Jedi Healer

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Jedi Healer Page 1

by Michael Reaves




  Star Wars

  Medstar

  II

  Jedi Healer

  A Clone Wars Novel

  Michael Reaves and Steve Perry

  For my son Alexander: "The Force will be with you - always." - M. R.

  For Dianne - S. P.

  RMSU-7

  The jasserak Highlands of Tanlassa,

  Near the Qarohan Steppes

  Planet Drongar

  Year 2 a.b.o.g.

  Scan & OCR: by Gilad

  upload : 28.XI.2005

  1

  In the moment, there was little time for thought. No real space to let

  the conscious mind judge action and reaction, no time for decisions about

  form and flow. The mind was far too slow to defend her in this life-or-death

  situation. She had to trust muscle memory, had to let go of any connection

  to past or future concerns. She had to be totally and completely in the now,

  if she was to survive this battle.

  Even these thoughts passed in the space of no more than a heartbeat.

  Barriss Offee cut and slashed with her lightsaber, whirling and

  twirling it, her movements weaving a shield of luminous energy before her,

  stopping blaster bolts, arrows, swords, even a few slung rocks, without

  reflecting any directly back toward the attackers. That was of vital

  importance, and the hardest part of the battle-don't kill any of them.

  Master Kenobi had been adamant on that. Do not lop off arms or legs or

  heads; do not thrust through the bodies of their attackers. Not those of the

  Borokii, nor those of the Januul.

  It was much harder to fight and disarm or wound than to maim or kill.

  It was always harder to do the right thing.

  Barriss fought-

  Next to her, Anakin Skywalker was displaying a fair skill with his

  lightsaber, though his technique was still somewhat rough. He had come into

  training much later than had most Jedi Padawans, but he was managing quite

  well. She sensed through the Force that he wanted to do more, that he wanted

  to strike them all down, but he held himself in check. She could feel the

  difficulty he was having in doing so, however. And that slight smile on his

  face as he wove a defensive energy web before him bothered her just a bit.

  He seemed to be enjoying this far too much.

  To her left, Master Kenobi's buzzing energy blade stitched an

  ozone-scented tapestry of blurred light, knocking blaster bolts into the

  ground, blocking incoming arrows, and shattering durasteel blades almost too

  fast for the eye to follow. His expression was set, grim.

  Moving with that incredibly supple grace that was her hallmark, Master

  Unduli danced her defense, deflecting the attacks with ease. Barriss stood

  beside her tutor, her blue blade moving in perfect synchronization with the

  pale green shimmer of her Master's lightsaber. Separately, each was an

  opponent to be reckoned with; together, merged by and in the Force, they

  were a fighting unit far stronger and faster than the sum of its two parts.

  So thoroughly and completely did they complement each other's feints,

  parries, and blocks that many of the wild Ansionian plainsfolk stared in

  disbelief even as they pressed their attack.

  When the howlpack had first advanced despite her practiced skill,

  Barriss had felt a surge of fear; there were so many of them, and to control

  without killing was much, much harder. But now, as she leapt and parried and

  swung her weapon, the Force guiding her every move, the initial panic was

  gone. With the four of them together this way, she had never felt the Force

  flow as strongly as it did now. She was with Anakin and Master Kenobi,

  nearly as completely as she was with Master Unduli. It was an unbelievably

  powerful, heady sensation, intoxicating, overriding, filling her with

  confidence: We can do it-we can defeat both armies-/

  Rationally, she knew this could not be, but the conviction was a thing

  of the heart, not the mind. They were invincible. They batted death from the

  air: full-power particle beams, needle-tipped arrows, swords sharp enough to

  shave the Ansionians' long manes . . .

  It seemed to go on for a long time-hours, at least- but when it was at

  last done, Barriss realized that the entire encounter had taken perhaps ten

  minutes or less. Dozens of shattered weapons lay at their feet, and the

  surprised combatants surrounded them, plainly in awe of the fighting skills

  of the Jedi. As well they should be ...

  Barriss smiled at the memory of the encounter on An-sion. She had felt

  the Force many times, before and since, but never had it been that. . .

  compelling. Even when they had demonstrated their "spirit" for the

  Alwari-she with her compass dance, Anakin with his singing, Master Obi-Wan

  Kenobi with his storytelling, and Master Lumi-nara Unduli with her

  Force-sculpture of whirling sand- she had not felt so alive as during the

  battle, fighting alongside her Master and the others. Fighting alone was one

  thing, but fighting in tandem or in a group? That was much, much more.

  But that was the past, and if she had learned nothing else from her

  years in the Jedi Temple, she had learned that the past could be revisited,

  but not relived. She was no longer on Ansion now, but on Drongar, that humid

  hothouse of a world, and even though her mission to find the thief who had

  been stealing the valuable bota crop grown here was over, she had yet to

  hear from her Master as to the next step in her training.

  Even as she felt frustration rising again within her, her desktop comm

  unit warbled. She activated it, and a small holoproj image of her teacher

  shimmered into view in the warm air. The comm unit was small, and it seemed

  to have a slight malfunction; aside from the usual blinking and ghosting

  common when communicating across many parsecs, some element in the power

  amplifier seemed to be emitting a too-warm-circuit smell, so subtle that she

  was uncertain if she was actually sensing it or simply imagining it. It was

  a not-unpleasant odor that reminded Barriss of roasted klee-klee nuts.

  Master Unduii was lightyears away now, back on Cor-uscant, albeit her

  image was close enough to touch. The three-dimensional likeness was

  insubstantial, though, and it would be like trying to touch a ghost.

  Barriss sighed, feeling tension loosen within her. Here on Drongar she

  had felt the separation from her instructor keenly. Just the sight of Master

  Unduii, even in a flickering, low-res holocast, was enough to help center

  her. And she badly needed centering. What with the Rimsoo's recent forced

  relocation, some fifty-odd kilometers to the south to avoid being destroyed

  by Separatist battle droids, along with Zan Yant's death and the nonstop

  batches of incoming wounded, she felt badly in need of the calming,

  centering influence that her teacher always brought with her.

  After a mutual greeting, Barriss said, "So, I suppose my mission here

  on Drongar is finished."

  Master Unduii cocked
her head. "And why would you suppose that?"

  Barriss regarded the image, suddenly uncertain. "Well ... I was sent

  here to find out who was stealing bota. The ones responsible for that, the

  Hutt Filba and Admiral Bleyd, are no longer doing so, being dead. The

  military has dispatched a new admiral to command Med-Star and the Rimsoo

  facilities planetside-he should be here shortly, and I expect he's been

  selected for his honesty, given the value of the bota crop."

  "That was only part of your mission, Padawan. You are also a healer,

  and there are still people there in need of that, are there not?"

  Barriss blinked. "Yes, Master, but-"

  There was a pause as her teacher regarded her. "But you don't think

  that sufficient reason, do you?"

  "With all due respect, I seem to be making very little difference here.

  It's like trying to move a beach full of sand one grain at a time. I could

  be replaced easily by any competent physician."

  "And you think that your talents would be better utilized elsewhere."

  It was not a question.

  "Yes, my Master. I do."

  Master Unduii smiled. Even in the flickering projection Barriss could

  see those intensely blue eyes twinkle. "Of course you do. You are young, and

  your desire to be a shining force for good has blinded you somewhat to

  things all around you that still need attention. But I sense that you are

  not done there yet, my impatient Padawan. There are still lessons to be

  learned. Spirits require healing, too, as much or more than do bodies

  sometimes. I will contact you when I think it is time for you to leave

  Drongar."

  Master Unduli's image winked out. Barriss sat on her cot for a time.

  She reached for calmness of spirit and found it difficult to acquire. Her

  Master's purpose in keeping her here eluded her. Yes, she was a healer, and

  yes, she had saved a few lives, but she could do that anywhere. There seemed

  little on this fecund planet that would help her become a fully fledged Jedi

  Knight. It seemed to her that her Master should be looking for some place to

  properly test her, to challenge all her skills, and not just those of a

  healer.

  But instead, Master Unduli had decided to leave her on this soggy

  dirtball, where battles were fought as they had seldom been fought in the

  last thousand years-on the ground, between armies fielded to wage war

  cautiously to avoid damaging the valuable bota plant that grew thicker here

  than anywhere in the known galaxy. Bota- a miraculous adaptogenic growth

  from which a variety of wondrous drugs could be made-was easily prone to

  damage, and even a mild concussion from an explosion too close could kill an

  entire field of it. Sometimes even the thunder from a nearby lightning

  strike-of which there were plenty, this being a young and volatile

  world-could damage the fragile plant. Neither the Republic nor the

  Confederacy wanted that, so the weapons and tactics of the war here were

  primitive in the extreme. Battle droids fought clone troopers mostly within

  hand-blaster range, in small numbers, and without much in the way of

  artillery or large power beams. When the plant over which both sides battled

  for control was worth its weight in precious gems, nobody wanted to shock it

  to death or set it on fire-which was all too easy to do in the high-oxygen

  environment, despite the swampy territory.

  While it was true that both sides had on occasion fielded heavier

  weaponry-witness the recent Separatist attack that had required moving the

  entire base-for the most part the infantries fought, and bled, for each

  precious centimeter of ground, all because of the kid-glove approach that

  bota required. Not for the first time Barriss wondered how an indigenous

  plant that was so fragile had managed to cling to its ecological niche for

  so long on such a tempestuous world.

  Such questions did not matter now. All that mattered was that the bota

  thief was dead-and yet, Master Unduli still bade her stay. Why? What was the

  point?

  She shook off the thoughts. Clarity of mind did not come with too much

  thinking-quite the opposite, in fact. She needed to empty herself, to allow

  the Force to provide the calm and serenity it always did-when she could

  reach it.

  Some days, it was a lot harder than others.

  2

  Lying on his bed, Jos Vondar glared at the young man in the

  lieutenant's uniform standing in the doorway to his kiosk. Hardly more than

  a boy, really; he looked like he was about fourteen standard years old.

  "What?"

  "Captain Vondar? I'm Lieutenant Kornell Divini."

  "That's nice. And you're standing there in the open doorway, letting

  the heat into my humble home, because . . . ?"

  The boy looked slightly uncomfortable. "I've been assigned here, sir."

  "I don't need a houseboy," Jos said.

  The boy grinned unexpectedly. "No, sir, I don't expect you do-seeing

  how neat and clean your kiosk is."

  Jos didn't reply to that. It was true that things had gotten a little .

  . . disorganized of late. He glanced around the small living space. His last

  two changes of clothes were hanging on the back of a formplast chair, the

  drink chiller was dilapidated enough to make even a slythmon-ger think twice

  about imbibing, and the mold creeping up the walls was as thick as Kashyyyk

  wood-moss. Candidly, Joss had to admit that a marsh pig probably wouldn't

  live in a sty as dirty and cluttered as this place.

  Of the two of them, Zan had always been neater. He would never have let

  it get this out of control. Jos could almost hear the Zabrak's voice: Look,

  Vondar, I've seen garbage scows more aseptic than this. What're you trying

  to do, max out your immune system?

  But Zan wasn't here. Zan was dead.

  The boy was speaking again. Jos tuned back in: "... been assigned to

  Rimsoo Seven as a surgeon, sir."

  Jos sat up on his cot and stared. Was he hearing right? This-this child

  was a doctor?

  Impossible.

  His disbelief must have shown, because the boy said, somewhat stiffly,

  "Coruscant Medical, sir. Graduated two years ago, then did a year of

  internship and a year of residency at Big Zoo."

  That did bring a smile from Jos. Big Zoo was the unofficial name of

  Galactic Polysapient, the multi-sentient-species medcenter on Alderaan, at

  which he himself had interned. It boasted no fewer than seventy-three

  separate environment zones and ORs, and treatment protocols for every known

  carbon-based sentient species in the inhabited galaxy, as well as most of

  the silicon- and halogen-based forms. If it was alive and reasonably

  conscious, sooner or later you'd see it at Big Zoo.

  Jos gave the boy a closer, more appraising look. He was human-either

  Corellian like Jos or some other close variant-towheaded, with cheeks that

  looked like they had yet to experience depil cream. "You should have had

  three years of residency before they drafted you," Jos said.

  "Yes, sir. Apparently they were running short on doctors in the field."

  The vestige of Jos's smile vanished. Zan had been dead only a week. And

  this boy
was supposed to be his replacement? The Republic was getting

  desperate if it was snatching babies from their cradles this way.

  Besides, nobody could replace Zan. Nobody. "Look, Lieutenant. . .

  Divini, was it?" "Uli."

  Jos blinked. "I beg your pardon?" "Everyone calls me Uli, sir. I'm from

  Tatooine, near the Dune Sea. It's short for Uli-ah, the word for Sand People

  children. How I got the nickname is kind of an interesting-"

  "Lieutenant Divini, far be it from me to question the wisdom of the

  Republic-I don't think anybody really could, since they don't have any

  wisdom to question-so, fine, welcome to the war. You check in with the unit

  commander yet?" "Colonel Vaetes, yes, sir. He sent me here." Jos sighed.

  "All right, I guess we'd better find you a place to stay." He rose from his

  cot.

  Young Divini looked uncomfortable. "The colonel said I was to bunk with

  you, sir."

  "Stop calling me sir. I'm not your father, even though I feel old

  enough for that these days. Call me Jos... Vaetes sent you to stay here'?"

  "Yes, sir. Uh, I mean, yes, Jos."

  Jos felt his bottom teeth settle firmly against his upper jaw. "Stay

  right here." "Okay,"

  Vaetes was waiting for him when Jos arrived at his office. Before he

  could say a word, the colonel said, "That's right, I sent the boy to your

  cube. He's been assigned here as a general surgeon and I'm not going to have

  the construction droids drop everything and build a new kiosk when you have

  an empty bed in yours." He raised a hand to forestall Jos's comments. "This

  isn't a debate class, Captain, it's the army. You're the chief surgeon in

  this unit. Show him the drill, get him set up. You don't have to like it,

  but you have to do it. Dismissed."

  Jos stared at Vaetes. "What's the matter with you, D'Arc? Someone split

  your head open and drop a regular army brain in? You sound like a character

  in a bad holovee. Have you taken a look outside recently? We're not even

  totally relocated yet, only one bacta tank's online, and we lost an entire

  case of cryogen during the move. Meanwhile, nobody told the enemy we're

  having problems, so they just keep shooting our guys and we have to keep

  patching them up somehow. I don't have the time to wet-nurse some rimkin

 

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