It seemed this was turning into more of a personal engagement between Connor and Arcanix than anything else, not that Keira could say she really minded. In a way it allowed her a deeper look into their philosophy, whether personal or more dogmatic in nature, without their worrying who they had to impress or persuade. It was a change from the typical coercing that both sides employed when attempting to get an individual to fight for their cause. This revealed them as people, not just Jedi and Sith, a representation that was scarce galaxy-wide. But even then, she wasn’t sure if she liked the aspects of either point of view she was hearing. Having been raised to be independent from a young age, she had no need for aligning herself with either Order. It was an unnecessary formality.
The silence that hung between the three after Arcanix made her offer was heavy with anticipation and latent, unspoken thoughts that were too personal for any of them to voice. “Both of you have excuses. Everyone does. The Jedi say they do what they do in the name of all that’s good and light, and the Sith claim their motivation to be instilling order in the galaxy, both of them through whatever means necessary. And in the end, they’re both hypocrites as well. You can both claim to be more correct than the other, and say that in the end your ways are more moral, but it doesn’t mean anything. That’s all they are, words. And what you have to say is worthless unless you can back it up with more than just the typical clichéd proof.” A bold claim, but one she believed firmly.
A wry half-smile turned up one side of her mouth, and she shook her head with the quietest of laughs. “It’s all ridiculous, when you think about it. Who cares who made the first move? It’s over now, what happened has already transpired, and no one can go back in time to change it. Squabble over it all you want, review the security footage, settle the argument…what’s it going to fix? You’re both responsible for instilling wisdom in the followers of your respective Orders, but you can’t even get over something as simple as this. And yet somehow it seems absurd that I choose not to follow either, and simply do what I think is right to better serve those I call friend and family. But we’re all supposed to have some greater purpose, apparently.” She rolled her eyes, displaying her obvious distaste for the entirety of it.
Absently she levitated three stones above her palm, turning them in a slow circle, contemplating the events that had unfolded just moments before. “Some of us couldn’t care less about the impact we leave on the galaxy. Or at least, we don’t care enough to actively attempt to make a difference. It’s all consequential. If we do, great, but if we don’t, it’s not a big deal. It’s how we survive that matters, and how we effect those we care about. Everything else is secondary.” Compared to their supposed devotion to their Orders she was decidedly apathetic to all of the affairs, only caring so far as she and hers was concerned, and no more. If her affiliation with the Ravens brought her closer to the Sith and farther from the Jedi, then so be it. None of that changed her personal moral compass or caused her to waver in all that she stood for.
Her hand slowly clenched into a fist, and the stones were turned to smaller pebbles, slowly trickling to the ground, loosed from her grasp. “I’m not going to choose between two sides that are equally flawed. It’s either the apathetic Jedi or the domineering Sith. Light, dark, black, white…some of us choose neither. Some of us choose grey. Everyone seems to forget the spectrum that is the Force.”
[member="Darth Arcanix"], [member="Connor Harrison"]