the art of light

Finally making good on his three-year old promise to his cousin

Despite the reasons for it, the restoration of the New Jedi Temple and its cultural elements was a thing Ajinar could be thankful for and easily connect with. Otherwise, swapping his life on Hapes for the auspices of the Jedi path without a way to smooth that transition had until now made taking the plunge difficult, regardless of his unhappiness. He had felt so out of place with each attempt. Now, with something familiar to apply himself to, a place to use his existing skills in parallel to furthering his development in the Force, he felt hopeful that he could begin to weather adapting to Jedi life.
His greatest concern was that he wasn't entirely certain how to navigate the concept of equality. At least on Hapes, he knew his place... but this time he had decided to take things as they would come. At least the Order was headed by a woman - to him, it made sense - and not just any woman, but his cousin's former master. That was comfortable.
"Still so much to do," he breathed, pausing to be awed for not the first time by the scale of the Temple and its wounds as he ascended the rest of the steps, but the prospect made him smile, "to have a hand in it..." Well, that was an honour. "...but staring will accomplish little, ne?" He adjusted the bag over his shoulder, nudged himself with a little laugh - staring was perfectly normal in all of his portraiture work - and continued onward up the steps, and into the Temple.
There was, after all, someone he had to meet, and a time set for it.
Upon entering the table, Ajinar was craning his head back to take in the vaulted ceilings of the entrance hall, a thing he felt dwarfed by. He attempted to recall the likeness of Master Farr from their correspondence, but the preparations for his departure from the homeworld had been a whirlwind of figuring what to bring, what to leave, making and cementing promises... but there was one detail he could recall clearly: that she was both deaf and partially blind. His own parents were utterly sightless, reliant on the Force and those under their employ to navigate spaces around them.
It was a familiar thing.
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