Traitor Matthew Stover (mobile ebook reader txt) đ
- Author: Matthew Stover
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With the gods so close at hand âŠ
If the world is full of violence, savagery, and torture, this must be how they want it.
Lots of things about the Yuuzhan Vong made sense to him now.
âMagnificent, isnât it?â
Vergereâs voice came from just behind his shoulder; though he hadnât heard her approach, he was too lost in wonder and new comprehension to be startled. And he had known somehow already that she would be here. He had felt her shadow upon his thousand-year dream.
He had known, somehow, that she was still part of his life.
âYou know,â Jacen murmured, still gazing up into the sky, âthatâs exactly what you said when you brought me into the Nursery. Those same words. Just like that.â
âTruly?â Her wind-chime laughter tinkled around him. âYou recall all that I say to you?â
âEvery word,â Jacen answered grimly.
âSuch a clever child. Is it any wonder that I love you so?â
Slowly, painfully, Jacen lowered himself to sit with his legs over the edge, his feet dangling free a kilometer above the rugged jungle canopy. âI guess I was pretty messed up. Pretty battered,â he said, laying one hand along the bandages that bound his sprung ribs in place. âYou patched me up. You and those tears of yours.â
âYes.â
He nodded: not thanks, just acknowledgment. âI didnât expect to live through it.â
âOf course not. How could you, and achieve what you did?â she said kindly. âYou found the power that arises of acting without hope ⊠and also without fear. I wasâI amâvery proud of you.â
Jacen met her eyes. He could see his own reflection, dark and distorted, in their glossy black surface. âProud? All the people up there who died because of meââ
âAll the people down here who live because of you,â she countered, interrupting. She briefly told him how the shapers had been forced to give the dhuryam immediate control of the seedship, and how it had begun the breakup into individual shipseeds so quickly that there had been no time to round up the rampaging slaves. The dhuryam itself had used their slave seeds to herd them to safety, fulfilling its side of the bargain it had made with Jacen. âYes, hundreds died in the battleâbut thousands of slaves were able to ride the shipseeds to the surface: slaves who were to have been executed at the climax of the tizoâpil Yunâtchilat. You were magnificent, Jacen Solo. A true hero.â
âI donât feel much like a hero.â
âNo?â Her crest splayed orange. âHow does a hero feel?â
Jacen looked away, shaking his head silently. She settled in beside him, swinging her legs over the void below them, kicking her heels aimlessly like a little girl in a chair too high for her.
After a moment, Jacen sighed, and shook his head again, and shrugged. âI guess heroes feel like theyâve accomplished something.â
âAnd you havenât? Several thousand slaves might disagree.â
âYou donât understand.â In his mind, he saw again the body on the hive-islandâs beach: the one who might have been a slave, who might have been a warrior, who had bled out his life next to the corpse of a shaper whoâd had no clue in combat: a shaper whoâd only thought to put his own body between the infant dhuryams and the killing machine Jacen had become. âIn the Nurseryâonce I started killing,â he said softly, âI didnât want to stop. That must beâI can only think thatâs how the dark side must feel. I didnât ever want to stop.â
âBut you did.â
âOnly because you stopped me.â
âWhoâs stopping you now?â
He stared at her.
She turned her quadrifid palm upward as though offering him a sweet. âYou want to kill? There is nothing around you but life, Jacen Solo. Take it as you please. Even mine. My species has a particularly vulnerable neck; merely take my head in your hands, and with one quick twist, thusââ She jerked her head up and back as though an invisible fist had punched her in the mouth. ââyou can satisfy this dark desire.â
âI donât want to kill you, Vergere.â He hunched into himself, resting his elbows on his thighs as though huddled against a chill. âI donât want to kill anybody. Just the opposite. Iâm grateful. You saved me. I was out of controlââ
âYou were not,â she said sharply. âDonât make excuses.â âWhat?â
âOut of control is just code for âI donât want to admit Iâm the kind of person who would do such things.â Itâs a lie.â
He offered her half a smile. âEverything I tell you is a lie.â
She accepted his mockery with an expressionless nod.
âBut everything you tell yourself should be the truthâor as close to it as you can come. You did what you did because you are who you are. Self-control, or its lack, had nothing to do with it.â
âSelf-control has everything to do with itâthatâs what being a Jedi is.â
âYou,â she said, âare not a Jedi.â
He looked away. Remembering what she had done to him kindled a spark within his chest that grew into a scorching flame around his heart. His fingers dug into the lush moss that carpeted the ledge, and he made fists, tearing up a double handful, and a large part of him wanted that moss to be her neck. But years of Jedi training had armored him against rage. When he opened his fists and let those shreds fall into the wind, he let his anger fall with them.
âBeing a Jedi isnât just about using the Force.â His voice was stronger now; he was on sure ground. âItâs a commitment to a certain way of doing thingsâa certain way of looking at things. Itâs about valuing life, not destroying it.â
âSo is gardening.â
He hung his head, numb with memory. âBut I wasnât trying
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