[It is likely apparent that Ahsoka has no measure for how to deal with grief of this magnitude. She had always been taught that everything that perished would return to the Force, and therefore death was something meant to be celebrated. But there's nothing that feels celebratory about this. This hurts, the Force doesn't come to either of them. He is just gone.
Obi-Wan's faked death had hit her hard, though not as hard as it had hit Anakin -- and certainly not as hard as Anakin's death hit her now. Lexa might feel Ahsoka acknowledge her, but she doesn't make any attempts to sit up or pull herself away from her old master. She can't speak -- considering that she has to bury him is almost too much to think about.
But one thought prevails among the others, angry and raw (though not directed at Lexa):]
no subject
Obi-Wan's faked death had hit her hard, though not as hard as it had hit Anakin -- and certainly not as hard as Anakin's death hit her now. Lexa might feel Ahsoka acknowledge her, but she doesn't make any attempts to sit up or pull herself away from her old master. She can't speak -- considering that she has to bury him is almost too much to think about.
But one thought prevails among the others, angry and raw (though not directed at Lexa):]
( I won't bury him here. He deserves better. )