Read The Crystal Star Online

Authors: VONDA MCINTYRE

Tags: #Fiction, #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #General, #Science Fiction, #Fiction - Science Fiction, #Adventure, #Science Fiction - Space Opera, #Space Opera, #Imaginary wars and battles, #Science Fiction - Star Wars

The Crystal Star (2 page)

And Han, Leia's dear Han, had helped orchestrate the spreading peace. All children, not just the children

of the people who brought down the Empire, should be safe.

Or so Leia had thought.

Leia followed Dr. Hyos's assistants as they carried Chewbacca back to the surgery in the ancient Munto

Codru castle.

She felt very alone. Han and Luke had left on an adventure, with her blessing. Winter had taken the

opportunity of this peaceful tour to attend a conference on runaway children. She too was worlds away.

The coincidence did not amuse Leia.

She waited outside the surgery, where Dr.

Hyos and her assistants worked to heal Chewbacca's wounds. Courtiers and aides hovered until Leia,

with careful courtesy, sent them away.

The wyrwulf sprawled before the surgery doors. Dr. Hyos had spoken to it, told it that it could not enter

the surgery until it was older, and left it on guard. It dozed, and its head tipped forward until it balanced

on the tips of its awful fangs.

Chamberlain Iyon hurried into the stark stone waiting room.

"There's no sign," he said. "No sign.

They are very bold, very clever. Madam, we must wait for them to communicate." "Wait?" Leia

exclaimed. "That seems... unwise... to me." When she was younger she would have chosen a more

intemperate description: Stupid. Ill-advised. Idiotic.

"The ransom demand will come in the morning," the chamberlain said, trying to reassure her.

"Morning! By morning the kidnappers could escape!" "They cannot escape, madam. The port is closed.

And furthermore, they will not escape.

They have no reason to." "But it's been two hours," Leia said. "The people who stole my children also

stole two hours!" Mr. Iyon frowned. "How, stole?

Madam, you worked through the noon hour. The chronos are correct, the sun is in its proper place..." He

let his voice trail off, aware that his feeble joke had failed to lighten the mood.

"They stole two hours," Leia said again.

"These were no ordinary kidnappers! Ordinary kidnappers could never get through our defenses, they

couldn't get past Chewbacca, they couldn't steal time from us!" "But, madam, as I explained--Munto

Codru produces kidnappers of rare quality." He looked at her sadly.

He thinks I'm reacting from fear and grief, Leia thought. If I tell him I suspect a follower of the dark side

is responsible for this outrage, he'll believe I've lost my mind.

The doors of the surgery opened; Dr. Hyos patted the wyrwulf's heavy head, came to Leia, and took her

hands. The doctor held each of Leia's hands pressed between two of her own.

"Chewbacca," she said. "He'll be fine. His hearing will take time to recover from the effects of the

pressure bomb. He'll be weak while he builds up his blood." "Did he tell you--" "He's not in any shape to

tell anyone anything. Leia, my princess, he must sleep or he'll be in danger." "Did you send my message

to Han and Luke?" Leia asked the chamberlain.

"Yes, madam, but I regret--they are too close to Crseih Station. The star system is most violent. The

black hole, its quantum crystal companion--theirthe influence blocks communication." "Then we must

send a ship out after them." "Madam, the port is closed." "I closed the port! I can order a ship to leave

the planet!" Concerned and gentle, he touched her hand in comfort.

"We must maintain an illusion," he said.

"The port is closed because of a malfunction in the tracking equipment. If a ship leaves, if the emergency

is revealed publicly to be a sham, we will have offered the ransomers a mortal insult." "But you said

they'd know--" "The kidnappers," Dr. Hyos said. "They know, and we know. Everyone else may guess.

No matter. Perception, that's what matters.

Not reality." "Dr. Hyos is correct, madam," the chamberlain said. "I beg you, madam, carry on with your

afternoon's appointments as if nothing had happened. Call on the bravery for which we all honor you. For

the sake of the children." Leia struggled to hide her trembling, struggled to think clearly.

By the time a ship could reach Han, she thought, whatever happens will have happened. I gain nothing by

sending for him.

"I'll go back to the receiveg room," she said.

"I'll finish my appointments. If we haven't heard from--if we haven't heard anything by sundown--" "By

morning, please, madam." The chamberlain's face was anxious. "By morning, I assure you, we'll have

instructions." "I'll finish my appointments." Leia left the waiting room.

"Leia--" Dr. Hyos said.

"Madam--" the chamberlain said.

"What!" She faced them both, glaring.

Mr. Iyon gestured, unhappily, ^wlessly, at her bloody hands, her muddy skirt.

I've met ambassadors and heads of state in worse clothes than this, Leia thought. Worse clothes, and

dirtier.

Leia scrubbed Chewbacca's blood from her hands. Her gown was a lost cause, bloodied and mud

stained, its delicate fabric slashed by the grass blades. She threw it into the recycler, and her slippers

after it. In her bathing room, as she stood in her shift, she started to tremble. She lowered her eyelids,

blotting out the reflection of her own disarranged hair and stark face and staring eyes, reaching for calm,

reaching for certainty.

The fluting warble of Artoo-Detoo drifted into the room. The droid came closer. At the same time, Leia

heard a person's voice, high and childish and uncertain.

"No, I don't remember, I don't remember..." Artoo-Detoo sang.

Leia hurried toward the voices. As she entered her bedchamber, the silk rugs soft beneath her bare feet,

a young Codru-Ji, a native of this world, backed erratically into the room.

"I don't know, I don't remember," she said.

Artoo-Detoo's front foot preceded his cylindrical body; finally his domed head and his rear feet appeared

in the doorway. He was herding the Codru-Ji to her.

"I only saw that the small ones were gone, and the large one was hurt, I only ran for help." It was the

page who had reported the kidnapping. The blood had been washed from her face, and her abrasions

treated, and her torn clothes replaced by a hospital gown.

Leia hurried forward. "Oh, my dear--" The page did not react. Leia touched her upper shoulder.

Startled by the touch, the page jumped straight up and turned around in the air. She came down with all

four hands clenched into fists behind her, and backed rapidly away.

She saw Leia. Her eyes widened.

"Forgive me, forgive me--" Leia took her gently by one lower arm and urged her into the room.

"Why are you out of bed?" Leia asked. "You should be resting--healing." "The small droid came to me,

and I saw I must beg your forgiveness--" "Artoo, how could you?" Leia said. "Fetch Dr.

Hyos--qklyffwas The droid warbled, backed up, came forward, hesitated.

"Hurry!" With a descending trill, the droid scooted through the doorway.

Leia led the page to a couch and tried to help her to sit. At first the page resisted.

"No, I mustn't sit--" "It's all right," Leia said. "Please don't stand on ceremony." Leia tried to urge her to

sit, but the page's knees locked. Leia allowed her to remain standing, and stood beside her. "You saved

Chewbacca's life," Leia said. "And you gave the alarm--" The page stared at her, uncomprehending.

"Milady, I'm sorry, I cannot hear..." She put her hands to her ears. She started to cry, her sobs shaking

her silently.

"I don't know what happened," she said, her ^ws broken by tears. "They were there, playing, and then--"

She shuddered and flinched; Leia wondered if she was experiencing the pressure bomb all over again.

"I... I must have fallen asleep, madam. I should be exiled! And when I awoke the small ones were gone,

and--" She touched the shells of her ears. She made a high-pitched whistling sound in her own language.

"That is to say, Mr. Chewbacca was hurt, and--and I cannot hear, madam!" Leia held her--awkwardly,

because of the difference in their forms, but tenderly--and tried to soothe her.

Dr. Hyos arrived, indignant that her patient had been disturbed.

"I can't imagine what Artoo was thinking, to bring her here," Leia said. "Of course she shouldn't be up--"

"She shouldn't be down," Dr. Hyos said cryptically. "But you are correct, she must rest and recover."

The page broke away from Dr. Hyos and grasped Leia's hands.

"I am so sorry," she said.

"I forgive you," Leia said, slowly and carefully. "I forgive you. Do you understand me?" The page

hesitated, then nodded, and allowed the doctor to take her away.

Artoo-Detoo remained in Leia's apartment, whistling unhappily and arcing back and forth while Leia

dressed. His noise irritated her, but he would not stop and he would not stay still and he would not tell

her what was wrong. He followed her from her apartments. When they came to an intersection of

corridors, he rolled along one that led outside, while Leia squared her shoulders and trudged toward the

meeting room.

Artoo-Detoo whistled insistently.

"I can't," Leia said. "I have to. pretend." She walked into the receiveg room. The herald, usually so

efficient, glanced at her, dismissed her with his gaze, took a step toward her to show her out, then

snapped to attention, recognizing her at last despite her rough clothes.

"Chief of State of the New Republic, daughter of--" "No time for the whole li/!" Leia said. The herald fell

silent. Everyone in the room, her aides and advisers and native Codru-Ji alike, stared at her in confusion.

The chamberlain took a hesitant step toward her.

Leia crossed the receiveg room, her boots loud on the polished stone floor. She took her place in the

circle of chairs, leaned back, and crossed her legs. The heavy fabric of her stiff new hiking trousers

rasped against itself. She forced herself to look relaxed.

"Your pardon, Ambassador Kirl," she said to the representative from the province of Kirl. "Thank you

for your patience. We had a slight... a slight domestic upset." She forced her most charming smile. "You

know how it is--" Her voice suddenly failed her.

The handsome Kirlian ambassador, who took his name from his province, spread all four hands.

He returned her smile.

"I do know how it is," Kirl said. "Many's the time I've interrupted my work--z you say, for a slight

domestic upset. No apology is necessary, though you are notably gracious to offer it!" Always before, his

grandiose manner had amused and sometimes even charmed her. Now it felt to Leia as if his ^ws went

on forever, each one dragged out like molasses.

The day continued, interminably. Munto Codru's convoluted politics meant that she had to receive

ambassadors from an endless number of independent political entities. No wonder the world lay at the

edge--outside the edge--of importance to the Republic. It spent most of its energy facing its own

international disagreements.

Its citizens had little time or attention left over for the larger questions of interplanetary cooperation.

They had taken years to agree to choose a chamberlain, another year to settle on Mr.

Iyon.

When the evening bell rang, the ambassador bowed and withdrew. As the aides shut the doors of the

receiveg chamber, the people left in the waiting room whistled and sighed in the native language. The

doors closed, shutting off the sound.

"Any ^w?" Leia asked, her voice tight.

"No, madam," the chamberlain said.

"But we must not expect to hear before morning. That is the tradition." "Those other people," Leia said.

"What did they want? Are you sure they weren't the kidnappers, trying to talk to me?" "What other

people?" "The people still in my waiting room." "Nothing and no one of importance, madam," Mr. Iyon

said. "Small matters--many invented so the petitioner may go home and say, "I met the princess--I spoke

to the Chief of State of the New Republicffby '" "Nevertheless, I'd like to speak with them." "They will

return. Come, now, you must eat.

Tomorrow you'll negotiate with the ransomers, and the children will come home, and everything will be as

it was." Leia forced herself to unclench her hands from the arms of her chair.

Her fingernails had torn small crescents into the heavy satin upholstery.

Leia hurried toward the silent surgery.

Inside, Dr. Hyos stood at her desk. The doctor's eyes were closed. She dozed, standing up, with all four

arms slightly extended, shifting subtly as if in a slow-motion dance or a soft breeze, balancing her. Leia

had never seen a native of Munto Codru sleep.

What an odd position, Leia thought. Is that normal? Or unique to Dr. Hyos? Maybe she just fell asleep

standing up. I'm about to do the same.

The wyrwulf lay at the doctor's feet.

It raised its horrible head and gazed at Leia with its horrible bright eyes. It snorted and laid its head back

on its frontmost paws. But it did not close its eyes. Leia had no reason to be frightened of the wyrwulf,

but it disconcerted her nonetheless.

Leia let the doctor sleep. Walking softly, giving the wyrwulf a wide berth, she entered Chewbacca's

sickroom.

He lay in a hammock that cradled his huge form. Regeneration bandages covered his leg. Leia had been

afraid she would find him immersed in a bacta tank, suspended and unable to communicate.

Leia sat in a chair nearby and watched him, impatient with his sleep. His breathing was shallow and fast.

She wanted him to wake. She wanted to talk to him, to find out what he had seen, to find out if he too

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