Lightsabers
Page 7
"Actually," Yfra said, not meeting Tenel Ka's eyes, "I wasn't so much
chosen as I was . . .
convenient. I was in a nearby star system on business, you see, when
your grandmother received word of your . . . unfortunate accident.
"Now, my dear," she continued, "we'll be corning out of hyperspace in a
few hours, so if there's anything I can do in the meantime-"
"Yes, there is," Tenel Ka interrupted in her usual forthright manner. "I
wish to be left alone."
If the ambassador was put off by the abrupt answer, she covered it well.
"Why, of course you do, my dear," she said with gracious insincerity.
"You've been through such an ordeal." She looked meaningfully at Tenel
Ka's arm and artfully pretended to suppress a shudder of revulsion. "You
must feel simply terrible."
With that, Yfra withdrew, managing to leave Tenel Ka feeling even worse
than she had beforewhich might actually have been what the ambassador
wanted. The ruthless henchwoman was a skilled manipulator.
Tenel Ka looked at her left arm-what remained of it, after her faulty
lightsaber had exploded. There had been no chance of salvaging the limb
and allowing it to heal in a bacta tank. She was no longer complete.
How could she be a true warrior now? She could not even claim her wound
as the honorable result of battle. Her injury had, in fact, been caused
by her own pride. And haste. And stupidity. If only she had taken more
care in choosing her lightsaber components. If only she had been more
meticulous in assembling the weapon. . . .
Certain that her success or failure in battle would depend on her
physical skills, she had not bothered to use her best talents when
constructing her weapon.
Even during her Jedi training, Tenel Ka had always proudly tried to rely
solely on her natural abilities, refusing to use the Force unless there
was no other way to accomplish her goals.
But now what had become of her fighting prowess? How could she ever
again climb a building using nothing but her fibercord, her grappling
hook, and her own wits? How would she climb a tree? Or hunt? Or swim?
Why, she couldn't even braid her own hair! And who would respect a Jedi
with only one arm?
Lost in such grim thoughts, Tenel Ka drifted into sleep. The next thing
she heard was a tapping on the door to her stateroom.
"My dear, are you resting?" Ambassador Yfra LIGHTSABERS
^ called in her cultured voice. "Time to come out now. We're almost
home. We're near Hapes."
Tenel Ka shook herself awake, stood, and looked at the viewscreens
around her. The Thunder Wraith was no longer traveling in hyperspace.
The stars and planets of the Hapes Cluster lay all about her, like
handfuls of rainbow gems from Gallinore scattered on rich black velvet.
"Did you hear me, my dear?" the ambassador's voice came through the door
again. "You're home."
"Home," Tenel Ka repeated. The dread she had been feeling congealed into
a ball of ice in the pit of her stomach, as she considered that this
place might indeed be her home from now on.
Immense warships, Hapan Battle Dragons, appeared as if out of nowhere to
escort the tiny shuttle to its landing area. When the Thunder Wraith
finally landed and Tenel Ka disembarked, she looked around with the
first trace of eagerness she had felt since the lightsaber accident,
searching for her parents. She was surprised, however, to find that her
grandmother, Ta'a Chume, was the only relative present.
The former queen, accompanied by a large honor guard in full ceremonial
garb, stepped forward to greet her granddaughter. Tenel Ka endured an
embrace and a showy display of affection-although her grandmother never
hugged her in private-and asked, "Why did my parents not come?"
"They were called away," Ta'a Chume answered smoothly, "on an urgent and
top-secret diplomatic . . . matter. Only I and my most trusted confidant
know their whereabouts." She motioned to one of her retainers, who
strode forward to drape a royal robe across Tenel Ka's shoulders. Its
thick, soft folds hid Tenel Ka's arms, and she did not have the energy
to object. "But," her grandmother continued, "I assure you that your
parents will return as quickly as they are able."
Four pairs of scantily clad male servants appeared, bringing cushioned
seats for the princess and her grandmother. Tenel Ka sat, and only then
noticed that at least two dozen more handsome servants had filed onto
the landing pad. She closed her eyes and sighed. She might have known.
It seemed that in her parents' absence, Ta'a Chume had decided to
receive Tenel Ka with as much spectacle and fanfare as possible-perhaps
to prove to her aspiring-Jedi granddaughter how wonderful it was to be a
member of the royal family.
Tenel Ka was not thrilled.
Three brawny young men, dressed only in loincloths, moved to the center
of the landing pad and began a rhythmic display of their gymnastic
abilities. Other servants along the sidelines produced stringed
instruments and flutes and began a musical accompaniment. During their
performance, the former queen leaned toward her granddaughter and
murmured, "You are so fortunate."
LIGHTSABERS
^ Tenel Ka blinked in surprise.
Her grandmother made an all-encompassing gesture. "Everything you
see-Hapes and its sixty-three worlds-is yours to command." Her voice
took on a persuasive tone. "Not many who fail to become Jedi Knights
have such a pleasant alternative. After all, unlike the weapons of
battle, wielding political power does not require the use of both arms.
Tenel Ka grimaced, not only at her grandmother's unfair assertion that
she had failed in her Jedi training, but also because one of the
acrobats had performed a double handspring-an act she had done countless
times herself, and one she'd always assumed she'd go right on doing. She
had even included flips, cartwheels, and handsprings in her daily
exercises at the Jedi academy. The Jedi academy . . . she missed it
already.
When the gymnasts finished, a young man stepped forward and began to
juggle with phenomenal agility.
Tenel Ka grew more uncomfortable as she watched him pass fire crystals,
hoops, and blazing torches from hand to hand, tossing them high into the
air with ever-increasing speed.
Another thing I will never be able to do, Tenel Ka thought, pressing her
lips into a grim line.
She tried to concentrate on the juggler's face instead. The young man
was indeed beautiful, but right then Tenel Ka would have traded every
servant and guard on the landing platform for just a glimpse of a face
that was friendly: Jacen, Jaina, Lowbacca, even Master Skywalker. . . .
"You know," her grandmother said, leaning toward her again, as if a
thought had just occurred to her, "perhaps your injury was the Force's
way of showing you that you were never meant to be a Jedi Knight-that
your destiny has always been to rule Hapes."
Tenel Ka's breath left her in a rush, as if a rancor had stepped on her
stoma
ch. She wondered if perhaps, for once, her grandmother might not be
right.
^ ----------------THE ACOUSTICS IN the grand audience chamber on Yavin
could carry even a whispered word from the stage to every seat in the
hall. But today no lecturer stood at the far end of the long chamber,
and Jaina's steps were so slow and hesitant that her booted feet made no
sound. With the exception of Jacen and Lowie, who sat on stone benches
near the front, the audience chamber remained completely empty.
No, not quite empty. Images of a confident young warrior from Dathomir
filled Jaina's vision: Tenel Ka raising her cup in a pledge of
friendship, Tenel Ka braiding her long hair in preparation for Jedi
training exercises, Tenel Ka scaling the outer walls of the Great
Temple, pulling herself up easily hand-over-hand. Jaina could sense
through their connection in the Force that similar thoughts troubled her
twin brother.
Just moments after Jaina took a seat near Jacen, the Jedi historian and
instructor Tionne appeared through a side door and came to stand near
the three
^
trainees. Jaina felt her brother's mood brighten at the sightof the
silvery-haired Jedi woman. Tionne had taught them to look for multiple
solutions to any problem, to find choices, fresh perspectives, new
alternatives. As always, Jaina was struck by the wisdom in the
mother-of-pearl eyes, wisdom gained from years of studying the tales and
lore of ancient Jedi.
Tionne's voice was soft and melodious. "Master Skywalker has asked me to
. . . help you to move forward in your lightsaber training."
Jaina shifted uncomfortably, not wanting to think about the deadly
weapon she wore clipped to a utility loop on her orange jumpsuit.
Tionne motioned to the three seated trainees.
"Please. Come up on the platform where we have more room to work."
Jacen and Lowie mounted the steps, but Jaina hung back, not sure if she
could express her reluctance. But when Tionne beckoned again, smiling at
her with kind patience, Jaina found herself moving to join the others.
With each step, her lightsaber bumped against her leg, a grim reminder
of its deadly presence. Her heart began to pound with dread, and a cold
sweat broke out on her neck and forehead. Continuing with her lightsaber
training, she could see now, was going to be even more difficult than
she had expected, and Jaina could tell from the set of LIGHTSABERS
^ Jacen's jaw that her brother was also struggling to control his own
anxiety. He must have sensed her difficulty too, because he turned to
her with a shaky smile. "Want to hear a joke?"
She forced a laugh. "Why not?"
This took her brother by surprise, and he paused a moment to think.
"Okay, why is a droid mechanic never lonely?"
Jaina shrugged, knowing tter t ian to attempt an answer.
"Because he's always making new friends!"
Jaina giggled in spite of herself, grateful for the release in tension.
Lowie let loose a bark of laughter as well. A dimple appeared in
Tionne's cheek, and the approving glow in her alien eyes showed that she
understood how hard this must be for all of them.
Then, spacing the trainees two meters apart, each facing the same
direction, Tionne took them through a series of exercises, using only
the hilts of their lightsabers. Clearing her mind of all else, Jaina
echoed the instructor's strong, fluid movements as if she were
performing a dance.
Apparently satisfied with their progress, Tionne ended the exercise and
came to stand in front of Lowie. Gesturing for Jaina to take a position
beside her, facing Jacen, Tionne pressed a stud on the handle of her
weapon and a shimmering silver beam sprang from it, eoruscating with
energy.
"Please ignite your lightsabers," she said.
Though a frown of doubt crossed Jacen's face, he soon held a glowing
emerald blade. With a snaphiss, Lowie's blade appeared too, blazing a
deep gold, like molten bronze. He held it at his side.
"Oh, do be careful, Master Lowbacca," Em Teedee said from the Wookiee's
waist. "You know how delicate my circuitry is."
Biting her lower lip, Jaina closed her eyes and touched a button on her
lightsaber. Her weapon whooshed to life; the flare of its
electric-violet beam and the light of the three other energy blades
penetrated even through her shut eyelids, bringing with them a flood of
vivid memories.
Violet. The color of the evil Nightvister Tamith Kai's eyes.
Silver Brakiss's flowing robes. The Shadow Acad@ emy. Jacen and Jaina
dueling with each other in holographic disguise. A mistake by either of
them could have meant death.
Bronze. Almost the reddish gold of Tenel Ka,v hair. Tenel Ka's severed
arm, still holding the handle of the failed lightsaber as it exploded.
The shock on Tenel Ka'sface as an emerald blade sliced through her arm.
Emerald green. The color of Zekk's eyes, surrounded by a dark corona.
Zekk, who was even now being trained on the Shadow Academy, learning to
serve the Second Imperium and using the dark side LIGHTSABERS
^ of the Force. And if the Second Imperium attacked the New Republic as
planned-the New Republic that Jaina and Jacen and Luke Skywalker's other
Jedi Knights had sworn to protect-she would be forced to fight. How
could she not defend the New Republic, when her mother was its leader?
Would she have to face Zekk with a lightsaber to protect her own mother?
With a cry, Jaina switched off her weapon and dropped it to the
flagstones, backing away from it as if it had turned into a krayt
dragon. An instant later all lightsabers were extinguished, and Jaina
shuddered with relief.
Tionne's pearly eyes were grave as she looked at her three young
charges. Picking up Jaina's discarded lightsaber, she seated herself on
the cool stone of the raised platform and said, "Please, make yourselves
comfortable. I need to tell you a story."
Jaina, Jacen, and Lowie settled in a tight halfcircle around her,
crowding close, needing the contact. Tionne sat straighter and held her
delicate hands before her, moving them as she wove her tale like an
invisible tapestry before their eyes.
"Thousands of years ago, in a time of great evil and great good," Tionne
began in her rich musical voice, "there lived a woman named Nomi
Sunrider with her husband Andur, who was training to be a Jedi Knight.
"When Nomi and her husband traveled to take a gift of precious Adegan
crystals to Andur's new Jedi Master, they were stopped by a group of
greedy bandits, who killed Nomi's husband and tried to steal the
crystals. But when Nomi saw her husband lying dead, she snatched up his
lightsaber and took a deadly revenge on his murderers. Afterward, seeing
what she had done, Nomi was so filled with revulsion that she vowed
never to touch a lightsaber again.
"To fulfill the dying wish of her husband, Nomi carried the crystals to
his Jedi Master, Thon. There she stayed with her baby daughter Vima and
began her own training to become a Jedi. She learned and grew i
n wisdom
and the Force, but still she refused to touch a lightsaber, although it
was the weapon of the Jedi.
"Eventually, however, there came a day when she discovered that her
power with the Force alone could not protect the ones she loved. To save
her beloved Jedi Master and to guard her daughter, Nomi once again took
up a lightsaber and fought for what she knew was right.
"But by this time Nomi understood the purpose and meaning of the
lightsaber-and from that day forward she fought with all the power of
the light side of the Force. She was never eager to use her lightsaber,
but she knew it was occasionally necessary. By learning to accept this,
she became a great Jedi Master and a great warrior."
LIGHTSABERS
^ As the story ended, Jaina drew a deep refreshing breath, coming out of
the near trance she entered whenever listening to Tionne's tales. Jaina
sensed that much of the horror she had felt earlier had already drained
away, though her muscles were as sore and weary as if she herself had
fought all of Nomi Sunrider's lightsaber battles.
Jaina felt something heavy and solid slide into her hand. She glanced
down to see the handle of her lightsaber. Tionne had slipped it to her.
"No need to turn it on for now," the Jedi instructor said gently,
looking directly into Jaina's brown eyes. "I think we've come far enough