Traitor - Matthew Stover (iphone ebook reader .txt) š
- Author: Matthew Stover
Book online Ā«Traitor - Matthew Stover (iphone ebook reader .txt) šĀ». Author Matthew Stover
āYouāre breaking my ARM please you have to get up, you have to pull me UPāā
Get up? He didnāt have the strength to stand. He didnāt have the strength to save her. He had only strength enough to hurt her even more.
And to torture her final minutes with empty hope.
He could barely imagine what she must have gone through, to miss the evacuation of Coruscant, to survive the bombardment, and the invasion of the Yuuzhan Vong. To have lived through the shattering transformation of her world into theirs: the tearing of a whole planet from its orbit. To have hidden in constant terror all these weeks and months in the downlevel shadows, desperately avoiding the conquerors. And when the cavern beast had led her down its throat ā¦
Her heart must have been bursting with relief and joy. She had finally found sanctuaryā
Then she had found that the only real sanctuary is death.
And how she would come to that death: eaten alive, digested while still awake and aware.
And when she had looked up to see him on the rim above her, an explosion of sudden hopeā
Because she couldnāt know that the man who had come to her rescue was a broken ex-Jedi, tainted with darkness, half mad with suicidal despair.
How had he ended up so useless?
The simple unfairness of it made him angry.
Why should he be the one who has to watch this girl die? Heād never asked to be a hero. Heād never asked for power. From the very day he was born, the whole galaxy had been watching him, waiting for him to do something great, something that would live up to the legend of his illustrious parents, of his legendary uncle.
He couldnāt even live up to his own legend. Such as it was.
And there had been plenty of people who had enjoyed that, hadnāt there? There had been plenty of dirty sniggering people who got plenty of dirty sniggering satisfaction out of calling him a coward behind his back, and not one of those nasty vicious sniggering creeps had even once had to feel what it was like to hang in the Embrace of Pain, or toil hopelessly to save a few lives in the Nursery, or be forced to face the black-hearted indifference that was the real truth of the universeā
Anger blossomed within him, surged and swept him away in the familiar red tide, but this time he didnāt fight it, didnāt struggle and thrash and drown himself in its current. He welcomed it.
In the red rising tide, he found all the power he needed.
TEN
HOME FREE
Home.
The Solo apartments, not far from the ruined hulk of the Imperial Senate, still stood nearly intact.
Home was where Jacen had been heading ever since heād woken up under the Bridge. Where else did he have to go?
Is anything better than finally finding your way home?
One thing heād never asked himself: once he got home, what then?
Heād been half expecting, all these weeks, that reaching the place where heād grown up would mean something: that heād find some kind of safety there. Some kind of answers. As though if he could only lie down for a nap in his own bed, heād wake up to find that the nightmare heād livedālosing his family, his youth, his faithāhad been only a hypnoid fantasy sparked by teenage hormones and an undigested dinner.
Is anything worse than finally reaching home, and finding that youāre still lost?
Heād been lost at home for hours by the time Anakin walked in.
Jacen sat in his place, in the chair heād always used at the dining table on those rare occasions when the whole family had been together: to the left of his motherās chair, next to Jaina, whoād always sat at his fatherās right. Across the table, Anakin always used to sit next to the specially designed Wookiee-sized chair for Chewbacca.
Jacen tried to summon memories of those happy family timesātried to hear Chewbaccaās half-howled laughter, tried to see his motherās struggle to maintain a disapproving glare at one of his fatherās slightly risquĆ© stories, tried to feel Jainaās elbow in his ribs or a surreptitious glop of orange protato flipped at him by Anakin when their parents werenāt lookingābut he couldnāt. He couldnāt fit those images into this dining room.
The dining room was different now.
A slickly glistening blue glob of puffballsāsome sort of fungus colonyāhad enveloped Chewbaccaās chair and a quarter of the dining table; pale yellow tendrils rooted it to the leafy purple underbrush that had sprouted from the floor. The table itself had cracked in the middle, buckling beneath some kind of bloodred taproot the size of a Hutt that had broken through the ceiling and seemed determined to drill its way through the floor as well. The walls were draped with multicolored creepers that served as habitat for a variety of hand-sized creatures resembling scaled, warm-blooded spiders.
Jacen was pretty sure they were warm-blooded; at least, their clawed seven-toed feet felt warm as they ran down his arms, up his chest, and across the back of his shoulders. Heād blink once in a while, when one would scamper over his face, but that was his only motion.
He could have moved, if he wanted. He just couldnāt come up with a reason to.
The arachnoid creatures spat some kind of mucuslike secretion, globs of thick glassy saliva that stuck tenaciously to whatever it touched, with the sole exception of the arachnoids themselves. While it was still wet, their prehensile feet stretched and spun and drew the saliva out into thick glistening ropes that tightened and turned translucent as they dried, filling half the Solo dining room with a frosted fibrous web.
Jacen was pretty sure that this web was intended to bind him to this chairāthat these arachnoids had some vague presentient plan to eventually eat him. He could
Comments (0)