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Year 298 AC/7 ABY
The Sunset Sea
The taste of salt remained on Luke's tongue as he supervised the morning's training aboard the Northern Maid. Twenty days at sea had transformed the merchant vessel's deck into a makeshift practice yard as the ship rolled gently in the calm waters, but Luke barely noticed anymore—his sea legs had come quickly, aided by the Force.
Jon circled his two opponents with the fluid grace of a Vornskr, his practice blade weaving defensive patterns in the air. Harwin attacked from the left while Alyn pressed from the right, their coordinated assault designed to overwhelm. Yet Jon flowed between their strikes like water, redirecting their momentum rather than meeting it head-on.
"Better," Luke called out, noting how Jon had finally stopped telegraphing his pivots. "But you're still thinking too much. Trust the Force."
Beside him, Jory Cassel stood with arms crossed, his weathered face etched with something between awe and unease. The captain of guards hadn't spoken much since the ironborn attack, but Luke could feel questions building behind his careful Northern reserve.
Jon ducked under Harwin's swing, using the bigger man's momentum to send him stumbling into Alyn. Both guards cursed good-naturedly as they untangled themselves, while Jon reset his stance, barely winded despite the hour-long session.
"I've fought in many battles," Jory said quietly, his eyes never leaving the sparring match. "I've seen brave men and skilled men, lucky men and dead men." He paused, choosing his words with care. "But I've never seen anything like what happened with those ironborn."
Luke remained silent, sensing the man needed to voice his thoughts.
"Jon moved like... like he knew where every blade would be before it fell. And you..." Jory shook his head slowly. "You threw men overboard without touching them. Turned their own arrows against them mid-flight."
The sparring continued before them. Jon had gained the upper hand now, using Form III's defensive principles to tire his opponents. Harwin's strikes grew wilder while Alyn's footwork turned sloppy. It was only a matter of time.
"Where are you really from, Ser Luke?" Jory's voice held no accusation, only genuine curiosity. "Because it's not any place I've heard tell of, and I've traveled many a places."
"Just Luke, and…" Luke turned to meet the older man's gaze, allowing a small smile to touch his lips. "I'm from the stars, Jory."
The captain's eyes widened, his mouth opening slightly before snapping shut. For a heartbeat, he stared at Luke as if trying to determine whether he'd heard correctly. Then, unexpectedly, Jory barked out a laugh—a deep, genuine sound that drew glances from the sparring men.
"The stars!" Jory chuckled, shaking his head. "Next you'll tell me you rode here on a dragon made of moonlight and ice." Through the Force, Luke sensed the man's relief at what he perceived as a jest, his mind rejecting the impossible truth in favor of comfortable humor.
Luke's smile widened slightly, but he said nothing.
Jory's laughter faded as he studied Luke more carefully. "Well, wherever you're from, I'm glad you're teaching Lord Stark's children. I understand the secrecy now, men fear what they don't understand, and there's plenty who'd name this sorcery."
A cry from the sparring match drew their attention. Jon had finally broken through, his practice blade resting against Harwin's throat while his foot pinned Alyn's sword to the deck. Both guards yielded with good grace, though Luke caught their uneasy glances. These men had grown up with Jon, watched him train in Winterfell's yard. To see him move with such supernatural skill...
"That's the problem, though," Jory continued, his voice dropping. "Everyone on this ship saw what you both can do. Those ironborn who survived, they saw it too. Word will spread like wildfire once we make port."
Luke nodded slowly. He'd known this moment would come—had felt it approaching like a distant storm. "And how will Westeros react to such word?"
Jory's expression turned grim. "The North might accept it, given time. We remember the old ways, the First Men and their magics. But the South?" He gestured toward the distant horizon. "The Faith of the Seven holds sway there. To them, all magic is blasphemy, heresy against their gods. They killed men for less during the Faith Militant uprising."
"Yet you don't think that way," Luke observed. "You've seen what we can do, and you're not calling for sept or septon."
A wry smile creased Jory's weathered features. "Those of the blood of the First Men are made of sterner stuff, Luke. We've not forgotten that there was magic in the world once. The children of the forest, the giants, the Others themselves—my grandmother swore she'd seen a giant as a girl, though most called her mad for it."
The morning sun climbed higher, burning away the sea mist. Jon had ended the sparring session, and now he helped Harwin and Alyn remove their practice armor. The easy camaraderie between them couldn't quite mask the underlying tension—the growing awareness that Jon Snow was becoming something beyond their understanding.
"Besides," Jory added, "I saw you save Lady Sansa from that assassin. Whatever power you wield, you use it to protect Lord Stark's children. That's enough for me."
Luke appreciated the man's pragmatism, even as he sensed deeper currents beneath. Jory Cassel was loyal to his bones, but that loyalty was being tested by forces he'd never imagined. How many others would face the same test in the days to come?
"Prepare them," Luke said quietly. "Your men. Help them understand that what they've seen doesn't change who Jon is at heart. He's still Ned Stark's son, still the boy they've known all his life."
Jory nodded thoughtfully. "Aye, I'll do what I can. Though it might be easier if we knew what to call it. This... gift you've taught them."
"The Force," Luke said simply. "It's called the Force."
"The Force," Jory repeated, testing the foreign word. "And you can teach anyone to use it?"
"Not anyone. It requires natural sensitivity, which the Stark children possess in abundance. But even then, it demands years of training, discipline, and..." Luke paused, watching Jon laugh at something Harwin said, "wisdom to use it well."
The ship's bell rang, signaling the noon hour. Sailors moved about their duties with practiced efficiency, though Luke noticed how they gave Jon a wider berth than before. Fear and awe made for a potent combination.
"We'll reach Oldtown in a fortnight if the winds are in our favor," Jory said. "Best prepare the lad for what he'll find there. The Citadel's full of men who think they know all the world's secrets. They won't take kindly to mysteries that challenge their understanding."
Luke nodded, already considering how to approach that particular challenge. But first, he had other lessons to teach. Tonight, he would begin Jon's instruction in pyrokinesis—a dangerous step, but necessary. The boy's natural affinity for fire couldn't be ignored or suppressed. It had to be understood, controlled, channeled properly.
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Night had fallen over the Narrow Sea, transforming the water into an endless expanse of liquid obsidian beneath a canopy of foreign stars. Luke sat cross-legged on the floor of their small cabin, a single unlit candle between him and Jon. The ship's gentle rocking had become a meditation in itself, a rhythm that helped center the mind.
Jon mirrored Luke's position, though tension radiated from his shoulders. The events at Winterfell—the revelation of his parentage, the burst of uncontrolled fire—still haunted him. Luke could feel the boy's fear wrapped around his heart like iron bands.
"Fire is not evil," Luke began, his voice soft in the confined space. "Nor is it good. It simply is—a fundamental force of nature, like wind or water."
"It felt evil," Jon said quietly. "When it came out of me. Like something dark and hungry."
Luke reached out with one finger, touching the candle's wick. The flame leaped to life without flint or tinder, casting dancing shadows on the wooden walls. "That darkness wasn't in the fire, Jon. It was in your emotional state when you summoned it. Fire reflects the heart of its wielder."
Jon stared at the small flame, his grey eyes so dark they seemed black in this light, reflected its orange glow. "My father... Lord Stark said my real father was the Mad King's son. Is that why? Bad blood?"
"There's no such thing as bad blood," Luke said firmly. "There are too many children of darkness who chose the light, and children of heroes who fell to shadow. What matters is choice, not heritage."
He gestured to the candle. "Watch the flame. Really watch it. See how it moves? It's alive in its own way, consuming fuel, producing heat and light. Through the Force, we can commune with that life, guide it without dominating it."
Jon leaned forward slightly, his breathing steadying as he focused. Luke felt the boy's presence in the Force sharpen, his natural sensitivity reaching out tentatively toward the flame.
"Don't try to grab it," Luke instructed. "That's the mistake most make with pyrokinesis. They try to seize fire like a sword hilt. But fire won't be grasped—it must be danced with, partnered."
The flame flickered, responding to Jon's tentative touch through the Force. It leaned toward him slightly, as if recognizing kinship.
"I feel it," Jon whispered, wonder creeping into his voice. "It's... warm. Not just physically, but..."
"In the Force, yes. Fire has its own presence, its own voice if you know how to listen." Luke smiled at his student's progress. "Now, very gently, see if you can make it grow. Don't force it—invite it. Feed it your intention, not your emotion."
Jon's brow furrowed in concentration. For several heartbeats, nothing happened. Then the flame began to stretch upward, growing from the size of a thumb to the length of a finger. It wavered, threatening to gutter out as Jon's control fluctuated.
"Steady," Luke murmured. "Breathe with it. In as it grows, out as it settles."
The flame stabilized, dancing at its new height. Jon's eyes widened with a mixture of fear and exhilaration. "I'm doing it. I'm actually..."
The door creaked, and Jon's concentration shattered. The flame exploded upward in a brief column of fire that nearly reached the low ceiling before Luke gestured sharply, containing it back to its original size.
"Sorry," Jon gasped, pulling back. "I lost focus."
"Which is why we practice," Luke said calmly. "Control comes with time and repetition. You did well for a first attempt."
Jon studied his hands as if expecting to see them marked somehow. "It felt different this time. Cleaner. When it happened at Winterfell, it was like something else was controlling me."
"Strong emotions can overwhelm our connection to the Force, especially anger and fear. They create static, distortion. The dark side feeds on that distortion, turns our abilities into weapons of destruction rather than tools of creation."
"The dark side," Jon repeated slowly. "You've mentioned it before, but never explained. Not fully."
Luke considered his words carefully. How to explain the eternal struggle between light and dark to a boy who'd just discovered his world contained magic at all?
"The Force has two aspects," he began. "The light side—peace, knowledge, serenity, harmony. And the dark side—anger, fear, aggression, passion unchecked. Both exist within everyone. The choice is which we feed, which we allow to guide our actions."
"And my fire... it comes from the dark?"
"No." Luke's response was immediate and firm. "Your ability is neutral. But when you summoned it in anger, you touched the dark side. That's why it felt wrong, hungry. The dark side takes our gifts and twists them, makes them serve destruction rather than life."
Jon absorbed this silently, then asked, "Have you ever touched it? The dark side?"
Luke's mind flashed to Cloud City, to the Emperor's throne room, to moments when rage had nearly consumed him. "Yes. Every Jedi faces that temptation. I came very close to falling, once. Closer than I like to remember."
"What stopped you?"
"Love," Luke said simply. "Love for my father, my sister, my friends. The dark side promises power, but it's a hollow promise. It takes everything that makes us human and burns it away, leaving only hunger and hate."
Jon nodded slowly, understanding dawning in his eyes. "That's why you're teaching me control. So I don't burn away."
"Exactly." Luke gestured to the candle again. "Shall we continue?"
They worked for another hour, Jon gradually learning to make the flame dance, grow, shrink, even change colors slightly. His natural affinity was remarkable—stronger than Luke had initially suspected. By the time exhaustion forced them to stop, Jon could maintain a steady control over the flame for minutes at a time.
As Jon prepared for sleep, rolling out his bedding on the narrow bunk, he paused. "Master Luke? That promise I asked for, about where you're from. I've been thinking about it during our voyage."
Luke looked up from extinguishing the candle with a gesture. "And?"
"I want to know. Whatever the truth is, however strange. I've learned my whole life was built on lies meant to protect me. I don't want any more secrets, no matter how difficult they might be to believe."
Luke studied his student carefully. Through the Force, he sensed Jon's sincerity, his need for truth after so many deceptions. "Are you certain? Once you know, you can't unknow. It will change how you see everything."
Jon sat up straighter, his jaw set with determination. "I'm certain."
"Very well." Luke moved to the small porthole, gazing out at the stars. How to explain an entire galaxy to someone who'd never conceived of worlds beyond his own?
"Look to the stars, Jon. What do you see?"
Jon joined him at the porthole. "Lights in the sky. The maesters say they're distant suns, though most folk think they're jewels set in the sky by the gods."
"The maesters are closer to the truth. Each star is indeed a sun, like the one that warms this world. And around many of those suns orbit other worlds, like this one. Worlds with their own people, their own histories, their own struggles between light and darkness."
Jon's brow furrowed. "Other worlds? You mean..."
"I come from one of those worlds," Luke said quietly. "A desert planet called Tatooine, orbiting twin suns in a star system so far from here that your maesters couldn't calculate the distance."
Jon pulled back slightly, his eyes wide. "That's... that's impossible."
"Search your feelings," Luke suggested gently. "The Force doesn't lie. You can sense truth when you hear it."
Jon closed his eyes, reaching out tentatively with his newfound senses. Luke felt the moment when understanding struck, when the boy's expanding awareness touched the truth of Luke's words.
"Seven hells," Jon breathed, his eyes snapping open. "You're serious. You're actually from..." He gestured helplessly at the stars.
"I am. I traveled between stars in a ship—not unlike this one in principle, though far more advanced." Luke's look up to the stars again as the salt-thick breeze through the porthole carried the creak of rigging and distant shouts of sailors, grounding him in this primitive vessel even as he spoke of impossible distances. "I was seeking an artifact when my vessel was damaged, forcing me to land here."
Jon's knees gave out. He dropped onto his bunk with a thud that made the thin mattress wheeze, his face cycling through expressions like a maester flipping through manuscript pages—disbelief, wonder, a touch of fear. The candlelight caught the sheen of sweat on his brow despite the cool night air.
"The stories you've told us," Jon's voice cracked, and he swallowed hard. "About the Empire and the Rebellion, about Jedi and Sith, they're all real? They happened on other worlds?"
"They did." Luke settled onto the opposite bunk, the wood groaning under his weight. Through the Force, he felt Jon's mind reeling, trying to reconcile everything he thought he knew with this vast new reality. "The galaxy, that's what we call the collection of star systems, contains thousands of inhabited worlds, millions of species. Humans are common, though we share space with countless others."
"But how?" Jon's hands clenched and unclenched on his knees, his breath coming faster. "How can people travel between stars? It would take... the maesters say even reaching the moon would be impossible."
"Technology your world hasn't developed yet. Ships that can travel faster than light itself, bending space and time to cross impossible distances." Luke watched the boy's face carefully, sensing the moment when his worldview began to crack like ice under spring sun.
Luke's raised his right hand, removed the glove and he slowly peeled back the synthetic skin of his glove. The leather whispered away from metal joints, revealing the intricate servos and durasteel framework beneath. In the candlelight, the prosthetic hand gleamed like polished silver, each articulated segment catching and throwing back golden reflections.
Jon's sharp intake of breath cut through the cabin's stillness. He leaned forward, gray eyes wide, drinking in every detail of the impossible limb. "By the Old Gods," he breathed, then caught himself. "Is it…does it hurt?"
"Not anymore." Luke flexed the mechanical fingers in sequence, the soft whir of servomotors barely audible above the ship's creaking. "Though phantom pains still wake me sometimes. The mind remembers what the body's lost."
"How?" Jon's voice dropped to barely above a whisper, as if speaking too loudly might shatter the unreality of the moment.
Luke studied the boy's face—fascination warring with horror, "My father cut it off."
The words hung between them like a blade. Jon's mouth opened, closed, opened again. "Your father did this?"
"During our second duel. I was young, cocky, thought I could face him before my training was complete." Luke turned the hand palm-up, watching light play across the sensor pads. "He gave me a choice—join him in darkness or die. When I refused, he took my hand as easily as you'd snap a twig."
"But you're his son." The raw disbelief in Jon's voice carried an edge of something deeper, a boy who'd grown up yearning for a father's acknowledgment, unable to fathom one who'd maim his own blood.
"The dark side had consumed him so completely, I was just another obstacle." Luke clenched the mechanical fist, servos humming. "He hung me over a bottomless shaft by my remaining hand, the stump of my right arm screaming, and still asked me to rule the galaxy beside him."
Jon's knuckles went white where he gripped the porthole's edge. "What kind of father—"
"One who'd forgotten how to love anything but power." Luke pulled the glove back on with practiced ease, hiding the evidence of old wounds. "Though in the end, buried beneath all that darkness, some spark of Anakin Skywalker remained. Enough to save me when it mattered most…I know it's difficult to accept."
"Difficult?" A laugh burst from Jon's throat—high, sharp, edged with hysteria. He pressed his palms against his eyes, shoulders shaking. "Master Luke, a moon ago I thought I was Ned Stark's bastard. Nothing more, nothing less. Just another Snow to fade into obscurity." His hands dropped, revealing eyes bright with unshed tears. "Then I learned I'm actually the son of a dragon prince and a she-wolf. I discovered I can move objects with my mind and summon fire from nothing. And now you tell me you fell from the stars themselves?"
He stood abruptly, pacing the narrow cabin in three strides before spinning back. "I'm beginning to think nothing is impossible. That everything I've ever been taught is a lie wrapped in ignorance."
"That's a valuable lesson," Luke said, keeping his voice steady, a calm anchor in Jon's storm. "Though I'd caution against taking it too far. The universe has rules, even if they're broader than you first believed."
Jon slumped against the porthole, his breath slowing down. Outside, the stars continued their eternal dance, indifferent to the crisis of faith happening in this cramped cabin. The ship rolled gently, and somewhere below deck, a sailor sang a bawdy song about mermaids.
"Why here?" Jon's question came out barely above a whisper. "Of all the worlds among all those stars, why did you crash on ours?"
Luke felt the Force stir around them, thick as the salt air. "I don't believe it was chance. The Force guided me here, though I didn't understand why at first." He stood, moving to stand beside Jon. "Now, training you and your siblings, sensing the darkness growing beyond your Wall... I think I was meant to be here. To help prepare your world for what's coming."
"The Others. The Long Night." Jon's reflection looked older suddenly, weighted with understanding. "We're just one world among thousands, and yet our fate matters?"
"Every world matters. Every life matters." The words came heavy with memory—of Alderaan's billions, of younglings in the Temple, of his aunt and uncle reduced to charred bones. "I've seen empires spanning star systems fall because one person made the right choice at the right moment. I've seen single acts of compassion ripple across galaxies."
Jon turned from the window, searching Luke's face. This close, Luke could see the shadows under the boy's eyes, the way his jaw clenched against exhaustion. "And you think we're approaching such a moment?"
"I know we are. The Force is building toward something here, Jon. Something that will determine the fate of your entire world." Luke placed a hand on Jon's shoulder, feeling the tension thrumming through the boy like a drawn bowstring. "But that's a burden for tomorrow. Tonight, you need rest. We'll reach Oldtown soon enough."
Jon nodded slowly, but didn't move toward his bunk. "Master Luke? Are there others like you here? From... out there?"
"Not that I've sensed. I believe I'm alone—the only representative of the wider galaxy on your world."
"That must be lonely." The words were soft, almost lost in the creak of timber and splash of waves.
Luke considered that, feeling the weight of it settle into his bones. How many nights had he stared at alien constellations, knowing Leia would never see them? How many times had he reached for a comlink that would never connect? "Sometimes. But I've found new purpose here, new connections. The Force binds all living things, whether they're from Tatooine, Coruscant or Westeros. In that way, we're all family."
Jon's mouth quirked in a smile that didn't quite reach his eyes. "A very large family."
"The largest imaginable."
The boy finally moved toward his bunk, exhaustion winning over wonder. As he settled onto the thin mattress, pulling the rough wool blanket to his chin, he asked, "Do you miss it? Your galaxy?"
Luke blew out the candle before answering, letting darkness fill the cabin. Only starlight remained, painting everything in silver and shadow. "Every day. But missing something doesn't mean you're in the wrong place."
Jon's breathing gradually deepened, the day's revelations finally releasing their hold. But Luke remained awake, sitting lotus-style on his bunk, letting the Force flow through him like the ocean currents beneath their hull.
Through the porthole, the stars wheeled in their courses and somewhere among those distant lights, the New Republic continued its work of building peace. Leia would be negotiating treaties, probably running on too little sleep and too much caf. Han would be pretending he wasn't enjoying respectability, complaining about diplomatic dinners while secretly loving that Leia needed him there. And the Jedi Order Luke hoped to rebuild remained a dream deferred, a temple without students, wisdom without inheritors.
But here, on this creaking ship that smelled of tar and brine, Luke had found a different purpose. These children of Westeros carried the same potential he'd once seen in himself of a raw, untrained boy but burning with possibility. Jon especially, with his burden of hidden heritage and growing power, reminded Luke painfully of his own journey from moisture farmer to Jedi Knight.
The Force whispered around him, and for a moment, Luke could almost see the threads connecting everything—Jon's destiny intertwined with fire and ice, with the Stark children, bound by blood and purpose while an ancient evil stirring in the furthest north. Whatever cosmic purpose had brought him here, whatever the Force intended, he would see it through.
A wave larger than the rest rocked the ship, and Jon mumbled something in his sleep—a name, perhaps, or a prayer. Luke reached out through the Force, smoothing the boy's dreams, easing him deeper into rest. Tomorrow would bring Oldtown with its learned maesters who thought they understood the universe. They would walk among chains of knowledge forged link by link, never knowing how small their world truly was. Or how vast.
But tonight, truth had been spoken and accepted. A boy who'd thought himself nothing learned he might be everything. And an old Jedi found that even in exile, even galaxies from home, the Force still had work for willing hands.
The ship sailed on through the darkness, carrying them toward dawn and whatever destiny awaited in the City of Chains. Above them, the stars continued their eternal dance, each one a sun, each sun warming worlds, each world teeming with life and possibility and the endless, binding Force.