=== Dooku ===
Dooku, Jedi Master and once the pride of the Order, stood in the center of the ancient Council Chamber. The late afternoon light of Coruscant poured through the tall windows, illuminating motes of dust that danced in the air. Around him, the twelve seats of the Jedi High Council were filled save for one, all staring at him in stony silence.
He stood with his hands clasped neatly behind his back, his rich cloak falling in perfect folds, his head slightly bowed in respect as the Council gathered their full attention on him.
"Masters," Dooku began, letting his gaze sweep across familiar faces: Yoda, perched still and unreadable; Mace Windu's empty chair, Plo Koon, Shaak Ti, Ki-Adi-Mundi, and the others leaning forward ever so slightly, sensing the tension in the air.
"I wish to thank you for answering my request to meet on such short notice," he said smoothly. "I know we all have… burdens enough these days." He paused, letting his words sink in. "But there are matters of grave importance that I must speak of, things that can no longer be left unspoken."
There was an uncomfortable stir as some Masters shifted in their seats. Qui-Gon Jinn, seated to one side, caught Dooku's eye and gave him the faintest nod, a student's quiet show of faith in his old Master.
Dooku drew a slow breath. He seemed almost to be gathering himself, searching for the exact shape of what must be said, as though he regretted needing to say it at all.
"I stand before you not as a rebellious Knight or some conspirator," he continued, his tone still even, his eyes steady. "I stand before you as a Master of this Order, a servant of the Light for longer than some of you have drawn breath. And I stand here because I can remain silent no longer."
His gaze drifted to Mace Windu's empty seat draped in a mourning cloth, a black mark on the Council's perfect circle, before flicking back to the gathered Masters.
"I have spent years bringing you my visions, shadows that flicker at the edge of the Force, warnings of a darkness rising. Each time, I hoped you would listen. I hoped our Order would act, that we would rise to meet what I have seen."
His voice trembled with the fierce control of a man holding back a tide of disappointment. "But every time I came, I was told the same: that my dreams were illusions. That they were mere nightmares, shadows to be debated and dissected until they faded."
He stepped forward, hands opening slightly, as if to lay bare the raw truth between them. "I have watched the Senate rot from within. I have seen the Republic bend under the weight of its own corruption. And I have watched our Order stand idle. We have become so blinded by our so-called principles that we cannot even see the flames licking at our feet."
Still, his tone did not rise, it was almost mournful, his disappointment laid bare for all to see. "You must understand, my friends… I have not come here to simply cast stones or to rebuke you for the sake of my pride. I have come because I love this Order, or what it once was."
He paused, taking in the strained faces around him. Some Masters looked at him with sympathy, others with wary suspicion, but none yet understood the full weight of what was coming.
Dooku drew himself to his full height, his cloak shifting over his shoulders like a gathering stormcloud. His eyes hardened, the ice behind them beginning to crack with the heat of his anger.
"And so I must speak the truth you refuse to see."
He let the silence stretch, feeling their tension coil tighter. Then, at last, he continued.
"We sit here, cloistered in our marble tower, speaking of balance and destiny while the galaxy crumbles beneath our feet."
Yoda's ears twitched, but he said nothing. He simply watched, ancient eyes half-lidded.
Dooku raised his voice, letting it roll across the chamber like distant thunder.
"I have brought you visions and dreams, fragments of darkness, glimpses of a coming war. And what have you done?" He pivoted slowly, robes swirling around him. "You dismiss them. We debate them for hours, for days, for weeks until the meaning is lost, the urgency gone, and the galaxy moves on without us."
Ki-Adi-Mundi opened his mouth, but Dooku cut him off with a sharp gesture.
"You say the Force will guide us. The Force does not guide those who refuse to act! The Senate is rotten, infested with corruption, deceit, petty power plays. You know it, and I know it! Yet you stand beside those charlatans every day, lending them your moral authority while they line their pockets and sign the Republic's death warrant."
"Master Dooku-" Cin Drallig began, but again Dooku's words fell like hammer blows.
"No! You will hear me this time! You will listen." He pointed a long finger, sweeping it across the room. "We sit here in our circle of stone, clinging to illusions of control. When the outer region burned beneath the boots of the Astartes, did you sense it coming? When the Black Templar carved through our Temple, when our precious brothers and sisters died on our own steps, did you feel the darkness before it was upon you? Did you lift a finger before it was too late?"
Silence. Some Councilors stared at him with wide eyes. Others looked away, shame hidden behind the folds of their hoods.
Dooku's voice lowered, but it did not soften. It became colder, more precise, each word like a blade.
"I am old. I have lived long enough to see this Order for what it is now: a bloated, stagnant council of squabbling fools. You speak of the Light, but you fear the Dark more. You fear the people you claim to protect. You fear the very power that gives you life."
He paused to look at each of them, Obi-Wan, Saesee Tiin, Kit Fisto, Shaak Ti, Adi Gallia, even young Anakin Skywalker who had been allowed to sit and witness. They squirmed under his gaze.
Master Oppo Rancisis hissed softly, coiling his long tail. "You overstep, Master Dooku."
"No," Dooku said, voice sharp. "It is you who have overstepped. You have overstepped so far from your calling that you no longer recognize it."
Yoda finally spoke, his gravelly voice drifting through the chamber like a whisper of wind. "Abandon the Code, would you? Betray the Order, would you?"
Dooku stepped closer to the old Grandmaster. "Betray? I swore to defend this galaxy. To protect it. That oath stands, even if the Council is too weak to keep it themselves."
"That is why I am leaving this Order. I will not stand by as you debate your principles into oblivion while billions suffer."
Shock rippled through the chamber. Murmurs rose like an agitated hive.
Dooku lifted a hand to still them. "I have spoken with Captain Maximus. He offered me a choice. The Imperium will welcome us, not as lapdogs, and not as pawns of some corrupted Senate. But as brothers-in-arms."
Shaak Ti leaned forward, disbelief etched into every line of her face. "You would trade the Jedi way for the Imperium's tyranny? For their brutality? You would join the enemy?"
Dooku's eyes narrowed. "I have seen more honor in their so-called brutes than I have in this chamber in a decade. They do not hide behind platitudes while darkness takes over. They act. They protect their people. They give them purpose."
"Madness!" Ki-Adi-Mundi barked. "You would throw away centuries of tradition for an empire of war-mongering fanatics?"
Dooku turned to him with icy disdain. "Perhaps you would understand if you left this Temple more often."
Gasps. Even Plo Koon lowered his head, words failing him.
Dooku spread his hands, the rich folds of his cloak like wings of shadow. "I came here today to give you a chance. Captain Maximus has offered the same to you, to all of you. Leave this broken Republic. Join us. Help forge something stronger. Something that will stand against corruption. Help me build something better."
He let the silence hang.
But the fury in the grand Council Chamber was already boiling over. The heavy air of silence that had carried Dooku's words now cracked and splintered as the gathered Masters struggled to contain their outrage and disbelief. A few sat in stunned silence, their gazes turned inward as if searching for some hidden flaw in the Force that might make sense of what they had just heard.
Others leaned forward in their seats, anger flaring at their temples. The chamber, a place of calm debate and ancient wisdom for centuries, now trembled on the edge of open conflict.
Cin Drallig was the first to finally lose his composure. He rose from his seat in a single fluid motion, the deep folds of his robe falling around him. His eyes blazed with righteous fury as he leveled a finger at his old peer.
"Master Dooku." he hissed, voice sharp as a blade striking a training post. "You stand here and spit on the Council that nurtured you, the Order that made you! You have betrayed the Oaths you swore beneath this very roof!"
A low murmur rippled through the chamber, some Masters nodding in fierce agreement, others flinching as if struck. Qui-Gon Jinn sat and watched, the pain on his face was that of a man watching a beloved father be stripped and rebuked.
A deep rumble shook the floor as a heavy, cylindrical pillar began to rise from the chamber's circular center, ancient servos whining beneath the stone as it emerged. Its top was shaped into a single hollow socket, polished to accept a single weapon.
Drallig stepped from his seat, robes trailing behind him like the tattered remains of his trust. He stopped before the pillar and locked eyes with Dooku, his voice quieter now, but more cutting than ever. "If you would so boldly forsake us, then you will at least do so without the symbol of our trust. Surrender your lightsaber. Surrender it, and all that it means."
Dooku stood very still. For the briefest of moments, he looked almost surprised, but that flicker was gone as quickly as it came, replaced by the grave, regal calm of a man accepting the weight of his own choices. Slowly, he drew back his cloak, unfastening the curved hilt that had hung at his hip for decades, a trusted friend, an extension of his will, the last thread that bound him to these walls and the memories within.
He turned the weapon over in his palm, feeling the cold metal against his skin, every scrape and notch, every carefully maintained surface that had helped keep peace and defended the weak when the Republic still meant something true. For a moment, his thumb hovered over the ignition switch. A small, wistful smile ghosted over his lips, a farewell to a life he once knew.
With deliberate care, he placed the tip of the weapon into the waiting socket. It hissed gently as it locked into place. Mechanisms deep within the pillar hummed to life, and the hilt was drawn downward into the column, swallowed by stone and ancient machinery alike. A faint metallic echo rang out as the pillar receded, taking with it Dooku's last symbol of knighthood.
Silence again filled the room, but it was not the tranquil calm of Jedi meditation, it was the hush of mourning, the cold void of a bond severed forever.
Dooku turned to face the circle of Masters. For a heartbeat, the proud Jedi Master was gone, in his place was simply a tired old man who had fought for what he believed was right for longer than any of them would ever understand. He let his eyes rest on each of them in turn, Master Yoda, who would not meet his gaze; Shaak Ti, her hands trembling slightly in her lap; Ki-Adi-Mundi, his brow deeply furrowed in conflict.
But his eyes lingered longest on Qui-Gon, the boy who had been like a son to him, the man now caught between two worlds. Dooku inclined his head, just slightly, a private farewell only Qui-Gon would understand.
"My friends," he said softly, voice raw yet still unwavering, "you must believe me when I say I am sorry that it has come to this. I am sorry for the pain this causes you, the doubt it will spread. You will call me a traitor. Heretic. But know this…"
He lifted his chin, every line of his noble bearing unbowed by the weight pressing on him now. "I have loved this Order. I have loved what we stood for more deeply than words can say. And despite the blindness that has overtaken you, I am still proud to have served alongside each of you, through all our trials."
His eyes shone for a moment, wet with the memory of decades spent in these hallowed halls. "I wish you could see what I see. And perhaps… someday you will. May the Force be with you. You will need it far more than I."
With that, Dooku turned his back on the highest circle of the Jedi Order. The hem of his cloak swept behind him as he stepped across the ancient stones, the same floor he had crossed as a youngling, as a Knight, as a Master of the Order.
Not once did he look back.
The Council chamber doors parted with a deep, sonorous hiss, letting in a gust of cool air that rustled the robes of those left behind. Qui-Gon watched him go, his lips parted as if he might call after him, but he said nothing. He merely bowed his head, the storm of old loyalties and new convictions warring in his heart.
As the doors sealed shut behind Dooku with a soft finality, the Masters were left staring at the space he had once filled, a void that seemed somehow larger than the man himself, a wound in the fabric of the Order that no words could ever mend.
Far below, Dooku stepped out into the light of the Temple's highest terraces, the wind catching his cloak like the wings of an eagle breaking free of its cage.
His hands, for the first time in decades, were empty. Yet they had never felt heavier.
The echo of his boots on the polished stone floors followed him as he descended from the Council Chamber. His mind was a swirl of memories, faces, lessons, failures, all washing over him in waves that broke against the solid walls of his resolve. The great doors of the Temple parted before him for what he thought would be the last time, spilling him out into the vast causeway that overlooked the endless durasteel towers of Coruscant.
He paused for a moment on the broad steps, his eyes taking in the horizon. The sun was setting, painting the clouds in bloody streaks of crimson and gold. The wind that always danced along the Temple's heights tugged at the hem of his cloak.
He was almost down the last set of stairs when he heard the familiar voice that somehow cut through the city's constant roar like the whisper of an old melody.
"Master! Wait!"
Dooku stopped. His spine stiffened, but his shoulders eased ever so slightly. He turned, robes brushing against the steps as he looked back to see Qui-Gon running toward him. He looked so much like the boy he'd once been, stubborn, relentless, eyes bright with a mix of rebellion and devotion.
Qui-Gon came to a halt before him, breathing harder than he would admit, the wind catching his hair and robes in gentle, tangled waves. For a moment, they just looked at each other, no words yet, just the understanding of all that had passed between Master and Padawan, father and son.
"I thought you'd already be gone," Qui-Gon said, his voice soft, as if afraid to break the fragile moment holding them apart.
Dooku let out a low, tired chuckle. "And I thought you would be in the Council Chamber, arguing some impossible position as usual."
Qui-Gon's mouth quivered into a small, wistful smile. But then the humor faded, and his eyes searched Dooku's face, the lines etched there by years of battles fought with words, blades, and belief.
"I wish I could come with you," Qui-Gon said quietly. He looked down, the truth hard for him to speak. "But Anakin… he still struggles with his anger. He blames the Astartes for so much. He needs me here. The boy is strong, but the darkness in him is stronger still. I can't leave him."
Dooku placed a hand on his shoulder, squeezing it firmly. "And so you shouldn't. He will need your strength. And your defiance," he added, with a trace of warmth that few others had ever drawn from him.
Qui-Gon's eyes brightened with something like mischief then, that old spark that had always driven Dooku mad in his youth. "Then, before you leave us behind for good… I have something for you."
He reached into the folds of his robe and drew out a long hilt. The metal was polished but worn, a history of battles hidden in every scratch and scuff. Dooku recognized it at once, though it was not his own. It was the saber Qui-Gon had brought before the Council years ago, the same one recovered from Tatooine when the Astartes had ripped the Sith apprentice Maul in half like the dog he was.
Qui-Gon held it out, cradled in his palms like an offering. "I couldn't get your saber back. You know how the Council is. They're already sealing off your old quarters, acting like you never existed. But… you shouldn't go empty-handed. Take this, until you find a crystal of your own, and forge something worthy of you again."
Dooku reached out and took the hilt with reverence. It was not his, but at this moment, it felt like it could be. It felt like a bridge to a life that was ending and one that was just beginning.
His eyes met Qui-Gon's, and he searched for any sign of regret there, but found only quiet pride, and a fierce loyalty that nothing, not even the Order's failings, could snuff out.
"Thank you, my boy," Dooku murmured. He turned the saber over in his hands, feeling its weight. "You know this could bring you trouble, if they find out you helped me."
Qui-Gon just shrugged, his expression soft but stubborn as ever. "Let them find out. You've done what you had to do. And you taught me the same, to follow the Living Force, even when everyone else is blind."
A silence settled between them, heavy with things unsaid. But there was no need for apologies or explanations now.
Dooku looked at him for a long time, seeing not the brash boy who once challenged him at every turn, but the man he'd hoped he would become, strong, wise, and unyielding. He lifted his free hand and placed it on the side of Qui-Gon's face, thumb brushing the grey at his temple.
"I have always been proud of you," he said, voice thick with the weight of all the years between them. "Of the Jedi you are… and the man you are. Whatever comes, remember that. Remember I love you like my own."
Then, with a small, sad smile, he pulled his old Padawan into a tight embrace. Qui-Gon returned it without hesitation, closing his eyes to hold back the welling grief he hadn't expected to feel.
"Goodbye, my son," Dooku whispered.
They parted slowly, reluctant to sever that last living tie. But when they did, there was no more hesitation. Dooku turned away, the borrowed saber now clipped to his belt.
His cloak snapped around him in the wind as he descended the final steps, the city lights of Coruscant spread out before him like a tapestry of flickering stars. Qui-Gon watched as his master entered his ship, and took off into the vast void of space beyond. Unsure of what the future held.
===
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