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By Aeshna (aeshna@kelmaith.demon.co.uk)
Archive: Yes please! DPS, MA, OKEB, anybody else who
wants it; just let me know where it ends up.
Category: angst!
Rating: PG
Warnings: post-TPM (follows canon), character
death
Spoilers: not really.
Summary: some promises are better off broken....
Disclaimer: not mine, alas, no matter *how* many toys I
buy. Everything here belongs to George.
Feedback: of any variety is very much appreciated but
not essential -- I'll post anyway! I've suffered for my
art, now it's
your turn....
Notes: some ideas seem to be universally seen as a bad
thing by the Jedi. This is a quick look at what might
happen if the
Council were a little less squeamish about certain things....
It's also a contribution for Dead Padawan Day
(http://www.ravenswing.com/DPS/), so you have been warned!
<g>
Thanks to Dee for her wondrous beta, which ensured that the
finished fic is a lot more angsty than the first draft
was.
Also thanks to Clarence and Res for offering support and
helpful suggestions along the way. It wouldn't be the
same without you guys!
* * = italics
"Wish to speak with us, you do?"
"Yes, Master Yoda," Obi-Wan replied respectfully, his head bowed as he knelt in one of the anterooms of the Council chamber. The young knight looked haggard in the ruddy light of the sunset beyond the tall windows; his Force signature was threaded with a fatigue that escaped his shields with painful ease. "There is a matter that I must... I fear that I have made a terrible mistake."
The aged master narrowed his green eyes. "No shame there is, in acknowledging mistakes. Only in prolonging them." He leaned forward in his seat, inspecting the man before him. "Speak you should," he said kindly.
Obi-Wan raised his head, his gaze shifting from Yoda to Mace
Windu. "Masters, I... I do not think that I can train
Anakin. I
have tried but he is too strong and there is an anger in him
that I can neither contain nor release."
"You knew the boy was strong when you took him on," Windu pointed out.
"I know, Master, but I did not fully appreciate how strong he
was. And he is growing stronger every day. I try to
teach him but as he grows more aware of his power the less
interested he seems in what I have to say." Obi-Wan
closed his eyes as if in pain. "I have tried to find
answers within the Force but all that my meditations will
show me is...." He trailed off, the words
apparently too hard to say.
"Is darkness," Yoda finished for him. "Seen it also, I have."
"Then you would consider assigning him to another master?" There was hope in the young knight's voice. "I know I promised Qui-Gon... but Anakin needs a more experienced hand than mine. He is only thirteen, he would adapt well to the change."
Yoda and Windu exchanged a glance, the elder Jedi's ears flicking back and down in a movement that spoke of regret. Obi-Wan looked from one to the other as the silence went on a moment too long. "Masters?" he tried, uncertain.
Windu steepled his fingers and sighed. "I only wish it were that simple, Obi-Wan."
"But --"
"Consider it we have," Yoda said. "When darkness we
saw, alternatives we sought. Other paths. But no
light, we found.
Only darkness. Chosen One he may be, but no good of him
will come."
"Master Yoda, he's just a little boy --"
"Obi-Wan," Windu interrupted. "When Qui-Gon first brought Anakin to the Temple, you yourself said that he was dangerous."
"I know, but..."
"But wished to carry out Qui-Gon's last request, you did." Yoda's ears drooped sadly at the thought of his former padawan. "A good Jedi, Qui-Gon was, but no foresight had he. Foresight, you have. Sensitive you are." Leaving his seat, he shuffled forward, placing a gnarled hand on one brown-clad shoulder in a gesture of compassion. "And, alas... right you were."
Obi-Wan made a small, choked sound, his gaze fixed on the tiled floor. "I have failed."
"No. Done, you have, as well as any could have asked. The Force wishes this one for the Dark. Accept that we must. Misguided, would further training be."
"But I promised...."
"Sorry, we are. But unacceptable the risk is."
"Then he is to be released from the Jedi?" Obi-Wan looked from one master to the other again, confused. "But where would he go? We cannot send him back to slavery on Tatooine. And the Sith --"
"Would snap him up in an instant," Windu said gravely. "We cannot send him away from the Temple. The potential danger would be unthinkable."
"Seen this too, we have," Yoda intoned.
Obi-Wan frowned. "Then what will happen to him?
If he cannot be...." He trailed off, paling as
horrified realisation dawned in
his grey eyes. "Oh. Oh no. You can't...."
"Kinder, this way is. Painless, will it be."
The young knight stared at them, shocked disbelief spreading
across his features as Yoda's words sank in. "He's a
child! You
can't seriously be proposing that we --"
"Obi-Wan." Windu leaned forward in his seat, his
statement sympathetic. "If there were any other option
we would take it.
He is a child now but in a few years time he will be a man
and a man of immense power... and one who is fated to turn no
matter what any of us do."
"Master Yoda said that his future was only clouded," the knight protested, clearly distressed.
The wizened old Jedi shook his head with a sigh. "Cleared the clouds have. Only darkness lies beyond."
"But he...." Obi-Wan swallowed hard. "He's just a
boy. He hasn't *done* anything yet! And I... I
*care* about him. That is
why I wanted him to go to another -- because I cannot give
him the training he deserves. I can't just allow him
to... to be...."
"We lose one life now or many later," Windu told him.
"In some of the future paths Yoda has seen, the entire Jedi
Order is
destroyed, torn apart by Skywalker's madness. Even in
the easier futures, the death toll is immense. I am
sure that your own
visions have been no easier."
"No," the young knight whispered, "they have not. But I cannot allow *this* to happen!" He looked up, his statement determined. "It's wrong. It's against everything we stand for."
"We stand for the preservation of the light. The manner
of that preservation may not always be pleasant but it is
always
necessary, regardless of the cost." Windu leaned
forward, his eyes searching Obi-Wan's face. "We face a
great threat here. We can deal with it now or deal with
it later. The only difference is in the number of
casualties."
The knight shook his head. "But I *promised*.... There *has* to be another way."
"I only wish there were."
"Go," Yoda said kindly. "Meditate on this you should. Peace you must find before done this may be. Your own answers, must you seek."
"Yes, Masters." Obi-Wan stood shakily, his eyes downcast and his face set. He hesitated a moment, then bowed and made his way to the door, leaving as quickly as he could without running. The two Council members watched him go.
"Troubled he is," Yoda noted.
Windu raised an eyebrow. "Hardly surprising, given that we've just passed down a death sentence on his padawan. We have to handle this carefully -- we don't want to lose Kenobi as well. He's too valuable to let turn."
"Come to see our way, he shall," the elder Jedi said calmly.
"Done, this will be -- must be -- but understand why, he
should.
If understand and accept he can, then lose him we will
not." He nodded, as if in agreement with his own
words. "Adaptable, Obi-Wan is. Young, too.
Recover he shall, in time."
"How much time?" Windu looked sceptical. "He's a
good knight -- we need more like him. It's a pity that
we have to lose
Skywalker's potential but --"
"Recovered from Skywalker, some potential may yet be," Yoda toldhim. "Thirteen, he is, and human male...."
Windu looked thoughtful. "That could be a worthwhile course to pursue. A routine medical should be easy enough to arrange.... I take it that we won't be telling Kenobi about this?"
Yoda looked towards the door that the young knight had fled
through. "We shall not. Troubled enough already,
he is. This
also... he does not need. Better to let him think that
ended this has."
"Agreed." Windu let his gaze shift to the ever-moving
skies beyond the window, the jagged spires of the cityscape
stretching
to the darkening horizon. Yoda had described visions in
which he had seen proud Coruscant fall, the skyline ablaze as
millions died at Skywalker's hand. What they did now
was not entered into lightly but the alternatives were too
ugly to contemplate. Better to sacrifice the one to
save the many.... "Qui-Gon should never have brought
him here."
A snort. "Whatever Qui-Gon pleased, Qui-Gon did. Meant well, but think things through, he did not. Too old, the boy was, to be taken. Learned this from Xanatos he should have."
"Qui-Gon was never interested in learning from his mistakes."
Windu sighed. "A shame that this lesson must fall to
Obi-Wan
instead."
"Fall to someone, it must. A final trial for Kenobi, this is."
"Let us hope that he is strong enough to survive it."
Obi-Wan made his way back to his quarters with a heavy heart. He had requested the meeting with Yoda and Windu in the hope that he would be separated from his padawan... but not like this, never like this. For all that Anakin's strength and potential frightened him, he still cared for the boy, still wanted to see him survive and grow even if he himself were not his teacher. What had been suggested was horrific, insane... and yet he could almost see the Council's argument. Visions of death had haunted him for too long for him to deny their significance.
Numbly, he realised that he had reached his destination, the
apartment he had been assigned on his return from
Naboo. The
apartment he would lose for smaller quarters if he ceased to
have an apprentice. Suddenly dizzy, he leaned against
the door,
resting his forehead on the smooth, cool surface, trying to
think. Something like shock had set in as he left the
Councillors but now it was receding and he could feel the
impact of their words anew. It wasn't as though he were under
any illusions about the methods the Order sometimes used --
there were times when taking prisoners simply wasn't feasible
-- but to kill a child? One of their own? *His* own?
Fighting down the lump in his throat, Obi-Wan pushed back from the door. It wouldn't do to be seen in the corridors like this. He had to control his emotions, at least until he had the chance to sort through them in meditation. Only then he could begin seeking alternatives to the Council's proposal....
There was a clatter of footsteps behind him as he palmed the
door open, a familiar bright presence in the Force.
Throwing his
shields up, Obi-Wan made himself smile as he turned to greet
his padawan. "Good evening, Anakin. How was your
day?"
"Hi, Master!" the thirteen year-old exclaimed cheerfully, wrapping his arms around the knight in a welcoming hug. "Classes were okay. Philosophy was as dull as ever -- does Master Hyth'yan *have* another tone of voice? -- but astronavigation was great. Xenobiology was pretty good too -- did you know that the Ratiithan lyseworm has seventeen different stages to its life cycle? Master Krel had one in a jar and it was even uglier than a womprat! And at lunch, Nasylen said that she'd...."
Obi-Wan let Anakin chatter on as he steered the boy into
their rooms, trying, at least for a few moments, not to think
about his
possible fate. There were times, like this, when it was
easy to forget that Anakin was anything other than a normal
padawan, as
gifted as any Jedi was but no more than that. Easy to
forget that he was the Chosen One, fated to bring balance at
any cost. The horrors of Obi-Wan's visions seemed to
fade a little in the presence of the enthusiastic youngster,
until he could almost
dismiss them as groundless nightmares....
And then he would remember the childish fits of temper, when the Force would darken and curl around the boy like a storm, ready to be unleashed at Anakin's whim. The one time he had lashed out at his master, Obi-Wan had been able to turn the attack aside, dissipating the angry energy before it could do harm. Less fortunate had been his sparring partner in a group exercise, who had needed to have his arm set in three places after accidentally clipping the padawan with his training 'sabre. And as Anakin's command of the Force increased, there was always the fear that next time could be worse....
"Master?"
Obi-Wan blinked, looking down at Anakin, who had an statement of concern on his face. "I... I'm sorry, Padawan."
"Are you all right?"
"Of course, Anakin. I'm just a... little tired right now."
The boy frowned. "You don't sleep enough."
"You're right, I don't." Sighing, Obi-Wan let himself
drop onto the rather aged couch that had come with the room,
trying not to think of the sleepless nights that had plagued
him of late. "Unlike some, who have trouble getting out of
bed in the
morning...." He reached out and ruffled Anakin's hair
fondly as the boy settled beside him.
His padawan giggled and squirmed away. "I'm preserving my strength for the day, Master!"
"You're just making sure that *you* don't have to prepare breakfast."
"You're a much better cook than I am." Anakin grinned and leaned against his master's side, relaxing as Obi-Wan slid an arm around his shoulder. He snuggled closer. "I'd probably poison us both."
The knight felt a surge of almost painful affection for the
boy at his side and had to fight down a sob. Was this
what it felt like
to be a parent? To know that this little life was under
your protection, held there by utter trust and unquestioning
love? He
had never really known his family, had instead been raised by
the Jedi so that his earliest memories were of the pale walls
of the
creche and his fellow initiates, not the warm arms of his
mother. He didn't know how a parent should behave, had no
idea if he were any substitute for his padawan's absent
mother. He did his best but could never really know if
it were enough.... And now it might not matter whether
it were enough or not.
Obi-Wan sat up, pulling away from his padawan. He *had* to get some time for meditation -- for all that he usually enjoyed quiet time with Anakin, this was agony. "I think I should get an early night."
The boy blinked, then grinned brightly. "Good idea, Master. I can get myself to bed."
"After several hours in front of the vid screen, no
doubt." Obi-Wan allowed a sliver of humour into his
voice -- his apprentice
could be so easy to read sometimes....
"It's educational," Anakin said cheerily.
"Of course it is, Padawan. *Especially* the sports channels." Obi-Wan raised an eyebrow and was rewarded with a blush. He smiled and tugged briefly on the short blond braid. "Just try not to abuse my absence *too* much, Anakin...."
"Master, would *I* do that...?"
Secluded in his room, with Anakin thoroughly distracted by
whatever utterly unsuitable vid trash the boy had managed to
find,
Obi-Wan shed his clothes, settled down at the end of his bed
and attempted to meditate. After several fruitless
minutes he flopped back onto the covers in frustration, his
calm centre elusive amidst the chaos of his thoughts.
Now that the shock had lifted and reaction taken hold, he was
left with a tangled mess of emotions that he would have to
pick through to find any degree of peace.
Taking a deep breath, the young knight began to order his thoughts.
The thought of losing Anakin hurt, could not help but hurt
given the nature of the training bond they shared. To
think that the
boy might die at the hands of the Jedi was appalling... and
yet he could not deny the danger that seemed to hover around
his padawan, darkening the futures despite all that anyone
could do. It was against everything he had been raised
to believe but was there really any other option? The
Council seemed to think not and the threat had to be
neutralised somehow....
*No,* he told himself fiercely. *There HAS to be
another way! But what...?* Not finding any easy
answers, he turned his
thoughts inward again.
A part of him felt shame at his failure to carry out
Qui-Gon's last request. His master had entrusted the
boy's training to him,
a final act of faith that he had *tried* to fulfil. His
master had loved him, his master had *trusted* him... his
master....
Obi-Wan blinked as realisation washed over him, the mist of grief-ridden sentiment suddenly lifting from his mind. His master had loved him in his way, yes, but he had also taken shameless advantage of his padawan's devotion time and again. Right up until he laid eyes on the little blond menace that was Anakin Skywalker... at which point Obi-Wan had become just so much excess baggage to be shed at the earliest opportunity. It still hurt to think about that scene in the Council Chamber, when he had been openly discarded in favour of Qui-Gon's new protege, still hurt to remember how he had been the one to have to apologise in an effort to heal the breach that had opened between them. Twelve years of blind adoration and at the end of it all, Qui-Gon's final thoughts had been for the boy, for his training.
He had never even said goodbye.
Looking back on those last words now, Obi-Wan found that the
only emotion he could summon was anger. Anger that his
loyalty had been for nothing, anger that Anakin had come
between them even then... but mostly anger that Qui-Gon had
put him in an utterly impossible position. What choice
had he been given regarding Anakin's training? Qui-Gon
had been his guiding light for half his life, there was no
way that he could deny the man's dying wish, no matter what
strain it put on his own position. At his age he should
be going on solo missions, learning his independence and his
place within the Order, not driving himself half mad trying
to train his master's latest and last pet project. It
wasn't Anakin's fault -- that much he couldn't blame on the
boy -- but it was not the right way to begin a training
relationship. That they had managed to bond at all was
something of a
miracle....
Anakin. He was here to concentrate on Anakin, not on bonds past. Ruthlessly pushing all thought of Qui-Gon aside he tried to empty his mind once again, seeking his centre.
This time, he found it.
And the visions were waiting for him.
Worlds in flames, their continents ablaze as vast ships
pounded their surfaces with fire. Anakin's face, older
yet still
recognisable, splashed with blood and twisted with hate as he
swung his lightsabre with obvious intent to kill. The
sound of
harsh breathing, as if through a respirator mask. The
Temple a burned-out shell, abandoned by the Order in their
flight. Queen
Amidala screaming in pain, her belly swollen with advanced
pregnancy. The Jedi hunted across the galaxy,
slaughtered like
animals. Darkness everywhere, staining the futures with
blood.... And through it all, the terrifying knowledge that
he would survive to see it come to pass, that he would
weather the purges to live with the guilt of having released
the architect of it all into the galaxy....
His eyes snapping open, Obi-Wan pulled himself back into the
present, his heart racing. So much evil, so much
destruction....
Desperately, he plunged himself back into the dark imagery,
seeking other paths, alternative fates. And found
nothing, as he
had found nothing on every previous occasion he had tried
this.
Dimly, Obi-Wan became aware of the tears coursing down his cheeks as he wept for Anakin and for himself. In truth, there was no decision to make -- the loss of the cheerful innocent would hurt but it would hurt more to release such a monster into the universe. Anakin was a child now, but he would grow. And change. And then the boy now happily watching vids on his master's viewscreen would be transformed into a creature of darkness with the blood of billions on his hands. To kill a child was a terrible thing, but could they honestly afford to let him live? Which would be the greater crime?
Whatever happened, Obi-Wan's conscience would be an inevitable casualty and this one death felt as though it would be as hard to bear as millions, familiarity making it more painful than the demise of strangers. And yet the sacrifice *had* to be made....
Sniffing, Obi-Wan wiped at his eyes, drying the tears as he
set his mind to the task ahead. He was a Jedi. He
was trained to
make hard choices. And if this one was harder than
most, it was because it had heavier repercussions than most,
for the entire
galaxy as well as for the Jedi Order. It would hurt but
he would survive it, even if Anakin did not.
Decision made, he rolled himself in his covers and let himself be claimed by thankfully dreamless sleep.
The Healers' Wing had always made Obi-Wan feel slightly
uncomfortable -- ever since his childhood he had hated being
ill
or injured, unable to tend to himself, and the sterile
corridors and wards of this section of the Temple always
reminded him of
those feelings of helplessness, of dependence. He had
always told himself that those impressions were misguided,
foolish, that this place was dedicated to the light and to
the preservation of life....
But not today. Today would see something else entirely.
Anakin walked at his side, complaining that this was his
third day of tests and it was getting *boring*. Obi-Wan
smiled sadly at his padawan's protests -- for all the boy's
words, Anakin had accepted that the tests were necessary
because of his abnormally high midichlorian count and had
submitted himself to the Healers with remarkably good
grace. He had been quite descriptive in his accounts of
the procedures... all bar one, which he had seemed keen to
gloss over. Obi-Wan had not pushed him on that,
remembering it all too well himself. The words "here,
kid, take this cup and go fantasise about your master," were
still indelibly
stuck in his mind.
On the previous days, Obi-Wan had sent Anakin to the Healers alone, needing the time to meditate and prepare for what must be done. Yoda and Mace Windu had visited him, talking him through what would happen and what to expect from a suddenly broken training bond... as if he hadn't experienced *that* already. They had discussed the moral implications of the act, how both action and inaction would carry their price, and at the end of it all were reconciled to the necessity of this pre-emptive execution. All that needed to be done now was the act itself.
"What's next, Master?" Anakin asked, trying unsuccessfully to
keep his frustration out of his voice. "I don't think
I've got
anything *left* for them to sample or measure!"
Obi-Wan smiled weakly. "Just a few... vaccinations, Padawan. We don't want to you getting ill on a mission, now do we?"
The boy snorted. "Doesn't my being the 'Chosen One' protect me from bugs?"
"Better safe than sorry...."
A blue-robed Healer stepped out of a side corridor, beckoning them to follow her. Obi-Wan recognised her -- Yushana, one of the more senior Masters and the one assigned to carry out this most delicate of tasks. She led them to a small room containing a wheeled bunk and some monitoring equipment, the sterile surroundings making the young knight shiver as he realised that this was where it was to be done. It seemed so... impersonal.
"You must be Anakin," Yushana said as she settled the blond padawan on the bunk. "I just have a few jabs to give you and then we can send you on your way! I know how you boys hate to be kept down here...." She raised a silvered eyebrow at Obi-Wan, evidently remembering his protests at that age.
Anakin didn't answer, instead looking at her suspiciously. Obi-Wan could sense the sudden wash of uncertainty over the bond as the boy's Force-sense alerted him to peril at the hands of this stranger. Swallowing hard, the knight laid a calming hand on his apprentice's shoulder, preparing himself for the course he had decided on the previous night. "Master Yushana?"
"Yes, Knight Kenobi?" The Healer was preparing the hypospray, filling it with an innocuous-looking clear liquid.
"If I may, I would like to administer the vaccine myself."
Yushana looked at him, startled. "That really isn't necessary."
"I know." He had been told that he would be spared this, that he didn't even have to be there when this was done... but he had felt that he owed Anakin this much. "But I... it is my duty. There may come a time when I need to administer medication in the field and, well, any practice would be welcome."
"If you are sure." The Healer seemed rather reluctant to hand the injector over.
"I am," Obi-Wan told her firmly, taking the instrument as it
was finally offered. He stared at the hypospray for a
few seconds,
strengthening his resolve and feeling the guilt gnaw at his
conscience anew. It seemed too easy. Too
callous. How could he
send his apprentice into this alone...?
Yushana cleared her throat. "There is only one dose in the hypospray, Knight Kenobi," she said carefully.
Obi-Wan blinked and looked up at her, only then realising the
direction his thoughts had been taking. Swallowing hard
and
dismissing the idea from his mind, he turned to his
apprentice. "Roll up your sleeve, Padawan."
"Master?" Anakin looked decidedly unconvinced. "I don't want to. What's in there -- it's dangerous. I can feel it."
Pushing his mental shields up as far as they would go,
Obi-Wan replied, "It's... vaccine for Bhegrrhyzan meningitis,
which is an
extremely virulent disease found in several systems.
It's a live vaccine, so you can probably sense the disease
organisms in there, although I assure you that they're
weakened to the point that will do you no real harm."
"But Master, it feels --"
"Padawan, your sleeve...."
Anakin tensed, looking at the plastic and chrome of the
hypospray with suspicion... but then he relaxed, looking up
at his mentor with a determined smile as he pulled the cloth
towards his shoulder as requested. "It still feels
wrong. But I trust you,
Master."
In that instant, Obi-Wan's nerve almost gave out, but he forced himself to be calm as he positioned himself beside his apprentice on the bunk. Pressing the delivery nozzle against the tanned skin, he murmured, "This will make you feel a little sleepy -- don't fight it, you'll just give yourself a headache."
His padawan's smile was sunny. "Okay, Master." Anakin didn't even twitch as Obi-Wan pressed the trigger stud and sent the drug into his bloodstream.
The dose delivered, the young knight threw the injector to
one side, pulling his apprentice across his lap to cradle him
in his
arms. Anakin looked at his master as though the man had
gone mad but then his eyes began to sag shut and his head
lolled loosely against Obi-Wan's shoulder as the drug took
effect. Yushana stepped forward to pat Obi-Wan's arm,
her gaze sympathetic. Then she turned and left the
room, leaving the pair to this most private of moments.
Obi-Wan held Anakin to him tightly, burying his face in the brush of golden hair as the boy's breathing grew slower and more ragged, his pulse fluttering indecisively. The Force swirled around them, confused and angry, currents of energy seeking release as the padawan's life force faded back into the void that had conceived him. Rocking the limp form in his arms, Obi-Wan let his tears flow freely, mourning the child he had come to love after such an uncertain start. It wasn't *fair*... but it had been necessary. And now it was far too late to go back.
Pain suddenly ripped through the knight's mind, the training bond dissolving as Anakin gave a soft sigh and relaxed into death. The wash of despair that crashed against him had a strangely familiar feel, carrying with it the memories of Naboo, when he had cradled his dead master as he now held his dead apprentice. There was a curious sense of completion to it.
Closing his eyes, Obi-Wan let the visions come to him again. For a few moments there was nothing, as though the possibilities were rearranging themselves... and then his inner eye cleared and showed him its fragile glimpses of the futures.
The darkness was not completely gone, but it had receded to
mere possibility, rather than utter certainty. The Sith
were still out
there, a presence in the Force that complemented the Jedi as
much as it opposed them, and there would be trouble there
yet... but the light still stood a fighting chance.
"I'm so sorry, Anakin," Obi-Wan whispered into the boy's tear-damp hair as the body began to cool in his arms. "So, so sorry. But it had to be done. We have hope now. We have hope...."
Predictably, Anakin did not answer.
END