Ahsoka Tano (
resnipstance) wrote in
driftfleet2015-10-31 12:27 pm
Entry tags:
(no subject)
Who: Ahsoka + you
Broadcast: Video (fleetwide)
Action: Common area of the Marsiva
When: Afternoon? Evening??
Has... anyone else been having weird dreams lately, or just me?
Also, what do people do for fun around here? This is the longest I've ever been cooped up in one place. At least if there was something to do...
Anyway, I'm sick of meditating. If anyone wants to come chat or keep me company, I'm sitting in the living area. Does anyone know if they have a dejarik board around here? I'm not much good at it, but it's a good time waster at least.
Oh-- right. I'm always up for a spar, too... if you think you can keep up.
Broadcast: Video (fleetwide)
Action: Common area of the Marsiva
When: Afternoon? Evening??
Has... anyone else been having weird dreams lately, or just me?
Also, what do people do for fun around here? This is the longest I've ever been cooped up in one place. At least if there was something to do...
Anyway, I'm sick of meditating. If anyone wants to come chat or keep me company, I'm sitting in the living area. Does anyone know if they have a dejarik board around here? I'm not much good at it, but it's a good time waster at least.
Oh-- right. I'm always up for a spar, too... if you think you can keep up.

no subject
I didn't say you weren't.
[Honestly, given the aliens he's dealt with before there's every chance he's looking at getting his ass handed to him. He just doesn't think there'd be any malice in it, and he's learned to trust his instincts on the matter of other people.]
no subject
[Normally when sparring against an unknown opponent, Ahsoka would wait for the other to strike first. It only seems fair. She's very aware that she's much more likely to hurt someone else than be hurt, so it helps to wait before she can get assessment of their strength and skill level.
But this guy looks approximately ten thousand weight classes above her, so. Even if she put everything she had behind a single punch, she still isn't entirely sure he'd be fazed. So she goes for it.
Her first strike is quick. Not as fast as she can go-- that would just be mean. No, it's still within the limits of normal human speed, just fast. She won't pull her punches, but she won't go all out, either. For now, she's just testing the waters, seeing how much she can get away with.]
no subject
He has no doubt that the gym is being monitored just as much as the rest of the ship. They brought him here, odds are they already know what he can do and he's not going to do himself any favours playing dumb or pretending weaknesses he doesn't have. In any case, that's not how he does strategy. His resolve has always been a soldier's, not a spy's.
He doesn't break a sweat, but it's a near thing by the time he calls for a stop with one upraised hand.]
Mind if I ask your fighting style? Never seen anything like it before.
no subject
Nevertheless, she stops immediately when Steve raises his hand. She's not terribly sweaty either, but she is a little short of breath. Finally:]
... I'm Jedi trained. [She says, like that explains everything. Were she not feeling so peeved, she might have given a better explanation. As it is, instead she says:]
What's your deal? I'm not a youngling. Take me seriously.
no subject
C'mere.
[He holds his hands up, and gestures with a toss of his head for her to hit his open palm.]
Hard as you can.
no subject
She steps up to him again and throws him the hardest punch she can muster, strengthening her blow with the Force.
It's... not the hardest punch Captain America has ever been on the receiving end of. (That's stiff competition, after all, isn't it?) But it's still certainly harder than a skinny sixteen year old girl's punch has any right to be.
She looks to him then, expectant, defiant. As if to say, "Well?"]
no subject
The blow still has a surprising outcome: it makes him take a step back. Just one, enough to shift his balance and readjust for a new center of gravity. When she steps away, he works his jaw off to one side thoughtfully, rubs his thumb across the palm she'd hit. It doesn't exactly hurt, but it smarts. Enough to get his attention.
Had her boots on the ground for three years, hits like there's a wave of pent-up anger lurking just behind her fist, and wants to be taken seriously. Only one way to deal with that, and that's honestly.]
All right.
[He glances up at her, lets his hands drop to his sides.]
For the record, it's not a matter of not taking you seriously. I do. I just have to be careful who I hit and how hard. I don't like hurting people, and we've only just met. [A bit of a smile, crooked and wry but not insincere.] You'll have to forgive me for not wanting to go all-out on a relative stranger.
no subject
Well. I suppose I can forgive that.
... So what's up with you, anyway? You're clearly not a Jedi. Or a Sith. But you're stronger and faster than a normal human anyway.
[aHSOKA YOU DON'T JUST ASK PEOPLE THAT]
no subject
I've been genetically enhanced. Folks back home call me a supersoldier.
[He says it with a very faint shrug.]
no subject
Oh. So you're like a clone?
no subject
No. It's probably one of the differences between our-- [he gestures] universes.
no subject
Wait. So... there's only one of you?
no subject
Yeah. Take it that's unusual for you?
[If it could work only once-- Peggy's words, once upon a time. He'd appreciated the sentiment for what was meant, and earned his stripes in the War, but he still thinks sometimes about all the lives that could've been spared with more people like him.
After Zola, he's given over to thinking how many more could have been taken, too.]
no subject
It saves the civilian population from enlisting or worse-- being drafted. Plus, the clones are all engineered and trained from birth to be fit for battle, both physically and psychologically.
no subject
I see.
[He does, at least, keep himself from positively radiating disapproval. Instead, he works his jaw off to one side and heads to the side of the gym where the free standing weights take up a portion of the wall.]
Anyone ever ask them how they felt about that?
no subject
Loyalty and willingness to serve is pre-programmed into their DNA.
[She says, like it's obvious, like that answers the question sufficiently.]
no subject
Effectively removing their free will. Doesn't strike you as a little unfair?
[He says that as he pulls a medicine ball off the rack in the wall, one of the lighter ones. He bounces it in one palm and gestures at her to indicate his intent before he throws it to her.]
no subject
I-- I don't know. Maybe, I guess? But I mean-- it's not like we had any other option. [She tosses the ball from hand to hand idly as she thinks.] The Separatists' droid army numbers in the millions, and they just keep making more of them. The Order alone can't compete with that, even if we are the best in the galaxy. And there's no way we'd have been able to enlist and train a civilian army in such a short space of time. [She throws the ball back to him.] The Republic would've been wiped out!
no subject
[No matter how many people say the French were cowards for surrendering, so few remember the history of it: that the people always fought. Even in New York, even in Sokovia-- people fight when their way of life is threatened.
He knows - rationally - it's not as black and white as all that. But there are some things that'll always fire up the soldier in him.]
War's ugly, but I don't think the answer to it is ever to strip people of their free will.
[The draft is different, but even that he doesn't like. Wars are started by politicians and fought by men on the ground, it's not cowardice to want to stay out of that fight. Hell, the more he's in it, the more he thinks it's the only sane choice. It's just not one he could ever make for himself.
He shifts his palm over the face of the ball, flexing his fingers before he tosses it back again.]
no subject
You don't get it. I'm not talking about human enemies. I'm talking about droids. Millions of unthinking, unfeeling soldiers, who only have one mission: seek and destroy everything in their path. Are you telling me that we should ask civilians to go up against that?
no subject
I know what you're talking about.
[He doesn't like to think about what might have happened if Ultron had succeeded in Sokovia. He wouldn't have survived it, most likely. He switches hands, hefts her the ball in an easy underhand with his left.]
Most soldiers were civilians first, where I'm from. So long as there's a reason, people will stand up to fight. It's a choice they deserve to make for themselves.
no subject
Look, it's different for clones. Jedi, too. I mean, it's not like I was given a choice either. But I didn't mind. I was happy to be a Jedi. Fighting to make the world a better place, to protect people, that's like the best job description in the world.
no subject
Christ. He's killed people her age, and his jaw tightens.]
What does freedom of choice mean to you? Not as a definition. How do you feel about the idea?
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Of course it's important. But normal rules don't apply to Jedi! Force sensitives have to be trained. Especially if they're strong. Can you imagine someone with the raw power you or I have, but put in the wrong hands?
Once you finish your initiate training, you're free to leave the Order whenever you want. But if you stay, you have to accept that you're going to spend a lot of time following orders until you work your way up. ... Well. Most of the time, anyway. Some of the time. ... When they're not stupid.
[Read: Ahsoka spends a lot of time disobeying orders she thinks are stupid.]
no subject
[And it's absolutely not the training he objects to. Those with power need to know how to control it. Speaking of control-- he braces himself for that throw, and catches the ball with a bit of a grunt.]
(no subject)