Dyscommunication

by Anne Carr and Emrin Alexander



Archive: M_A; all others please ask

Rating: NC-17

Category: AU, first-time, Plot What Plot, angst

Pairing: O/Q

Warnings: None

Synopsis: Misunderstandings, understandings, sex; started about the time when we were all talking about virgin sacrifices

Disclaimer: The usual. If GL thinks any one of us is making any money off this, then he's nuts. He's making all the money. From us.

Feedback: Please, please oh please. njtucker@yahoo.com



Obi-wan Kenobi stared out from their rooms in the Palace, over the city, out past the green valley, to the mountains. It had been ten years since he had first stood at this balcony door, still excited to have been chosen as Padawan, braid barely long enough to touch his shoulder. He looked over his shoulder into the room. In the sunset it all looked red gold, but there was color there, carefully placed where candlelight would pick it up. There was food in the oven, just beginning the aroma that would fill the room soon enough. It was ready. He was ready.

His gaze went back to the mountains, breathing in the sweet air. Ten years ago, Qui-gon had set him down on that sofa behind him. Explained what he was about to be a part of in words he could understand. "We'll be going into the mountains and it will be cold, so take the furs they've provided. For the first part of the ceremony we'll be together. For the second part, you'll stand alone. Keep your hood up. You don't need to watch, just stand there."

"Why don't you want me to watch, Master?"

Qui-gon had not answered directly. "You understand the situation?"

"The Yalens and the Trevans have been at war for a long time. The Trevans have won and we came here to officiate at the signing of the Treaty." He had almost chanted the words.

"That's the first part of the ceremony. The second part deals with a sacrifice."

Obi-wan had gone pale.

Qui-Gon's rumble of laughter made him feel a little better. "Not a death sacrifice, my young Padawan. A sacrifice of a different kind. The Yalens will offer 'the light' of their race, a young noble person. The Trevans want to show that now the war is over, they do not require such a sacrifice."

"So they will turn the sacrifice down?" Obi-wan was trying to understand.

"Yes, and no. They will not personally take the sacrifice. Instead they will offer the nobleperson to the one who stands in the middle. That will be me."

Obi-wan sensed great import in those words, but did not comprehend the true meaning. It had taken him years to see the full picture. Now he stood in the doorway, trying to place the exact spot in the mountains where they had gone that night. They had been part of a long line of people who were singing, carrying boughs of strange blossoms, and behind them had been drummers. It was easy to slip into the Force, becoming one with that rhythm. Constant training had given him stamina, and the climb was easy.

They came to a rounded, dipped area, and he followed Qui-gon to the center where a huge fire burned. The blossom boughs were added to the fuel and the smoke rose with sparks, a heady, sweet scent filling the air.

The two leaders, Yalen and Trevan, were signing the Treaty on a long, waist high, smooth rock. They clasped arms, smiling at each other. The people cheered. Then silence fell, and a young man, clad only in a white silky looking skirt, his hands tied loosely with a white cord, was led forward by the leader of the Yalens. Obi-wan knew now that the sacrifice was the Yalen prince, Tanen, the leader's oldest child. He was a few years older than Obi-wan, tall and lean and muscular. Beautiful in the firelight.

The cord was handed to the leader of the Trevans, who bowed deeply. He touched the face of the sacrifice, pushing back Tanen's hair, and complimented the Yalens' on the virtue and beauty of their youth. Then he handed the cord on to Qui-gon, who lifted up the tied hands and used the Force to release the cord. It fell to the ground and the young man stood with his hands apart, signifying freedom.

Obi-wan now understood, though at the time, he had been aware that the meaning was beyond him. Tanen was free, therefore it was HIS choice to do what he did next. He had turned to the Jedi and reached out his arms. Qui-gon accepted the gesture and pulled Tanen into the warmth of his robe, symbolic protectiveness. He had also said something in the young man's ear, and Obi-wan had seen the half-smile quirk on Tanen's face. The bond he had with Qui-gon radiated only serenity.

Then Qui-gon turned Tanen and the young man lay on his stomach. Obi-wan shut his eyes. He had not been smart enough to shut them at the time. He had seen it all. He had seen his Master, with the gentleness only the truly strong could engender, as he lifted aside Tanen's white skirt, opened his own robe, and had slowly taken the length in his hand and pushed it into the Yalen sacrifice. He was concentrating on Tanen and Obi-wan had, without thinking about it, joined peripherally, through his link with his Master. It was all feeling. Reassurance, lack of pain, protection, and a strand of something else that had eluded recognition then.

He knew it for what it was, now. Lust.

In front of him a simple ornament skidded into sudden life and smashed into powder. Obi-wan made a face and took a breath. He had to learn to control his emotions. He was certainly better at them now than he had been, but sometimes his strength in the Force got away from him. His room in the Temple was pretty much empty these days, because ornaments always got the vent of his emotion.

He should have withdrawn from the link, but it was still too new, and he didn't know how. And, if truth be told, he didn't really want to. Ten years and he still remembered. Tanen had accepted the entry into his virginal channel, had responded to being taken with actual enjoyment. Qui-Gon's face was sweat drenched in the cold. Massive control. Encouragement. Awareness centered only on Tanen, the feel of his body. The tight hot touch clenching him deeper. Lust.

Obi-wan turned away from the balcony. The sun had set. Dinner was almost ready. He used Force to light the first candle. Any time now, Qui-gon. Any time.

Obi-wan sat on the sofa and ran one hand over the area beside him. Soft. He could feel the texture. It was the same. They had come back to these rooms, he'd sat right here, running his hand over this pattern, as Qui-gon first paced, then crouched in front of him. His Master was not angry. But he was concerned.

"You should not have done this, Obi-wan. There are times when our bond should not be used."

Obi-wan hung his head. "I'm sorry, Master. I didn't mean..."

"I know." Huge hands cradled his head, messed his hair. "I know."

Then he had been wrapped in that robe, held, protected. The other thing, the one Obi-wan had not understood, was not there.

And here they were. Ten years. Back for another ceremony. No sacrifice this time, instead the marriage of the two tribes, Yalen and Trevan, with the life bonding of Tanen and the middle son of the Trevan council chief, Cathian. It was a love match, and no one could doubt it, seeing them together. It was not overt. It was in the subtle way they gravitated toward each other. The odd look that shared. They had been friends since they were placed together in the tribes' joined armies, bunked together. Could the two sides fight together? Yes.

Obi-wan lit a second candle with the Force, one finger barely flicking. The ceremony the night before had been one of the most sacred things he had ever witnessed. He stood there next to Qui-gon, letting the words wash over him, head bowed. They wore scarlet, Tanen and Cathian, and at the celebration after, they could be picked out in the crowd, apart and together, always coming back to each other. He had seen Qui-gon with Tanen at one point. They were laughing and Qui-Gon's hand was on his shoulder. Obi-wan had turned away. He was drinking just a little bit more than he should. The concoction was bubbly and ticked his nose.

A voice said in his ear, "And why are you celebrating alone?"

It was Tanen, shining, over the moon.

"Congratulations." Obi-wan smiled at him.

"What are you afraid of?"

"I'm sorry, I don't understand."

"My mother says that people in love can recognize like kind." Tanen said softly. He was waving at someone across the room, but his words were for Obi-wan alone. More than startled, Obi-wan retreated into Jedi mystery and did not respond.

"When I knew I loved Cat, I set out to win him. One night. Everything perfect - candles, food, drink. I told him I loved him, and then I made him believe it." Tanen shrugged. "I didn't think Jedi felt fear."

"Do not believe everything you hear."

"Never."

Obi-wan glanced at him out of the corner of his eye. He was no longer the beautiful sacrifice. Willing sacrifice, bent over the altar with Qui-Gon's hard cock inside him. He was a grown man, hardened by time and experience. Handsome now, with laugh lines, eyes that smiled. Eyes that somehow understood. Tanen said, "You are afraid that if you let him know how you feel, you will lose what you have now, which is better than nothing at all."

Obi-wan shivered, but didn't answer.

"It will eat at you. Not the love. The not knowing." Tanen leaned over the balcony, acknowledging someone. "He's worth more than that, don't you think? On second thought, quit thinking. Just feed him and fuck him."

With that, Tanen was gone.

Obi-wan patted the sofa once more. The wine was chilled, the savory smell of cooking filled the room. He lit a third candle. A fourth. Anytime now, Qui-gon. Any time.




A bit later, as he carefully added some spices to the gently bubbling Anterian chicken sauce, Obi-Wan reflected that he would not be here, taking Tanen's advice, putting his suggestion into action at all, were it not for a conversation with Qui-Gon earlier in the day, after a strange breakfast. The wedding feast had been followed by the happy couple departing for a short trip alone; most of the hangers on and peripheral courtiers had departed, leaving commission delegates and tribal council leaders to get down to the business of negotiating a mutually rewarding trade agreement. Since Master Jinn was noted for his diplomatic capabilities and trusted by delegates on all sides, he had been asked to mediate. With more relief than he would admit in public, Obi-Wan had been excused. He did not mind negotiations, and he could be as diplomatic as Qui-Gon when necessary, but being cooped up listening to various and sundry politicos arguing the price of Yaleni potatos vs. Travni grapes....no, given a choice, he was just as happy to catch up on his reading and trying - still- to adjust to his very recent change from Padawan to Knight.

They had awakened early, Qui-Gon coming to his room, just standing there, until Obi-Wan awoke. He opened his eyes to Qui-Gon's stare, but before he could say a word, the man had nodded, speaking lightly, "Good. You're awake. Breakfast is ready."

Breakfast was fruit, bread and cheese. Not having to be anywhere, he had come to the table in just his sleep pants, still rubbing sleep from his eyes. Somewhere between sips of tea and eating one of the long, round gunnek fruits, he became aware that he was being watched. He glanced at his former Master, and felt a thrill run through him. There was a hunger in those dark blue eyes, quickly veiled, but it had been there nonetheless. He had almost squirmed in his seat, and forced himself to stay still. His mouth, still around the fruit, had slowly sucked at the juice because his throat had gone dry in an instant.

Qui-Gon smiled faintly, and rose. "I must be off." He hesitated by Obi-Wan's chair, and one hand rested against the Knight's head in an almost caress. "Will you be in tonight?"

Obi-Wan had been unable to do anything more than nod.

"Good." That large hand did caress him then, gentle pressure, perhaps a promise.

It had taken awhile before Obi-Wan could think clearly, long after Qui-Gon had gone.

It had been after the noon meal when, tired of struggling with a particularly obscure translation of an ancient Landarian love epic (Your Moon is the Center of My Universe, indeed) that he had gone exploring the vast palace. And run straight into Qui-Gon, on a temporary break in the meetings.

"Escaping from the potato wars, Qui-Gon?"

Qui-Gon smiled. "I wish. No, its a brief break only. But I was hoping to find you about."

Obi-Wan stilled and waited expectantly. There was something. . .vibrant about Qui-Gon today, something that tingled along the training bond neither Jedi had ever thought to sever. "Really? Why?"

Qui-Gon put a hand on Obi-Wan's shoulder. It was something he had done a thousand times in the past, but this time an electric shock ran from the simple touch all through Obi-Wan's nervous system. "I want you to be sure to be in tonight. You've no other plans have you? Nothing's come up?"

"Oh, uh no. Nothing's changed." Sudden inspiration as he remembered Tanen's advice. "I'm planning on cooking a very nice dinner, as a matter of fact."

Qui-Gon's grip tightened, and for a moment their eyes met in a glance that left Obi-Wan, at least, more than a little breathless. "Perfect. You think of everything. I think it will be a very special evening. For us both."

His former master was called back into the conference chamber then, and Obi-Wan had departed in search of a palace regular who could direct him to the nearest market. And now, here he was, waiting for Qui-Gon's return. Happiness and a feeling of expectant buoyancy filled him. Finally, the Master had realized that his former apprentice was a grown man, not a Padawan any longer.

More than time. There was the sound of the front door opening and he went forward to meet the future.

Obi-Wan's sense of happiness and expectant buoyancy faded away as he realized, with an abruptness of a slap in the face, that someone had accompanied Qui-Gon into the living area. He stopped in his tracks, balancing very carefully, arranging his features into an expression that could be classified as "generic welcome."

What in the name of 7 Sith Hells was the Yaleni Ambassador doing here? With Qui-Gon? On the very best of terms. Obviously.

"Aslin, you already know my appr -- former apprentice, Obi-Wan Kenobi. Obi-Wan, Aslin Deva is shortly to take up the post of Yaleni Ambassador to the Republic."

"I know that. Congratulations, Ambassador." Obi-Wan bowed.

"My -- you were just a child when you were here last, and now -- Qui-Gon tells me you've been knighted. My congratulations to you, Obi-Wan."

She smiled up at him, an attractive woman, red-haired and petite. He remembered her from their last visit to this world. He and Qui-Gon had spent time with her household. She baked wonderful cookies, his mind recalled with diplomatic precision.

Obi-Wan gave his head a minute shake to try and clear it, but all that accomplished was to make the dimly lit room swim around him in a sickening fashion. Aslin and Qui-Gon were both looking at him expectantly. Why? Oh. More manners. "Thank you."

He turned to Qui-Gon. "So, this is the reason you were so specific about dinner this evening, I take it?" He heard the clipped way the cadence of the words fell and the way his accent had become so pronounced. Two dead giveaways that he was upset, should anyone care to notice.

Qui-Gon was far to controlled to verbally rap his former apprentice's knuckles in front of a guest, but the long, questioning look Obi-Wan was receiving from his former Master should have performed the same salutary function.

"Obi-Wan - are you entirely well?" Qui-Gon asked.

Strangling the oddest compulsion to tell him that he was most certainly not well, that, indeed, he did not think he would ever be entirely well ever again, Obi-Wan struggled to respond appropriately. "I don't know."

"What?"

Wrong answer. He tried again. "Fine. I'm fine. Really."

His training was trying to tell him what to do, but he couldn't get enough neurons to cooperate. His face felt unnaturally stiff, as though muscles had suddenly marbleized. Frost darts were ran and played along nerve endings, weighing him down with ice. Glancing over the Ambassador's head, he saw Qui-Gon frowning at him.

"So many nice candles," Aslin was enthusing. Qui-Gon asked her if she wanted something to drink and Obi-Wan used the brief interruption to escape to the kitchen. He mechanically went about setting the various foodstuffs out, each on its proper serving plate, placed the dishes on a very elegant little cart and then, his mind carefully blanked, wheeled the lot into the dining room. Apparently, a dose of terminal rejection/humiliation/disappointment did not prevent one from being able to put dinner on the table.




Obi-Wan pushed the Anterian chicken casserole around on his plate. He had absolutely no appetite and was sure that the amount of food on his plate was actually increasing as the evening dragged on. Aslin sat on his left, at the head of the table, Qui-Gon across from him. He listened idly to their conversation, not really caring what was being said. He mixed some of the orange sauce from the chicken with the Yaleni grown purple potatoes and was fascinated when the mixture immediately defined chemistry by turning bright turquoise. There must be some enzymatic component to cause that kind of color change so quickly.

Laughter. He focused on it and returned to the dinner table in time to hear "...it was a whole basket of Leva fruit. He and Corin ate the lot. Tanen assured them eating all that fruit wouldn't be harmful." Aslin was telling a story. She turned a smiling face to Obi-Wan. "You were both so sick. I came home and found two bright green little boys who just wanted to die quickly and get the misery over."

Qui-Gon grinned. "We had to stay an extra two days before Obi-Wan was well enough to travel."

Obi-Wan thought What? Oh, the Leva fruit. For years, just hearing the words 'Leva fruit' made his stomach cramp, but tonight nothing permeated the warm, protective shroud of apathy surrounding him. He thought he smiled at them, but his face wasn't communicating much with his mind and rather than worry, he went back to pushing the food around on his plate.

"Obi-Wan?"

He hastily put a bite of chicken in his mouth and looked up. Qui-Gon and Aslin were both gazing at him expectantly. What did I miss? Hastily swallowing he asked, "What?"

Patiently, very patiently, obviously repeating word-for-word the question Obi-Wan had missed, Qui-Gon said, "What are your plans for tomorrow? Aslin has kindly offered to show me the Trideri Falls. While we're gone, would you like to visit with Corin?"

For all the world as though I'm still 13 and need to have a playmate while the adults go off for the day by themselves. Aloud he answered, "No, I. Do Not." Accent terrifically pronounced.

"Obi-Wan." Qui-Gon seldom used that dangerously quiet tone with him; never needed to use it. That he did so now, for perhaps the second time in Obi-Wan's life, should have been warning enough. It bounced off Obi-Wan and fell harmlessly to stony ground.

Obi-Wan stood up. "No." Enough. The one bite of food he'd swallowed felt like a rock in his stomach. And then he did something he had never done before. Would never have done before. He simply backed away from the table and stalked out of the apartment.




"Well, you could have been ruder."

Long past caring, Obi-Wan simply looked at Qui-Gon.

"But, I don't see how," Qui-Gon concluded.

Obi-Wan continued to simply look at him, shields firmly in place, a blank numbness pervading his body.

"Aslin is the newly appointed Ambassador to the Republic. She also happens to be an old friend. How could you act as though she were beneath your notice?"

Qui-Gon's tone was so calm, Obi-Wan thought admiringly, so reasonable, as always. He said nothing, simply continuing to look at Qui-Gon.

"Well?"

Ah, now that one word held a bit of ...could it be irritation? Obi-Wan considered this, analyzing the tone critically. Yes, very faint, but definitely irritation. He simply continued to look at Qui-Gon.

"You got up, turned your back and walked -- no, stalked -- out in the middle of dinner. The only reason there isn't a diplomatic incident to smooth over is because Aslin is good-natured. Are you aware of that, Padawan?"

Something stirred beneath the numbness, something hot, sharp, clean-burning its way through the shroud of protective apathy. Obi-Wan, sounding mildly curious, asked "Padawan?"

Qui-Gon was definitely annoyed now. "Even when you were 13 you knew better than to behave in such a fashion, Padawan. What in nine worlds got into you tonight?"

The apathy vaporized. "Padawan? I am not your Padawan."

"What?"

"I am not your Padawan."

"What has that got to do with anything?" Qui-Gon's movements matched the impatience in his voice as he yanked off the elaborately embroidered cloak he'd been wearing all day and tossed it aside. Distracted, his aim was poor. Instead of landing neatly on a nearby chair, it landed on a small, candle-laden table. "And what are all these damned candles doing everywhere? They're dangerous, especially with your propensity for setting yourself on fire every time you get near an open flame."

"Get out."

"Are you insane?"

"I am quite in my right mind, Qui-Gon." Obi-Wan retrieved the abused cloak - it would be stiff with wax in a second or two - and held it out to his former Master. He pointed, "There is the door. Leave."

Qui-gon looked. . .startled.

"Now." Both the expression on his face and the tone of his voice left no doubt that there would be serious consequences if the command, and it definitely was a command, was not obeyed.

Qui-Gon opened his mouth to argue, stopped, then, in a parody of manners, he bowed. Obi-wan did not move. Pain and anger swirled in him and held him frozen. Qui-Gon turned and left their apartment. Later, when he could think clearly, that would astonish Obi-Wan.

For now, however, the candles on the table began to explode, one after another.




The worst part about losing his temper, Obi-Wan decided the next morning, as he finally finished cleaning up glass and candle fragments, was disposing of the mess afterwards. This was just the physical mess. What he had wrought in his relationship with Qui-gon -- that would have to be faced as well. But not yet. He wasn't ready yet. So physical labor took the place of self-examination.

He had just dumped the last of the debris into the rubbish chute, when the door chimed softly. Force help him, but he hoped it wasn't Qui-Gon, then knew it wasn't. Qui-gon did not need to ring the bell at his own door. He put out a tendril of inquiry and encountered an oddly familiar signature, something from his past, vaguely recognized as being good. Relief washed through him and he opened the door to find himself face-to-face with a tall, wiry young man, shoulder-length hair, ready smile.

"Obi-Wan Kenobi?" The man tilted his head a bit to the side, then nodded. " Yes, you're taller than when I last saw you, but that's the same haircut. Minus braid."

"I'm also less green than the last time we saw each other, Corin. Have you ever been able to look a Leva fruit in the face again?"

Corin Deva shuddered. "Ugh. Never touch the ghastly things." He grinned, "Would you like to come out and play?"

Obi-Wan blinked. "What?"

Corin laughed. "Well, that was the impression my mother gave me when she suggested it -- said she was taking Master Qui-Gon off to see the Trideri Falls and would I like to visit with young Obi-Wan. As if we were still about 13 and just old enough to babysit each other."

"I got the same offer." He stood back and waved Corin into the sitting room.

"Parents. I'm getting married in six months -- Cat's sister, Tresli -- and Mother still wants to know if I washed behind my ears after I get out of the bath."

Obi-Wan laughed, couldn't help it. It was nice to know that he wasn't the only one getting the kiddy treatment. "Congratulations. And Qui-Gon is almost as bad. I was knighted three months ago and he still acts like I'm about to enter puberty any day now."

"Knighted! Congratulations to you, as well. So, how about it?"

"What did you have in mind?"

Corin shrugged. "I'm sure we can think of something. Oh--you're not contagious or anything are you?"

"Now why would you ask me that, Cor?"

"Well, last night Mother turned me out of my room so that Master Jinn could sleep there. I just wondered if you had some dread disease and he didn't want to risk catching it."

To his annoyance, Obi-Wan felt himself blush. So that was where Qui-Gon had retreated to. "No dread disease. Just a. . .severe difference of opinion. Sorry about you losing your bed."

Corin politely did not ask. "Don't be. The sofas in this place are big enough to sleep six. So -- want to play, Obi?"

"No fruit this time."

Corin nodded, expression solemn. "No fruit."



As it turned out, going out to play with Corin was fun.

They had explored the markets -- due to the wedding, merchants were offering far more extravagant gear for sale than usual. They spent a long time while Cor examined merchandise, particularly jewelry, searching, as he told Obi-Wan "For just the right bride gift for my Tres..." They finally found a delicate necklace and earrings that suited her perfection, then ate a late lunch at a local cafe Corin liked, and finally wandered back to the palace to sit talking on a terrace overlooking one of the many gardens that surrounded the complex.

"No, you are joking," Corin said, struggling to keep a straight face.

Obi-Wan nodded solemnly. "Oh, yes. And Qui-Gon said, "Your Eminence, I'm sure that if my Apprentice had actually propositioned your daughter, he would have done a great deal better than simply saying "'How about it, old girl,' and tripping her into a fountain" -- I still had to apologize, and that after the wretched girl had chased me around the fountains in the palace courtyard until I thought my lungs would give out."

Corin was laughing so hard he was holding his sides. But he could do one better. "That's not nearly as bad as the time that I was almost forced to marry one of the Senari herders."

"How did that happen?"

"Well, seems the fellow took a shine to me -- now I'm not averse to men, Obi, but this guy had to be about 900 years old and smelled like Bantha poodoo to boot, so there I am," Corin threw himself across Obi-Wan's lap, wrapping his arms around his waist "not knowing where to look, with this chap wrapped around me like I am around you right now, and my Father and Tanen are not being any help whatsoever, because if they say one word they are going to start laughing and not be able to stop. I cannot speak, because I'm going to start screaming in horror if I open my mouth -- oh yes, you laugh now, but I assure it was not a pretty sight."

"Oh, poor little you. Stop that!" Obi-Wan added in protest as Corin, taking advantage of the position he was in, ran one finger up his flank. It was his most ticklish spot, and Corin was unceremoniously dumped onto the ground.

It ended up being a wrestling match. Finally, flushed and still laughing they hauled themselves to their feet. It was then that Obi-Wan felt a familiar tingle along his nerve endings and instinctively turned his gaze upward.

Qui-Gon was standing on a balcony two floors above. Still as a stone, face expressionless. For a long moment he continued to simply stare at Obi-Wan, who -- unable to tear his own eyes away -- simply stared back. Then, with less grace than was his wont, the Jedi Master turned away and moved from their sight.

It was only then that Obi-Wan realized that after the first awareness, he had felt nothing, no exchange of sensation, nothing along the training bond.

Could no longer feel along it.

Because it had been severed; so gently he couldn't say when, at some point in those scant moments, it had gone. For the first time in his life, he was utterly, completely alone. He felt along the edges, like worrying at a toothache, and was astonished to find no pain.

Beside him, Corin, sounding puzzled, asked, "What was that all about?"

Obi-Wan shook his head. "I don't know, Corin, I truly don't know."

But he damn well intended to find out.




Qui-Gon was sitting on one of the large, overstuffed couches that flanked the fireplace in the main room of their temporary apartments, looking, well, looking lost. It was the first time Obi-Wan had ever seen his Master with that kind of aura about him and it almost deflected him from his mission. Almost.

"Why now?"

Qui-Gon looked up. "What?"

Obi-Wan moved further into their apartments, until he was standing in front of Qui-Gon. "You could have broken the training bond any time after my knighting. Why now? Why without warning?"

"It seemed the appropriate thing to do." Qui-Gon's voice was curiously toneless.

Obi-Wan stared at him, resisting the urge to shake the man. "Why?"

"What?"

Obi-Wan bit back a very descriptive word and said instead, "Stop it. We've already done that part of the conversation. You know quite well what I'm talking about."

Qui-Gon studied his own hands as though he'd never really seen them before. "When I saw you with Corin, it suddenly occurred to me. . .I realized that you are separate now, you should be. . .you are your own person. Complete and whole. You don't need me or the training bond any longer, Obi-Wan."

"I don't need. . ." Obi-Wan repeated, then shook his head. "I don't. . ."

Qui-Gon continued as though he hadn't heard him. "You make an attractive pair. You should realize that Corin will be married shortly -- Cat's sister."

"I know that - we spent half the day searching for a bride gift for her and the other half with me nodding wisely as Cor catalogued all of Tresli's incredibly long list of perfections." He smiled wryly, "Amongst which is singing like a bird and being extremely creative with variations of bantha stew."

Qui-Gon stopped studying his hands. "Bantha. . .are you joking, Obi-Wan?"

"No. Cor loves bantha stew in all its variations. Look, Qui-Gon, you didn't sever the training bond because of Cor?"

"Not directly, but seeing you with him made me realize. You are grown-up. You don't need. . ."

"You or the training bond. Right, at least on one count. Why did you ask Aslin Deva to dinner last night?"

"She's an old friend."

"I know. Why did you ask her to dinner last night."

"She's the new ambassador to the Repuplic."

"Why did you ask her to dinner last night?"

Qui-Gon started to get up, was stopped by Obi-Wan's deceptively iron grip on his forearm, one that would leave bruises. "Answer me."

Ah, that got some reaction. Qui-Gon's eyes darkened to a particularly inky shade of blue and his mouth tightened. "Stop it, Obi-Wan."

"I asked you a perfectly reasonable question, Qui-Gon, why won't you answer it?" Obi-Wan didn't let go of Qui-Gon, but he relaxed his grip to a more comfortable level.

"I ran into her at the close of the trade talks and we were chatting, catching up on news, the wedding, your knighting. The next thing I knew, she'd invited herself over to meet you again."

"Ah."

"May I go now?" Qui-Gon asked dryly.

"No. Having the Ambassador be a third wheel wasn't what you originally intended, was it?"

Qui-Gon didn't answer, but even without the training bond in place, Obi-Wan could feel the other man's increased pulse beat, signaling agitation. Intriguing. And over such a seemingly innocuous question.

"It wasn't, was it?" Obi-Wan prodded; the answer was too important to be mercifully tactful.

"What would you have me say, Obi-Wan?" Qui-Gon finally asked.

"The truth. It wasn't what you meant for the evening, was it?" Tell me, he thought, that I couldn't misread you that completely.

"No, it was not." Qui-Gon pulled away from Obi-Wan's loosened grip and stood, wrapping his arms around himself defensively. "Now are you satisfied?"

"No. Do you know what I was going to say to you, minus the Ambassador's presence last night?"

"I have a fair idea."

"Really. What is that?"

Qui-Gon shrugged. "I know the Council has offered you a pick of choice solo assignments. I assume you've decided to take them up on one. It is perfectly natural after all, to want to strike out on your own."

"Oh, you've got that all decided for me, have you?" Obi-Wan felt his earlier anger begin to reassert itself. "All neatly tied up. Only you forgot one important factor, Qui-Gon."

"And what would that be?"

"You did not ask me. You just assumed."

"Well, I. . ."

He got no further. Obi-Wan was on his feet and quite literally in his face. "Listen. I'm only going to say this once. I, fool that I am, did some assuming of my own. I turned down the solo assignments they offered. I told Master Yoda and the others that the only assignments I was interested in were with my former Master. If you hadn't chickened out last night, I would have explained that. I would also have told you why I made that choice."

"But. . ."

"Don't interrupt me. I was also going to tell you, you stubborn idiot, that I love you. By the way, that is what you so charmingly referred to as "all those damned candles" were a part of. And I do not set myself on fire every time I get near an open flame; I did that once, when I was 14 and it is about time you forgot it."

Qui-Gon's expression had changed in turn from angry, to confused, and was now bemused. "You love me?"

"Yes! Not that it seems to be doing me any good!" Obi-Wan realized he was shouting and abruptly stopped speaking.

"I did NOT 'chicken out.' "

"Yes you did."

"I did not," Qui-Gon insisted. "I. . .accepted delay as being the Will of the Force."

Obi-Wan, no longer quite so angry, raised an eyebrow and said, "I've got this Temple on Coruscant I'd like to sell you."

"It seemed. . ."

"A good opportunity to opt out, since you already had made up my mind for me, is that it?"

"Is your annoying tendency to finish all my sentences for me going to be a permanent fixture of our partnership, Obi-Wan? If so, I can tell you right now, I do not like it one bit." Qui-Gon unwrapped his arms from around his waist, put his hands on his hips, and added, "You're right, by the way."

"I see. And?"

"I. . .at breakfast, I meant exactly what you thought I meant."

"And?"

"In the hall between talks, I also meant exactly what you thought I did."

Obi-Wan smiled. "Well, that's all right then."

"No, it's not." Qui-Gon shook his head. "I was scared you would leave me, and I had no right to want you, to hold you back."

"No right?! If you don't, then who does?!" Obi-Wan didn't care anymore if he was shouting. "Sith! I love you! I think you care for me. You have NEVER held me back. NEVER. Except in this. . ."

He grabbed Qui-Gon's arms and pulled him forward until their bodies hit, then his hands went to Qui-Gon's head, pulling him down with handfuls of hair, taking his mouth in a ferocious kiss. He tasted blood, his own or his Master's, it didn't matter, because Qui-Gon's arms had gone around him and he was being held so tightly he could barely breathe.

There was a tongue in his mouth, sucking back, pulling him into Qui-Gon's mouth, ruthless, as if some dam had burst, and emotions were pouring into him through touch and some other link, new and infinitely stronger than the one that had been severed. Hands went from his waist to cup his ass, lifting him into the kiss.

Qui-Gon whispered, "I want you." Lips kissed him, over his face, quick and hard, bit briefly at his lower lip. "Now, my Knight. Now."

Obi-Wan managed to send agreement along this new link, and he was whirled, carried to the table and set down while Qui-Gon's arm sent everything flying, crashing into the far wall. He lay back, pulling at the larger man's robe, wanting his weight. But Qui-Gon held back, pausing for a moment, his breath coming harsh, looking.

"I can hear you," he said softly. "I hear what you feel. Obi-Wan, how could you love me like this? So much. . ."

Obi-Wan went from pulling him closer, to pulling off his clothes. "Touch me," he gasped, and lifted his hips when Qui-Gon grasped his leggings and yanked. His erection was full, already moist at the tip, instantly held in one large hand, gripped tightly, Qui-Gon's other hand busy at his waist, removing belt, sash, pushing aside his tunic. Somehow when the larger man leaned over him, they were groin to groin, chest to chest. It was beyond what he had dreamed.

They kissed again. And again. Harder. Obi-Wan was filled with pictures from Qui-Gon's mind, love and warmth and comfort and hot need. The need overcame it all and he surrendered without a second's hesitation, opening his legs, lifting his hips from the edge of the table, clear invitation.

Again those large hands held his buttocks, grip and release, closer and closer to his anal entrance, and by the time thumbs touched him there he was moaning. There was a snap in the air, a tendril of Force, then a moist finger against him, then in him, twisting just enough. He arched against it, demanding more, and it was given, exactly as he needed it, the Master's mind attuned exquisitely to his own. Another finger, and then something hotter, heavier, and a hand light on his hip stilled him. That sense of need was being carefully imprisoned, but at the ragged edges of control, and he ripped it away. wrapping his strong legs around Qui-Gon's body, pulling him close, sheathing the hot length entirely inside himself in one move.

He felt and saw and tasted the white energy that went through Qui-Gon, who lifted him up and withdrew and returned, each time touching that spot inside him, and he, too, let go of everything, trusting he would not be hurt. He gave himself over to the blinding light and it was so good, so right. . .He vaguely knew he was coming, that the clench of his muscles was bringing Qui-Gon over that edge, and then there was weight on him, and he was being kissed again, top lip, bottom lip, beads of sweat on his face licked clean.

There were no words, but he heard it all in his head, and words could not describe what he was hearing, the outpouring of Qui-Gon's joy in him. In an odd twist of biological reaction, he blushed.

When Qui-Gon opened his eyes, amusedly watching, he blushed again, thinking. . .

"Yes," Qui-Gon whispered, "you look well fucked, and you can't imagine how long I've waited to see you this way."






It was morning and they were leaving. Corin waved good-bye, his mother, the Ambassador beside him. She had given Obi-Wan a small package, his favorite cookies, and had whispered something in Qui-Gon's ear. They walked together up the gangplank to the ship that would carry them back to Coruscant. Half-way, Obi-Wan turned to wave good-bye again, and Qui-Gon paused beside him.

"What did she say to you?" Obi-Wan asked.

One corner of his former Master's mouth went up. "She asked, 'Life Bond?'"

Obi-Wan looked up at him, tall and strong, serenity hiding incredible passions, and blue eyes met his with faint inquiry. "Oh yes," he answered softly. "I think so."

They disappeared into the ship, the gangplank was raised, and with slow thunder the silver liner vanished into the sky.







1