STAR WARS - EYE OF THE STORM
I
There was nothing left to fight for.
Nothing to believe in. His
body was battered. His spirit
exhausted and all but consumed. Luke
Skywalker closed his eyes and leaned back into the sheltering cocoon of the Falcon's
medical bunk, knowing he would recover, but praying for oblivion.
And then someone whispered his name.
His head came up, neck muscles straining.
"Father?" he whispered, the sound of it foreign on his tongue.
With words weighty and sonorous the
black void entreated, "Luke,
son…come to me. It is your destiny.”
Luke gritted his teeth and took a deep
calming breath, seeking to draw strength from the Force river that ran through
his veins, the waters of which the old hermit Ben Kenobi had taught him to tap.
But as he immersed himself, seeking that sweet communion, a malevolent
shadow rose beneath him, tainting the once pure flow.
It swirled about him, desirous, voracious, until it coalesced into the
forbidding form of a single black hand that sought to ensnare and enfold him.
Vader.
Father.
Heartsick, Luke leaned toward the ship's
wall as it lurched and tilted, and rolled free of the stationary bunk.
Without acknowledging the loss, he cradled the seared stump of his right
arm in the crook of his left, ignoring the frantic signals the severed nerve
endings were sending to his brain, and went to the cockpit.
Leia glanced at him as he entered, a smile momentarily erasing the fear
etched into every inch of her patrician features.
The big Wookiee Chewbacca brushed his shoulder in affection, and the
dark-skinned man who sat in Han's seat nodded a brief greeting before turning
back to the matter at hand.
Virtually ignored, Luke sank wearily
into one of the passenger seats behind the pilot's station and let his eyelids
close, shutting out the ordered chaos that eddied and churned about him.
He could feel the others fear. The
hyperdrive had failed again. They
believed they were going to die.
A small sigh escaped his trembling
lips. If only it could be that
easy. "Ben," he murmured
as he sensed Artoo-Detoo's desperate bid and felt the stars begin to slide,
"why didn't you tell
me?"
###
Princess Leia Organa pressed
sweat-soaked strands of chestnut hair away from large brown eyes and blew out a
breath. The old bucket of bolts
that was the Millennium Falcon had done it again, survived and seen them through
when any other far more space-worthy vessel would have had the good grace to be
blown into a billion infinitesimal pieces.
They were alive. As she
heard Lando whoop with unbridled joy, Leia rose from the undignified position
she occupied on the floor and turned to seek the bright blue eyes of the young
man who had rescued her from the late Death
Star. She trusted she would find in Luke's eyes the echo of her own
triumph - the unalterable certainty that life, truth, and justice would win out
no matter what the forces of evil threw against them.
Instead she found his seat empty. Shifting
slightly, Leia spied a limp form near its base, the blunted tip of its truncated
arm thrust out like a grotesque signpost pointing toward disaster.
Luke wasn't breathing.
###
Dissipated spirits surrounded him
troubling his dreams.
He could sense them circling, shifting,
even as his thoughts brushed them, until they were no more than a puff of breath
blown through frost-bitten lips. Blue
eyes snapped open on a twilight world, dusky and pale, illuminated solely by a
feeble wash of red-gold light that glistened deceptively upon slick walls of
green ice. Above his head
stalactites hung like jagged teeth, their frosty points sparkling expectantly.
Luke shivered and closed his eyes again.
He could feel the cold cutting through his Alliance-issued uniform and
knew the
Falcon and his friends were very far away - though he couldn't
remember how they had become separated. Taking
a deep breath, he cast his mind forward searching for signs of life.
As expected a few dull-witted creatures brushed the edge of his
Force-perceptions, but otherwise Luke was alone.
Reassured, he moved to place his hands on either side of his narrow hips
and push off the cavern floor, only to unexpectedly list to the right.
Something was wrong, but before he could put a name to it, the painfully
sensitive stump of his right arm struck the cold unyielding ground.
Nauseated, he fell back panting, his pulse quickening as a sick sensation
gripped his stomach bringing bile to his mouth.
It was true. It
was all true. In a flood of
rage and despair, dark emotions cascaded over him like rain-swollen torrents
tumbling over the jagged rocks of memory.
He had deserted Yoda. Ben had lied to him.
Darth Vader was his father.
Luke rolled over and fought the urge to
retch. Distraught, he lay his
fevered forehead upon the cool floor and sought to gather strength.
So Ben had lied about Vader.... So
what? Ben had still taught him so much.... Given him the Force as an ally.... And yet, whom did it serve?
Ben utilized the Force for good, but Vader called upon it as well.
If it obeyed the Dark Lord of Sith, how could it not be tainted?
And if Vader was his father, how could he
not be as well?
With supreme effort Luke derailed that
train of thought and focused on finding first his knees and then his feet.
The action left him gasping for breath but determined.
His path was clear. He had
been separated from the others: He had to
find his way back. It would matter
little who his father was or what Ben
had neglected to tell him if he died here lost and alone.
Stumbling forward, he hugged his damaged right hand against his feverish
form and stubbornly refused to call upon the questionable power of the Force to
augment his waning strength. Soon,
it was all he could do to physically lift one foot and place it in front of the
other. As fatigue and shock threatened to overwhelm him and his body
began to shake, words echoed unbidden in his mind. "If once you start down the dark path, forever will it dominate
your destiny." He
could see Yoda, the diminutive Jedi Master he had forsaken, his wizened face
downcast and without hope. "Much anger in him, like his
father." Luke sighed
and struggled to take another step. Like
his father....
Like Vader.
He shook sweat-soaked hair and tried
without success to push away the image of his own likeness framed by Vader's
black visor. The ancient Jedi
Master claimed he had failed the test in the cave.
But
had he failed? Or had he
merely glimpsed the future? Was it
true what they said? Like Father like son?
###
Luke shivered uncontrollably, wishing he
could forget. He had been walking
for several hours in a southerly direction, seeking the origin of the pale light
that washed the walls a muted rose and he was weary. Very weary. And
cold.
Really
cold. His breath shone like
small white clouds against the cavern's coppery skin and his extremities had
long since stopped burning - which he knew was not a good sign. Dazed,
he stumbled again and realized he was beginning to lose consciousness.
As terror struck him, his good hand shot out for balance making contact
with the wall of silent scintillating ice.
Without warning, a sense of evil flowed through him, causing him to
recoil as though struck. A presence, immeasurably old and impossibly strong with the
dark side of the Force had awakened at his touch.
Gasping, he backed away from the glistening surface as deep within its
heart an ebon shadow stirred. Luke's
young blood froze as he felt it
recognize him and begin to move willfully toward him.
Cloaked in darkness, it beckoned him, utilizing his inherent connection
to the Force as a channel. Swallowing
hard, Luke placed his right hand on the hilt of his lightsaber.
The elegant weapon pulsed and seemed to sigh with satisfaction as he
brought it to life, wielding it like a talisman.
Within its crystalline prison the
apparition grew ever more substantial as it drew closer, and with this
solidarity came a greater sense of urgency.
Awkward, unsure of his prowess, Luke employed his left hand to weave a
web of light before him intended to protect his fragile soul. Somehow he knew
the creature must not touch him. One
touch would mean the end of everything. Surrender.
Death.. Horrified, he
planted his feet a meter apart and lifted the Jedi weapon, meaning to slice
through the glassine curtain and strike at its black heart.
Instead, when it made contact, the wall shattered like a silvered-sheet,
sending an hundred-thousand glittering shards winging towards him like a swarm
of enraged insects. As Luke dropped the lightsaber and flung his arms before his
face, a soul-searing scream assailed his ears and a slender grey hand stretched
forth to clutch his garments. Desperate,
it pulled him toward the inky blackness. Sickened,
he slapped the grasping fingers aside. Abruptly
they vanished, and for a brief moment he thought he had won.
Then he heard a sound like the enraged bellow of a Rancor, and he knew
the battle was not yet begun. All
of a sudden, a maelstrom of malevolent intent struck him, brutally blasting the
air from his lungs. Stunned, he
stumbled and fell.
Lost in the false night he heard his
lightsaber fizzle as though snuffed, and seconds later black ice filled his
veins, paralyzing him.
She
had won.
###
Leia shouted, "I don't know!
If I knew, don't you think I'd do something about it!"
She glanced away from Threepio's expressionless golden face to Luke's
pale features and then at the dismal readings on the diagnostic panel above him. All lines were flat. Desperate,
she balled her fists, pressed her eyes closed, and reached for whatever tenuous
fiber had bound them together before, when Luke had called to her as he hung
helpless beneath the cloud city of Bespin.
She had heard him then.
Maybe, just maybe he could hear her
now.
"Luke?" she projected,
breathing deeply and trying to remain calm.
"Luke, hear me."
Leia waited a moment and then peeked
through her thick black lashes. Nothing
had changed. Either she wasn't
strong enough or Luke was already beyond her reach and the Force's.
Discouraged, she sighed and laid her hand atop his cold one, fighting a
wave of despair that threatened to overwhelm her.
"Damn it, Luke, I've already lost - "
Her husky voice choked as she fought back tears, "I've lost Han.
I won't lose you as well!"
Half-frantic, she glanced about the sterile cabin looking for a miracle
and encountered the coal black eyes of Han's co-pilot and friend Chewbacca.
The Wookiee was watching her intently, his expressive face echoing her
own pain and loss.
"Chewie?"
He shook his chestnut head and moved
forward with a soft growl to strike the side of the instrumentation panel,
obviously hoping this piece of machinery - like most on the Falcon
- was malfunctioning. No such
luck. The lines remained as flat as
an Alderaanian paper bug.
Grief-stricken, the rebel princess
lowered her head to her friend's motionless chest and sobbed.
"We've lost him."
###
For a long time Luke lay unmoving, his
pulse ringing steadily but slowly through his veins like the persistent call of
a trapped miner refusing to surrender to the icy hand of fate.
He had awakened shivering and sweat-soaked.
Aware that his body had passed through a crisis and been weakened by the
experience. Exhausted, he lay his
head back upon the rocky surface and blew out a breath.
What had happened?
Had he defied Uncle Owen and left the compound late in the night only to
fall by the wayside somewhere where no one could find him?
The scent of sickness lingered, assailing his nostrils.
Had he been attacked? Perhaps
by one of the Sand People?
Attacked and left for dead? There
had been a fight.
A remnant of that memory persisted.
But as soon as he attempted to wrap his hands around it, the vision
evaporated like moisture on a sun-soaked stone.
All that was left was the faint echo of the cry that had brought him back
from wherever shock and fever had tried to take him.
The sound of a woman's voice, plaintive and desperate....
Hearing her call, he could not help but
answer and reach towards life.
His curiosity aroused, Luke tried to
rise but moaned softly as his stiffened muscles protested. Unexpectedly a hand reached out and lay firmly across his
chest, pinning him down. Suddenly,
he was aware of a cool presence pressed against his warm flesh, a soft thigh
atop his own, and an ample chest melded to the curve of his aching back.
He attempted to turn his head to identify the one who restrained him, but
found he could not. His waning energies depleted, he dropped back to the hard
earth with a groan and shivered ferociously.
The fever had not been beaten, only broken.
"Hush," a low voice
whispered, wind whistling through broad pipes to produce a reedy tone.
"You have been Dream-Treading.
Rest now. The road ahead is
long and must be traveled until its end. Sleep
now, little one. Sleep and draw
power from the Inspirer's touch." Cool
lips pressed lightly the skin at the nape of his neck and he recognized the one
who had called him back.
Then he slept.
###
Leia tasted blood and grinned.
Her lower lip might have been wounded, but her heart soared.
Above her head, the medical monitor chirruped and bleeped and nearby
Chewbacca roared. See-Threepio, the
prim and proper droid Luke had inherited in a very round about manner, clapped
his golden hand upon the royal-blue dome of his small mechanical companion,
Artoo-Detoo, and chided him. "There,
you see. Must I always remind you
humans are quite resourceful? The
princess has managed to save Master Luke!"
The dark-haired beauty peeled her eyes
from the display for the first time since she had made the decision to put the
young Jedi on complete life-support. She
snorted. "Far from it,
Threepio, I've only managed to postpone what is most likely inevitable."
She reached out and laid her hand on her friend's pale forehead.
His flesh was clammy and a faint blue tinge lingered near Luke's slightly
parted lips. She mirrored
Chewbacca's frown and asked quietly, "Does the Falcon
have any medi-cocoons? We're going
to need one to keep him stabilized."
The Wookiee issued a series of hollow
barks she took for a yes. This was
Han Solo's ship...how could they afford to be without one?
Or better yet, a fleet of them.
"Threepio, you go with Chewie.
Get one ready." She
glanced at the young man's life signs. They
were steady, but consistently low. "Artoo,
you and I should go back to-"
"Leia?" Lando Calrissian, the handsome smuggler who had been Han
Solo's friend in a former existence -and his betrayer in this one- leaned
through the hatch to inform her, "I've contacted the Fleet. They're expecting us."
He took one look at her somber face and noticing the still form on the
medical bunk asked sharply, "The kid?
He isn't-"
Setting aside the horrific memory of
Han in the carbon-freeze chamber, she shook her head and then ran a hand over
her face, attempting to dislodge the fatigue that clung there like a voracious
Mynock. "No, Luke's
alive. For now. Reestablish contact and request Two-OneBee, he knows Luke's
history. Let's get back up front.
Artoo, you come with me-"
Already on the move, it took Leia a
second or two to realize the little droid had remained at Luke's side, daring to
defy her direct command. She
planted her hands on her hips and started to snap at the blue and white machine,
but unexpectedly checked herself as a series of plaintive bleeps and toots
issued from deep within it. Worn by
one unendurable loss piled upon last, she had almost failed to recognize
another's agony. Deeply touched, as
well as a bit surprised by the little droid's loyalty, she lifted her hands and
held them up in a gesture of surrender.
"All right, Artoo, you win. You
can stay here." Leia turned
and started to follow Lando as he disappeared through the hatch that led to the Falcon's
tiny cockpit, but found she couldn't. Something
forced her to linger for one final look. Luke's
boyish face was awash in the amber light of the instrument panel.
One hand lay upon his chest, the stump of the other encapsulated in a
medical device that fed much needed fluids to his dehydrated body.
His Jedi weapon lay formally at his side.
And at his feet a blue and white watchdog stood silent guard patiently
waiting for the familiar sound of his Master's voice.
She shivered and whispered prayerfully,
not knowing to whom she spoke. "Please,
send him back."
###
Luke awoke sometime later swathed in
animal pelts and sweating like an Ugnaught.
A small fire blazed near his bare feet, radiating warmth, and the scent
of something delicious cooking made him salivate.
He maneuvered into a sitting position, noting as he did that his clothing
had been removed. Beneath the
grey-white furs he was naked as a babe. An
oily substance, odorless and colorless, coated every inch of his skin.
He ran his fingers along it, noting it was slightly warm to the touch and
made his flesh appear opalescent. It
put him in mind of the residue left after immersion in a Bacta Tank.
Shaking away that unpleasant memory he stood, intending to search for
something more suitable to drape across his bare frame, but instead froze,
unexpectedly overwhelmed by his surroundings.
Translucent waves frozen in a perpetual
sea highlighted the cavern walls. The
creation of time and pressure, the dense crystalline surface undulated to a
height of fifty or sixty feet and then vanished into a lapis lazuli sky. He took a step toward it and watched as the fire's light
kaleidoscoped, reflecting a myriad of shades that resolved into an azure wash as
all of the colors but the deepest blues were absorbed. It's beauty was unsettling.
Luke hesitated a moment and then took another step - gingerly,
tentatively - as though he feared the brilliant blue glass might shatter if he
moved too quickly. A distorted
reflection mimicked his actions, but that
was all. Moments later, emboldened,
he searched the cave until he found a pile of grey clothes that seemed to be his
size. It turned out to be a
regulation flight-suit, though he found he was unfamiliar with the design.
Still, grateful for anything more familiar than animal pelts, he pulled
the form-fitting pants over his boyish form and smiled sheepishly.
"Aunt Beru'll skin me alive if I
come home wearing someone else's clothes."
"Your Aunt will not see you as you
are. Have no fear."
Luke pivoted sharply only to be
confronted by another vision, thoroughly as captivating and enthralling as the
frozen sea of glass. A statuesque
woman, full bodied and fully five or six fingers taller than him, stood
silhouetted against the crystalline barrier.
Waist-length hair black as jet framed her darkened visage and billowed
about her broad shoulders, casting fantastic shadows on the floor.
She held her head high and waited in silence while he hastily donned the
borrowed shirt and fumbled with its fastenings.
"You are better now.”
It was a statement, not a question.
"Yes, thank you," was all he
could think of to say. Then,
stumbling for the right words, Luke added, "How did I...?
Did you bring me here…rescue
me?"
She moved away from the scintillating
flow and approached him slowly. As
the muted light caressed her silvery flesh, the soft
sheen of her shoulders showed him she too wore the oily balm.
Grey as gun-metal, her dark skin was polished stone.
Her wide-set slanted eyes
glistened like black pearls as they regarded him with amusement.
If one of the smoky stalactites which lined the vaulted ceiling had
descended, been granted female form and had life breathed into it, it would have
looked like this. Clothed only in
the slimmest of sarongs, she seemed a veritable goddess.
"Yes," she answered as she
came to rest beside him. She had an accent unknown to his ears.
"Your thanks I do not need. Though
there is something else I want."
Luke frowned as she casually fingered
his collar. Her nearness made him
uncomfortable, though he didn't know why. "W-what?"
he stammered.
A savage smile lit her beautiful face.
"Another fastening there is."
As she passed by him to squat like a
savage before the fire, he glanced to where her fingers had lingered.
One of the fastenings was out of sequence.
Like a little kid he blushed and hurriedly corrected his mistake.
After a moment she quietly instructed,
"Sit. Eat."
Luke's stomach growled in reply.
"Thanks. I guess I am
hungry."
She gestured with a hand that flashed
quicksilver. "Good.
Come then, eat. Gather
strength for the task ahead."
###
Twenty minutes later Luke pretended to
linger over the last bite of stew, passing a hard lump of bread around the sides
of a rough-hewn stone bowl. In
truth, he was studying his mysterious savior as she remained spell-bound before
the fire. Her black hair was shot
through with silver so that it appeared veined like the finest marble.
One prominent stripe ran from the edge of her left temple, straight
across her crown, and down the right side of her waist-length tresses.
Her lips were full and the deep red of Corellian blood-stripes. Above them, a knife-straight nose separated eyes like
obsidian disks, deep-set and heavily lidded.
Lush lashes, velvet black, brushed high-boned cheeks.
Once or twice as he watched, an ebon lock troubled her eyes.
Involuntarily, she would chase it away with a shimmering hand tipped with
smartly manicured nails, and then return with fierce determination to her study
of the ebbing flames. Luke shifted
at last and set the bowl down.
Immediately she looked up.
"You eat like an Ice Creature with
an empty larder. Long you have been
without food and nourishment." Luke
noted again the unnerving habit she had of making statements instead of asking
questions, as though she already knew
the answers. "It is
enough."
He didn't know if a response was
expected or even required, but he answered anyway.
"I don't know about ice creatures, but I was hungry as a Bantha.
Thank you again." He
stood and turned to survey the crystalline wall that separated them from the
outside. It extended far beyond his
range of vision to the east and west, and at least seventy-five feet into the
air, arching over their heads like half of a gigantic rib-cage.
A rosy glow glimpsed through its azure depths was all that indicated the
world beyond. Luke ran greased
hands through dark blond locks and turned to face her, only to find her
eyes were already on him. Blushing,
he suggested, "Now if you could just point me in the right direction, I'd
like to head for home. I'm totally
lost. I can't recall ever seeing anything like this on
Tatooine...."
She sniffed and passed her hand slowly
and deliberately through the flames, watching as the opalescent balm sizzled in
its heat. "That is because you
are no longer on Tatooine."
Luke darted forward, frightened for
her. He grasped her arm and hauled it back and then froze when he saw it
was unscathed. A moment later, her
words sunk in. "What?
What do you mean I'm not on Tatooine?" He
distinctly remembered heading out into the desert in pursuit of the droid his
Uncle had just purchased from the Jawas. It
had claimed it belonged to old Ben Kenobi, but he had never found it or
the old man it sought. Somehow, he must
have gotten lost along the way.
The woman rose with effortless grace.
Once again, her close proximity disturbed him.
Her scent was strong, musky, reminiscent of exotic spices and heady
wines. It affected him on some deep
unspoken level. She met his eyes
and he felt her hand upon him, even though she hadn’t moved.
"You are no longer on Tatooine, Luke Skywalker.
You left there long ago. You
are no longer a simple farm boy, the nephew of an unimportant moisture farmer.
You have fought many battles between that moment and this.
There are scars," she lifted her dark hand and brushed his right
cheek, tracing one of several narrow valleys that ran from just below his left
eye to his jaw line with fingers carbon smooth, "on your face and on your
soul."
Luke frowned but found he could not
pull away as her hand slipped inside his shirt, its cool pressure resting above
his heart. Without warning images
exploded within his mind's eye. He saw a cold barren world and himself
astride a curious beast, canvassing the frozen wastes.
Suddenly a savage creature, a tidal wave of white fur, teeth, and claws,
struck him down, rending the tender flesh of his cheek.
It clutched his ankle and bore him away toward certain death.
Then everything went black. He
gasped and drew away, trembling.
She withdrew her hand and sighed.
"You do not remember all. That
is as must be. For now, know only
that you are not on your planet, but mine.
"Welcome to Hoth."