TITLE: The Chosen part 1
Author: Sarina Argus/Aya
Rating: Will prolly go R, maybe NC-17, but that's kinda pushing in J
Summary: AU, WAY AU. What if Qui-Gon never took Obi-Wan as a
padawan?
Archive: Please do so. Eil, Crysta I think you're the only 2 that would
want
this.
Author's Note: Again I say, this is WAY AU. We're going to pretend
the JA
books #2-whatever NEVER HAPPENED. That is, Qui-Gon let Obi-Wan go.
Feedback: Please please please please please please say something.
This fic
was hard to get just right. Let me know if what you think.
The first year was the hardest. They kept him hidden, Force blind, drugged
more often than not. It wasn't a comfortable existence. But he was
Jedi.
He survived.
The second year, he was close to giving up hope. Surely the order wouldn't
have given up on him by now. He had friends, powerful friends as well as a
powerful master. Well, former master, he corrected himself. Surely
he
wouldn't have given him up without seeing a body or feeling his presence in
the Force. The others would laugh, 'You're fooling yourself, old man.
Whatever you were before, those days were over."
The third year he was traded away like a beast.
And now he found himself on the block again, his dealer showing the slave off
as best as he could. Not many buyers this time, he thought ruefully.
Am I
truly that old? That useless? He stood up a bit straighter, his face
a mask
of serenity. He'd not been able to call on the Force for some time because
of the slaver's implants, but his training had not left him.
"I'll give you 200 for him, no more." A new voice called out,
and Qui-Gon
grit his teeth.
"Two hundred? You bankrupt me!" his dealer wheedled.
"He's worth at least
five."
"He's too old, and too proud. I'd most likely end up killing him
before
breaking him. I'm only offering because you're desperate." The
buyer read
him well. "Two hundred for him, and three for the woman."
The dealer hesitated, then nodded. And Qui-Gon Jinn, once revered master
of
the Jedi Knight order, now found himself at the mercy of a new master.
The trip across the desert was long, but cool in the night air, and Qui-Gon
wondered what kind of man his new owner was. He glanced at the cloaked
figure, whose features were all but hidden in his flowing headscarf.
Thinking back at how quickly the deal was closed, he wondered if his new
master was as calculating as he appeared to be.
What ever he was, he was a merciful one. The woman he bought begged that
he
buy her child as well. The boy was also up for sale, but was advertised as
an amoran so the price was much higher. Yet, he paid the asking
price
without flinching, though it was obvious the man wasn't looking for a
pleasure slave. Qui-Gon glanced again at the man, a question on his lips.
"Ask already, or sit still. It's very distracting."
Qui-Gon blinked, startled by the amusement in the rich tenor. "I was
curious
why. I doubt you lack for companionship. You don't seem the
type."
His new master snorted. "Just looking out for my interests. I'm
not
foolish, and it was a small price to pay for loyalty." He paused a
moment,
then added, "Not that it should matter to you."
"I was just concerned for the boy," Qui-Gon started.
"Oh?" Grey eyes turned to him, piercing him with a look.
"Since when have
you ever been concerned about a child's welfare?"
The older man flinched. "I'm not a monster," he protested.
"No, you're a slave. My slave, and you'll do well to remember
that." The
young man turned his attention back to the sands, leaving Qui-Gon at a loss
for words. Turning his attention to the manacles on his wrists, he began
the
meditation of the wind.
The farming compound was not large by any means, but looking at the advanced
technology, the well-maintained droids and the number of beings awaiting the
skiff, it was a very successful one. Qui-Gon was led off down the ramp
into
a holding compound and into a large building. There he was stripped,
cleaned
and dressed in pale leggings and a loose white shirt. He was then lead by
another droid to a waiting area.
He didn't wait much longer. His owner strode in, tossing his cloak to a
waiting servant before helping himself to a drink. "I trust you were
fed
before the auction," he said, keeping his back to the larger man.
Qui-Gon shook his head, his hands bound in front of him. "None of us
were."
The young man motioned to an older female servant. "See that the
others are
taken care of." She curtseyed quickly, then started out.
"And please bring
dinner for my guest." She nodded and left them alone.
He finally turned and faced Qui-Gon, who was suddenly struck with a sense of
deja-vu. "Have we met before?"
The younger man smiled, though it was hardly a comforting look. "A
long
while ago, Qui-Gon, though I wondered if you'd remember me." He
leaned back,
folding his arms over his chest.
"I apologize. These past years are hardly what I would consider to be
routine for me."
"I wouldn't think so. This is hardly the place I'd expect to find the
legendary Jedi Master Qui-Gon Jinn. Not that I'm complaining, of
course."
Qui-Gon blinked. "You know me?"
The young man gestured to a large chair across from him. "Of course.
Anyone
familiar with the Jedi order knows your reputation." He strode around
the
room, waving his glass as he spoke. "Rebellious, arrogant Qui-Gon
Jinn,
curse and blessing of the Jedi Council. A man whose heart was so hardened
by
the turning of his second apprentice, he swore never to take another
apprentice, will of the Force be damned."
Qui-Gon flinched at that his words. "You have me at an advantage
sir."
"Good." The young man smiled and took a seat across from
Qui-Gon. "How many
boys and girls did you send to the 'corps?' Ten? Twenty? All because
of
your Sith-be- damned pride. Setting his glass on the table between them,
the
young man leaned forward, resting his chin on his tented fingers.
"Dreams
died and lives ended because of your vow. Yours and others like you."
"It was the will of the Force..." Qui-Gon muttered, then was cut
off by a
bitter laugh.
"It was the will of the Force that we be brought together. Yoda saw
it, I
saw it, the whole damn order saw it. Everyone but you. And now
the Force
brings you here. To me. We were destined to be together."
Another
unsettling smile. "Ironic that you are not the master in this
case."
Qui-Gon glared at him. "Who are you?"
He swept up his glass in a silent salute. "I'm Obi-Wan Kenobi.
And you
belong to me."
end part 1
Qui-Gon stared at the young man whom Yoda wanted him to take as his third
padawan. Obi-Wan Kenobi. A talented young man whose Force signature
almost
blinded him when they met during the choosing. The boy wanted so much to
be
a Jedi, wanted to serve the Force as a knight. Kenobi's desire was so
strong, it frightened him then, so much so Qui-Gon rejected the boy that
begged to be his apprentice. He let the boy go.
The man the boy became smiled again, and that smile frightened him. Even with
Qui-Gon's suppressed force sensitivity, he could feel Kenobi's signature,
stronger now with light and dark energy flowing through him, shifting in the
air between them as he tossed back a wheat-gold lock of hair.
"I suppose you never thought you'd see me again, did you Qui-Gon?"
Obi-Wan
leaned back in his chair and raised his glass to his lips.
"I must say it is not exactly what I expected," Qui-Gon answered,
gathering
his wits about him.
"And what were you expecting, Master Jinn?"
Qui-Gon flinched at the scorn that dripped from the honorific. "I was
expecting to be treated like a slave."
Obi-Wan cocked an eyebrow. "And how would that be? Bound,
gagged, left
naked and vulnerable in the dark? Or maybe tortured and beaten for not
performing up to standard." He set his glass down lightly.
"It can be
arranged, you know. I'd hate to disappoint you a second time..."
He
chuckled then. "Not that it would matter in this case, as I have no
desire
to cast you aside."
"What do you want?" Qui-Gon asked through clenched teeth.
Obi-Wan drawled, "For now, I want to know exactly what kind of man throws a
boy away. What kind of people condemn their young to such an
existence?"
"The Jedi do not throw away the young, they show them the path..."
Obi-Wan cut him off. "Yes, yes, they show them the path the Force has
chosen
for them. Don't tell me you actually believe that babble, I thought you
were
more intelligent than that."
"Well obviously you've not done badly," Qui-Gon noted as another
servant
brought in a tray piled high with food. "With servants, plenty to
eat, you
are more fortunate than a mere knight."
Obi-Wan laughed bitterly. "No thanks to your order, Qui-Gon.
This," he
said, gesturing to the surroundings, "came from several years of very hard
work. And powerful connections."
"So you no longer serve the agricorps?"
"You could say that," Obi-Wan replied. "More accurately, I
did not fit into
the mold of a model agricorps candidate."
"So you left."
"No. I was sold."
"Sold?" Qui-Gon was incredulous.
"For five moisture collectors, a cask of Alderaanian brandy and a night for
D'fnee with three of the dealer's favorite women." Obi-Wan shrugged.
"At
the time, it was the most they'd paid for a Jedi-reject. I suppose I
should
be happy with that." He refilled his glass. "Master D'fnee
took one look at
me and saw what he called my 'true value.' He then contacted the dealers
and
sold me to the highest bidder. And as he put the binding collar around my
neck, he said, 'Think of the good you'll be doing the others, and the order.'
He patted my behind, groped me a bit and turned me over to my new owner.
Wine?" he offered.
Qui-Gon sat, incredulous. "You were sold?"
Obi-Wan poured him a glass. "Of course. All the pretty ones
are. Neela was
sold as she didn't have the 'gift' for farming. She died there you
know."
Obi-Wan's gaze went distant. "They sold her to a group of
mercenaries. She
didn't survive the first night."
"I'm sorry," Qui-Gon offered, unable to meet the younger man's stare.
"So was D'fnee. He had to give back half the fee." His
voice was so
matter-of-fact, it unsettled the Jedi master. Just as Obi-Wan had hoped.
"And he was chosen by your council to nurture the poor children deemed
unworthy by people like you. You must be quite proud."
"Is that why I'm here? To pay for his crimes?"
"Hardly." Obi-Wan smiled then. "I have other plans
for you, but for now
please eat. I have a wonderful cook, she does wonders with the meager
supplies we have available." He turned to the figure entering the
room.
The boy was 12, maybe 13 years old, with sandy blonde hair and bright blue
eyes. His hair was cropped short in front, with a long tail falling from
his
nape. He barely gave Qui-Gon a glance before turning to Obi-Wan.
"Master," the boy started, "I've finished the last forms and my
meditations."
Obi-Wan smiled and called the boy closer. "Has Garen approved you to
move
on?"
The boy nodded. "He said I should be able to move on to blasters and
blaster
bolts."
"Excellent," Obi-Wan patted the boy's shoulder then gestured to Qui-Gon.
"Qui-Gon Jinn, this is Anakin Skywalker, my student."
Anakin looked the older man over, sizing him up. "Good evening to
you, sir."
Eyeing the meal, he added, "My mom made that. She's a really good
cook."
Glancing back at Obi-Wan, "Master?"
Obi-Wan chuckled. "Of course, Ani. I was just waiting for you.
I know how
much you dislike dining alone." He glanced at Qui-Gon again.
"I know you
don't care for children, but I hope you don't mind Ani's presence. He and
his mother always share meals with me."
An older woman entered, carrying another tray. "I'm sorry to keep you
waiting. One of the girls needed my help."
"Not at all," Obi-Wan said smoothly, taking the tray from the woman
and
setting it on the tagble. "I was just introducing our guest to Anakin.
This
is Anakin's mother, Shmi." He gestured to Qui-Gon again. "Shmi,
this is
Qui-Gon Jinn, late of the Jedi order."
"You're really a Jedi?" Anakin stared openly at the older man.
"Yes, I am," Qui-Gon answered softly, puzzling out the strange
looks both
the boy and his mother gave him. Anakin looked back at Obi-Wan, who nodded
solemnly, then back at the large man. He snorted quietly and turned
his
attention to his meal.
"Please eat, Master Jinn," Obi-Wan drawled, his tone dripping with
sarcasm.
"Lady Shmi is a wonderful cook." Shmi smiled slightly at
Obi-Wan, then
turned a wicked stare to Qui-Gon.
An awkward silence fell over the room. Qui-Gon ate lightly, carefully
watching both his would-be apprentice and the boy who called Obi-Wan master.
There were strange currents there, quick sly glances that turned into dagger
looks towards Qui-Gon. He'd not felt this uncomfortable in a very long
time.
"Mister Jinn, why did you throw my master away?"
Qui-Gon met the boy's blue eyed gaze. "I don't know what you
mean."
"Yes you do." The boy set his fork down and stared at him hard.
"You were
supposed to be with my master. I can feel it now, just like my master and
I
are meant to be together. But you didn't want him. Why? What
was wrong
with him?"
Qui-Gon cleared his throat and glanced at Obi-Wan. The young man settled
back into his chair and watched him, amused.
Anakin continued. "Well? Didn't you like him? He's really
nice and a
wizard Grey. Why didn't you teach him?"
"Anakin, I don't think I can answer that," Qui-Gon answered.
Anakin stared at him a moment longer, then turned back to his master.
"You
were right, Master."
Obi-Wan raised an eyebrow. "Oh?"
Anakin nodded. "He is a coward."
~*~*~*~*~*~*
Obi-Wan turned to Qui-Gon. "Anakin, I'm sure that Mister Jinn would
prefer
his faults not be pointed out in such a blunt fashion."
"Yes master," the boy nodded. "I apologize, sir, if I've offended
you." He
gave Qui-Gon another sly look and quickly finished his meal.
Qui-Gon, again was at a loss for words and rather than flounder, turned his
attention back to his meal. "Madam," he directed to Shmi,
"may compliment
you on a fine meal?"
"Thank you sir," she answered curtly. Turning to Obi-Wan, she
raised a
questioning eyebrow. Obi-Wan nodded. "If you'll excuse
us," she said,
standing quickly. "Anakin?"
Anakin rose then bowed to Obi-Wan, "Master"
Obi-Wan smiled warmly and ruffled the boy's hair. "Rest well, simulan.
We
have a long day ahead of us." Nodding to Shmi, "Good night, and
thank you
again for a wonderful meal."
Shmi curtseyed, then led her son from the room. Obi-Wan watched them leave
then turned back to Qui-Gon.
"Now then, I'm sure you have questions for me before we proceed."
Qui-Gon studied the young man for a few moments. "What do you want
from me?"
Obi-Wan laughed. "What do I want? That's hardly a question I
can answer to
your satisfaction over a glass of wine. Wouldn't you want to start with
something easier?"
"No, actually, I'd like you to explain what I'm doing here. Why did
you want
me?"
The smile faded. "Let's get one thing straight, Jinn. I don't want
you, I
own you. The Force brought us back together after you, in your arrogance,
chose to ignore it's will. You brought this fate upon us both."
"You didn't have to buy me."
"And you didn't have to cast me off. But because of your hubris, many
initiates were cast off by knights who followed your example, not wanting to
commit to training the next generation, regardless of what the Force
dictated."
"You blame me for them?" Qui-Gon asked.
"I'm not ignorant enough to blame you for the acts of so many knights, but
I
can blame you for the precedent you set in choosing this path. And may I
point out that regardless of what you say, the Force destined us to be
together, else you'd not have crossed my path again." Obi-Wan drank
his wine
in several swallows before setting the glass down lightly on the tabletop.
"The rebel Master Qui-Gon Jinn set his Force destined apprentice aside, for
fear he'd train another only to walk the dark path"
"That's not why I did not choose you." Qui-Gon interrupted.
"Then why?"
Qui-Gon thought back, remembering the young boy from so long ago.
"You
seemed too angry. Too desperate."
Obi-Wan laughed. "I had just turned 12 and was attending my last
choosing.
You were my last hope, Qui-Gon, of course I was desperate."
"Both you and Initiate Chun. He wasn't chosen either."
"I know," Obi-Wan answered. "He arrived several weeks after
I did. And was
sold to the same traders I was, but he didn't fare as well."
"What do you mean? What happened to him?"
Any further conversation was cut off as another young man came in.
"Ben,
fifteen on the late shuttle. D'fnee is furious."
Obi-Wan was on his feet in an instant. "Who's out there?"
"Siri." The young man turned and stared incredulously at the
older man.
"Ben, is that"
"Did she put up much of a fight?" Obi-Wan cut him off, grabbing
his outer
cloak.
"Yes, unfortunately. We ended up sedating her. She'll be all
right."
Obi-Wan nodded, then turned to Qui-Gon. "If you'll excuse me, I have
work to
do. My people will see you to your room." So saying, he turned
quickly and
followed the other man out, leaving behind a bewildered Qui-Gon Jinn.
~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*
It would be several hours before Qui-Gon was summoned again. This time he
was led to a severe looking office where Obi-Wan, or Ben as he was now known,
waited.
"I apologize for shuttling you off so quickly, I had business to take
care
of." He gestured to the chair across from him. "Please, I need
to send a
communiqué before we continue our discussion."
Qui-Gon lowered himself into the chair as Ben activated the comm. Several
moments passed in silence. Then a dark figure appeared on the holopad in
front of him.
"Obi-Wan, its good to hear from you again."
"Thank you, Mace," Obi-Wan smiled. "It's been a
while."
"Too long." A long pause. "Did it go well?"
"Like clockwork. Tell Adi that Siri is here and unharmed. I'll
do the mind
wipe in the morning and send her on her way."
"She'll be glad to hear that. Siri isn't ready for the truth just
yet."
Another pause. "I know Siri's well being wasn't the reason for this
contact,
was it?"
Obi-Wan flashed a wicked smile. "Actually, there is something else.
There's
someone I'm sure will want to say hello to you." He turned the pad to
face
Qui-Gon. "Look what I found"
Qui-Gon watched the councillor's eyes widen in shock. "Qui-Gon?"
"Mace, thank the Force. I'd all but given up hope of ever being
rescued."
"Qui-Gon, I had no idea" Mace started. "No one could feel
you in the Force,
not even Yoda. We thought you were dead."
"As you can see I'm very much alive, but I can explain when I'm back at the
temple. Tell Kenobi to release me."
"I can't do that, Qui."
"What do you mean you can't do that?" The older man was
incredulous.
"What he means," Obi-Wan drawled, "Is that You. Belong.
To me."
~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*
"Is that why you brought me here? To finish your training?"
Ben shot a dagger look at the Jedi. "You put too much value on your
knowledge, old man. Why would I give you the means of destroying me
again?"
Qui-Gon lowered his gaze.
Ben backed away and spread his arms, more calm now. "Isn't the Force
an
elusive, ever-changing energy that takes more than a thousand lifetimes to
understand completely?"
He paused a moment then continued. "To answer your question, I
learned what
I know now from several different masters." He turned quickly and
headed to
the door. "Come, our meal is waiting." When Qui-Gon
reached for his shirt,
Ben stopped him. "Leave it."
"Why?"
"Because I said so. And the boots too. I want you
barefoot."
Qui-Gon started to question him again, but the look in Ben's eyes changed his
mind. He followed the younger man from the room.
They entered a large dining hall. Already there was a large group waiting,
who either nodded to Ben or stared openly at Qui-Gon. He suddenly felt very
exposed and began to chant mentally again.
"Be thankful I let you keep your trousers. I'm sure there's more than
one
person who'd want to survey you completely." Ben led him to a chair
at the
head table. "But then I'm sure you've gotten used to it. It
only took me a
few months. By then, I had nothing left to hide."
Qui-Gon sat and fold his hands in his lap before him. Ben stood behind the
chair next to Qui-Gon and called greetings to the others before taking his
seat. Soon dishes of food were passed around the tables, followed by
pitchers of drink. Everyone ate heartily, calling out jokes, telling
stories
and discussing the mission from the previous day. Qui-Gon at first refused
the meal, then thought better of it. He'd need his strength if he was to
escape. As he ate, he listened to the conversation around him.
"What about the ship, Ben? We can hardly throw her into space,"
called one
young man.
"We can't keep it here," a Mon-Calamari shouted.
"With those markings, it
screams Jedi all over it."
"We could sell her whole or in pieces. She's still fully functional,
or will
be when we get done with it."
"That ship spells trouble. There's no way of getting rid of it
without being
found."
Ben held up a hand. "Did anyone check it for a homing beacon?"
"Twice," the Dressalian answered between mouthfuls of food.
"We found 3, and
jettisoned 2, just as you instructed."
"And the third?"
"Set in that container you sent to D'fnee." The entire company
began to
laugh as he continued. "They'll be chasing their tails then demanding the
truth from the frog."
"I wonder what story he'll tell them this time, especially since Siri won't
be able to help him," Ben mused. "Her mind was
surprisingly simple to
clear."
"What explanation will she give him?"
"She won't." Ben chuckled. "I didn't feel a need to
make up a story for
her. She came to try and find the missing ships. She promised the
council
she'd find the pirates that were looting the temple. I'd rather keep her
grasping at shadows."
"She'll look as stupid as he will," the Mon-Calamari snorted.
"Not that it
would be a big stretch for her."
"You still angry at her, Bant?"
Bant smiled. "Not anymore..." And the company began to
laugh again.
"What about the initiates?" Qui-Gon asked quietly. Many sets of
eyes turned
to him, glaring.
"Why do you care, Jinn?" Bant spat.
Qui-Gon ignored the young woman and asked Ben. "What about the
children.
What did you do with them?"
Ben raised an eyebrow. "They're safe. Safer than they would be
had Siri
completed her trip. The traders are back and D'fnee is woefully
understocked. They'll start taking their business elsewhere."
Ben smiled at
the others then and turned his attention back to the group. "In any
case,
Mace has been notified and will be handling this investigation. Who do we
wish to give up this time?"
Garen answered softly, "Palder, from Sonboh. Another three bodies
were found
in the wastes." A shudder ran through the room and silence fell over
them.
"These were from Teacrux, the hydro-corps settlement. They were
reported
missing as runaways several months ago."
"Any objections?" After several more moments, Ben nodded.
"Very well,
Palder it is. Whose turn is it?"
"Mine," Garen replied.
Ben looked at his friend with concern. "I'll go in your place if you
wish.
You don't have to."
Garen shook his head. "No, I need to do this. These are my
trials." He
looked up with a soft smile. "Then I'm pulling training duty for the
next 3
cycles."
Ben nodded. "Done. I'll make sure the next run nets you some
kermana
jellies." He then turned to Qui-Gon. "Garen was sent to the
hydrocorps with
Bant. I'll let you sort out the rest."
Qui-Gon shook his head. "You can't tell me the council is unaware of
this.
Surely someone would be watching out for the children..."
"The council washes their hands of the initiates the moment the ship leaves
the docking bay." Another man entered the room, robes billowing out
behind
him. "All they care about is who is left. The class of padawan
learners.
The rest are just numbers to them. Statistics to pad some council member's
next funding requests."
Ben smiled as he stood and shook the outstretched arm. "Master, I'm
glad
you're safe. A great many things happened since last you were here."
Turning back to Qui-Gon, he added, "I believe you know each other."
Qui-Gon stared at the outstretched hand before raising his gaze to the man
across from him. Deep blue eyes sparked in recognition and amusement. He
felt the blood drain from his cheeks as he was greeted by a deceptively mild
voice.
"It's been a very long time, my master." Xanatos, late of Telos
and Offworld
Corporation smiled back at him. "I wasn't planning on staying long,
but
now..." He turned back to the younger man. "Ready my
rooms, Ben. Qui-Gon
and I have a great deal of catching up to do."
FIC: The Chosen part 6
disclaimers in part 1
(AUTHOR'S NOTE: I know that in the disclaimers I said this story prolly
won't go past an R rating. I think I lied LOL. We'll both find out
next ep :))
Cool air brushed across Qui-Gon's shoulders as he followed his former apprentice
to another part of the compound. Ben was occupied with his student's
lessons, but would be meeting Xanatos at the 'yards' later, whatever they were.
For now, he was at the dark-haired man's disposal.
"Did you get enough to eat this morning, Master?" Xanatos let
the last word drip off his tongue like syrup.
"Yes, thank you. Your padawan was quite considerate."
"He's not my padawan," Xanatos noted.
"You trained him..."
"Qui-Gon, padawan is a Jedi term. A child with worth to a Jedi
knight. I was a padawan," he explained. "Obi-Wan is my
apprentice, one I teach to take my place and follow in my path."
"I taught you..."
"You conditioned me. You wanted to create me in your image.
There is a difference."
Xanatos watched the older man squirm under his very amused gaze before removing
his cloak. "How long has it been, Qui-Gon?"
"Not long enough," he muttered softly.
"Still bitter, master?" Xanatos chuckled. "You
haven't changed. Still too stubborn and arrogant to see beyond the here
and now... but then you were too in touch with 'the living Force,' weren't
you." He waved his hands for dramatic effect. A silence
fell upon them and lingered a few moments.
"You've done well for yourself." Qui-Gon said quietly.
"You'd be amazed how useful a Force-sensitive smuggler is. I was
good, but Ben... he's been unbelievably successful in this business."
Xanatos poured himself a drink and kicked off his boots. "And so
strong in the Force... If I hadn't found him, taken him under my wing...
"He'd be fulfilling his destiny as the Force guided him."
"Gods, Qui-Gon, don't tell me you believed his Force-guided destiny was to
play whore to deep spacers in every way possible." He paused a moment
before continuing, meeting Qui-Gon's stunned look with an equally icy gaze.
"That's how I found him. Naked, bound, being used by a Gamorrean in
one end and a Taltosian in the other. He would have been screaming
otherwise." At Qui-Gon's stunned stare, he smiled. "I'd
bought time in the slaver's harem. Beautiful creatures, men and women
existing only to service a person. For a price." He sipped his drink.
"Ben was one of his premiums. 'Near virginal, barely broken...' How
could I resist such a challenge. And then I saw him. The implant
D'fnee put in him could barely mask the fear pouring off him. The dark
energy. And he looked at me and all I could feel was you..."
"What are you talking about?"
Xanatos set his glass aside and slowly walked over to the sleeping mats.
"He hated you. All he could think of was what the Force told him was
his destiny, and the arrogant ass who took it away from him and condemned him to
that existence." He flipped the top sheet back and sat on the edge of
the bed. "Naturally I waited until they'd finished, after all, wasn't
it you who taught me to wait my turn."
Qui-Gon swallowed hard, thinking about the expressive blue eyes he remembered.
"Anyway, they left, and he crawled to the corner, whispering that he'd be
right with me. Gods, he was frightened." He stood again and
picked up his glass. "He wasn't bad. I mean not as good as he
is now... but then that comes from experience," he spat, piercing Qui-Gon
with a cold stare, "doesn't it, master."
"I'm sorry," Qui-Gon breathed.
"So was I."
Qui-Gon hesitated. "I'd hoped... I saw so much potential in
you."
"As I did in Obi-Wan. But there's difference between us. I
didn't punish Obi-Wan for believing differently than I did."
"I never punished you for holding different beliefs..."
"No." Hanging his cloak on the wall, he began loosening the ties
to his shirt. "You never punished me, but you made me feel less than
worthy, less than intelligent. You humoured me, made me believe I was
making a difference, that we were making a difference as Jedi, when in fact we
were just perpetuating the lie."
"What lie. What are you talking about?"
"The Jedi order are not protectors of the galaxy, they are mercenaries for
a omnipotent, sanctimonious council. Trained thugs who serve by way of
this all-knowing, all-powerful Force. But not the whole of the Force. Just
the part the chosen few deem acceptable."
"That's not true, Xanatos," Qui-Gon mused softly. "You are still
bitter about the life you left behind..."
"And you're still as blind as you always were! The council is not
infallible, they never have been! You used to harp about how blind they
were..." Xanatos slammed his glass on the table, scattering shards of
broken glass. "Do you remember that mission we had to Peralta 3?
The one where we were to protect the regent until his coronation? I told
you something was wrong, that I felt it. And you dismissed it as my
misguided longing for my birthright. 'Padawan, you'll understand one day how
much you've gained as a Jedi.' Remember that?"
Qui-Gon nodded slowly.
"After we left, he instated laws and commands that led to the genocide of
half of the population! Millions were killed because of us, because we
stood by and did nothing! Was that the Will of the Force?"
"It was not our place to..." Qui-Gon started.
"Sith, Qui-Gon, it's always the same excuse," Xanatos interrupted.
"'The Force wills it. It's not our place to question.' Gods, I
never thought I'd see the day the rebel master Qui-Gon Jinn, the man who
challenged the council about the 'will of the Force,' falling back on their
same, tired excuse, 'It's not my fault, it was the will of the Force.'"
"I have always served the Force as it willed me." Qui-Gon met
his gaze again. "My choices didn't often mirror the opinion of the
council, but still I followed my instincts."
"And what part of your instincts told you to seduce me?" Xanatos
asked.
"I..." he stuttered, the blood slowly coloring his face, "it's
what I thought you wanted."
Xanatos laughed. "I wanted a great many things then, old man, but you
as a lover wasn't one of them." He dropped his shirt to the cool
floor, then surveyed Qui-Gon with another glance.
"Which is why we stopped. When you wanted me to." Qui-Gon
replied, tensing as the younger man approached him. "You told me you
didn't want..."
"I didn't want you then, Qui-Gon. I didn't want anything to
jeopardize my training." He raised his hand to Qui-Gon's throat.
Qui-Gon flinched at first, then stood perfectly still as he began to separate
his mind from his body. This body.
"But now..." Xanatos slid a hand over Qui-Gon's chest, causing a
shudder to ripple through the older man's body.
Qui-Gon felt himself begin to respond to the expert touch. "Xan,"
Qui-Gon breathed, using his padawan's old nickname.
"Get into bed."
Qui-Gon hesitated. Xanatos' voice was much sharper this time.
"Get into bed."
"Why?"
Xanatos laughed wickedly. "Why indeed? Because I said to."
"Xanatos..."
Xanatos quickly grabbed Qui-Gon by the hair and threw him across the room.
"I don't know what you expected from me, nor do I care. But what you
need to understand is this. You are no longer a Jedi Master, no longer a
Jedi knight. You are Qui-Gon Jinn, bound legal property of Ben Kenobi, my
apprentice, and while in these quarters, you answer to me. I don't give a
damn about his revenge on you or your hurt. All I care about is a body to
relieve myself with." Stalking over to the prone man, he hooked his
fingers into the waistband of his trousers and with a Force-assisted pull, tore
the garment away.
Qui-Gon felt the panic in his throat as memories of his last few years came back
in a flood. The look in the young man's eyes was no different than those
who assaulted him before. "Xanatos..."
"Just think, master," he drawled in response. "I'll be able
to show you everything I've learned. You used to enjoy reviewing my
lessons with me..."
He began to recite the code again. "There is no emotion, there is
peace," he thought, steeling himself for the assault. He'd been used
before, by strangers, his former owners, the dealers. Those times he'd
call on his teachings, mentally reciting koans or passages to focus his mind on,
pulling it away from his violated body. It was the one place they could
not touch him The one place he'd be left alone.
//If you'd rather do it this way, I'd be happy to oblige.// Xanatos'
laughter filled Qui-Gon's head.
Qui-Gon's eyes flew open. He was greeted by the same predatory smile,
which slowly began to fade.
"I'm growing very tired of this, Qui-Gon. Get. Into. Bed."
WARNINGS: non-con, slash not your cup of tea, just read the last
3 lines,
and you'll get the gist of this part :)
~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~
Qui-Gon swallowed hard. He slowly began to crawl up the side of the bed
when
he felt himself pinned by invisible hands to the side, stomach down, his legs
slowly being nudged apart.
"Is this how you want it?" Xanatos purred. "I believe this
is the position
you preferred then." He ran a hand over Qui-Gon's lower back,
trailing his
fingers down the cleft of his buttocks. "Then again, I was usually in
your
position, wasn't I?"
Qui-Gon grit his teeth, drawing in deep breaths. His forced calm was
shattered by a quick slap to his buttocks.
"Wasn't I?" Xanatos growled, loosening the belt to his trousers.
"Yes," Qui-Gon whispered.
"And you wanted it that way, didn't you?"
"Yes." Qui-Gon heard a dull thud behind him. He felt warm
wetness run the
length of his cleft, washing over him once, twice...
"And you want this don't you?"
"No, Xan, please..." He felt the warm hard shaft easing between
his slick
cheeks. It teased at the opening, then he felt Xanatos angle his hips
upwards
Xanatos grabbed Qui-Gon's hips and pulled his body against him roughly.
"Well I want this." He pulled back slightly before pressing into
the older
man's body. "I want this now..." And Qui-Gon felt the pain down
to his toes,
though his fingertips and he bit his lip to keep from crying out as Xanatos
moved against him, sliding into him with short hard thrusts.
He'd remember all of this later: the slap of skin against his thighs, the
tearing of soft tissue, strong fingers digging into his flesh, the edge of
the bed cushion pressing into his stomach, the linen that tangled his beard
as he was used, all of this imprinted in his mind, a curse of his Jedi
training. He remembered teaching Xanatos about observation. They would
walk
through a room and upon leaving, Qui-Gon would question him about it, wanting
to know specifics, scents, minute annoying details that any casual observer
would disregard. Even at the temple, Qui-Gon would test him about what was
different in their shared quarters, making him remember minute details in
everything they did. Xanatos was talented, but did poorly with those types of
exercises.
As for himself, he could tell if his padawan changed the order of holovids on
his shelf, the position of the plants in the windows, whether his chair had
been moved even slightly. It made him a skilled field man and a cursed slave.
From the beginning, he remembered every person that took him: their smell,
their feel, the way they used him. His first owner enjoyed it and was
flattered that one of her whores would be so attentive. But when the
novelty
wore off, she sold him for a small speeder and two maintenance droids. And
yet, still he remembered.
And now, he was remembering the first time he'd initiated this type of
intimacy with the young man now pistoning him. He remembered the look in
Xanatos' eyes as he brought the boy to his first climax with him, the crooked
smile on his lips as he looked up at his master in wonder. "Was
that...?"
Xanatos had asked in hushed, breathy tones, and Qui-Gon smiled and brushed
back his dark hair, saying "Yes, padawan, and it was wonderful..."
He'd initiated their relationship then, teaching Xanatos about his body, his
sexuality, about the intimacy between lovers. He remembered all that now,
painfully bringing the irony of these moments to the front of his mind.
"You never let me do this to you, old man," Xanatos growled, "not
once did
you let me fuck you." He gripped Qui-Gon's hips tighter as he
continued.
"Were you afraid to let me inside? Afraid you'd feel less in control
then?"
Qui-Gon closed his eyes tighter, beginning his mental chanting, willing his
mind away from his body. 'There is no emotion, there is peace...'
//How does it feel now, master...// Xanatos asked, pulling Qui-Gon back
against him.
Qui-Gon whimpered, his thoughts more broken apart. 'There is no passion,
there is serenity...'
Xanatos' movements became sharper, more spastic. //Tell me how it
feels...//
he asked again, each word punctuated by a hard thrust.
Qui-Gon gripped the bedding with shaking fingers. He felt Xanatos reach
around his hip and begin stroking his soft shaft. He felt Xanatos touch
and
tease his most sensitive areas, sending sparks of sensation though his groin.
He willed himself not to respond.
//I can make you want this, old man.//
Qui-Gon bit into the bed linens, feeling the tears burning beneath his lids.
Xanatos slammed into him deeply, and Qui-Gon felt himself flooded with warm
wetness. The young man shuddered, thrusting twice more before pulling
himself away. Rolling onto the cushion, He dragged Qui-Gon up onto the
bed,
smoothing his hand over the man's mussed hair.
"You're a good fuck, old man. Perhaps later we can..." A
loud knock
interrupted them. Xanatos called out, "What is it?"
The door opened and Bant, the Calmarian woman entered. "Ben wants
you.
There's a problem." She glanced at Qui-Gon. "What should I
do with him?"
Xanatos stood and dressed quickly. "Get him cleaned up, I'll send for
him
later." Grabbing his cloak, he shot a quick glance at Qui-Gon and
turned to
leave. Stopping at the door, he turned, smiled and tossed a small object
on
the bed.
"For your services."
Qui-Gon stared at the blue shell as the door clicked shut.
~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~
"On your feet," Bant's voice took a rough edge.
"My clothing..." Qui-Gon mumbled, pulling himself off the bedcushion.
"We're going to the baths, Jinn. You won't need them there."
She picked up
the shell and examined it closely. "This is Calamari."
Qui-Gon nodded, wincing as fierce pains shot through him. "A gift
from a
senator who asked me to negotiate a peace accord. He said it would bring
me
serenity."
Bant grabbed his arm and guided him out of the room. "What was he
doing to
with it?"
"I..." Qui-Gon sighed. "I gave it to him for his 13th
birthday."
Bant smiled slightly. "Ah. The ever important padawan gift.
Not that I'd
understand any of that."
"You were never chosen."
Bant's expression hardened. "I wasn't good enough. Too many
knights thought
a Calamarian would be too much of a liability in the field. And the only
hope for advancement is field work. So, Garen and I were shipped to
Teacrux." They entered the large shower areas where Bant positioned
Qui-Gon
under a nozzle. Moving across from him, she activated the sprays.
Warm
water washed over Qui-Gon falling over his now sore muscles. Bant seemed
to
relax as well.
"You were sent to the hydrocorps," Qui-Gon continued. "And
Kenobi took you?"
Bant hissed at him, her eyes wide. "Ben saved us both. He and
Master
Xanatos were trading on the planet and Ben felt me in the Force."
"You called him?"
"He found us." She folded her arms over her chest. "Palder
drugged us and
left us wandering the wastes. Not before they took their pleasure with us
of
course. Of course, a Calamarian doesn't hold the same attraction a humanoid,
so he decided I was expendable. Garen wouldn't leave my side. We
were all
we had left. He even fought with some of the 'nurturers.'" The
last word
was spat with utter disgust. "In the end, they left us to die in the
lowlands. The wastes." She snorted, "I kept thinking,
'This wasn't supposed
to happen. This wasn't what the Force meant for us.' Garen and I searched
the wastes, traveled as far as we could looking for help. And do you know
what we found?" She stared into Qui-Gon's eyes, her own eyes flat and
expressionless. "Bones. Bones and implants."
"What kind of implants?" Qui-Gon asked, though he already knew the
answer.
"The same kind we all get when we're thrown out..." She smiled
faintly. "Oh
yes, I forgot, you never got one of those implants." She reached over
and
tilted his head to the side, examining his neck. "Like this one,
Jinn. Only
yours is a bit more crude... no wonder..."
"What do you mean?" he asked, pulling away.
"We could *hear* you all they way down in the yards," she said,
smiling at
his discomfort. "I knew you had a strong mind, but 'la, Jinn..."
She eyed
him carefully. "And now you're ours."
"What do you mean?"
"You'll understand soon enough." She turned off the water and
tossed him a
thin towel. "Here, dry off. The knife will be here soon.
She's not staying
long and Ben wants you tagged."
"Tagged?"
"He wants your implant changed." She tossed him another set of
leggings,
this pair thinner than the previous ones. "Why, I don't know. I
told him it
was a bad idea."
Qui-Gon thought about losing what little touch of the Force he still felt and
shuddered. "Why doesn't he just kill me?" he mumbled.
"You don't get off that easy." She grabbed his shoulder and led
him from the
baths. "If the Force meant for you to be dead, we'd not be speaking
now."
"You still believe in Force-guided Destiny?" Qui-Gon barely
stifled an
incredulous laugh. "With all that has happened, you believe you're
still
serving the Force?" He quickly found himself slammed into the floor,
gasping
as the breath was squeezed from him.
"How dare you question Force-guided destiny!" she raged,
dragging him across
the floor. "You put this in motion by going against its will!
Or did you
think of that?" She smiled in triumph. "You never
have..." She laughed
then, a chilling laugh. "It's never occurred to you that all of this
was
your fault, that the Force could be punishing you for challenging destiny!
Gods, Ben was right, you blind foolish old man!"
Qui-Gon found himself pressed onto another table, his arms and legs
immediately tethered with thick leather straps. He suddenly felt weak, and
turned to the Calmarian.
"It's the rock embedded into the table, Jinn. It inhibits whatever
Force-sense you have left." Tightening the straps, she smiled down on
him.
"She'll be right with you, Jinn. Try to relax."
"Please," he whimpered.
"Please what?"
"Don't do this to me."
She leaned over him, brushing his hair back from his face. "Goodbye,
Jinn,"
She whispered.
In the previous part, the healer removed Qui-Gon's Force inhibiting implant,
allowing him to feel the Force for the first time in 7 years. The danger
was
that he would go mad. Ben and he are now alone in the med bay.
~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*
At first, it was believed midichlorians were sentient life forms that existed
in a symbiotic relationship with their hosts. It was believed they existed
only in chosen highly developed life forms able to understand them.
Then
science came along and discovered that midichlorians were amplifiers, and
that everyone and everything had them. It was the concentration of the
midichlorians that determined Force sensitivity.
Therefore the pain Qui-Gon felt was understandable. It was akin to being
immersed in sound after being deaf for so long. At first he screamed,
echoing the noise flooding his body. Then his body attempted to adjust to
this bombardment and he vomited onto the clinic floor. Crumpling to his
knees, he cradled his head in his hand as his body slumped to one side. He
gasped for breath as Kenobi knelt over him.
"At least you didn't forget to breathe." Kenobi's voice was
flat,
emotionless.
"Hurts... make it... stop..." Qui-Gon gasped.
"Give it a moment..."
Qui-Gon curled into a fetal position, dragging air into his lungs. His
head
thudded in his hands, his eyes closed tightly as tears streaked his cheeks.
He could feel his heart pound against his ribs, making it even harder to
breathe. Concentrate on your breathing, he told himself. Inhale...
Exhale...
The noise began to dull, and he brought his focus inward. In his mind, he
saw a block. Pale, smooth, alone, it sat in the middle of the din.
He
examined it as much as the force would allow, then soon another block
appeared. And another. And another.
"Good..." Kenobi whispered, kneeling by the older man.
The blocks began multiplying, lining up into a rudimentary shield. It was
flimsy, crude, not much better than what a crechling could manage, but it was
there. And the din faded.
"There is no emotion, there is..."
"You don't know how wrong you are, old man. Emotion brings us
peace."
Qui-Gon watched the young man through slit lids. "Peace," he
whispered,
gathering his strength, "comes from... control... not from emotion..."
Though Kenobi spoke softly, his voice was overpowering. "Emotion is
how we
gain control. It allows us to understand motivations, needs, actions.
Would
the Force have gifted us with emotions if we were not to explore them?
Sith,
Jinn, we're more aware of emotion because of our sensitivity! It separates
us from droids, from machines. Peace comes from the realization that
emotion
lets us embrace this existence. Control, not denial of our emotions leads
to
peace." He smiled as Qui-Gon's eyes widened, feeling the effect of
his words
on the man. "Why would a Jedi choose to put his life in jeopardy in
service?
What reward does a knight get, save for the respect of his order? We can
feel their gratefulness, their joy, yet a Jedi is not to feel as they do.
They are to distance themselves from what would bring them closer to others,
closer to the Force. The Force unifies us, but with the Jedi doctrine of
Practiced Stoicism, how can you truly be unified?"
Qui-Gon let the words spin through his already whirling mind. He couldn't
fault the young man's logic. Yet the order and its practices went back
several millenia, surely they would have thought of this.
Kenobi continued. " 'There is no ignorance, there is knowledge.' That
is the
second part of it, isn't it?"
"Surely you don't find fault with that..."
The younger man snorted. "Seeking knowledge? Hardly. But
the Jedi don't
seek knowledge, they seek justification. They talk about the Force in
terms
of light and dark, ignoring the middle ground that exists in every situation.
Every action they take, every principle they cling to is one-sided,
perpetuating the myth that only the light is good, and only the dark is evil.
They ignore the people who die because of every treaty they sign, and the
ones who survive within the dark. They force peace, just as the dark
nurtures chaos. Each side is a contradiction. And every teaching
omits the
truth that there are always gray areas. And in those areas, we exist.
They
use their information to justify their existence. We use ours to further
ours."
Qui-Gon closed his eyes then and sank back to the floor. He heard the
young
man kneel next to him.
"As for passion and serenity, without passion, there is no motivation to
live. Passion allows us to attempt the impossible. Passion doesn't
just
allow progress, it demands it. Without passion, there would be no
serenity,
only complacency. It gives us the will to live, to survive and to carry
on.
It makes us who we are and leads us where we will go. It is life.
Serenity
comes from living with our passions, expressing our emotions, and using our
knowledge to achieve what we do. Without any of these, there is only death.
And the Force is life."
Qui-Gon felt himself question his teaching and learning, not for the first
time in his life, but surely for the first time in a great while. And this
time was the first time he found no easy answers. In the past, he would
turn
to his former master. But here, now...
"What do you want from me?"
Obi-Wan smiled then, a genuine smile. "I want you to see who we
are."
"And who are you?" he asked.
"We are the Chosen."
Epilogue (one year has passed):
He watched the viewer with expectation as the image fizzled to life. Qui-Gon
Jinn appeared, his eyes clear, a peaceful smile on his lips:
"Greetings my master. As you can see, I survived my captivity and
found a
way to live. I hope this message finds you well. There is much that has
happened since we parted company, much that has changed me, made me see the
broader universe before me, and for the first time in a great many years, I
feel at peace with my place in it. Perhaps one day, I'll be able to
explain
this to you though I know it will be many years before we'll meet again. I
wished to tell you that though I live, I'll not be returning to you or the
order. I have seen too much, learned too many things; I would not be happy
within the confines of your beliefs. You would say I've been corrupted, but I
believe the Force has opened my eyes and shown me my way. I wish you
peace,
my master. Until then, the Force is with you."
"Very nice Qui." Mace settled his hand on Qui-Gon's shoulder.
"I'll make
sure Yoda receives this."
"Thank you, Mace. Are you sure you won't be in any danger delivering
this?"
Mace smiled. "None whatsoever." He paused a moment.
"We can still set up a
private meeting. He has missed you."
"That's alright. If I met with him, I'd not be able to keep us
hidden. I'm
too weak. Too inexperienced."
"Not for long," Ben chimed in. "Qui, your students are
waiting. You and
Xanatos are to demonstrate a proper duel for them, remember?"
"Right." Qui-Gon stood and embraced Mace. "If you'll
excuse me," he said,
then strode confidently to the courtyard. Drawing his saber, he surveyed
the
many children mirroring his every move.
"Forgive my tardiness. First position..." he called out.
And the learning began.
~~~~~fin~~~~~