The Fine Art of the Force.

For this meme. Still taking prompts.


Stargate Atlantis

Someone accidentally activates an unknown Ancient artifact on Atlantis, which releases some kind of aeresol. McKay has a fit at whoever did it, and goes to shut things down and clean up the mess they made. All seems well until the person who had the accident starts accidentally setting things on fire when they get angry or scared.

Things just go downhill from there, as far as McKay is concerned, when the “weird things happen when feeling strong emotions” starts spreading.

Something something, someone who isn’t one of the main crew figures out this is kinda like using the Force in Star Wars. At least enough that the “and now we meditate and figure out how to be calm and serene and still throw flaming debris at the Wraith with out minds” works.

fialleril:

redcap3
replied to your post “Following this post (months later because this got buried in my drafts…”

…is it crazy I kinda want to see post-Vader Anakin being set up for a blind date?

The whole thing is Han’s idea.

When he first suggests it to Leia, he says he wants to do something nice for the old man, which as cover stories go is frankly terrible. Leia only raises an unimpressed eyebrow.  It’s such a bad excuse it doesn’t even deserve a response.

Finally Han gives it up and admits that, okay, fine, he just can’t stand watching Rustbucket get flirted at every time they’re all dragged to some gala or top brass event. Anakin’s clueless act is just embarrassing, and worse, Chewie thinks it’s funny, that traitor.

Leia just goes on looking at him. Luke, though, says, “Uh, Han, I don’t think it’s an act.”

Han stares at him. “Oh come on, kid. No one is that clueless.” Then he stops to consider this, and who he’s talking to. Luke is a very friendly person, and very bad at recognizing the line between friendly and flirting. Half the Rebellion wants to date him and as near as Han can tell, he genuinely has no idea. But still… “Okay, fine, maybe some people are. But your old man was married. He managed to produce the two of you somehow. So he can’t be completely unaware of how these things go.”

Leia snickers at him. Han has the sinking feeling she knows something he doesn’t, but he knows better than to ask when she gets that look in her eye.

So he decides he’s gonna set Anakin up on a date, and Leia can laugh all she wants. He’ll be the one laughing when it works.

His first attempt is a guy named Rav who used to work maintenance in one of the hangars on Home One. These days he’s planetside on Coruscant. Nice guy, a few years older than Anakin, green eyes, a great ass. Han arranges the date at a bar so chill he frankly hates the place himself, but it seems like the kind of scene an older couple might enjoy. (Anakin’s only thirteen years older than you, a little voice in the back of his head says, but he ignores that. It’s too weird to let himself think about.) He tells Anakin that Rav wants to meet up and talk shuttle maintenance, which is such a damn obvious innuendo that he barely manages to restrain a cringe as he says it.

But hey, it works, and Anakin’s off to meet with Rav and Han congratulates himself on a job well done. Leia’s still smirking, but that’s just because she hasn’t yet learned what a great matchmaker he is.

Anakin swings back by Leia’s apartment about three hours later, early enough that Luke’s still there and Han is just a little worried. But it was only a first date, so…that doesn’t have to be bad, does it?

“How’d it go, Rustbucket?” he says.

Anakin shrugs easily and heads for the kitchen to start a pot of tzai. “Not bad. Rav’s got some great ideas for B- and Y-wing class fighters, but his views on TIEs are woefully misinformed.” He grumbles something under his breath. “I understand that there’s a need to bad mouth the enemy fighters in front of the troops, but you don’t need to buy into your own propaganda.”

Han blinks a little. Luke and Leia are snickering behind their hands, and for once, it’s real damn easy to see that they’re twins. He glares at them both.

“Well, all right, but…what about the, uh, social aspect?”

“Huh?” Anakin comes into the living room and sits in the chair across from Han and Leia’s couch. Han can never get over how the guy just…sprawls when he sits. It’s about the least Vader-like mannerism he can think of.

“Did you hit it off?” Han asks.

A brief frown crosses Anakin’s face. “I don’t know. I wouldn’t mind another chance to correct his opinions on TIEs.” Suddenly he brightens, “I did manage to get him the bartender’s number, though, and I’m pretty sure they’re going out this weekend, so I suppose that’s my good deed for the day.” He says this last very dryly. It’s something his therapist suggested, taking notice of his good deeds and letting himself be proud of them or something like that, and Anakin always snarks about it but Han is pretty sure he’s also following his therapist’s advice, so that’s something.

Anyway, that’s clearly not the important thing here. “Wait,” he sputters. “You…set Rav up on a date…with the bartender?”

Leia looks positively gleeful now and Han is pretty sure she didn’t plan this, but if it turned out she did he wouldn’t even be surprised.

Anakin, though, doesn’t seem to understand what’s got Han in such a fuss. “Sure,” he says with another shrug. “They made a cute couple.”

“I don’t believe this,” Han mutters. What kind of guy plays wingman for his own date? He scrapes a hand over his face and resolves to hold on to whatever dignity he can. “Okay, so Rav’s not your type, huh?”

Anakin only looks at him with an expression of such genuine confusion that Han can’t even convince himself the guy’s pretending. “My type of what?” he says.

A loud snort of laughter escapes Leia, and she tries to play it off as a sneeze. Han isn’t impressed.

“Never mind,” he mutters, and eventually the conversation moves on, but he knows Leia isn’t going to forget about this anytime soon.

*

So okay. Maybe he made a bad call with that first try. Maybe Anakin’s only interested in women? It’s a possibility. Fine. So this time Han will have to find the right woman.

He considers his options carefully. Luke and Leia’s mom was a politician and a founder of the Rebel alliance, smart as hell and also pretty damn stunning. (Leia definitely takes after her mother, he thinks, without the slightest hint of a goofy grin, no matter what Chewie says.) She must have had a terrible sense of humor though. Either that or she put up with Anakin’s awful jokes out of some never before heard of reservoir of patience and goodness. Actually, the way Anakin talks about her, that might be true.

So he’s looking for someone smart, driven, principled, but also somehow willing to endure endless terrible puns. That’s a tall order.

The first person he tries is Mon Mothma. It takes him a couple weeks to work up to asking her, because yeah, there’s nothing about this idea that isn’t awkward. But he’s got to admit, she does fit the profile.

So eventually he gets up the guts to suggest the idea of a date, and Mon Mothma laughs in his face.

Well, Han thinks, muttering to himself and wishing he could erase the last fifteen minutes of his life from existence. In hind sight, that was a pretty stupid idea. He’s never even heard of Mon Mothma going on a date.

“You’ve never heard of Dad going on a date either,” Luke says, smirking. Not for the first time, Han wonders what the hell he was thinking, making Luke his confidant in this. But he needed someone with more insight into Anakin, and he’d be damned if he’d ask Leia.

“That’s different, obviously,” Han says. “He spent twenty years inside a tin can.”

Luke rolls his eyes. “I just don’t understand why you won’t let this go,” he says.

“Because people are always flirting with him!” Han says. “And he’s always pretending not to notice. It’s infuriating.”

“It doesn’t happen that often,” Luke says, and okay, Han thinks, that’s actually true, but still. It happens often enough.

Luke sighs. “If you’re so stuck on that, why don’t you just ask one of the people who’s actually flirted with him?”

Huh. That’s not a bad idea, actually. Why didn’t he think of that.

*

It still takes him a while to plan his strategy, but eventually he manages to set Anakin up on a date with a woman named Meera Yasko. She’s Corellian, he’s pretty sure, but she’s also whip smart and pretty attractive. She’s some kind of attorney at a non-profit or something, and Han’s never been especially keen on people of the legal persuasion, but he figures Anakin might like that.

The old man takes a bit of convincing, but Han is a master of smooth talking (don’t laugh, Leia!) and eventually he gets them set up at a nice swank restaurant and even orders a bottle of wine for the table as a surprise.

*

Anakin comes back from this date a lot more excited, and Han experiences a fleeting moment of smug hope, only to have it crushed beneath Anakin’s heel when it turns out the man is excited for all the wrong reasons.

Apparently, Meera is the chief counsel at a non-profit involved in education for underprivileged youth, whatever the hell that means. They’re an interplanetary organization, too, but it’s not the organization itself that really interests Anakin. Meera has the legal background to cover all of the complicated bits about starting a foundation that Anakin doesn’t really understand (and Han understands even less, if he’s honest), and he thinks they might really be able to get this off the ground.

“Wait,” says Han. “This? What’s this?”

He expects a glare or an eyeroll from Leia and maybe Luke, but instead, they look as curious as he feels.

“Oh,” says Anakin, looking oddly shy. “Right. I haven’t told you yet. I’ve been thinking, well, they’re paying me all this money that I don’t need -” (here he raises a hand to forestall Leia’s usual protest) “- so I want to do something with it. And I thought… Tatooine’s free now, but there’s not exactly a uniform system of education, and many of the communities don’t have necessary supplies or access to training for teachers or -”

“Dad,” says Leia, “I think that’s a wonderful idea.”

As it turns out, setting up an entire school system takes a lot of work. Who knew, right? It also takes a pretty shocking amount of money, much more than Anakin’s supposedly extravagant yearly salary. That’s not a problem, though, because Meera helps him set up a fundraising program that’s frankly terrifying in its efficiency.

They spend an awful lot of time together, but it’s mostly in her office or over working lunches. Still, Han holds onto hope for a while. After all, she at least was definitely interested. He knows that. But after several months, he finally has to admit defeat. Meera and Anakin have a pretty great working relationship, and Han would even venture to say they’ve become friends, but he still hasn’t seen any evidence that Anakin ever realized she was interested, and it’s pretty clear now that she’s not thinking about him that way any more.

Still. The Padme Naberrie Educational Foundation basically exists because of Han, so he’s counting this one a win.

*

He keeps trying.

There’s a woman named Jasta who likes to dance and, apparently, has terrible taste in art. Not his best choice, but hey, Anakin managed to set her up with a guy they ran into at the art museum, and he seems happy about that, at least.

There’s Varin, who’s an active duty lieutenant in the Republic navy and likes to spend her leave time volunteering with animals. Anakin introduces her to the recently defected Admiral Piett, and damn if the two of them aren’t getting married about five months later. So that worked out, Han thinks, rolling his eyes. But hey, Anakin got a cat out of the deal, which apparently his therapist thinks is great for him, so…there’s that.

There’s Piett himself, which Han still thinks made sense in theory, because Anakin is clearly fond of the guy. But, looking back, he can admit that it’s pretty likely even Piett didn’t know this one was meant to be a date, and Han suspects Anakin may have agreed to the whole thing as an excuse to set Piett up with Varin.

His last attempt is a Twi’lek woman named Dinsa Atray who’s frankly just a little bit terrifying, but then so is Anakin, so Han figures it’s a good match. They actually start meeting up pretty regularly, and Han is starting to feel pretty smug about it, even though Leia still isn’t convinced of his matchmaking skills. But his illusions are cruelly shattered a few weeks later, when dramatic and disturbingly well-documented accusations of sentient trafficking and money laundering bring about the abrupt end of Senator Orn Free Taa’s political career and, eventually, the beginning of his exciting new prison career.

(“Well this was fun,” Han overhears Dinsa tell Anakin. “Let me know if you ever want to destroy a man’s life and reputation again. I’m always game.” Yeah. Maybe more than a little terrifying.)

*

Three years into his self-appointed quest, and Han’s sitting at the dinner table staring at an invitation to the wedding of Mon Mothma and Meera Yasko. He has to admit, he didn’t see that coming. He wonders a bit sourly if Anakin introduced them, too. Honestly at this point he wouldn’t be surprised. The universe is trolling him, clearly.

“Hey, Rustbucket,” he says, because no one’s ever accused him of quitting while he’s ahead. “Who are you bringing as your plus one?”

Leia eyes him with fond derision, and Han gamely ignores her.

“Kadee, probably,” Anakin says. “She likes weddings. Why?”

“No reason,” Han mutters.

*

It’s three more months before he finally gives up. But he’s not going to admit that.

“You know,” he tells Leia, “I think I can declare this operation a resounding success.”

“Really,” says Leia with a smirk. “Because from where I’m standing it looks like you set my dad up on a dozen blind dates, and he still doesn’t even realize he’s been on one.”

Han waves a careless hand. “Well, from where I’m standing it looks like Operation Get Anakin Skywalker Some Friends was an unqualified success.”

Leia’s face softens and she leans up to give him a lingering kiss. “That’s sweet, Han,” she says, and when he grimaces she laughs. “But don’t worry. I won’t tell anyone.”

“May I please draw your OC?”

theotherguysride:

carminecrossroads:

Reblog this message if you encourage anyone that wants to draw your OC to do so.  No need to ask for permission in advance.

Go for it.  Draw my OC.  If you want, I’ll even give you reference posts.  Go to town on it.

You are welcome to draw my OC and surprise me with the result.  Seriously.  In fact, I encourage it.  I will proudly display whatever it is you submit to me regarding my OC.  There is a chance that I will squeal about it for several days.

Even if you feel you aren’t good at whatever artistic adventure it is you do, please feel free to submit it to me.  I want to see what you have done.

I’d LOVE to see if anyones vision matches mine!

ladyvean:

Tell me about your Star Trek OCs.

*sees this cross their dash via @guljerry* Oooh. An excuse to babble about everyone.

Mm. Where to start.

Eka Ke

An OC from an original species, specifically written for A Galaxy Away From Home. Ne/nir/nem pronouns because four-gendered species, who follows Garak when Garak escapes from the being who thought xir owned him. (And then followed him when Garak went into a zone interdicted by Eka’s species, and effectively got nirself exiled because Eka was curious about Garak’s ability to lie and get away with it.)


Every other OC is Cardassian, so far. Most of them Obsidian Order or relatives of those in the Obsidian Order because of what I’ve been writing them in.

Nadya Gennel

A field operative only a little older than Garak, who has a penchant for long-term assignments, and following up on interesting bits of information independently. No interest in a spouse, and has an adopted son, which makes her something of an oddity.

In Children of the Order, her adopted son is a teenage Julian Bashir who she first met when his parents took him to Adigeon Prime for genetic resequencing. (Sometimes she thinks it might have been a mistake to take a long-term assignment to Earth after that netted her a son and little else, but on the other hand, Julian’s been an exemplary field operative following in her footsteps, so she’s really quite proud of him.)

Any other AU she shows up in, her son is Jakel, who is 8 at the end of the Dominion War, and I haven’t decided yet if he’s one of the war orphans left on Bajor and adopted at some point after the Occupation, or is a mixed Cardassian-Bajoran infant she adopted just at the end of the Occupation.

She lives in Lakarian City, and because I stubbornly headcanon that no matter what they want to claim, the Dominion did not succeed at killing everyone in Lakarian City, she’s one of the survivors. Even if she did lose most of her family who’d not moved elsewhere on Cardassia.

Salen Gennel

Nadya’s mother, and the doctor who Julian joins – and eventually takes over from – in Burning Bridges. I haven’t actually done anything to develop her in Children of the Order, and in the only other story I have in progress, she’s one of the dead in Lakarian City, as she never made it out of the hospital she works in (or runs).

Aerit Milar

An Obsidian Order surgeon, who tends to call herself a sculptor of new truths. She is justifiably proud of her skills, and is willing to accept favors as payment for doing work.

She lives in Lakarian City, though she wasn’t born there, and though when the Obsidian Order was officially dissolved, she took up a job as an archivist – officially – she’s never bothered to stop doing what she does best. I still haven’t figured out what she owes Garak that she does the work on Julian in Burning Bridges.

I also tend to headcanon her as the surgeon who Damar sends Dukat to for altering Dukat’s features so he appears Bajoran. What exactly the transaction was that allowed that to happen, I have no idea, but she’s annoyed that her work was used thoughtlessly and carelessly, found out, and as far as she’s concerned, utterly wasted.

In Children of the Order, she’s Julian’s primary physician, as well as the surgeon who has altered him multiple times. She’s mostly proud of him for his ability to readily adapt to whatever truth she’s been instructed to craft for him, and only mildly annoyed he was found out by the Bajorans and the Federation, since it wasn’t carelessness on his part.


The rest of my Trek OCs aren’t very developed yet, though eventually. I’ve a good half dozen I’m poking at for a post-canon story that only tangentially involves canon characters. Because I can, and because it’s worth exploring what happens when the only survivors of the destruction of Lakarian City (as Nadya puts it “a place of leisure, religious fanatics, and retired Obsidian Order families”) are those retired and not-so-retired Obsidian Order operatives and their families, and that because paranoia and building for that paranoia.

slothssassin:

Fun™ things to do on Tumblr:

Let’s make this a nice place for all of us.

  • Send messages to people. They could become new friends!
  • Someone reblogged an ask game? Go on, ask them something, you know they’ll be happy.
  • Share your OCs! It’s nice to see how other people create their characters.
  • See something about an OC on your dash? Comment on it, reblog it, show your interest. People are happy if others want to know more about their characters.
  • See something you like? Tell the creator! Send an ask, a message, comment, anything.
  • Do art trades! Or art for fic trades!
  • If you like a post, reblog it. It won’t hurt you. Likes are nice, but reblogs are better.
  • You like someone and what they’re doing? Why not send them a random ask and tell them? You’ll make their day!
  • Tag people! Tag games are fun and make you feel integrated in a fandom.
  • Respect others

Feel free to add stuff to the list.

Sunset and Evening Star – LeslieFish – Star Trek: The Original Series [Archive of Our Own]

Word Count: 121,808
Chapters: 18/18
Fandom: Star Trek: The Original Series
Rating: Mature
Warnings: Creator Chose Not To Use Archive Warnings
Relationships: James T. Kirk/Spock
Characters: James T. Kirk, Spock, Leonard McCoy, Original Characters
Additional Tags: Alternate Reality, Religions, Slash

A time-travel mission gone wrong traps Kirk in the past and returns the Enterprise to a different and challenging future.


My Notes:

This is the only TOS fic I have read where I didn’t know the author from other fandoms/parts of Trek fandom before going into it, and at this point, I can’t remember why I clicked on it in the first place.

And I have not once, in multiple re-reads, regretted doing so.

This is a fucking fantastic piece of work, with an immersive experience of the ancient Roman world, and a fascinating potential future. The relationship between Kirk and Spock is well-explored without being overwhelming, and while central to the resolution of the plot, isn’t the primary plot itself. I adore the OCs woven into the story, and each of them is a distinct person in their own right – no one is just a sketch there in the background.

If you’re concerned about the religion in the story – while the idea of it is central to the story, and why certain things happen, it isn’t in-your-face, and it isn’t prostyletizing. It’s still present, and that might not be to everyone’s taste. Particularly if having christianity in particular deeply criticised is likely to make you uncomfortable.

Also – the social criticism in places comes across as quite pointed, and I find myself nodding along with the critics a lot. It feels applicable to the current political climate, in fact.

And final note – the fic itself is in the vicinity of 34 years old, though its posting date to AO3 is more recent. There might be some things in there that do not match up to current research or ideas about history, but that does not mean it is not well researched or written.

Sunset and Evening Star – LeslieFish – Star Trek: The Original Series [Archive of Our Own]

“per ardua ad astra” – chapter eight

anghraine:

I’m also sure everyone is reading for Space Wikipedia.

last chapter:

“That’s what we were talking about,” added Zekheret. “I can’t believe you didn’t hear. Darth Vader is on the Death Star, right now. He captured the princess and brought her here.”

Efrah dismissed this with a wave of her hand. “Oh, that was hours ago. I’m sure he’s already questioned her.”

this chapter:

Princess Leia might be held elsewhere, and of course, they might be completely untrustworthy. But their information coincided with Bodhi’s, and certainly with the level of chaos around the princess. It seemed most probable by far that she was here, in this very quadrant.

Being tortured.

I can’t do anything about that, Jyn told herself, even her mental voice thin. I can’t do anything.

chapters: one, two, three, four, five, six, seven

Keep reading

“per ardua ad astra” – chapter seven

anghraine:

I meant to post last night, but fell asleep after posting at AO3. And venting. >_>

last chapter:

“In your line of work,” said Jyn, “do you try and pick up as much information as you can, wherever you find it, or focus on getting everything you can from a few good sources?”

“Both,” he replied through a yawn. “If only one is possible, though, a reliable source is worth a hundred gossips.”

She’d been afraid of that.

this chapter:

She didn’t want to know them, or anyone. Even at the best of times, and these were far from those. Soon, she or they would be dead, and it’d be good riddance for whoever lived. Hell, they’d kill her in a moment if they knew who she was. No point in cozying up for that, except—

Except she needed information.

chapters: one, two, three, four, five, six

Keep reading