Star Wars Roleplay: Chaos

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Private Moving Day



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Wearing: xxx
Tag: Isola Delaine Isola Delaine

The dormitory on Tython smelled faintly of stone dust and old wood, like a place too ancient to be new again no matter how many times it was scrubbed clean. Sunlight filtered through narrow windows, casting beams across the sparsely furnished room with nothing in it save a bed, desk, and a small closet. It was simple, functional. Jedi.

Jackson Lesan stood alone in the center of it all, surrounded by a half-unpacked duffel and the unfamiliar quiet of a world that still didn't feel like home.

He knelt to pull out a bundle of spare tunics when a box of training tools slid from the top of the pile, teetered, and fell. A small metal dumbbell rolled free clanging once off the side of the bedframe before landing squarely on his foot.

"Frak!" he snapped, hopping back and nearly falling over the edge of the bed.

He caught himself with one hand on the mattress, the other cradling his throbbing foot. For a second, he just stood there, hunched, breathing through clenched teeth as the sting pulsed upward. Then came the wave of frustration not just at the dumbbell, or the bruise already forming beneath his boot, but at everything. The silence. The distance from everyone he knew. The hollow ache of missing CJ. The way this whole new chapter felt less like a beginning and more like being dropped into the middle of a book he hadn't read the first half of.

He exhaled hard through his nose, shaking his head. "Great start, Lesan," he muttered.

The dormitory stayed quiet. No laughter from nearby rooms. No familiar voices. Just the sound of birds outside and the low hum of ancient generators buried deep in the Temple's foundations.

Jackson sat down on the edge of the bed, his foot still sore, and rubbed his temples. He wasn't sure if it was the pain or the loneliness that hurt more, but either way neither was going away anytime soon.

Jackson sat there, staring at the dumbbell like it had done more than bruise his foot. He blamed it as if it had personally summoned every ache he'd tried to keep buried since leaving Jakku.

He leaned forward, elbows on his knees, and let his fingers lace together. The silence around him deepened, until the soft whoosh of a desert wind seemed to take its place, a phantom noise from a world that felt galaxies away.

Jakku.

The Enclave hadn't been much. A scattering of durasteel shelters patched with canvas, half-buried in sandstorms and prayer. But it was home. A place where sunrises stretched wide and orange across the dunes, and the only thing more stubborn than the heat was the people who chose to live there. People like Master Romi Jade.

Her presence always filled a room, not with volume, but with weight. The way she moved, spoke, taught… she never wasted words, never performed for the sake of attention. She didn't need to. She was the center of gravity for so many of them.

For him.

He remembered how she'd correct his form without saying a word—just a look, a gesture, a calm presence that reminded him to slow down and breathe. Her eyes could cut through his frustration like a lightsaber through duracrete, until what remained was just clarity and grit.

The last time he saw her…

He swallowed hard, jaw tightening.

There had been smoke. Fire in the distance. A tremor in the Force so sharp it sliced through him like glass. She told him to stay on Jakku. That he wasn't ready. That others needed him more. He didn't want to leave her. But he obeyed.

That was the last lesson she gave him: sacrifice.

His breath shuddered out, and Jackson rubbed his eyes with the heel of his palm. He didn't cry. Not here. Not now. But the weight of it all sat heavy on his chest like a stone he couldn't shift.

The dormitory on Tython didn't feel like home. Not yet.

But Romi Jade had believed in him. She saw something worth saving, something worth shaping.

And maybe that was reason enough to stay.

Jackson stayed where he was, unmoving. The light from the window stretched further across the floor, golden and warm, but he didn't feel it.


He sat with his memories. Let them breathe. Let them ache.


Not every wound bled. Some just settled beneath the skin and stayed there. So in the silence of the ancient dormitory, alone on a world filled with legends he hadn't earned the right to walk among, Jackson Lesan did what Jedi rarely allowed themselves to do.

He grieved. Quietly. Honestly.

And then, when the moment passed,not because he was ready, but because it had simply run out of time, he stood up. Slowly. Carefully. The pain in his foot a dull echo now, far removed from the pain in his chest.

He didn't speak. He didn't swear.

He just went back to unpacking.

 
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Tag: Jackson Lesan Jackson Lesan

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Bootsteps echoed softly down the stone corridor to the temple dorms. Deliberate. Steady. Isola Delaine rounded the corner, jacket slung over one shoulder, a datapad in hand that she wasn’t really reading. She had the kind of gait that said she wasn’t in a hurry, but also wasn’t interested in stopping. Just one more lap around the Temple, one more hour of pretending like she felt anything for this place besides foreign.

Her door was just ahead.

But then... a crash. A muffled curse.

She slowed.

Another beat of silence, then the sound of something heavy hitting the floor. Metal against stone. Someone was definitely losing a round with gravity.

Isola glanced sideways, to the door to one of the dorms, half-open. She stood there a second, hand on her hip, thumb grazing the edge of her datapad. The hum of discomfort in the Force was subtle, but it was there. She leaned slightly and called in, her voice dry but not unkind.

“Hey. Uh, everything alright there, guy?”

There was no judgment in her voice, just curiosity, and maybe the faintest thread of concern tucked beneath the deadpan delivery. She waited, silhouetted in the doorway. Tall. Still. Silver eyes catching the warm slant of afternoon light like they didn’t belong in a place this old.

 


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Wearing: xxx
Tag: Isola Delaine Isola Delaine

Jackson didn't look up right away.

He was still crouched by the foot of his bed, one hand wrapped around the metal dumbbell like he could will it into dust. The sound of her voice caught him off guard, not just because he hadn't sensed anyone nearby, but because it was the first voice that didn't belong to a memory in hours.

"Yeah," he answered, eventually. His tone was flat, too practiced to sound convincing. "Just getting to know the floor up close."

A beat passed, then he exhaled, the tension bleeding out of his shoulders as he stood, tossing the dumbbell back into the duffel with a clank that felt louder than it was.

He turned toward the doorway, pausing when he saw her. She looked like she didn't care, but not in the way that meant she didn't actually care. It was the armor some people wore when being here felt more like exile than destiny.

Jackson scrubbed a hand through his hair and shrugged. "Guess I'm making a real impression on day one."

His smile was brief and tired, but real.

Jackson stayed standing, though his posture still leaned toward the half-unpacked bed like he wasn't sure if he was done with the moment or just pausing to breathe.

She hadn't walked away.

Most people would've kept moving and let the awkward noise belong to someone else, but she stood there in the doorway, not nosy, just present. That kind of casual presence could be dangerous. It invited conversation before you knew you wanted one.

He didn't. Not really.

Not with a stranger.

But he wasn't made of stone, either.

His gaze flicked to her silver-eyes. She was unreadable with her jacket slung like she couldn't decide whether to stay or bolt. It made her seem like the kind of person who looked like she didn't need anything from anyone, which, in his experience, usually meant they needed everything and didn't know how to ask for it.

Then again, who was he to guess?

"I'm fine," he said again, quieter this time. Less sharp around the edges, but still guarded. "Just… dropped something… on my foot. Wasn't trying to start a concert."

He forced a light chuckle, but it didn't travel far. The silence stretched a bit longer than it should have, and he turned his back partially, reaching for a stack of tunics as a way to busy his hands.

Truth was, he didn't want to talk about the bruise forming on his foot, hole Romi left behind, or how empty the room still felt even after unpacking three sets of training gear and a faded holopic of the Jakku Enclave that he kept telling himself he didn't need anymore. He didn't know her, and whatever kind of person she was, she wasn't Romi.

But she'd stopped.

She'd asked, and that counted for something.

He glanced over his shoulder, just enough to meet her gaze, and offered a small nod. "Thanks, though. For checking."

Another beat.

He sighed, rolling the tension out of his shoulders as if it could fall to the floor like the dumbbell had.

"I'm Jackson," he said finally, with a half-smile that was equal parts tired and polite. "Or Jax. Either works."

He didn't offer more than that. Not yet. Not until he knew whether she was just being polite… or someone worth trusting.

 

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