifts around a bit until she's comfortable. Then:]
... Are you ready?
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His mind wanders briefly as he looks at the candles, set adrift with these thoughts. But he pulls himself back and shuffles to move to sit across from her. Master Yoda had wanted him to do the same thing, to accept what he saw as fact. Just as he had accepted his mother dying.
Will he be ready if he can't do anything about this? Will that be possible?
Both of Anakin's hands find his knees, and he tilts his head forward.]
I am.
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She holds her hands out to him across the space between them, expectant, but also a little sheepish.]
... Don't laugh-- I know it's not exactly usual. But ... I thought it might help? To remind you that I'm here.
[And that he's here. In this room. Not in the vision. Here, with the support of a friend.
Visions, she knows, can be overwhelming at the best of times, even when they're not about people you love dying.]
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After a beat, he does place his hands into hers, knowing full well what she might see in the process. The bond between them had always been strong—is still strong—but there are so many things that he's concealed from her throughout the years. Everyone has believed him to be a general, and yet—
And yet.]
I'm not gonna lose my way. [He says these words like he's reassuring her, but it sounds more like he's taking the time to convince himself.]
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