lunes, 29 de diciembre de 2025

Chapter II — Power in the Shadows

 [Index

The report was delivered to the Senate with the gravity reserved for victories that needed to become history before they became questions.

From the Chancellor’s podium, the operation was presented with precise restraint. A Separatist command node on Jabiim, critical to planetary interdiction and Republic casualties, had been located beneath heavy fortification. With Republic forces scattered, communications degraded, and evacuation impossible, General Anakin Skywalker had undertaken a direct strike accompanied by only five clone troopers. According to the report, Skywalker infiltrated the facility through a secondary access point, neutralized multiple layers of automated defense, reached the command core, and oversaw the placement of demolition charges that resulted in the complete destruction of the base. Enemy forces were declared fully eliminated. No salvageable technology remained.

The Senate chamber murmured, the sound rising in waves as the scale of the feat settled in. A Jedi General, barely out of adolescence, achieving what entire task forces had failed to do—alone, effectively, decisively.

The Chancellor allowed the moment to breathe.

He then formally recognized the five clone troopers by designation and callsign, commending their valor, discipline, and unwavering loyalty under impossible circumstances. The Senate approved their decorations without dissent; medals and citations were easy, uncontested symbols.

Then Palpatine leaned forward slightly, hands folded, voice warm.

—In light of this extraordinary act—he said—I am submitting a motion that General Skywalker be granted a public acclamation, in recognition of his courage, initiative, and service to the Republic.

Approval indicators flared across the chamber almost immediately. But Palpatine did not call the vote yet.

Instead, he continued, his tone shifting just enough to sound reflective.

—It is worth remembering that this young man’s path into public service did not begin in this chamber, nor even within the Jedi Order. He was first brought to our attention by Senator Padmé Amidala of Naboo, whose belief in him predates this war.

A subtle pause. Calculated.

—It seems only fitting, then, that any public recognition of General Skywalker’s heroism be led by the one who first recognized his potential. I would welcome the Senator’s words on this motion.

All eyes turned.

Padmé Amidala rose slowly, the chamber quieting in a way that protocol alone could never enforce. Her expression was composed, but those who knew her well could see the careful control beneath it.

—Chancellor—she began—Honored Senators.

She did not look at Palpatine as she spoke. Her gaze moved across the chamber instead, taking in allies, rivals, worlds represented by sigils rather than faces.

—General Skywalker’s actions on Jabiim saved lives. Not abstract numbers—lives. Clone troopers who will return home, civilians who will not be caught between collapsing fronts, systems that will see another sunrise free of occupation.

She paused, choosing her words with precision.

—But I must urge caution in how we frame this moment. We are at war. Our young people—Jedi, clones, citizens—are already carrying more weight than any generation should be asked to bear. Honor is appropriate. Gratitude is necessary. But we must not turn valor into spectacle, or sacrifice into mythology.

A murmur rippled through the chamber, quieter this time.

—If General Skywalker is to be recognized—she continued—it should be as a symbol not of individual glory, but of what this Republic should be fighting for: cooperation, courage, and the hope that even in the darkest moments, we can still choose to act with purpose.

She inclined her head slightly.

—On those terms, I support the motion.

The vote proceeded immediately afterward.

The results were decisive.

The motion for public acclamation passed by an overwhelming majority, with only a handful of abstentions and no formal opposition. The Chancellor announced the outcome with visible satisfaction, already shaping the narrative that would follow: a heroic Jedi General, a grateful Republic, unity in the face of chaos.

As the chamber moved on to the next item of business, Palpatine sat back, serene.

The applause would come.
The holocams would follow.
The story would be told exactly as intended.

And Padmé Amidala, having spoken carefully and truthfully, returned to her seat with the faint, unsettling awareness that something far larger than a celebration had just been set in motion.

 

 

 

The Jedi Council chamber received the Senate’s decision not with applause, but with silence.

Holographic light shimmered across the circular hall as Masters took their places, robes still, expressions guarded. The image of Coruscant’s skyline faded, replaced by the austere geometry of the Order’s oldest space, a place meant for reflection rather than celebration. Yet even here, the echo of the Senate’s acclamation lingered, like a vibration that refused to dissipate.

—Public adulation of a Jedi General—Master Mace Windu said at last, his voice firm, controlled—is not a trivial matter. The Order was not meant to become a symbol for the masses, nor a tool of morale crafted by politicians.

—And yet—countered Ki-Adi-Mundi—we cannot deny the results. Skywalker’s actions on Jabiim prevented a catastrophic collapse of the front. The Force itself seems to… respond to him in ways we have not seen before.

Yoda’s ears drooped slightly, his eyes half-lidded, ancient and unreadable.

—Responds, yes—he murmured. —But to what, we must ask.

The discussion unfolded cautiously, layered in philosophy rather than accusation. Some Masters spoke of adaptation, of an Order grown rigid in an age that demanded flexibility. Others warned that Anakin Skywalker’s growing influence—over soldiers, over outcomes, over the narrative of the war—was accelerating faster than wisdom traditionally allowed.

—His methods are unconventional—Plo Koon observed. —But they are effective.

—So is lightning—Windu replied. —That does not make it safe to invite indoors.

Throughout it all, Obi-Wan Kenobi remained quiet.

He sat upright, hands folded within his sleeves, posture immaculate, the very image of Jedi composure. Yet beneath that stillness, unease coiled tightly. He listened as his peers spoke of his former Padawan not as a student, not even as a Knight, but as a phenomenon—a variable, a force multiplier, a risk to be managed.

Each word landed heavier than the last.

He had trained Anakin. He had failed him. He had watched him surpass expectations again and again, always by reaching further, pushing harder, risking more than any of them would have dared. And every time Anakin did so for others—for clones, for civilians, for the Republic—the Council’s trust seemed to retreat rather than deepen.

Obi-Wan’s thoughts tightened around a question he had never voiced aloud.

Is this not what the prophecy promised?

The Chosen One. The one meant to bring balance. The one called to achieve what others could not. If Anakin did not bend the Force in impossible ways, then who ever would? And yet, the more impossible his feats became, the more suspicion followed, as if greatness itself were a transgression.

—Concerned, you are—Yoda said suddenly, his gaze shifting, settling directly on Obi-Wan.

The chamber stilled.

Obi-Wan inclined his head slightly, choosing honesty over caution.

—I am troubled, Master Yoda. Not by what Anakin has done—but by our reaction to it. Each time he risks himself for others, each time he succeeds where doctrine says he should fail, our answer is not trust, but distance.

He paused, words measured, restrained.

—If he is the Chosen One, then he will walk paths we cannot map in advance. And if we punish him for that… then perhaps the danger is not that he is changing—but that we are refusing to.

Silence followed, deeper this time.

No Master spoke immediately. The Council, ancient and powerful, found itself facing a question no amount of meditation could resolve easily: whether Anakin Skywalker represented the future of the Jedi Order—or the proof that the Order, as it stood, could no longer contain the Force it claimed to serve.

And far below the Temple, beyond the chamber’s serene walls, the galaxy continued to shift—
waiting to see which answer the Jedi would choose.

 

When Anakin noticed them, he did not hesitate.

He knelt smoothly, head bowed in respect.

—Master Yoda. Master Obi-Wan.

The younglings reacted a heartbeat later, startled but eager, dropping to their knees in imperfect unison, voices overlapping as they echoed the greeting. The hall, moments ago alive with motion, stilled into something almost ceremonial.

Anakin rose, offered the children a brief, reassuring glance, and then moved toward the exit of the chamber, leaving the lesson behind without flourish, as if it had never been about him in the first place.

As he passed beside Yoda, something shifted.

For the first time in centuries, the Grand Master felt the Force not as currents to be read or balances to be weighed, but as vastness. Not light alone. Not shadow. The whole of it—radiant, immeasurable, like a star held at human distance. It was beautiful in its immensity… and terrifying in its honesty. Power without hunger. Depth without malice. A presence so complete that it left no room for denial.

Yoda stopped.

His eyes closed.

And then—softly, unexpectedly—he laughed.

A quiet, rasping sound, amused not by humor, but by realization.

—Fear leads to the dark side, it does—he murmured to himself. —And afraid… together, we have become.

He opened his eyes again, ears lifting slightly.

—Curiosity, perhaps, we should choose instead. And imagination.

He turned his head toward Anakin, who had paused respectfully at the threshold.

—Young Skywalker—Yoda said—tell me this. If Master we were to name you… what would you do?

The question hung lightly, but the chamber leaned toward it.

Anakin did not posture. He did not pretend humility. He answered honestly, almost sheepishly.

—I’d disappear into the archives for months, Master. You wouldn’t see me for a long time.

A small grin broke through, unguarded.

—I really want to read… once this war is over. All of it.

A few of the younglings giggled. Obi-Wan blinked, then smiled despite himself.

Yoda studied Anakin for a long moment.

Then his smile came—not wide, not dramatic, but genuine.

—Hmmmm—he said. —Dangerous, that answer is.

A pause.

—Dangerous… because wise.

He tapped his cane once against the floor.

—Go, Skywalker. Much to learn, still there is. But rushing… you are not.

Anakin bowed once more, turned, and left the chamber, his presence receding like a tide rather than vanishing outright.

The younglings slowly relaxed, whispers returning. Obi-Wan watched the doorway long after Anakin had gone.

Yoda remained still.

For the first time in many years, the future did not feel heavy with inevitability.

It felt open.

 

 

 

The Chancellor’s office was quiet in the way only power could afford to be. Tall windows framed the endless motion of Coruscant’s traffic lanes, streams of light flowing like veins through the city’s spine. The room was dimmed deliberately, the world outside reduced to suggestion rather than presence.

When Anakin entered, Palpatine turned slowly from the window, his expression already warm, already familiar, as if the meeting had been anticipated rather than arranged.

—Anakin—he said gently. —I was hoping you would come.

The door sealed behind him with a soft hiss. No guards. No aides. Just the two of them, as it had been so many times before, though the air felt subtly different now, charged with something Palpatine could sense but not yet name.

—The Senate is still buzzing—he continued, gesturing toward a seat but not insisting. —Five clones. A fortified node. Total victory. They adore you, my boy. You’ve given them something they desperately need.

He studied Anakin closely as he spoke, not merely watching posture or expression, but listening for dissonance in the Force, for cracks where fear or pride might echo.

—Hope.

Palpatine smiled, hands folding together.

—The Jedi Council, on the other hand…—he let the thought trail off, the implication doing more work than words ever could. —They are uneasy. Success has a way of unsettling institutions built on restraint.

He stepped closer, voice lowering, intimate but not conspiratorial.

—Tell me—he asked softly—how do you feel about all of this?

The city lights reflected faintly in the Chancellor’s eyes, endless, hungry, patient.

Whatever Anakin answered here would not be recorded.
Would not be debated.
Would not be voted on.

It would simply be remembered.

 

 

 

Anakin spoke without preamble, his shoulders squared but his gaze lowered, the words chosen carefully yet weighted with something unmistakably sincere.

—Ashamed, Chancellor. During the mission I did something forbidden by the Council. I used Force lightning. I overloaded the army’s circuits… and I rewrote the clones’ memories so they wouldn’t report what happened. I think I did wrong—but if I hadn’t, we would all have died.

The admission hung in the air, raw and dangerous.

Palpatine did not react immediately.

He did not recoil. He did not interrupt. He simply listened, hands folded, eyes soft with something that resembled concern far more than judgment. In the Force, he leaned forward delicately, like a connoisseur testing the surface of a rare wine.

And then—without any outward sign—he felt it.

A room.

Not a memory, not an emotion, but a constructed space within Anakin’s mind: ordered, deliberate, sealed. A place made to be found. Palpatine’s awareness brushed against it and slipped inside with practiced ease.

There, waiting patiently, was the bait.

I desire more power.
I desire that my beloved Padmé be recognized, placed in positions of greater importance within the Republic…

Palpatine’s breath slowed.

Not in surprise—
in appreciation.

Outwardly, his expression softened further. He moved closer, placing a reassuring hand on Anakin’s shoulder, the gesture perfectly calibrated.

—Anakin…—he said quietly—do you know what truly concerns me about what you just told me?

He waited a beat, then answered himself.

—That you believe doing what was necessary makes you weak.

He turned Anakin gently so they faced one another, eyes kind, voice warm.

—You were placed in an impossible situation. The Council teaches restraint in temples and meditation halls, not in collapsing fortresses surrounded by death. You did what a protector does.

In the Force, Palpatine let his presence flow—not probing, not attacking—validating. He touched the edges of the planted desires and nodded inwardly, filing them away like jewels placed exactly where he hoped they would be.

—As for Force lightning—he continued calmly—it is not evil by nature. It is energy. Intention gives it meaning. The Council fears what it does not control, and so they forbid what they do not understand.

A pause. Then, gently:

—And Padmé…

He smiled, almost fondly.

—Your concern for her speaks well of you. Wanting her talents recognized, wanting her influence to grow—that is not ambition, Anakin. That is loyalty. Love.

He leaned back slightly, giving Anakin space again, as if refusing to crowd him.

—You did not fall today. You adapted. And adaptation is how the Republic survives.

 

 

 

Anakin tilted his head slightly, the gesture almost boyish, deliberately disarming, as if embarrassed by his own transparency.

—Is my love for her really that obvious?—he asked, forcing a small, awkward smile. —You sound more like a Jedi than Master Yoda, Chancellor.

The comment landed lightly on the surface, but beneath it ran calculation. The Force around him remained carefully folded, the constructed chamber in his mind still open, still offering exactly what it was meant to offer.

—But if it’s true—he continued, voice earnest—I would appreciate it as a personal favor if you could give her a position of greater importance. I know she causes you trouble, and that she argues with you, but I believe that, given the circumstances, it would actually give you more flexibility in the Senate. A greater sense of democracy… especially now, when some voices are starting to call you a tyrant. That worries me.

The words were chosen with care: concern, not accusation; loyalty, not demand.

For a moment, Palpatine said nothing.

He turned away from Anakin and walked slowly back toward the window, hands clasped behind his back, gazing out at Coruscant’s endless sprawl. From the outside, it looked contemplative. In the Force, it was anything but. Palpatine felt the shape of the request, admired its symmetry, its political intuition. It was the kind of suggestion seasoned senators struggled to articulate without revealing themselves.

He smiled faintly.

—Obvious?—he said at last, softly. —No, Anakin. Human.

He turned back, expression warm, almost indulgent.

—Your concern for Padmé Amidala has always been evident to me not because it is reckless, but because it is restrained. You do not ask for power for yourself. You ask for legitimacy for someone else. That tells me more about you than any battlefield report ever could.

He stepped closer, lowering his voice as if confiding something dangerous.

—You are not wrong about the Senate. Perception matters as much as authority, sometimes more. The appearance of openness, of dissent allowed near the center of power… it reassures people. Especially those who fear what they do not understand.

A pause. Just enough.

—Padmé is respected. Principled. Difficult.—a faint, amused exhale—And precisely for that reason, useful in ways many of my allies are not.

He nodded slowly, as if arriving at a conclusion rather than revealing a plan.

—There are committees forming—emergency oversight bodies, wartime councils meant to advise and temper executive action. I had not yet decided who should be elevated into those spaces.

He met Anakin’s eyes.

—Your suggestion has merit.

The Force stirred gently, approval without commitment, promise without binding.

—If Senator Amidala were seen more prominently—closer to the center—it would indeed project balance. Dialogue. Democracy, as you say.

He placed a hand briefly on Anakin’s shoulder again, the gesture paternal, reassuring.

—You worry about me being called a tyrant because you believe in the Republic. That, too, is very Jedi of you.

Palpatine stepped back, returning to his desk.

—I will consider it seriously. For now, say nothing to her. These things are more effective when they appear… inevitable.

The city lights continued their endless flow beyond the glass.

Palpatine watched Anakin carefully as the moment settled, unaware—or perhaps only half-aware—that the young Jedi before him was no longer merely reacting to manipulation, but designing around it.

And in the quiet between them, the balance of the game shifted again—not loudly, not dramatically, but decisively, like a blade turning just enough to catch the light.

Anakin allowed himself a small, almost conspiratorial smile, as if sharing an anecdote rather than shaping policy.

—I think—he said—that involving her more directly with the front, supervising the admirals, seeing things up close… the suffering of the clones, the cost of every delay, would make her more inclined to support budget increases when the motions come up. She calls herself a pacifist, but when she takes up arms…—he let out a brief laugh—let’s just say that’s how I met her. No pacifism at all.

The words hung in the air, light in tone, heavy in implication.

Palpatine laughed softly, a low, appreciative sound, and for a moment the mask slipped just enough to reveal genuine amusement. He moved back toward his desk, fingers resting on its edge, eyes thoughtful rather than predatory.

—Ah yes—he said—Senator Amidala’s… contradictions. Publicly, a symbol of restraint. Privately, a woman who understands that ideals sometimes require steel behind them.

He nodded slowly, as if Anakin had simply articulated a truth Palpatine had already catalogued.

—Exposure to the front does have a way of clarifying one’s priorities. Numbers become faces. Delays become funerals. It would be difficult for any responsible leader to witness that and still argue for hesitation.

In the Force, Palpatine tasted the thought again—not greed, not hunger, but alignment. Anakin was not asking to corrupt Padmé. He was asking to reveal reality to her, trusting that once she saw it, she would choose “correctly.”

That, Palpatine decided, was the most dangerous kind of reasoning—and the most useful.

—There are precedents—he continued calmly. —Special senatorial oversight missions. Civilian observers embedded with fleet commands. Entirely legal. Entirely defensible.

He looked at Anakin with something close to admiration.

—You think like a statesman, Anakin. You understand that power is not seized; it is normalized.

A pause, then a gentle warning disguised as counsel.

—Of course, Padmé will resist at first. She always does. But resistance fades when confronted with responsibility.

Palpatine straightened, clasping his hands behind his back once more.

—I will arrange for her to be offered such a role. Advisory at first. Symbolic, publicly. Substantive, quietly.

He smiled.

—And if she supports the budget motions afterward… well. The Senate will call it consensus.

The city lights beyond the window continued their endless motion, indifferent to the quiet architecture of influence being built above them.

Palpatine inclined his head slightly.

—You should rest, Anakin. You’ve given me much to think about.

As Anakin prepared to leave, the Chancellor watched him go with careful interest. The young Jedi was no longer merely being guided by affection or fear.

He was learning to shape outcomes.

And that, Palpatine reflected, could be cultivated—or exploited—with exquisite care.

Anakin smiled as he spoke, the tone light, almost playful, as if outlining a harmless stratagem rather than a carefully layered manipulation.

—I think forcing her wouldn’t be the best approach—he said. —Bait her instead. Have some second-tier officers try to cover things up, deny access, bury her in bureaucracy. Then, when she has one of her… outbursts—boom—you give her the authority and full access, and expose her to all the suffering. I’m sure that will work more easily.

For a brief instant, the room was very still.

Then the Chancellor laughed—softly, genuinely this time.

Palpatine turned from the window, eyes alight not with malice, but with appreciation, as though he had just heard a particularly elegant solution to a long-standing problem.

—Ah—he said warmly—now that is wisdom earned, not taught.

He moved closer, lowering his voice, confiding rather than instructing.

—You understand her better than anyone in this city. Padmé does not respond to command. She responds to injustice. To obstruction. To the sense that something is being hidden from her.

He nodded slowly, savoring the idea.

—Yes… limited access at first. Committees that “lose” her requests. Admirals who insist procedures must be followed. Enough resistance to awaken her indignation, but not so much that she disengages.

Palpatine’s smile thinned, becoming precise.

—And then, at the moment of maximum frustration, I step in as the reasonable authority. Full clearance. Oversight powers. Immediate deployment access.

He spread his hands slightly.

—She will feel she has won. That she has broken through corruption by force of principle.

A pause.

—And what she will actually have broken through… is distance.

The Force around him stirred faintly, pleased.

—Once she sees the clones’ suffering firsthand—once abstraction becomes reality—her positions will evolve naturally. No coercion. No pressure. Only experience.

Palpatine regarded Anakin with open admiration now.

—You don’t want to change her mind. You want to let her change it herself.

He inclined his head, conceding the point.

—Very well. We’ll do it your way.

The Chancellor returned to his desk, already composing the sequence of obstacles, delays, and eventual revelations that would feel organic, even righteous, to anyone watching from the outside.

—History favors those who believe they are acting freely—he added mildly. —And Padmé Amidala is nothing if not a believer in her own agency.

He looked up at Anakin once more.

—You’ve given me an excellent plan.

What Palpatine did not say—what he did not need to say—was that the plan revealed something far more interesting than its immediate usefulness.

Anakin Skywalker was no longer merely navigating power.

He was anticipating human reaction, designing paths where people would walk exactly where intended, convinced every step was their own choice.

And as the young Jedi turned to leave, the Chancellor watched him with quiet satisfaction, already imagining the future shaping itself not through domination—

—but through carefully arranged inevitabilities.

Anakin added one last thought, almost as an afterthought, his tone light but his timing precise.

—One more thing, Chancellor. I think that when she accepts those powers, she should assume some grand title, with media coverage to match. That will turn Master Windu purple with rage. He already distrusts me, and I think he’s more than ready to push you out of your office the moment he gets the chance. I’ll admit… I’d enjoy watching him suffer through that.

For the briefest instant, the air in the room sharpened.

Palpatine did not laugh this time. He regarded Anakin with a long, appraising look, the kind that weighed not words but trajectories. Then, slowly, a smile returned—smaller, colder, infinitely more controlled.

—An imposing name…—he said thoughtfully. —A public mantle. Ceremony. Symbols.

He turned back toward the window, hands clasped behind his back, Coruscant’s endless traffic reflected in the glass like a living circuit.

—You’re quite right. Titles shape perception. Perception shapes legitimacy. And legitimacy…—he inclined his head slightly—infuriates those who believe authority should remain cloistered and unchallenged.

A faint, knowing chuckle escaped him.

—Master Windu already believes himself the Republic’s conscience. To see a civilian—especially her—elevated, celebrated, armed with visibility and mandate… yes. That would test his restraint.

Palpatine glanced back over his shoulder, eyes bright with something that was not anger, but calculation.

—Let him strain. Let him watch symbols shift beyond his reach. Every moment he spends seething is a moment he is not organizing.

He paused, then added gently:

—As for your enjoyment…—a thin smile—be careful, Anakin. Amusement is a luxury. But I understand the sentiment.

He moved back to his desk, already imagining headlines, ceremonies, a carefully chosen title that would sound like duty while feeling like destiny. Something lofty. Something irreversible.

—We will give her a name the Holonet can chant—he said. —And we will let the Jedi explain to the galaxy why they are uncomfortable with hope wearing a crown of responsibility.

Palpatine settled into his chair, steepling his fingers.

—You continue to surprise me, my boy. Not with your power—but with your instinct for pressure points.

The Force between them was quiet now, taut as a drawn wire.

—Go—Palpatine said at last. —I will set these pieces in motion. When the time comes, you’ll see how beautifully offended Master Windu can be.

As Anakin turned to leave, the Chancellor watched him with measured satisfaction.

The Jedi thought in terms of light and dark.
The Sith thought in terms of domination.

Anakin Skywalker, it seemed, was learning something far more dangerous:

How to make others choose the outcome he wanted—
and enjoy the tension along the way.

Palpatine remained alone in his office long after Anakin had gone, the doors sealed, the city’s endless motion reduced to a distant shimmer beyond the glass. For several heartbeats he did nothing at all, simply allowing the moment to settle, savoring the texture of what had just transpired.

In the Force, his presence unfurled—slow, deliberate, luxuriant.

So close now, he thought, a quiet thrill coursing beneath layers of discipline. Not the crude anticipation of conquest, but the refined pleasure of convergence. The boy no longer recoiled from moral ambiguity; he shaped it. He no longer merely reacted to pressure; he applied it, intuitively, almost joyfully. Manipulation framed as strategy. Cruelty disguised as theater. Love leveraged as architecture.

Palpatine’s smile widened, unguarded now, stretching into something ancient and satisfied.

Nearly ripe.

He replayed the conversation, not word for word, but trajectory by trajectory. Anakin’s feigned shame. His calculated confessions. The false desires placed like offerings in an inner sanctum, convincing in their imperfection. The casual cruelty toward Windu, not born of hatred, but of amusement. That, Palpatine knew, was the true signal—not rage, not fear, but play.

—Yes…—he murmured to the empty room.

He believed—truly believed—that the future was unfolding exactly as he had engineered it. That Anakin Skywalker was shedding the last brittle constraints of Jedi morality, stepping willingly into a broader, harsher, more effective understanding of power. The Council would fracture. Padmé would be elevated, then compromised. Windu would strain, overreach, reveal himself. And when the final choice came, Anakin would already be standing where the Sith had always wanted him.

Palpatine closed his eyes, breathing deeply.

What he did not perceive—what even his immense foresight failed to fully register—was the absence of hunger in Anakin’s mind. The lack of desperation. The quiet, dangerous completeness of someone who was not seeking a master, but testing an equal.

The Sith Lord mistook sophistication for submission.
Control for convergence.
Proximity for inevitability.

And in that mistake, subtle and catastrophic, he allowed himself a rare indulgence:

Confidence.

Palpatine opened his eyes, gaze burning with triumph.

—Soon—he whispered.

Far away, beyond the reach of that office, Anakin Skywalker moved through the currents of the Force with a clarity that did not bend toward light or dark, but toward outcome.

And for the first time in a thousand years, the Sith were not the only ones playing the long game.

When Anakin left the office, Coruscant’s air felt lighter, as if the weight had never belonged to the city but to the room he had just exited. He walked the corridors at an unhurried pace, returning nods to guards and aides with practiced ease, while deep within his mind a different chamber sealed itself—one Palpatine could not reach, could not overhear, could not even sense.

There, thought shed all pretense.

That’s the obvious move, he considered. Too obvious.

The statues came back to him—resonances steeped in the dark side, malignant icons hidden in quiet corners, relics of Sith temples masquerading as history. Somewhere among them, the blade. The saber. The symbol. With what he now understood, it would have been easy—effortless—to tear a head from shoulders and end it in a heartbeat.

And that, he knew, was exactly the trap.

Killing Palpatine would not end the game; it would ignite it. There would be contingencies—layers upon layers of them. Dead-man switches woven into the Republic itself, protocols that would fracture command, unleash purges, ignite wars within wars. If Palpatine fell that way, he would take half the galaxy with him. That was almost certain.

Anakin’s jaw tightened.

I’m not here to replace one catastrophe with another.

The goal was not victory by annihilation, but avoidance of the knot—the same tangle of fear, backlash, and reaction that had consumed generations before. A clean strike would be loud. It would be simple. It would be wrong.

So there was only one path left.

Beat him at his own game.

Not with fury. Not with revelation. With patience. With misdirection. With outcomes that felt inevitable only in hindsight. If Palpatine believed the future was converging toward his design, then the design itself would become the lever. Let the Sith Lord invest. Let him commit. Let him overextend under the comfort of certainty.

Anakin exhaled slowly as he moved toward the lifts, the city’s endless motion reflecting off the polished floor.

You don’t cut the wire when it’s under tension, he thought. You reroute the current.

And somewhere behind him, in an office overlooking the heart of the Republic, Palpatine smiled—utterly convinced that the board was his alone.

Anakin Skywalker did not intend to flip the board.

He intended to win the endgame without letting the galaxy notice a game had ever been played.

 

In the corridors outside the Chancellor’s wing, Anakin encountered Padmé Amidala by coincidence so perfect it could almost have been design. She was flanked by aides and security, posture immaculate, expression composed into the serene mask required of a Senator moving through the heart of power. They slowed when they saw each other, exchanged the proper courtesies—measured smiles, inclined heads, words chosen for listening walls rather than ears.

—General Skywalker—she said, formally.

—Senator Amidala—he replied in the same tone.

For a few steps they walked together, surrounded by motion, by voices and datapads and the low hum of Coruscant’s machinery. Then, with a subtle shift that looked like nothing more than courtesy, Anakin angled his path, guiding her away from the main thoroughfare, toward a side gallery where transparisteel windows overlooked a quieter traffic vein far below. Her aides hesitated, exchanged a glance, then remained behind at a respectful distance, close enough to see, far enough not to hear.

The moment the noise thinned, the masks fell.

Anakin stopped, turned to her, and for a heartbeat simply looked, as if anchoring himself to something real after too much abstraction. Padmé’s expression softened, concern flickering beneath composure.

—You’re all right?—she asked quietly.

He didn’t answer with words.

He stepped closer, one hand rising to her cheek, thumb brushing the familiar line of her jaw, and kissed her—firmly, urgently, as if the corridor, the war, the galaxy itself had narrowed to this single point of contact. For an instant she stiffened in surprise, then yielded, fingers curling into the fabric of his robe, returning the kiss with equal intensity, equal need.

The city rushed on below them, indifferent and vast.

When they finally parted, foreheads resting together, their breathing was unsteady, laughter threatening and unsaid words pressing close behind it.

—That was… reckless—Padmé murmured, though there was no real reproach in her voice.

Anakin allowed himself a small smile, one that belonged to him alone.

—I know.

He stayed close a moment longer, grounding himself in her presence, before the weight of what lay ahead inevitably returned. Around them, the corridor remained quiet, as if granting them this brief, stolen interval.

Then, reluctantly, the distance returned—not between them, but between who they were here and who they would need to be again when they stepped back into the flow of the Republic.

Anakin tightened his embrace slightly, drawing her closer so that to any distant observer it would look like nothing more than a private reassurance between two public figures. His voice remained low, almost lost against the fabric of her cloak.

—Listen to me very, very carefully—he whispered again. —Your mind is strong in the Force. You were only a few midichlorians away from being sensitive. Even so, I know you can hide your thoughts from him. That’s why he fears you.

Padmé went still in his arms.

She pulled back just enough to look at his face, searching it, her expression shifting from warmth to alert concentration.

—From whom are you talking about?—she asked quietly.

For a fraction of a second, Anakin said nothing. The corridors around them felt suddenly narrower, the air heavier, as if the very walls had leaned in. When he finally answered, it was not spoken aloud at first; his forehead rested briefly against hers, his breath steadying, choosing precision over impulse.

—The Chancellor—he murmured at last. —Palpatine.

—He is the Sith Lord we’ve been looking for. Listen to me very carefully—we cannot tell the Jedi. If we do, they’ll run straight into a coup attempt. That’s exactly what he needs. There’s a secret order in the mind of every clone; it will erase their personalities and turn them almost into droids. They’ll kill every Jedi in the galaxy in an instant—

Anakin swallowed hard.

—Do you understand that we can’t face him yet? And that we won’t have the Council? Tell me—from a political perspective—what cards do we have now?

Padmé did not pull away. She did not look shocked. She looked focused.

She took a slow breath, then answered in a whisper as measured as any speech she had ever given on the Senate floor.

—Yes. I understand. And you’re right—we cannot move openly, and we cannot rely on the Council. If the Jedi act first, they lose legitimacy, and legitimacy is the only shield they have left.

She paused, thinking, then spoke again, each word placed with care.

—So here are our cards.

—First: legality. Palpatine’s power is immense, but it is still framed as lawful. Emergency powers. Wartime necessity. If we move against him, it must be through mechanisms that look boring, slow, and procedural—committees, audits, civilian oversight. Nothing dramatic. Nothing that smells like rebellion.

—Second: plural voices. It can’t be just me. If I’m alone, I’m dismissed as idealistic. If it’s only you, you’re framed as unstable. We need a coalition—moderates, loyalists, even some of his supporters—people who argue for “balance,” not removal. The illusion of consensus is more powerful than truth.

—Third: distance from the Jedi. Painful as it is, the more visibly separate this effort is from the Order, the safer they are. The Jedi must look apolitical, restrained—almost naïve. That frustrates him. It denies him the pretext he wants.

She looked up at him then, eyes steady.

—Fourth: you. You’re his blind spot. He thinks he’s shaping you, and that makes him careless. You must remain close, trusted, indispensable—but never predictable. You don’t oppose him; you redirect him.

A beat.

—And finally: patience. We don’t expose him. We let him overextend. We let his need for control create contradictions—laws that clash, powers that overlap, allies that resent one another. When the moment comes, the Republic must ask for limits on him.

She reached for Anakin’s hand, grounding him.

—This isn’t about defeating a Sith Lord with a strike. It’s about making it impossible for him to rule without revealing himself.

Her voice softened, but did not waver.

—And until then, we survive. We gather proof quietly. We shape perception. We keep the Jedi alive by keeping them out of it.

Padmé met his gaze, utterly resolved.

—Those are our cards. They’re not heroic. They’re not fast. But they’re the only ones that don’t end with the galaxy on fire.

She squeezed his hand once.

—Now tell me—are you willing to play a long game without applause?

The corridor hummed around them, indifferent, while somewhere far above, power congratulated itself for being unchallenged.

Anakin closed his eyes, the words leaving him like a confession drawn from somewhere deeper than fear.

There is more, he sighed. Beyond the galaxy—invaders. I have no evidence, only what the Force tells me. If the galaxy returns to complete peace as it was before this war, it will be destroyed. If I create a totalitarian government, it will collapse in on itself and also be destroyed. I need an in-between path. I know it’s difficult—but you are the woman with the greatest political wisdom I know. I know you’ll help me find it. For now, you must play the Chancellor’s game too. Support him in some things, oppose him in others. Accumulate all the power and authority you can. Perhaps you are the Chancellor we’ll need when everything reaches its limit.

He kissed her—brief, decisive—and then he was already moving away, rejoining the current of the corridors as if he had not just placed the fate of the galaxy in her hands.

Padmé remained where she was.

For a moment she did nothing at all. She did not chase him. She did not call his name. She stood still, eyes fixed on the space he had just vacated, letting the implications settle—not as panic, but as architecture. When she finally breathed, it was slow and deliberate, the breath of someone who had accepted a responsibility rather than been crushed by it.

She lifted a hand to her lips where he had kissed her, not sentimentally, but as if sealing a vow.

—An in-between—she murmured to herself. —A living system. Flexible enough to adapt. Strong enough to endure.

Her expression changed, the softness giving way to clarity. She was no longer simply Padmé Amidala, senator pleading for peace. She was already drafting structures in her mind: layered authorities, civilian oversight with teeth, emergency powers that decayed by design, a Republic that could strain without snapping. A state that rewarded dissent without paralyzing itself. A balance not of stillness, but of motion.

She turned back toward the main thoroughfare, the public mask sliding into place flawlessly.

To her aides, she issued calm, ordinary instructions—meetings rescheduled, briefings requested, committees convened. Nothing alarming. Nothing dramatic. Yet beneath each mundane act, she placed another brick.

She would support the Chancellor—publicly, when it bought trust.
She would oppose him—procedurally, when it bought leverage.
She would accept authority—reluctantly, visibly, so that every promotion looked like a burden rather than an ambition.

And when she next stood before Palpatine, she would do so not as an adversary, but as a pillar—useful, indispensable, difficult to remove without shaking the whole structure.

As she walked, her resolve hardened into something calm and dangerous.

If the future requires a hand steady enough to hold power without becoming it, she thought, then I will learn how to do exactly that.

Padmé did not look back.

Anakin Skywalker would fight in the currents of the Force.
She would fight in the currents of law, perception, and consent.

And between them, unspoken but absolute, was an agreement far stronger than any oath:

When the galaxy reached the edge—
she would be ready to stand there and keep it from falling.

The chamber was silent when Padmé stepped forward.

Not the tense silence of expectation, but the attentive stillness of an audience that sensed—without yet knowing why—that something important was about to be said. Holo-cameras adjusted their focus. Commentators leaned closer to their consoles. Across the Republic, feeds stabilized as millions tuned in.

Anakin stood a pace behind her.

He did nothing visible.
He did not gesture.
He did not speak.

He simply was—and through the Force, that was enough.

Padmé drew a breath and began.

—Today, we speak of victory—but not the kind that belongs to a single name.

Her voice was clear, measured. As the words left her, Anakin let the Force open paths, subtle as breath through cloth. Each syllable carried farther than sound should allow, settling into listeners with an inexplicable sense of rightness, as if they had always agreed and were only now remembering it.

—We speak of clone troopers who held their ground when retreat was the safer choice. Who followed their general not because they were programmed to obey, but because they trusted him.

In the press gallery, analysts exchanged glances. That phrasing, one of them thought. Not because they were programmed… The sentence landed gently, but it landed deep. In barracks light-years away, clones straightened unconsciously, a warmth blooming in their chests they could not quite name.

Padmé continued, her cadence steady.

—General Skywalker did not ask his men to die for him. He chose to stand with them.

Anakin let the Force underline the sentence—not louder, not dramatic, but heavier. On the Holonet, viewers leaned forward. The words felt personal. Earned. Commentators began to adjust their language in real time.

—This is what the Republic looks like when it is at its best—Padmé said. —Not flawless. Not untouched by sacrifice. But decent. Human. Capable of choosing loyalty over fear.

A murmur ran through the chamber. On the streets of Coruscant, people who had never cared for Senate broadcasts stopped walking. Vendors paused mid-transaction. For a moment, the Republic felt like a single room listening to a single voice.

She spoke then of logistics, of support, of the need to care for veterans and the wounded, grounding the speech in policy, in responsibility. The Force carried clarity with her words; confusion slid away. Even those inclined to disagree found themselves listening rather than resisting.

Then—inevitably—the tone softened.

—And yes—Padmé said, a faint, unguarded warmth entering her voice—there is heroism here.

Anakin felt it shift, but did not intervene.

—Not the loud kind. Not the kind that demands statues. But the kind that reminds us why we endure this war at all.

She turned slightly, just enough.

—General Skywalker’s courage is not found only on the battlefield. It is found in his refusal to abandon those who depend on him.

The Force did not amplify the sentiment.

It humanized it.

Across the Republic, something changed. Commentators faltered mid-sentence, then recovered with new tones—less cynical, more reverent.

—She’s not just praising him—one analyst murmured. —She’s defining him.

—No—another replied quietly. —She’s defining us.

Padmé concluded without flourish.

—If we are to survive this war and still recognize ourselves afterward, then we must hold fast to what is decent, what is brave, and what is worth protecting.

She inclined her head.

—That is what today’s victory represents.

Silence followed.

Then applause—not sharp, not forced, but rising, sustained, spreading outward like a tide. On the Holonet, reaction feeds exploded. Civilians replayed clips. Soldiers shared fragments. Comment sections filled not with arguments, but with something rarer: agreement that did not feel imposed.

Before today, Padmé Amidala had been, to many, just another senator. Idealistic. Left-leaning. Inconvenient.

After today, they saw something else.

They saw restraint with strength.
Beauty without vanity.
Decency that did not apologize for itself.

They saw—not consciously, but unmistakably—a symbol.

Palpatine applauded with the rest, smiling as expected. Yet even as satisfaction flickered across his face, a more complex calculation formed beneath it. Padmé was no longer merely useful. She was becoming structural—woven into the Republic’s self-image itself.

Anakin remained silent as the applause echoed.

He felt the Force settle, the resonance complete. He had not spoken a word—yet he had changed how millions felt.

And in that moment, unseen by almost everyone, the balance of the future shifted—not with thunder, but with understanding.

 

 

A few days later, Palpatine was reading in silence.

Columns of numbers scrolled across the holotable, projections layered with predictive curves and margin notes written in his own hand. At first glance, the data should have pleased him. At second glance, it irritated him. At third, it unsettled him.

Volunteer recruitment rates had exploded—ten thousand percent above baseline projections.

Not conscription.
Not emergency levies.
Volunteers.

Enough non-clone personnel to reinforce every active front, to staff logistics, to rotate exhausted units. In purely military terms, it was a windfall. In political terms, it was a complication.

Most of them did not carry inhibitor chips.

And when analysts drilled into the why, a single phrase appeared again and again in interviews, surveys, and intercepted feeds:

“We’re enlisting to protect Padmé Amidala.”
“She represents what the Republic still is.”
“If she falls, the Republic falls.”

Palpatine’s fingers tightened slightly against the edge of the table.

Symbols were supposed to orbit power, not generate it independently.

He was in the middle of recalculating deployment models—already annoyed by the friction introduced by an army that thought rather than simply obeyed—when the doors to his office opened without ceremony.

Padmé Amidala entered, visibly furious.

Not performative anger.
Not senatorial outrage measured for cameras.
One of her berrinches—raw, indignant, righteous.

Exactly as planned.

—This is unacceptable—she said immediately, not waiting for permission, not waiting for greeting. —I have been requesting access for days. Days, Chancellor.

Palpatine looked up slowly, carefully arranging his expression into patient concern.

—Senator, please—he began.

She cut him off.

—No. I want to know why every department I contact suddenly “lacks clearance.” Why admirals defer to committees. Why committees defer to subcommittees. Why every request I file vanishes into procedure.

She stepped closer, hands braced on his desk.

—I am asking for basic information. Clone casualty rates. Mortality figures. And the fate of those deemed too incapacitated to return to the front. Where they go. Who oversees them. Who decides they’re no longer… useful.

Her voice sharpened on the last word.

—And don’t tell me it’s classified for my protection.

Palpatine leaned back slightly, folding his hands, studying her as if she were an unexpected but fascinating variable. In the Force, he felt it clearly now: the pressure building around her, the expectation of millions who had already decided she mattered more than procedure.

—You must understand—he said calmly—these systems are complex. Wartime bureaucracy—

—Is not an excuse for hiding the human cost of this war—she snapped. —If I am expected to speak to the Republic about sacrifice, then I will see it. All of it.

She paused, drawing a breath, then delivered the line exactly where it would hurt most.

—Unless, of course, someone is afraid of what I might do with that information.

The room went very still.

Palpatine felt it then—not danger, but constraint. This was no longer a senator making noise. This was a symbol demanding substance to match its halo. Denying her now would not quiet her. It would amplify her.

He smiled gently.

—Padmé…—he said—your passion does you credit.

He rose slowly, stepping around the desk, lowering his voice into something conciliatory.

—You’re right. And perhaps I’ve been too cautious. The very fact that so many departments are deferring responsibility suggests that clearer authority is needed.

He met her eyes.

—Yours.

She stilled.

—I will grant you provisional oversight access—he continued—direct reporting channels on clone casualty data, medical disposition, and veteran reassignment. You will have clearance to observe, audit, and report your findings directly to my office.

A pause, perfectly timed.

—Of course, this comes with responsibility. Discretion. And an understanding of how… destabilizing raw numbers can be if handled without care.

Padmé straightened, anger cooling into something sharper, more dangerous.

—I understand responsibility, Chancellor.

Palpatine nodded, outwardly composed, inwardly irritated.

Because he could feel it now: the drag.

Every concession slowed him.
Every symbol complicated the machinery.
Every voice he could not silence without consequence added friction to the design of his future empire.

And worst of all—

This confrontation, this outrage, this perfectly righteous fury—

It had not been spontaneous.

It had been anticipated.

As Padmé turned to leave, already issuing instructions to her aides, Palpatine watched her go with narrowed eyes.

The web was tightening.

And for the first time since the war began, he was no longer entirely certain whose design he was standing inside.

The Senate chamber was full to the edges, every pod occupied, every gallery lit, every Holonet channel aligned. This was not a routine session; it had been announced, prepared, anticipated. The Republic could feel it before a word was spoken.

Palpatine rose slowly at the center dais, hands open, posture weary but resolute—the practiced bearing of a leader who had carried too much for too long.

—Honored Senators—he began—this war has demanded more of us than any conflict in living memory. It has cost lives, worlds, and trust. Including trust in me.

A murmur rippled through the chamber. He allowed it.

—I am not blind to the fact that my emergency powers, however necessary, have strained my relationship with the Jedi Order—one of the sacred pillars of this Republic. Nor am I unaware that many of you fear what unchecked bureaucracy and distance from the front have done to our moral clarity.

He turned slightly, letting the words travel.

—That is why I am proposing the creation of a special civilian office, unprecedented in scope, but essential in this moment.

Holo-text flared to life above the floor: a new title, deliberately long, deliberately solemn.

High Senatorial Commissioner for Military Oversight and Republican Integrity.

Gasps. Whispers. Calculations.

—This office—Palpatine continued—will supervise the military bureaucracy in person. It will possess unquestioned access to casualty reports, logistics, medical disposition, veteran reassignment, and strategic review. Its authority will stand above all military personnel, save the Chancellor himself.

The chamber was very quiet now.

—This Senator will have standing to address the Jedi Council directly. Not as a commander. Not as a subordinate. But as a representative of the civilian conscience of the Republic.

He paused, then delivered the blade wrapped in velvet.

—And precisely because this role must restore trust, it cannot be filled by an ally of mine.

Several Senators leaned forward.

—It must be someone from an opposing political wing. Someone who has challenged my policies openly. Someone whose integrity is recognized by the Jedi and by the public alike.

Palpatine inclined his head.

—Therefore, I formally nominate Senator Padmé Amidala of Naboo.

The chamber erupted.

Not chaos—reaction. Pods lit up with simultaneous debate. Some Senators rose at once in protest, others in support. Holonet commentators spoke over one another as feeds split and multiplied.

“She’s too idealistic.”
“She’s exactly the point.”
“This centralizes power.”
“No—this redistributes it.”
“She’ll slow the war.”
“She’ll make it survivable.”

Padmé stood slowly in her pod, visibly startled—perfectly so. She did not speak. She did not gesture. She let the moment exist.

Across the chamber, Anakin was not present—but his absence was felt, like a held breath.

The voting sequence began.

First: procedural approval to create the office.
The measure passed narrowly, after heated argument—many Senators unwilling to oppose a reform framed as oversight.

Second: confirmation of the nominee.

This vote was different.

Centrist blocs broke unexpectedly in her favor. Moderate loyalists, sensing the wind, abstained rather than oppose. A few hardliners voted no—loudly—but found themselves isolated.

And then the outer systems voted.

Worlds exhausted by war.
Systems where her speech had been replayed endlessly.
Planets where recruitment banners bore her image beside clone armor.

The tally shifted.

Green lights overtook red.

The final count appeared above the floor:

CONFIRMED.

The applause that followed was not uniform, but it was undeniable.

Palpatine bowed his head slightly, gracious in victory, though something tight flickered behind his eyes. This office would slow things. Complicate them. Introduce drag where he preferred acceleration.

But denying it would have been worse.

Padmé stepped forward at last, her voice steady, clear, carrying without force.

—I accept—she said simply—on the condition that this office serves the Republic, not any one person. Including myself.

More applause. Louder now.

As the chamber settled, Palpatine resumed his seat, smiling for the cameras, already recalculating.

He had intended to create a symbol he could manage.

Instead, he had elevated one he could not easily remove.

And as the Senate adjourned, one truth pressed in on him, unwelcome and persistent:

The Republic was becoming slower.
More thoughtful.
Harder to bend.

And for the first time in a long while, that fact did not merely inconvenience him.

It frustrated him.

[Index

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