MedStar_ Jedi Healer - BestLightNovel.com
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What a pitiful excuse for a man, too. Are you just going to let her go? Without a fight?
He frowned at his reflection. Aloud, he said, "What am I supposed to do? She won't talk to me! And I don't know why!"
So? You're not stupid! Figure out why! You couldn't stop Zan dying-are you fust going to let Tolk walk away without even knowing whys'
Jos turned away from the mirror and went back to his cot. He stood there, staring at the bed. There was the question, wasn't it? The big one, the only one: why? What had caused Tolk, the woman who said she loved him, to just up and leave? She had cited the explosion on MedStar, the dozens of deaths-but that didn't make sense. Tolk had seen worse, far worse, and a lot closer at hand. No, this was different. It was almost as if she'd received a revelation from some primitive planetary deity . . .
The sudden realization hit him hard enough to make him sit down. It was as if he had been punched in the solar plexus, his wind stolen, so that he couldn't take another breath. He knew. He knew Great-Uncle Erel. He had talked to Tolk. He had told her what it was like to give up family and home forever. He had poisoned Tolk's thoughts!
It made perfect sense. She had figured the old man would speak to her. Jos had, too, but somehow that knowledge had slipped from his mind-he had been so tired and overworked. In hindsight, it seemed unbelievable [hat he could have put that possibility out of his thoughts, but he had. Tolk had talked about the explosion, the deaths, the horror of it all, and Jos had fastened upon that and thought about her reasons no further.
Uncle Erel.
Rage rose in him like a hot tide. He stood, went back to the 'fresher, and flipped the sonic shower on. He stepped into the stall, feeling the grime and sleep and sour smell of alcohol that still seeped from his pores begin to sluice away, rolling down his body in dirty waves to the drain. He looked at his chrono-the next transport was scheduled to lift midmorning. Time enough to shower and dress, and then, by everything that was righteous, he would pull rank, call in favors . . . grow wings and fly if that's what it took to pay a visit to his loving uncle and have the truth from him-one way or another.
32.
Kaird, or Mont Shomu, as he was known in his fat human disguise, smiled as the human pilot and the Twi'lek food service tech sipped from the bottle of local wine he had brought along. It wasn't bad wine, made from a round, reddish purple fruit about the size of a human's closed fist that grew on the funguslike trees of the Ja.s.serak Highlands. Called avedame, the pulp was crispy when ripe, and had a tart, yet sweet taste; the wine reflected this.
That the wine was drugged with myocaine didn't affect the flavor at all, given that in the liquid oral form, the muscle relaxant was tasteless, odorless, and colorless. To allay any suspicion, Kaird also drank the wine. The difference was that a pinch of neutralizer had gone into his gla.s.s, along with the straw-colored wine, ensuring that he would feel no effect from the chemical.
"Let's get started, shall we?" the Twi'lek female said. The excitement was high in her voice. Kaird smiled, and the fat face smiled with him. How sweet and naive ...
Bogan, the human pilot, was just as ramped. He swallowed half his gla.s.s of fruit wine and impatiently waved the holoprojector to life. Not as conscientious as the other pilot, to drink wine, even though it wasn't much.
The image of a large hall filled with tables, at each of which two players sat, blossomed in the air above them. The holoproj was sharp, and they would get to enjoy the first twenty or thirty minutes of it. After that, once the pharmaceutical took hold, they would be awake and alert, but simply unable to move.
After fifteen minutes, the pair of them began to slump, and, while they no doubt wondered and worried at this, they simply did not have the energy to do anything about it, save to frown. At twenty minutes, they couldn't even flex their facial muscles enough for that.
Were he to give each of them a blaster, neither could summon the strength to raise it and shoot him.
Kaird moved to the human. "Can you speak?"
"Y-y-y.. . yesssss," Bogan managed, his voice a dragged-out slur. "Wh-wh-whaaat. . . ?"
"I'll keep it short and simple. I've drugged you. I want the codes to the admiral's personal s.h.i.+p-access, security, operational, everything. The drug I gave you is not fatal; however, if you don't give me the codes, or if you give me false ones, I will kill you and your friend. Do you understand?"
"Y-y-yesss ..."
"Good." Kaird produced a recorder from his pocket. He knew that the man's slurs wouldn't matter-the security codes were not vox-specific, so anybody could make them work. "Give me the codes. Take your time, identify each one clearly. If they work, you and your girlfriend will have a pleasant evening watching the Strag match, and by noon tomorrow, you'll be able to move well enough to call for help.
"If any of the codes fails, however ..." Kaird removed a small thermal detonator from his pocket. Used to trigger a larger bomb, a unit this size, if it went off in this room, would shred everything in it, paint the walls with blood and vaporized flesh, and then knock down the walls. All in about a thousandth of a second.
He held it so the man could see it clearly. "Do you recognize this?"
"Y-y-y-"
"Good," Kaird said, cutting him off. "I have a transmitter for the detonator that has a range of two hundred kilometers." He produced a small device, held it up, then pocketed it again. "If, as I leave in the stolen s.h.i.+p-yes, I am stealing it-anything awry happens with the codes you give me, and I mean anything at all-then I will trigger this." He stood, moved to the holoprojector, and set the thermal bomb on top of the device.
Bogan had begun sweating, which was good.
"Now, I know you're a pilot and thus a brave fellow, Bogan, and probably not afraid to die yourself," he said. "But your Twi'lek Strag mate here is an innocent non-combatant. You wouldn't want her to be turned into b.l.o.o.d.y paste now, would you?"
"N-no . , ."
"Well, then, we're in accord. The codes?"
After Bogan had spoken the words and numbers aloud-a long and slow process-"Mont Shomu"
took several of the couch cus.h.i.+ons and used them to prop the boneless couple up and against each other, so that they were looking at the holoproj. He wiped the sweat from Bogan's face. "Enjoy the match. I've set the projector to repeat, so you won't get bored-at least, not for the first dozen or so times." Kaird bowed slightly, then exited.
He could have killed them outright, of course, and there were many in his profession who would have done so without a second thought. Nor would it have bothered him particularly to do so; he had sent more than his share of people back to the Cosmic Egg in his time, so two more would hardly affect the total very much. But there were reasons not to kill them.
First off, n.o.body had paid him to do so; second, it wasn't necessary. The two were out of commission, inside a locked kiosk, and by the time anybody missed them, Kaird would be long gone. They had no idea he was a Nediji, and the fat human they had met would be recycled synthflesh in a few minutes. He'd made sure there were no currents leading to his nest.
He grinned inside his disguise. Actually, the thermal detonator was a trainer-mechanically and electrically identical to a live grenade, but without an explosive charge, and thus harmless. The "transmitter" he had waved at Bogan was a personal featherette groomer. As far as Kaird knew, there weren't any handheld transmitters that size with a range anywhere near two hundred kiicks. More importantly, if the codes didn't work and he was somehow captured, he certainly didn't want to be brought back to answer charges of intentional murder. They'd jam him into the brig for stealing a s.h.i.+p, of course, but that wasn't a death-sentence crime, even for stealing an admiral's rig during a war. Eventually, Black Sun would send somebody to find out what had happened to him, and they would get him released. A wartime tribunal that found him guilty of murder, on the other hand, would have him cooked and recycled long before Black Sun even began to wonder where he was.
In addition, there was the matter of that former Med-Star admiral he had taken out, the Sakiyan Tarnisse Bleyd, and it wouldn't do at all for them to be prying into his brain and discover that. But even in war, there were rules, and brain scans were not supposed to happen without proper authorizations. If it did come to that, it would be better to shut himself down than talk, Kaird knew, since he'd be dead either way, and doing it himself would be quick and painless-which was not at all how it would be if Black Sun was unhappy and involved.
The best plan was, of course, to not get caught.
Kaird headed for a 'fresher to lose the last of the heavy human suits. And good riddance.
Mont Shomu, like Hu-nandin the Kubaz, had served him well, but he was quite happy not to have to wear the heavy disguise again. He wondered how humans who really did carry that much extra fatty tissue functioned. As far as Kaird was concerned, he'd rather be plucked and roasted over a slow fire.
Jos was as angry as he could ever remember being. He saw the man before him almost as if there were a red haze in front of his eyes. He said, through gritted teeth, "Were you not my great-uncle and my commanding officer, I'd knock you on your b.u.t.t!"
"In your place, I expect I would feel the same way."
They were in the admiral's office on MedStar, and they were alone, but Jos somehow suspected that if he started smas.h.i.+ng Erel's face in, somebody might come to see what the noise was about. Several somebodies, in fact, all of them military security, large, humorless, and armed.
Not that it mattered. The way he felt right now, no one and nothing could stop him if he wanted to slug his long-lost uncle.
"How dare you interfere between us this way? What gives you the right?
"I only wanted to spare you grief."
"Spare me grief? By driving off the woman I love? Sorry, Doctor, but I don't quite see the medical indication there. Tolk is the cure for so much of what bothers me, hurts me, scares me, that I cannot begin to explain it to you!" Jos paced up and down, seething, for a moment. "I still can't believe she listened to you!"
"That she did this is a measure of her love and regard for you, Jos."
"How do you figure that?"
"She doesn't want to see you ostracized from your family and friends."
"Because you painted for her such a grim and ugly picture of what it would be like. You made it sound like we'd be looked at as the sc.u.m of the entire galaxy."
"I admit that I did."
Jos had to consciously unclench his hands. He took a deep breath, let it out, took another. Easy, he told himself. Smas.h.i.+ng the admiral's nose might be very satisfying, but it would also be a bad move, no matter how much the man deserved it. He's a doctor, Jos reminded himself. He was doing what he thought best. But it was still hard. He wanted to deck the old man. A lot.
Even so, his anger was not quite at nova intensity anymore. Jos took another deep breath and said, "Well, Uncle, if my family is not willing to accept the woman I love,' then they're family in name only, and I'm better off without them."
Kersos shook his head, a gesture of infinite weariness. "I thought so, too. I've been down this path, Jos."
"But you are not me. I might have lived to regret it-though I doubt it-but even if I did, it would have been my choice. I should get to make it."
"It isn't that easy, son. You speak of cultural mores that have been around for thousands of years. There is much tradition to justify them."
"And sixty or eighty years from now, much of that culture and tradition, including the prohibitions against en-sters and eksters, will be gone." Jos paused, struggling to gather his anger back in. He could explain this to his uncle. He was smart and articulate; if he could explain a complicated procedure to a nervous patient, he could surely couch this in understandable terms.
"Listen," he said. "You were far ahead of your time, and I'm stilt ahead of it. But my children and their children will not have to deal with such mindless mopek."
Uncle Erel shook his head. "I find this difficult to believe. Are you able to foresee the future?"
Jos shook his head, sighed. "I can see the present, Uncle." He paused again. "It's been a long while since you were on the homeworld. Have you ever heard the term Hustru fonster?"
His uncle shook his head. "It sounds like Hoodish."
"Close. It's Vulanish, a similar obscure dialect from the Great Southern Reaches. I believe the last native speakers of the language on our world pa.s.sed away fifty years ago.
Anyway, Hustru fonster means 'the wife in the window.' It's a term that's come into usage in the last few years, and not one spoken in polite gatherings."
His great-uncle looked puzzled.
Jos continued. "Suppose we have a young man of good family who finds himself drawn to an ekster girl. Okay, so, everyone winks and nods and glances away while he gives in to his wild urges and gets his drive tubes scoured. It's not condoned, but it's permitted, as long as he comes back to the fold.
"But more and more of late, the good sons, and the good daughters, as well, are going offworld and finding eksters with whom they wish to continue relations.h.i.+ps. Yes, custom forbids it, but those with sufficient means have found a way around custom.
"The good son or daughter comes home and takes an enster spouse. But this is a wife or husband who enters into the marriage for reasons of commerce or position only. The newlyweds hire a housekeeper or a gardener or cook who just happens to be an ekster-you can see where I'm going with this."
His uncle said nothing.
"Technically," Jos continued, "there's not even a prohibition against that kind of arrangement. And so everyone's happy. No scandal, no shame, and if the 'housekeeper'
becomes pregnant through an unknown liaison, why, her child could be raised by her employers almost as if it's one of their own-such is their care and concern for a valued employee. Perhaps even adopted legally, since more and more of these enster marriages seem to be turning out barren.
"And, of course, if the child of a good wife resembles the gardener, or the issue of the maid looks like her employer, well, that can only be a coincidence."
His uncle shook his head. -"This is being practiced on the homeworld?"
"Widely and more frequently all the time."
Erel looked as if he'd bitten into something sour. "Well. There's your answer, then."
"No, sir, it is not!" Jos replied. His tone grew hot again, but this time he didn't throttle back. "I will not subject my spouse to such a practice-living a lie that fools no one, just to maintain an archaic and anachronistic practice that no longer serves any purpose. I would take Tolk to myself as wife everlasting, and any who find that unacceptable can open their hatches and sniff vacuum, for all I care."
"Your family-"
"Talk is my family! She ranks first and foremost. Everyone else from now on comes in second. I love her. I cannot see any life without her. And if I have to crawl across an obsidian razor field on my hands and knees to convince her of this, I will"
The older man smiled.
"Something amusing?" Jos felt his anger surge hotter. He was going to hit the man, great-uncle, commanding officer, or not-!
"I made that same speech to my brother, long before you were born." He stood.
"Congratulations, nephew. will support your choice in any way that I can."
Jos blinked, feeling like he'd been whiplashed by one of those hard banks against vacuum he'd seen fighter pilots pull. "What?"
"To go against thousands of years of custom is not a task for the weak. If Tolk meant anything less to you, you'd ultimately regret it. As you say, you might anyway-hut at least you're starting from a position of strength."
Jos leaned across the desk and looked the older man in the eye. "At the moment, Uncle, thanks to your meddling, I'm starting from nowhere, Tolk is going to transfer to another Rimsoo. She isn't talking to me now. Somehow I don't see things getting better with a thousand klicks of water between us."
"Son, n.o.body in the Republic Expeditionary Medical Force goes anywhere on this planet without my leave. If the woman you love is worth giving up everything else you have to be with, then you have something that's worth doing. I'll correct my mistake. She'll be around."
"But-how? The damage has already been done. How can you-? "
"By letting Tolk watch the recording of this conversation," Admiral Kersos said. "She was willing to give you up because she loves you. If she sees and hears how much you love her, it will make a difference."
Jos sat down, feeling like he'd just climbed a skyhook. Could Uncle Erel rectify his mistake? Or was it already too late?
"Don't worry, Jos. What I break, I fix."
And for the first time in days, Jos felt a sense of hope stirring in him.
33.
Den Dhur sat by himself in the cantina and brooded.
He had finished drafting his piece on the mutating bota, and, all modesty aside, he considered it one of his best efforts. He'd managed to tie some being-interest angles into it, by examining the potential ways in which various species would be affected by the loss of the miracle adaptogenic, using a number of case studies verified via the HoloNet. In addition, he'd worked in a hardhitting bit on the irony of fighting a war for a plant that then mutates and makes said war pointless.
All in all, it was the kind of journalism that garnered notices. His byline on something like it could very well put him back on the radar again, land him an a.s.signment someplace less . . . exciting than Drongar. Or, if he did indeed return to Sull.u.s.t and take Eyar up on her offer, it would be a great story to go out on.
There was only one problem. Upon reflection, he didn't see how he could file it.