What's a ship or character you haven't written yet, but really want to?
So technically I’ve written a short Leia and Qui-Gon drabble, but I’ve not written more than that, and there’s something really intriguing to me about the conflict that happens when you stick the two of them together.
They’re really similar in a lot of ways, not just in terms of character traits (hello stubbornness) but the way those traits manifest. They both have a tendency to steamroll anyone in their way (hello stubbornness again), both have a staunch devotion to their ideals that they refuse to compromise on (even when it would be better for them to listen), and they’re both big-picture thinkers (sometimes to the point of not being able to see the littler but equally important things).
Part of my philosophy for writing Qui-Gon is that he should always be forced to cooperate with people who challenge him, but challenge him in a way he can push back against. He doesn’t grow as a character when he gets stuck inside his own head and becomes totally set in his own opinions, but to be able to argue, he has to be working on a similar wavelength. It’s why it’s hard to write him and, say, Luke arguing—Luke is operating on a totally different level, with a totally different understanding of how the galaxy works and a very dissimilar ideological background. Leia, on the other hand, is a perfect opposing force for Qui-Gon.
Leia also needs someone to push back against—there’s a reason she doesn’t go for nice men—but in addition to that, she sets a standard for the people who love her and want to be around her to live up to. Han actively has to work to become a different person if he wants her not just to love him back, but to see him as an equal. Leia knows what she needs—a true partner—and she doesn’t settle for less. But sometimes she goes too far and falls into the same trap as Qui-Gon—thinking everyone has to meet her on her terms—and that’s not good for her either.
For me, that’s where Leia and Qui-Gon could get really interesting. Qui-Gon has a tendency to believe that he’s got the full picture—that he can see everything because of the way he is. He’s not going to believe he needs to change unless something drastic happens. But Leia won’t take him as he is. To see them together—to write them actually in love as a couple—would take figuring out what gives him that push to change, what makes him admit that he loves Leia, and furthermore, that he’s not the person he wants to be. And, in turn, writing them would mean figuring out what makes Leia realize that maybe he’s not so wrong about everything after all, and that maybe she has some growing to do too.

















