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Planet of Twilight

Page 40

by Barbara Hambley


  "No," said Luke softly. "You're right."

  He turned, and followed his sister and Han, the droids and Chewbacca and

  Liegeus, to the shuttle. At least he'd have a reason to get up in the

  morning, he thought wryly--now, and for quite some time to come.

  He would be back to this world, he knew to bring back the Guardians, when

  those who went offworld to form the droch-killing apparatus returned. To

  bring back the remains of the synth-droids and Needles, for the Guardians to

  try to rehabilitate and realign after their enslavement.

  To learn what he could of the Force, as the tsils understood it and of this

  strange civilization of timeless minds.

  But he would always wonder.

  He stopped at the bottom of the ramp, for one last look at the cool-glaring

  sun, the twilight stars, the wind-scoured sea bottoms, and waste-lands of

  colored glass, the towering crystal tsils.

  She has her own way, Liegeus had said. And he was right. Where she had to go

  now, Luke thought, he could not follow.

  The only way in or out of the gun station tower was over the walls.

  A Theran was grappelling easily down on a line, dark crimson coat and gray

  veils striking a familiar chord the fighter who had thrown the grenades,

  thought Luke, during that first battle he had seen. When the gawky, graceful

  figure reached the ground and walked toward Umolly Darm's freighter, he saw

  the lightsaber swinging at the heavy leather belt, the long tail of

  malt-brown hair as she pulled loose her veils, and his heart leapt against

  his ribs.

  She turned, at the other side of the landing ground, at the base of the

  freighter's ramp. She had always known if he was looking at her, even as he

  had known when her eyes were on him.

  For a long moment they stood in stillness. She at the threshold of her long

  road, he thought, and he at the beginning of his.

  He raised his hand to her, Farewell.

  Her shoulders relaxed, and he could feel the tension leave her, the fear

  that he would cross that open ground to tear anew all those toofresh wounds

  by taking her in his arms.

  The time was past, for that.

  In her stillness he read her thought Please understand.

  I understand.

  She raised her hand to him, and he could feel her smile.

  The antigravs on the shuttle were so smooth that there was no need to strap

  in for liftoff, though once the vessel got moving Luke knew he'd be better

  to be sitting down. He hurried his steps, to catch up with Liegeus as they

  made their way to the forward lounge. The philosopher was right, he knew.

  Trust your instinct, Obi-Wan had said, and curiously enough, once Liegeus

  had spoken of loving and freedom, he could no longer deny what his instinct

  had been telling him.

  There was a time to embrace, and there was a time to release.

  Time was long.

  He was at Liegeus's heels when they stepped into the forward lounge, and the

  woman seated near the mist and glory of the viewport rose from her chair.

  "Your Excellency," said the red-haired woman to Leia, who had preceded them

  in.

  But she said no more. She only stood transfixed, color draining from her

  face and with it draining the harshness of its lines, the terrible stern

  bitterness that seemed as much a part of her as the skull beneath the skin.

  It seemed to Luke that there was another face looking out from those bitter

  emerald eyes. A girl's face, almost unrecognizable. A fierce dreamer's face,

  scarred by the ecstatic knives of her dreams.

  In a whisper, unbelieving, Daala said, "Liegeus?"

  He was staring, as if at a ghost, only no ghost could have brought that leap

  of amazed joy to any man's face. "Daala?"

  They crossed to each other, stopped inches apart, as if, after a lifetime of

  diverging roads, at the crossroad they feared to touch once more. It was

  Daala who reached out first and took his hand.

  "Have you . . ." His voice hesitated. "Have you had a good road, all these

  years?"

  "A long one," she said, the girl's voice, the proud dreamer's, audible still

  beneath the damage of battle and years. And it seemed to Luke that he saw

  death leave her eyes, and long-forgotten life stir there again.

  "Cruel, in places. You?"

  "A long one."

  She put up her hand, touched his unshaven face.

  "I've missed you, Liegeus," she said softly. "I've missed This will sound

  foolish, but I've missed having someone to talk to."

  Liegeus's fingers brushed her cheek, wonderingly exploring the footprints of

  the years, then gathered up the copper weight of her hair.

  She had always been the stronger of the two, Luke thought, watching them

  together. And knowing this, he had released her into her strength.

  Their lips met, tasting first, both afraid, then drinking deep, as if they

  could never again have enough. Her arms went around him, in

  congruous in the military severity of her uniform; he crushed her to him,

  medals, blaster, and all.

  Nobody in the lounge existed anymore. It was as if Leia, and Han and Chewie,

  and the droids, and Luke had all been wiped from existence, and with them

  the past twenty years.

  No one in the lounge was the slightest bit surprised when Daala and Liegeus

  made their exit, without a word to anyone, handfast, into some other part of

  the shuttle. "I guess you'll have that conference some other time," remarked

  Han, drawing Leia down beside him on the black leather of the couch.

  Leia sighed and laid her head against his shoulder, weary beyond words . "I

  guess we will." His arms were around her, strong and rock hard under the

  rough linen of his shirt. He smelled of salt sweat and burned insulation;

  his chin was sandpaper against her temple and his breath living warmth on

  her skin. She wanted more than anything simply to remain there, and drift

  into sleep.

  From the viewport, Luke watched the thin yellow track of Umolly Darm's

  freighter as it lifted from the planet, streaked through the atmosphere and

  away.

  She's all right, he thought. It was like watching a hunt bird when after its

  years of servitude, its owner frees it to return to the woods. She is well,

  and strong. She'll find her way one day to the Force, to the light. He felt

  weightless, at peace, and strangely free.

  The blue air thinned to darkness and stars. The shapes of the fleet became

  visible, silvery pendants in the blackness--the world that he had sought

  since the age of eighteen, when he had looked into the Tatooine skies.

  She had released him, he thought, to travel his road, wherever that road was

  going, to whatever end that journey would have.

  He heard a soft step behind him, knew it was Leia before her hands touched

  his shoulders. Her voice was worried. "Are you all right?"

  "Yes," said Luke softly. "I'm all right."

 

 

 
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