Failure Is Not Fatal
Serya Talith
Jacen sat at the bar of a small diner. The chairs to either side of him were free. There were plenty of tables, but he always felt awkward taking one when alone. It was late for lunch, the crowds now on the streets outside. He signaled the serving droid and ordered a beer whilst he decided what to get for a quick lunch, not that there was much choice.
It had been a difficult few weeks. Jacen held this naive view that he could return and immediately make a difference. He was out of practice and therefore still sporting a bruise at the back of his head and several cuts and scrapes. Common gangsters shouldn't have bothered a Jedi Master, someone who had led the Alliance in the charge against the Sith. All this time and he could still be the overconfident fool. It made him wonder if he ever truly learned some lessons. Each time he had been harsh on Trextan for not listening, but the boy just had too much of his own father.
Jacen was not so rusty that he didn't sense the intent creeping up behind him. The flash of nerves, the focus on Jacen.
"That does not belong to you," he said as he sense someone reaching for his datapad without turning back.

Jacen sat at the bar of a small diner. The chairs to either side of him were free. There were plenty of tables, but he always felt awkward taking one when alone. It was late for lunch, the crowds now on the streets outside. He signaled the serving droid and ordered a beer whilst he decided what to get for a quick lunch, not that there was much choice.
It had been a difficult few weeks. Jacen held this naive view that he could return and immediately make a difference. He was out of practice and therefore still sporting a bruise at the back of his head and several cuts and scrapes. Common gangsters shouldn't have bothered a Jedi Master, someone who had led the Alliance in the charge against the Sith. All this time and he could still be the overconfident fool. It made him wonder if he ever truly learned some lessons. Each time he had been harsh on Trextan for not listening, but the boy just had too much of his own father.
Jacen was not so rusty that he didn't sense the intent creeping up behind him. The flash of nerves, the focus on Jacen.
"That does not belong to you," he said as he sense someone reaching for his datapad without turning back.
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