As Ezra stepped forward, the world didn’t just fade; it folded. The transition wasn't like jumping into hyperspace—there was no roar of engines, only a deafening, crystalline silence.
He realized then the danger of the glass. To reach into the past to save everyone would shatter the present. The lesson of the looking glass wasn't about the power to change everything; it was about the wisdom to know what must be let go. The Return [S4E4] Through the Looking Glass
Ezra didn’t look back. "The wolves showed me the way. It’s not about being sure anymore, Sabine. It’s about balance." Into the Veil As Ezra stepped forward, the world didn’t just
"Are you sure about this?" Sabine asked, her hand resting on the hilt of her blaster. She looked at the ancient Jedi Temple stones, now rearranged into a shimmering, impossible doorway. To reach into the past to save everyone
The "looking glass" was gone, leaving Ezra standing in the wind. He was older now—not in years, but in the way he carried the weight of the universe. He had seen the beginning and the end, and he knew that the only path forward was the one he walked with his own two feet.
He found himself standing on pathways of starlight that stretched into an infinite obsidian void. This was the . Above and below, circular portals flickered like dying embers, each one a window into a different moment in time. He could hear the echoes of the past and future—whispers of Ahsoka Tano’s blades, the breathing of Darth Vader, and the distant laughter of a younger version of himself. The Looking Glass
With a surge of the Force, he pulled Ahsoka through the veil, dragging her from the jaws of death into the silent void. They stood together in the timeless space, breathless and shivering. The Price of the Path