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Planet of Twilight

Page 6

by Barbara Hambley


  rollerball floors, stretched kilometer after kilometer. Zones of broken rock

  surrounded them, wall after brittle wall of toothed mountains uneroded by

  rain or the roots of growing plants. In other places the dry sea floors were

  covered for thousands of miles in faceted, quartzine

  gravel that glared as if the world were one great cut-glass gem.

  Crystal mountains flashed a bleached and broken reflection in the wan light

  of the tiny, faded whitish sun, chains of them petering out into lines of

  solitary crystal-rock chimneys, like widely spaced sentinels, far into the

  shimmering, twilight wastes.

  Light and glass, dizzying alien cloudless heights, and among it all, tiny

  zones of green.

  Luke's hands played fast through the orbital checks, then returned to the

  subspace, signaling back to the Adamantine, the Borealis.

  Nothing. They'd gone into hyperspace by this time, heading back to

  Coruscant.

  Death, his memory whispered. He had felt death, massive death, he thought.

  His recollection of it was dim and dreamlike, and he could not be sure

  where, or when, or from what direction the sensation had come.

  But Leia was alive. Somewhere, wherever she was, she was alive.

  He flipped his scanners to their widest range, but saw only the yellow speck

  that would be Seti Ashgad's pieced-together planet-hopper, blinking along at

  max sublight, heading for home.

  His single B-wing should be too small to register on its scanners at this

  distance, he thought. But it would be best to disappear into the planet's

  magnetic field before Ashgad got any closer.

  Do not meet with Ashgad.

  Do not go to the Meridian sector.

  Luke studied the scan again. This close to Antemeridian, it paid to be

  cautious, though by all accounts Moff Getdies didn't have the firepower to

  bump heads with the fleet at Durren, or the guts to try. And indeed, no sign

  of any deep-space vessels disturbed the provincial calm of this portion of

  the Meridian. Just the occasional orange flicker of planet-hoppers, small

  traders, light cargo haulers going about their petty businesses between the

  stars.

  What did Callista know about Seti AshgadS.

  He edged the B-wing into a lower temporary orbit and brought up the

  coordinates for the town of Hweg Shul.

  He would find her, he thought. He would see her again.

  The long-range laser cannon took out his rear deflector shield and nicked

  the stabilizer before he was even out of sight of blackness and stars.

  It was only luck it didn't destroy the craft entirely, luck and probably the

  difficulty in homing on a vessel at the bottom end of its target mass. Luke

  flipped at once into evasive action, twisting, zagging, plunging toward that

  vast glittering eternity of dimness and crystal through a flaming hovl of

  atmosphere. A second bolt clipped the B-Wing's airfoil; and as he fought to

  pull out of the crazy spin, Luke saw' the white lances of light slash upward

  from the ragged line of slate-gray foothills.

  So much for Seti Ashgad's information about the minimum mass needed to

  activate the gun stations, thought Luke grimly. Was that what Callista had

  meant about not trusting the man?

  But Ashgad hadn't known Luke would even be on Leia's mission, let alone that

  he'd be going to Hweg Shul. Nobody but Han and Chewie had known that. He

  twisted the controls, trying to avoid sliding straight into one of those

  white lances of killing light. The ground rushed upward, radiant, burning

  with wan, reflected sun.

  Blast, thought Luke, as the joystick lurched under his hands, don't quit on

  me now.

  There was enough play in the remaining stabilizer to land without killing

  himself--just. The antigray cradles were still okay. But when he leveled off

  he'd be a better target. He zagged right, left, dropped instinctively as a

  beam slicked over his head. Those were live gunners, they had to be. No

  autostation had that kind of response flexibility. Live gunners who knew

  what they were doing.

  Huge cliffs; mountains; towering terrifying, bare monuments of basalt and

  crystals yawned fathomless below him. He plunged the big fighter down among

  them, veered through narrowing chasms as a laser bolt splintered a black

  column of rock a thousand feet high to his left and rained the craft with

  fragments. The steady, howling winds of the higher atmosphere turned to

  random hurricanes that smote him from every canyon and crevice. With its

  long ventral airfoil the B-wing was almost impossible to control. Luke

  pulled into a level slide, barely avoid ing another bolt and a toothed crag

  of what looked like gray striated quartz, the glare of the sunlight from a

  million million mirrors nearly blinding.

  He was out of range of the gun stations, hidden in the mountains, plunging

  down a long, scintillated canyon toward the wasteland beyond.

  The stabilizer went, and Luke forced the controls over, reached out with his

  mind to touch the Force, nudge the crazily plunging craft away from the rock

  walls, past the jutting towers and razor-ridged hogbacks of stone, heading

  for the blue notch of the canyon mouth.

  Too low. No altitude. He'd never . . .

  He put out all his will, all the strength of the Force, to lift the B-wing

  over the last ridge of rose-gold shining glass, edge it down, down . . .

  Wind slapped him like a monster hand. The B-wing veered wildly, then the

  airfoil scraped and tore on the pebbled wilderness beyond the canyon. Rocks

  and dust and fragments of crystal enveloped him in a whirlwind of heat.

  Shaken nearly out of his bones, Luke held the controls steady, fighting to

  see, hoping there was nothing ahead of him but more level gravel.

  There was. A transparent boulder the size of a speeder caught what was left

  of the airfoil. The whole craft slewed sideways, rolled, the delicate

  S-foils buckling and snapping. Luke feared for one heart-tearing second that

  his seat restraint would give way, and he'd break his neck on the console.

  The belts held--there was an explosion of sealant and crash foam--the B-wing

  rolled twice more, like a barrel, and came to a stop up against something

  that sent up another splintering cloud of fragments and dust.

  Then stillness, the moaning of the wind, and the dying pitter of pebbles

  raining down on the laser-cracked hull.

  "Here, Your Excellency."

  Strong hands helped Leia sit up, put a cup into hers, held it steady while

  she drank. "How are you feeling?"

  She blinked. The divan had been moved out onto the terrace. Weak, strangely

  colored sunlight lay in mosaics of glassy brightness across the

  cinder-colored permacrete walls of the house that loomed over them, glinted

  on the treeless lunacy of the heaped stone ridges, columns, pinnacles, and

  buttresses that dwarfed the house on three sides and framed, on the fourth,

  eternities of flashing gravel, as if the sea had sunk away long ago and left

  its foam solidified into salt and glass.

  It must be the crystals that pick up and reflect the sunlight, thought Leia,

  looking around at the huge outcrops of them embedded everywhere in th
e rocks

  of the mountains. The small sun gave only thready light in cobalt oceans of

  sky. Dim stars shone even in the presence of its glow.

  Because of the light thrown back by the rocks, there seemed to be no shadows

  anywhere, or a confusing multiplicity of watered ones. The dry air tightened

  her face, as it had not in the moister mini-climate of the house.

  She turned from those bizarre distances to meet the anxious dark eyes of the

  man who sat on the divan at her side.

  It was Seti Ashgad's pilot.

  A nice man, she thought at once. He reminded her a little of the pilot

  Greglik for some reason, though the physical appearance could not have been

  more dissimilar. Of medium height and slender build, this man had a sort of

  saturnine darkness to him in utter contrast with the Rebel pilot's

  flamboyant good looks. Maybe it was the nose--an elegant aquiline--or the

  battered, deeply woven wrinkles around the eyes that spoke of a life lived

  very hard.

  More probably, she thought, it was somethin in the expression of the eyes.

  Odd again, to think of the daredevil Greglik. This man's eyes were the eyes

  of one who wouldn't harm so much as an insect or stand up to someone who was

  taking shameless advantage of him for fear of hurt feelings. An escaper, she

  thought. Not escape into drugs--he hadn't Greglik's unhealthy

  complexion--but escape by simply not being there if he could manage to get

  away.

  But nice.

  "I'm fine. I think I'm fine." Had Dzym been a dream? The slicing pain in the

  sides of her neck, the hands that drew life from her, exactly as the

  sickness had on the ship. The horrible impression she had had of some other

  being under his clothing, some vile movement, tucked away where it didn't

  show. "Where am I? What happened?" Her thoughts felt

  as if she'd dropped them, and they'd rolled to the far ends of the room, and

  exhaustion prevented her from gathering them up again.

  "I'm afraid i can't tell you where you are, Your Excellency." He sounded

  genuinely sorry about it. "You understand, it's better if you don't know. My

  name is Liegeus Sarpaetius Vorn."

  "Vorn . . ." With the greatest of difficulty, as if she were laboriously

  constructing a house of cards by means of waldoes, Leia put things together

  in her mind. "Liegeus Vorn--You were Seti Ashgad's pilot, weren't you. And

  Dzym . . . Dzym was here. Is this Nam Chorios?"

  "Dzym was here?" He held the vessel away from her reaching hands, his dark

  brows knotting. "I think you've had enough of this, Your Excellency. I'll

  get you some water."

  He emptied the cup--which Leia thought had contained water--over the low

  wall at the edge of the terrace. She sat up, watching it fall, the droplets

  flashing and dwindling as they tumbled in slow motion past the walls of the

  house, past the rocks of the bluff on which it stood, down to the broken

  tumble of slate and scree and adamant two hundred meters below.

  "Stay here in the sunshine," he urged gently. His voice was very soft,

  almost inaudible, but deep and one of the most beautiful she had ever heard.

  "I won't be a moment."

  Leia remained where she was, not because he had told her to, but because the

  warmth was pleasant on her face, like the slow return of health after a

  terrible coldness.

  The Borealis, she thought. What happened on board the Borealis?

  She'd been ill. The memory of cold returned, the slow dimming down of every

  system in her body. Or had that been later, when Dzym had come into the room

  there?

  Ashgad had apparently taken her off the ship, brought her to this place. She

  recalled nothing about it. Had Captain Ioa thought she was dead But in that

  case, they'd have brought her body to Coruscant, not here.

  Han, she thought. Han will be worried sick. The children . . .

  Other things were leaking back into her consciousness.

  The blinking message light on the comm that no one had been there to

  ansivet.

  Yeoman Marcopius darting away down the corridor.

  Admiral Ackbar saying, It looks as if there was an information leak at

  Council level, and Representative Q-Varx tapping the malachite tabletop in

  her private conference chamber with a stubby brown finger and saying, All

  arrangements have been made for the secret meeting with Ashgad, Your

  Excellency. Though he has no official position on the planet, this

  conference could be the key to the entire policy of beneficial usage of

  untapped planetary resources.

  Do not meet with AshGad.

  Do not Go to the Meridian sector.

  What had happened to the Noghri.

  The thought wended its way leisurely across her mind. She wondered, if she

  were to go into the room behind her and try the door, whether it would open.

  But, of course, she thought, locked or unlocked makes little difference. The

  house itself seemed to be situated in an utterly deserted wasteland of

  sawtoothed mountains and glaring, jeweled plain.

  Voices rose to her from somewhere below. She recognized Seti Ashgad's "We'll

  just have to go over Larm's head and talk to Dymurra.

  Larm's an idiot anyway. He still has no concept of what we need to complete

  the Reliant. Has any word come in on the subspace?"

  The beautiful baritone carried strongly in the thin, dry air. Larm, thought

  Leia. Moff Getelles had an admiral named Larm. She'd met him at the

  diplomatic reception on Coruscant to celebrate Getelles's elevation to the

  position, one of the last she'd attended at the Palace.

  Larm was of the flat-backed, by-the-book, spit-and-polish, boot-kissing

  school of soldiering, toadying Getelles and every other Moff and Governor

  without ever relaxing his tough-warrior manner. He'd come up through the

  fleet as Getelles's stringer, a dark-visaged and sternly efficient foil to

  the new Moff's hail-fellow-well-met fairness and had been duly promoted over

  the heads of several better-qualified candidates when Getelles had been made

  Moff of Antemeridian.

  Who Dymurra was she had no idea, though the name was familiar to her.

  She couldn't make out the words murmured in reply, but the

  purring voice pierced her, an arrow of cold under her solar plexus.

  Dzym. She looked down at her hand again.

  Soreness lingered on the sides of her neck, over the main arteries, but she

  lacked the strength to put her hands up to feel. The cold of death lingered

  in her mind, and something else, the aftertaste of nightmare.

  That was why she felt so weak.

  No, she thought. I feel weak because there was sweetblossom in the water.

  "I suppose you're right." Ashgad's voice was quieter, but just as penetrant.

  "Three synthdroids! When I think about how much even one of those things

  costs . . ."

  Dzym's voice was a little louder now. Knowing Ashgad's habit of pacing, Leia

  assumed he was farther from his secretary than he had been a few' moments

  before. "It could not be helped, my lord. Synthdroids were the only way we

  could bring the Death Seed on board the vessels undetected."

  The Death Seed! Leia's breath left her, as if with physical shock.

  Seven hundred y
ears ago that plague had wiped out millions.

  Whole sectors had relapsed into primitive subsistence, as those who

  understood machinery and spaceflight had perished wholesale . . .

  It was the casualness of Dzym's tone that galvanized Leia into action.

  She rose from the divan, pulled the cloaklike folds of her robe more closely

  around her--the sunlight held no heat--and made her way shakily to the far

  end of the terrace. Perhaps twenty-five meters below her, just above where

  the walls of the great, rambling house merged into the harsh basalt of the

  bluff itself, another terrace ran the length of that side of the building

  and curved around the face of the cliff.

  Heavy hedges of brachniel and 1oak grew from planters of imported soil as

  windbreaks around two sides, brilliant and alien green against the gray

  permacrete. A sort of gazebo stood at one end of the terrace, the shade

  densely black within. A complex system of mist jets and pipes mitigated

  somewhat the dryness of the air. By the way Ashgad turned, Leia guessed that

  Dzym sat within the gazebo's shade.

  There was a third being on the terrace, stretched out on a black-and-orange

  air-duvet under a veritable rainshower of air misters, and

  Leia flinched with revulsion at the sight of it, and the sound of its gluey,

  tuba bass.

  "Dzym's right." It rolled over, flexed its gelid length--at roughly twelve

  meters, it was the longest Hutt Leia had ever seen. It was massive, without

  Jabba's obesity; like a young Hutt in its agility and speed but grown to the

  size of an old one. "You couldn't have gotten past the medical scans without

  them. And only droids would have taken the vessels into hyperspace without a

  second jump coordinate."

  Hyperspace!

  Marcopius. Ezrakh. Captain Ioa. Those poor children of her honor guard . . .

  Threepio and Artoo.

  Sickness and horror swept her, replaced a moment later by a burning rage.

  "Yes, but at a hundred thousand credits apiece!"

  "Cheap at the price." The Hutt shrugged. "Dymurra thought it was worth the

  expenditure. I agree with him. It wasn't enough to have Liegeus put through

  that 'Mission accomplished, we're leaving for Co-ruscant' message, or even

  the faked transmissions from the jump point.

  We couldn't bring those vessels here. We couldn't destroy them without the

 

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