Aiden watched him, that boundless energy dancing through the Force like ripples across still water. Each hop, each laugh, each sparkle of movement carried something luminous, a light that no shadow could quite swallow. The Knight couldn't help but smile, the expression deep and genuine, his eyes softening at the sight of Ensy's unguarded joy. It wasn't just happiness he was seeing. It was healing, the kind that didn't announce itself, but quietly rewrote what had once been broken. Every laugh was a step away from fear, every bounce a heartbeat closer to peace.
The boy's words lingered in Aiden's chest long after they'd been spoken.
Family who won't give up on me.
He had heard oaths before, solemn ones made in temples, on battlefields, between Jedi bound by duty. But this one, spoken through laughter and light, carried more truth than any of them. It was pure, untouched by pretense. A child's promise, yes, but also a Jedi's.
Aiden's hand rested briefly over his heart as he walked, as though to steady something stirring within it.
"You already understand more than most ever do," he murmured, half to himself, half to the wind.
When Ensy circled back beside him, Aiden matched his pace. The Padawan's steps were springy, his tendrils catching the light like silver threads. Beside them, the burned forest stretched endlessly, but the air no longer felt haunted. Where once there was only ash, now there was motion, laughter — life again.
Aiden's smile turned into something quietly proud.
"Then let's see it together," he said.
"All that the world wants to show us, the beauty, the hardship, the in-between. Every part of it has something to teach."
The scorched bark of the trees glowed faintly amber, and the tiny green shoots that had survived the flames seemed to gleam brighter for it. Aiden glanced down at his Padawan, the warmth in his tone carrying the weight of certainty.
"You'll make a great Jedi, Ensy. Not because of power or skill, but because you still see the light where others see ruin. That's what keeps the galaxy alive."
He skipped again, laughter echoing faintly through the open air, and Aiden followed not with a hop, but with a calm, steady step that carried the quiet grace of someone who believed. Together they moved along the edge of the forest, one steady, one bright, both shining and for the first time since they'd set foot on Ukatis, it felt less like a mission and more like the beginning of something truly good.
By the time the sun had reached its peak in the sky, the burned forest was far behind them. The air changed as they neared the outskirts of the city, warmer, denser, threaded with the scents of cooking fires, oil, and the faint metallic tang of starship parts being worked somewhere deeper within the streets.
Aiden walked beside him, posture relaxed, his presence in the Force like a steady hand between the shoulder blades
. "Cities have their own kind of rhythm," he said quietly.
"Feel it the same way you felt the wind earlier. Let it move around you not through you, unless you choose to let it in."
Inside the walls, Ukatis city life unfolded like a tapestry. Market tents snapped in the breeze, lanterns hung from ropes stretching between buildings, and people of varying species moved through the walkways with an easy familiarity born of a close-knit community. Many glanced curiously at Aiden's armor, and at Ensy, but none approached with hostility. Just caution, and interest.
There were some that gave small nods, some that just ignored them. And there were others, many others that smiled and waved. For many even here who knew who Aiden was.