Star Wars Roleplay: Chaos

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Private Currents Without Command

Jairdain did not answer him immediately. She let his words settle fully, giving them the space they deserved rather than shaping a response too quickly. The quiet he left behind was not uncomfortable to her. It was the kind of pause that meant something important had been said and needed to be carried, not corrected.

When she did speak, her voice was calm and even, grounded in the same steadiness he had shown her.

"I believe you," she said simply. "About the way it comes and goes. About the lack of pattern. Some things do not announce themselves long enough to be named, not at first. They press, withdraw, and wait to see if they are noticed."

She did not frame it as a threat or an omen, only as an observation.

"And you are right about one thing," Jairdain continued, turning slightly toward him, her presence open rather than probing. "You are not alone, even if you are no longer standing inside an Order."

There was a quiet warmth in her tone as she added, "Both my brother and a good friend of mine have stepped away from the Jedi as well. Neither of them ceased to have allies, or purpose, or people who would answer if they called. So in that respect, you still have an Order you can lean on, even if it no longer wears the same name."

She inclined her head slightly, a gesture of respect rather than inquiry.

"If I may ask," Jairdain said, "what was your position before you stepped away?"

Then, without shifting the focus from him, she offered context rather than comparison.

"I am a Master with the Silver Jedi," she said quietly. "Or I was. After Bryn'Adul destroyed nearly everything, their mission was, in a sense, completed. What remained went dormant. Some would say it ended. I do not think that is the same thing."

Her attention returned fully to him then, steady and sincere.

"So," Jairdain finished, leaving no weight in the question beyond care itself, "how can I help you, Aiden?"

Aiden Porte Aiden Porte
 


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Jairdain Ismet-Thio Jairdain Ismet-Thio


Aiden listened to her with the same careful attention he had given everything else she shared, and when she finished he let an easy smile soften his face. It was not an attempt to brush the subject aside. It was the kind of gentle warmth he used when he was trying to keep a difficult conversation from turning heavy.

"I understand," he said simply.

He shifted his weight in the grass, the morning air moving cleanly over his skin, and he spoke the next truth without pride, only with quiet certainty.

"And I was on the Council," Aiden continued, his voice steady. "I held the title of Guardian of Justice and Peace, like my father did before me."

The words carried history more than rank. They sounded like something inherited and earned, and also something he had chosen to set down. When she mentioned the Silver Jedi, surprise flickered across his expression. It was not doubt toward her, but recognition, and the sudden sense of an old thread pulling tight.

"The Silver Jedi," Aiden repeated, almost under his breath. He looked at her then, brows lifting slightly. "My family lived there for a time. Many years ago." For a moment, he seemed to be searching memory for a shape he could not quite hold, then he let it go, returning to the present with a quiet exhale.

"And I am not sure what can be done to help me," Aiden admitted, honesty plain. "I do not think there is a quick answer. It is going to take time." He glanced toward the homestead, the open land, the calm that did not demand anything from him.

"But," he added gently, the hope still there, "Time is something I am willing to give it, as long as I do not give up on myself in the process."


 
Jairdain absorbed his words without interruption, the way one listens when something important has been entrusted rather than offered casually. The ease in his smile did not fool her, but she did not challenge it either. It was not avoidance. It was care.

When he spoke of the Council, she inclined her head, not in surprise so much as recognition.

"I understand that weight," she said quietly. "More than you might expect."

She did not embellish it, nor did she diminish what he had carried.

"I also served on a Council," Jairdain continued, her tone even, matter-of-fact. "I kept my title simple when I introduced myself to you, but I was a Master of Diplomacy. Different focus, same burden. Decisions that echo farther than you intend. Responsibility that does not end when you step away."

There was no bitterness in her voice. Only clarity.

At the mention of the Silver Jedi and his family's time there, she let that thread rest where it lay. Some connections did not need to be pulled tight to be real.

"You are right about one thing," Jairdain said after a brief pause. "Quick answers are rarely accurate, and certainty reached too fast is often borrowed rather than earned."

Her attention sharpened slightly then, not pressing, but present.

"How long has this been dragging on you, Aiden?" she asked gently.

Aiden Porte Aiden Porte
 




Aiden's expression softened as she spoke of her own council service, and he gave a slow, respectful nod. If she had carried that kind of responsibility among the Silver Jedi, then she would understand the weight without him needing to explain it twice.

"Then you understand," Aiden said quietly, tone sincere. "The decisions, the echoes, the way the title never really leaves your shoulders."

When she asked how long it had been pressing on him, he did not embellish it. He answered plainly, with the same honesty he had offered from the beginning.

"It has been about a month," Aiden said, thoughtful, as if counting the days by memory rather than a calendar. "Maybe less. I'm doing well though, I'm managing." He looked to Jairdain with a smile. "I promise."

 
Jairdain inclined her head slowly, a quiet acknowledgment that carried more weight than agreement alone.

"Yes," she said softly. "I understand."

For a moment, her focus drifted, not away from him entirely but more inward, as though she were passing through years of memory that no longer needed words to exist.

"I have helped settle disputes between governments that were prepared to burn entire systems rather than compromise," she continued, her voice calm, unadorned. "I have stood in rooms where new states were being founded from the ashes of old ones, and watched people decide, in a single afternoon, what thousands would live with for generations."

A faint, almost wry note touched her tone. "And somehow," she added, "I still found time to raise a family in the middle of it."

Her attention returned fully to him then, steady and present. "So when you speak of echoes," Jairdain said, "of responsibility that does not loosen its grip when you step away… I do not need it explained."

She regarded his smile thoughtfully when he said he was managing, when he promised. "I believe that you are trying," she replied gently. "And I am grateful for your honesty with me. Many people would have said 'years,' or 'it's nothing,' or avoided the question entirely. You did not."

She paused, then reached out just slightly, not quite touching him, but close enough that he could feel the intention behind the gesture. "But I also have the sense," Jairdain went on, her voice lowering a fraction, "that you are going to need help with this." There was no accusation in it. No doubt. Only quiet certainty.

"I do not know whether that is intuition," she admitted, "or experience, or the Force choosing to be unusually direct with me today." A small, knowing smile touched her lips. "Perhaps it is all three."

Her tone remained warm and supportive. "Your promise matters," she said. "It tells me you are committed to staying whole. But promises are not meant to be kept alone."

She focused on him again, unwavering. "And if the day comes when 'managing' is no longer enough," Jairdain finished, "you will not have to pretend with me. You will not have to carry it in silence. I will be here."

Aiden Porte Aiden Porte
 

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