Diversity Alliance

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Diversity Alliance Page 10

by Kevin J. Anderson


  The arachnid turned, trumpeting its outrage.

  Lowie swung his lightsaber like a club and cleaved a long gash through the

  center of the monsters eye cluster. The creature roared and thrashed, spewing

  venomous saliva from its mouth hole. ' It took all of Lowie's strength to evade

  the arachnid's attack and reach its body core. Then, with a great growl he

  shoved the monster off the thick chain. It railed its many legs as it fell down,

  down, down, until it splattered in a starburst pattern far below at the bottom

  of the crater.

  Lowie scrambled backward, 'getting to his feet and regaining his balance

  again as the other combat arachnids hesitated, wary now that they had seen their

  Wookiee foe emerge triumphant from battle with one of their kind.

  Raaba finally reached the other end of the chain where it was anchored to

  the high rooftop. She sprang from the chain and stood waiting, ready to offer

  her help to the young Jedi Knights.

  Tenel Ka moved to the anchor point and stopped to extend her hand to Jacen

  as he inched toward her, trying not to look down.

  Lowie's wrestling match with the combat arachnid had made the chain bounce

  and shake so much that Jacen and Jaina had been forced to spend most of their

  concentration on not falling, rather than making forward progress.

  Now, though, as they neared the dubious safety of the rooftop and Raaba's

  ship, Lowie began bounding toward them along the chain, running with uncanny

  balance to catch up. The two combat arachnids that had not yet given up the

  chase scrambled after him, hissing and clicking, ravenous for fresh food.

  Raaba yanked one of the small detonators from her crisscrossed ammunition

  belt, set the timer, and without pausing lobbed it in a perfect arc. The

  detonator sailed across the open air.

  Seeing the glittering object, the foremost combat arachnid reared up to

  catch it, as if the thermal detonator might be some sort of flying prey. The

  grenade detonated, shattering the creature's exoskeleton like a thousand chips

  of glass, spraying its innards in all directions.

  The shock wave from the explosion hurled Jacen sideways. He spun, grabbed

  for balance, and then slipped from the chain but Tenel Ka's arm shot out like

  lightning to seize him by the elbow and halt his terrible fall.

  Spurred by the thought of all that open air below, Jacen and Tenel Ka drew

  on the Force together to bring him back up again.

  Then the two of them, along with Jaina, finally scrambled to the sturdy

  rooftop, where it was safe... almost.

  The final combat arachnid, seeing its prey about to escape, increased its

  speed.

  It hissed and scrabbled along the chain, climbing like a deadly acrobat.

  Lowie bounded ahead, ignoring the gusts of wind, planting his feet firmly

  from one link to the next. The last combat arachnid dosed the gap, its jaws

  clacking. Lowie could not look behind him to fight. His best chance was to reach

  the rooftop before the creature could grab hold of him.

  The wound in his side was bleeding profusely now, but the young Wookiee

  didn't seem to notice.

  "Come on, Lowie!" Jacen cried. "You can make it!"

  With a final burst of speed, Lowbacca leaped the final several meters to

  the rooftop.

  The last combat arachnid charged forward like a landspeeder out of control,

  but Tenel Ka thought quickly, efficiently.

  In a flash of blazing turquoise, she swept her lightsaber downward to sever

  the ancient metal links that anchored the chain to the rooftop.

  Just as the combat arachnid reached out to grab for the companions, the

  chain broke free and fell away with the monster still clinging to it. The heavy

  links of corroded durasteel plummeted, carrying the unwilling passenger down,

  down, until it struck the far side of the amphitheater wall with enough force to

  squash the multi-legged creature.

  His heart pounding, Jacen was relieved to see how isolated they were on

  this skyscraper, away from the walls of the great crater.

  Lowie slumped to the rooftop, shaking and exhausted. Raaba came over, put

  her arm around his shoulder, and gave him a powerful hug.

  She touched the wound on his side with a groan of concern, then went to her

  ship to rummage for a medikit.

  Lowie looked up at her, his eyes filled with a thousand questions.

  "My, that was exciting, wasn't it?" Em Teedee said.

  SQUEEZING ALL THE young Jedi Knights into Raaba's interstellar skimmer

  proved to be a challenge, especially with the two large Wookiees. But Lowie did

  not mind being in such cramped quarters with his friends... and Raaba.

  The wound in his side still burned, but Raaba had efficiently applied a

  graft bandage to the injury, finding her well-stocked medikit quickly, as if she

  had cause to use it with some frequency. She calmly helped the 'exhausted

  companions settle into her crowded skimmer, which she had named the Rising Star.

  Lowie found it very unsettling to see the chocolate-furred young Wookiee

  woman, a friend whom he had once mourned as dead--now resurrected before him. He

  kept his eyes on Raaba's glossy coat as she guided the little craft across to

  the rim of the crater where the Rock Dragon waited.

  She flew with a speed and conscious skill that.stopped just this side of

  recklessness.

  Her eyes flashed bright, her movements were strong--and she seemed to be

  avoiding conversation.

  Lowie felt a growing discomfort. He wanted to ask Raaba so many questions,

  find out why she had disappeared, why she hadn't communicated with him for so

  long.

  Her loss and apparent death had been one of the saddest experiences in

  Lowie's life.

  "Er, Master Lowbacca, if you would be so kind as to give me a bit more

  room.... "Em Teedee said. Lowie looked down at his waist to find that he was so

  hunched over in the cramped cockpit that the little droid had been smashed

  between his stomach and his thigh. Yet somehow Lowie hadn't noticed the

  discomfort. After he rearranged his lanky limbs to remedy the problem, the

  little droid sighed. "Ah, thank you, Master Lowbacca. That's much better. Now my

  systems aren't in danger of overheating."

  Circling the broad crater, Raaba brought her skimmer in for a smart landing

  fifty meters from the Rock Dragon, and the young Jedi Knights gratefully climbed

  out, stretching their cramped muscles. In the aftermath of their ordeal with the

  combat arachnids, they all thanked her profusely.

  Raaba, though, seemed indifferent to the gratitude of the humans.

  Jacen and Jaina joked in relief after their near brush with death.

  Lowie could see curiosity about Raaba on the twins' faces and sensed the

  questions that clamored to be asked. Tenel Ka's expression was less readable,

  but he could sense her interest as well.

  Raabakyysh straightened her dusty red headband, pushed the ornamented

  armlets more firmly against her biceps, and gruffly asked if she could do

  anything else to help.

  Jaina's brandy-brown eyes narrowed in a shrewd expression that Lowie knew

  well.

  "Yes. Matter of fact, I really need to run a calibration check on the jump

&nb
sp; sequencer in our hyperdrive," she said, "Iql need Jacen and Tenel Ka to help A

  surprised-looking Jacen interrupted.

  "But Lowie always helps you with--" Jaina nudged him none too gently with

  her elbow, and Jacen subsided into conspiratorial silence.

  "Thing is," she continued, "we're here looking for someone, someone

  important, and I'm wondering if we overlooked any clues that might help. It

  would really mean a lot to us if you and Lowie would do one more circuit of the

  crater rim--just to see if there's anything we missed. And maybe you could do a

  few flyovers of the crater while you're at it."

  "Ah," Tenel Ka said, nodding. "Aha. An excellent plan."

  Humans could be much more perceptive than aliens gave them credit for,

  Lowie reminded himself. He was pleased when Raaba instantly agreed to the

  arrangement.

  She seemed happy to help in the search for Bornan Thul--or perhaps she just

  preferred to be away from the other young Jedi Knights. She made no objection to

  Lowie's accompanying her, though, and he hoped she wouldn't avoid.talking to him

  once they were alone.

  Lowie knew from their past time together that Raaba was not one to stand

  around once a decision was made. With a few bounding leaps she was back at her

  skimmer, climbing inside as she tossed a glance behind her at Lowie. He trotted

  after her, and then settled himself in the Rising Star's copilot seat, a

  position that had begun to feel natural to him.

  With a blast of repulsorjets that sent plumes of dust into the shimmering

  air, the Rising Star lifted off, and Lowie's spirits lifted with it. Through the

  front viewport he could see Jaina toss him a lighthearted salute before Raaba

  banked the skimmer and took off in the opposite direction around the rim.

  Finally sharing a moment of privacy with her, Lowie felt the growing impact

  of the good news: Raaba was alive! She had not been torn to pieces by Wild

  animals in the lower levels of Kashyyyk's jungle, or swallowed whole by a deadly

  syren plant.

  But where had she been for so long? And why had she not tried to contact

  her friends or family to reassure them of her safety?

  Lowie's sister Siren had been as distraught as he himself had been.

  He remembered their terrible months of shared grief.

  Lowbacca stared through the skimmers front viewport for a few minutes,

  dutifully searching for clues that might lead them to Boman Thul... and hoping

  that Raaba would broach these difficult subjects herself.

  She did not. In fact, she said nothing to him.

  At first he grew irritated that Raaba did not start a conversation. She had

  been the one who disappeared, leaving all of them to mourn. Then, knowing the

  pain and discomfort her words would necessarily bring, and wondering what excuse

  she could possibly give, he began to dread what she might say.

  Finally, Lowie could no longer remain silent. Clearing his throat with a

  growl, he began his question in a voice filled with tension. At the same moment,

  Raaba started to talk. The two Wookiees' words tumbled over each other, merging

  unintelligibly in the confines of the small cockpit. As each realized the other

  was speaking, they stopped, waited, began again at the same time, then burst

  into chuffing laughter at the absurdity of the situation.

  With that tension released, Lowie was finally able to ask Raaba what had

  happened on the night of her disappearance.

  Raaba replied in halting tones at first, averting her eyes. Her yearning to

  do something important and unusual with her life had been great, so great that

  she had been willing to risk her life to assure it.

  Lowie had already known that much.

  One night, without telling anyone, Raaba had brashly decided to attempt her

  rite of passage alone, asking for no help from Lowie or Sirra. But she had no

  sooner set out from the Wookiee tree city, had barely descended into the

  reasonably safe upper midlevels of the thick Kashyyyk forest, when a vicious

  katarn had attacked her.

  Immediately, her hopes for completing the mission by herself were ended.

  Though she managed to drive the katarn away, the beast left its mark on her,

  tearing a pair of deep gouges along her ribs with its fangs.

  Raaba knew full well that the scent of blood would bring other nocturnal

  predator running, ready for an easy meal. To stay in the forest now would be

  foolish, she realized, and to descend farther would mean certain death. But to

  go back would mean impossible shame and embarassment.

  Her only hope for survival lay above, in the treetops, in the safe, cozy

  Wookiee homes where she had lived all her life. Yet even as she hauled herself

  up branch after branch through sheer determination, Raaba found little hope in

  the prospect of simply surviving, going back to what had been her routine. Her

  brave attempt had been an utter failure--even cocky children climbed deeper than

  she had gone. She had no heart to go back to her friends and family and admit

  that she had begun her rite of passage only to retreat in cowardice at the first

  sign of danger.

  If was better for them to think her dead.

  And her death would free her to pursue other dreams....

  Raaba and Lowie finished their search around the crater's rim, and the

  dark-furred Wookiee woman took the Rising Star out into the center of the

  crater, landing it atop another tall building on the pretext of getting the best

  overall view of the city in the deep rock-walled bowl.

  When the two Wookiees climbed out of the croft, Lowie saw that Raaba had

  brought him to the highest point inside the crater.

  From the top of the creaking building rose a towering structure made of

  open metal latticework--a lookout tower or a corroded communications relay,

  Lowie guessed. Its peak rose more than a hundred meters above the top of the

  building, level with the distant rim of the crater. Wind whistled through the

  rusted girders.

  Lowie's heart raced at the sheer height of the structure. Without

  hesitation, Raaba sprang onto the latticework and began to climb.

  Needing no encouragement, Lowie followed suit.

  "Master Lowbacca, do be careful," Em Teedee scolded. "Do I need to remind

  you that you are injured? You shouldn't be exerting yourself in such a fashion."

  Exhilarated at being with Raaba, though, Lowie ignored the pain in his

  side, careful not to tear loose the graft bandage. Soon he drew even with Raaba

  as they climbed higher and higher, where their Wookiee instincts told them they

  would be safe and protected.

  After a few minutes he prompted Raaba to continue her story where she had

  left off.

  The feigned death had been a liberating experience for Raaba.

  Once she had decided that her family would be better off thinking her dead

  than a failure, a giddy feeling had come 'over her. If she was truly "dead," she

  had nothing left to lose. She could start over, become a new person.

  She had pressed her supply pack against her stomach to stanch the flow of

  blood from the injuries the katarn had inflicted.

  Then, knowing she would travel more easily without it, she left her pack

  behind as a decoy, in hopes that the b
loodstained pack would draw away some of

  the voracious predators already on her trail. She concentrated only on climbing,

  climbing, increasing the distance between herself and danger. At the same time,

  she distanced herself mentally from her home, her friends, everything she had

  known.

  Now, as they climbed the open framework of the rickety tower, Raaba looked

  over to check the graft bandage covering Lowie's injury from the combat

  arachnids.

  Perhaps, Lowie thought, it reminded her of the wound that--as far as her

  loved ones knew--had cost her her life....

  Finally, during that long nighttime ordeal, weak from loss of blood, Raaba

  had made her way to the hangar platforms on the outskirts of the Wookiee tree

  city and stowed away on a Talz freighter.

  The Talz first mate who found her, tended her wounds, and listened to her

  story, told Raaba that he knew of someone who could help her in her plight. He

  had been as good as his word.

  The furry white pilot and first mate had taken her directly to Nolaa

  Tarkona and invited her to join their burgeoning new political movement, the

  Diversity Alliance.

  Lowie absorbed the name of Nolaa Tarkona with great interest. It seemed

 

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