Anakin Skywalker was the son of the Force and in this universe the primordial power flowing through everything stayed to guide him. “Mom,” Anakin said, blue eyes glowing bright like a thousand suns. Blood was dripping from his legs, his hands, the knife he was holding. “Mom, I can free us.” THIS IS COPY PASTE ORIGINAL : https://archiveofourown.org/works/22880668/chapters/54686671
Padmé did not call Anakin out when she found him hiding in her living room, arms tugged beneath his knees, his chin resting on top of them. He didn't look like he had gotten any sleep lately and she was not about to stop him from getting at least some rest.
Instead, he merely put a cup of tea in his hands and went about her work. Halfway through midday, she got the call she had been waiting for.
"Senator Organa," she greeted her ally and friend. Bail Organa was a good man, friendly and charming on top, and Padmé wondered what would happen if she were to let him meet Obi-Wan sometime. The two seemed like the kind of people who'd get along like a house on fire. "How are you?"
"Quite well, thank you," Bail replied. He glanced at Anakin once but didn't further react to his presence. "And yourself?"
"Exhausted, if I'm honest," Padmé said. "The war hasn't even truly started and I already feel as if I've aged years, but let's not linger on that. How is your charge?"
"Adjusting," Bail said. "I offered to take him home to Breha, but he decided that he wanted to stay on Coruscant. I'm not sure whether it's the proximity to the Jedi or if it's because he has to protect me in turn for keeping him safe, but I decided it would be beneficial for his health to remain at my side."
Padmé smiled at him, honestly and truly happy. "I'm relieved to hear that."
Finally, some good news during this catastrophe. When the Jedi had taken them all back to Coruscant, nobody had been too sure what to do with little Boba Fett. Technically speaking, his father – no matter how undeserving Padmé thought him of the title – was a deceased criminal and there were enough people who wanted Boba to pay for his father's crimes. Hi status as a clone also didn't really improve his situation. Padmé would have taken Boba in himself, as would the Jedi, but neither was quite the right fit, and when Bail Organa had offered to take him in, then that was just good fortune.
"If you ever need someone to babysit, I can jump in last minute," Padmé joked.
Bail smiled and nodded. "I'll be sure to keep that in mind, Padmé, but I believe Boba would protest quite heavily against being babysitted."
"He can be part of my protective detail then," she amended. "I'm sure he will do excellent work."
X
The Council room was dead silent.
"You're joking, aren't you?" Qui-Gon asked, allowing disbelief to seep into his voice.
Whereas some of his fellow Masters smiled in tired exhaustion, others only rolled their eyes.
"A new member this Council needs," Yoda said. "Wise in the Living Force you are and raised a brilliant Padawan you did. A new member of this Council you may be if you accept."
Qui-Gon wondered what Dooku would say about this. His Master had already departed with his own clone battalion, heading straight to the Outer Rim and into the zones that promised the most gruesome battles. Dooku was a brilliant talker and given his relationship with the Senate, he'd probably be more useful on the Council than Qui-Gon. He had already been on the Council once.
Qui-Gon knew he was stubborn and thick-headed and unlikely to change his mind unless proven wrong. Both Dooku and Obi-Wan had told and shown him so often enough. Qui-Gon wasn't chosen for delicate and amicable peace talks. He usually went to do the negotiations where they expected things to blow up, and more often than not, they did.
He was not the best option for a War Council, especially when he struggled to wield the Force as he used to.
"Why me?" he finally asked when he didn't know what other question there was left to voice.
"Love this Order more than anyone else, you do. Had Knight and Padawan Skywalker not found their way here, found your way to them, you would have. Listen well to the world, you do. Not afraid to speak your words, you are. Ready for this, you are."
Not yet. Speak first. Right a wrong, my dear child, explain your scars—
"I have to talk to Anakin," Qui-Gon said, his heart hurting at the thought of the youth, yet rejoicing at finally getting a glimpse of the Force again. "I cannot give you an answer before I spoke to him."
The Masters nodded and Qui-Gon left.
X
Anakin was easy to find, hiding away in one of the lowest accessible levels of the temple. These days, he was either at Obi-Wan's sickbed when Obi-Wan was asleep, at his mother's when she wasn't telling him to finally go talk to Obi-Wan, hiding away in Padmé's apartments or down here. Qui-Gon had first thought that Anakin would try to go deeper, search for what lingered beneath the warm marble of their temple, but he never moved from his spot.
"Anakin."
The Padawan winced when his name was called, then slowly turned his head only to return to staring blankly at his hands. He looked absolutely miserable, tired too. Qui-Gon sighed.
"Do you remember the mission to Naboo? When we accompanied Padmé back to it?"
Anakin gave no sign that he was listening to Qui-Gon, but he decided to keep talking anyway. "When we entered the ship, you collapsed. Something set you off, something incredibly dark and harmful, and, best I could tell, it flipped a switch for you. Revealed something it shouldn't have."
Anakin's hands curled to fists as Qui-Gon sat down next to him. "Obi-Wan and I didn't know what to do, so we- no, I decided to do what I thought was best. I blocked those memories, dressed them up in kinder images."
Even now, so many years later, Qui-Gon remembered it so clearly. The chains wrapped around Anakin's entire body, the sun burning him, reminding him that he was not supposed to be there.
"And then, when you tried to heal me later on, you needed the knowledge that I had hidden from you to do better."
"To let you die, you mean," Anakin said. His voice was hoarse as if he hadn't spoken in days. "It would have stopped me from resurrecting you."
"Yes," Qui-Gon agreed. "I would have died and it would have been alright because it was my time. My actions took away something you should be able to recognize subconsciously and I want to apologize for it."
Silence followed Qui-Gon's statement as they let his words linger. It was true. That he realized now. Whatever he had done, it had shifted something within Anakin that wasn't meant to be shifted sideways.
"I think you made me human," Anakin replied, wings unfurling as bones cracked. "I don't think I was meant to be human."
His eyes were still closed, but Qui-Gon could still fill all of them watching him, waiting for a reaction, a confirmation.
"No, you were not," Qui-Gon replied. "And I'm sorry I made you something you weren't supposed to be in my fear of what you might have become in that moment."
"I want to be human," Anakin muttered. He stretched out his fingers, sharp claws, golden like his teeth, bleeding as if from scratching his arms raw, trying to dissect himself and sew his flesh back together in the right way, anything less hurtful. "I don't want to be like this. Everything is so loud and I'm always too much and if I get angry, I break the world apart. It isn't fair that I can feel so much, but I'm not allowed to embrace it."
"Oh, Anakin." All thoughts of logically expressing this to his Grandpadawan were forgotten. "Who told you that you can't embrace your emotions? You just can't let them become too much. You can't let them consume you. You need to find your balance again."
Qui-Gon knew it was a cruel demand to make when he had been so afraid of what would become of Anakin almost a decade ago now. There was no telling whether Anakin would still exist once he found that balance again or whether he'd return to his silent parent. After all, what parent would abandon their child if not because they knew they weren't needed anymore?
"I'm scared," Anakin admitted. "I was afraid my mother would be put back together again wrongly if I healed her so I lashed out and murdered all of them in cold blood and then I was scared to lose Obi-Wan and instead he lost his arm because of me and I'm scared that if I try to fix me, I won't be me at all. I know I can do it. I've been looking, I can see where you used your paint on me, but I just—"
Anakin looked up, bright blue eyes staring at Qui-Gon as he cried and wrapped his arms around him, hiding his face in his robes.
"I don't know what to do."
Gently, Qui-Gon held onto Anakin. How strange that a being as bright and strong as him needed an anchor as fragile as Qui-Gon. He ran his fingers through Anakin's hair, humming a melody under his breath he'd been taught years ago on a small Mid Rim planet.
Minutes passed, hours without either of them moving until Anakin's shoulders stopped trembling.
"I can't tell you what the right path is, Anakin. You have to decide that for yourself. The only advice I can give you is this question: do you love the Jedi?"
"What?" Anakin's confusion was painted across his face in broad brushstrokes.
Qui-Gon smiled. "I asked if you loved the Jedi?"
"Of course! You're my home, my family! How could I not?"
"Good." Qui-Gon nodded. "Then you will remind yourself of the fact that you love your family and that your family loves you every day and every action you take will be in this knowledge. Do not act against this love in your heart, Anakin, and may it ease the burden on your mind."
May it guide you well.
X
Obi-Wan's hand trembled. He hardly had any control over his new appendage and it frustrated him to no end. He was a perfectionist at heart, had spent hours training his fine motor control to become a Master of his form. He tried to keep his breathing under control, to focus, and not let the pain overwhelm him. If not for his own sake and to resist the temptation of just throwing his lightsaber halfway across the room, then for Anakin.
His Padawan already felt so guilty for Obi-Wan's injury, he didn't want to make him feel worse.
He couldn't stand the thought of looking at Anakin's sad eyes.
"Rough night?"
Obi-Wan turned his head around to find Shmi standing at the entrance of the training hall. Her injuries had healed well during her stay with the Healers, only a few faint scars across her face and shoulders revealing what she had been through. She was dressed ready for battle, wearing the new armor the Jedi had been given. Obi-Wan had tried it on once and immediately wished he could message Satine and ask her whether he could borrow one of hers for the war. Mandalorian armor was so much more comfortable.
Not that he thought the Jedi should wear any at all.
"Are you shipping out?" he asked.
"Yes, Dooku asked for backup. Apparently, he's been dealing with a Sith apprentice – a different one than the one you encountered on Geonosis – and intends to chase her down. Someone must take over his battalion. Since he dragged me back home from Tatooine, I'll return the favor."
"Take Anakin with you," Obi-Wan heard himself say. "He needs to get out of the temple."
"You haven't talked yet," Shmi stated, her tone not allowing for any disagreement.
"No," Obi-Wan agreed. "And I don't think Anakin will talk to me as long as he hasn't gotten a proper break. So, please?"
Shmi studied him for a moment, then she sighed. "Alright, but the moment you're fit for duty, he's your Padawan again."
Obi-Wan managed to crack a smile at that. "Of course, I'd never trade him for another."
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