Written
in response to the story challenge: "We want Admiral Piett
and Mon
Mothma playing doctor in a treehouse on Endor."
They
pushed him through the door at spearpoint, the flint tips hard at his
back, forcing him to drop to his knees as he staggered into the hut.
He
heard them rattling down the ladder, a dozen voices speaking in a babbling,
primitive language. Tonal and alien. Still on his knees, he surveyed
the damage. One tunic sleeve was in tatters, and blood was running
down his arm from a dozen knife cuts. His side felt like one
raw wound.
A thrown spear had hit him in the chest as soon as he had managed to
heave himself out of the capsized escape pod. And the escape pod landing
. . . He groaned with the memory. A purple bruise covered half his
temple. He couldn't even remember what object he had failed to stow, but
it had struck him on touchdown. The fact that he could not remember was
nagging at him. Concussion. Memory loss.
He
became aware he was not alone. A woman - a human woman - was
watching him
from a bench built into the side of the hut. She was fortyish, he thought,
trying to be charitable in this unprecedented
situation. Very serious
looking, poised and reserved. She had short, dark reddish hair, a
contrast to her pale skin. He straightened up. "Your pardon,
madam. I did
not intend to intrude."
She
got up, then, and helped him to his feet, taking him to a pallet made
of straw. As his legs began to buckle, she took his weight with a hidden
strength, lowering him to a sitting position. He stared at her. What
was she doing on this moon, of all places? He took in her face again.
Possibly an anthropologist, studying the natives -- the ugly and unpredictable
Ewoks who had taken him captive. Almost certainly a lesbian,
an intellectual, cast out from polite Imperial society. Bitter and
scarred. However, when he thought about it, she did not seem bitter.She
had a warm humanity in her eyes that did not fit the stereotype he had
so quickly constructed.
"Take
off your tunic, Admiral," she instructed.
Piett
smiled. "I believe I will remain clothed, madam."
"Mothma,"
said the woman. She pronounced it 'Moss'ma'.
He
heard it as 'Mossuma'. It meant nothing to him. "Piett,"
he said."And
you know that I am an Admiral."
"I
can read insignia, Admiral Piett. And as for me, I am a doctor. You will
be quite safe with your tunic removed. Safer than if you leave it on.
You may have a pneumothorax - a sucking chest wound. I can treat it or
I can ignore it. Your choice."
"A
doctor? How?"
"Not
all Universities have such stringent criteria as Coruscant,"
she said
quietly, letting the man decide what she meant. Coruscant had not admitted
women into the medical programs for
fourteen years, now. MonMothma
had studied at Cartago, which admitted women for a simple reason.If
a Cartagian man touched a married woman, the woman was put to death for
adultery. Therefore, they had begun training female doctors.
Mon
Mothma considered her options. She was prime among the Rebel Alliance,
the respected figure. The leader, she thought with some guilt.If
an egalitarian organization could be said to have a leader. And yet she
was about to try to treat the Admiral of the Imperial Fleet. She had spent
the last four months planning to kill him and scatter his ships.In
the grass-walled, log-floored
treehut of the Ewoks, those plans seemed
long ago and far away. He was a man. Humani nihil a me alienumputo,
she thought. The immortal words of Terrence. No human is a stranger
to me. A doctor's credo, internalized into a command.
She
mentally reviewed how she had come to try to direct the battle fromthe
forest moon of Endor. A commander, down in the gravity well? Plainly stupid,
now she came to think of it. But she had been persuaded, she had set
up the command post, it had been over run, and she had been captured. And
now she lived among the little people that had initially helped her troops,
the
furry, life-loving Ewoks.
Piett
groaned. The wound in his ribs felt like a fire. He tried to lift off
his tunic for the doctor, but could not raise his left arm. Mothma stooped
to help, and stifled a gasp at the injury. A purple bruise spread
from his waist to his left collarbone. The angry red center suggested
an infection, but the primitive spearpoint had failed to penetrate
the chest cavity.
"You'll
live," Mon Mothma said, but Piett didn't hear her. He had dropped
into unconsciousness, slumping onto the grass bed. She quickly checked
his pulse and tried to check his pupillary response. No luck there;
his eyes had rolled back.
The
hut began to shake as an Ewok ascended the ladder. It was a female, a
baby on her back in a hide sling. She left a bowl of gray meat and shredded
vegetables at the door, and turned away. "Wait," Mothma
said, in
her pidgin, prisoner Ewokian. "What meat is this?"
"Pig,"
the girl said.
Mothma
shuddered. 'Pig' all over the galaxy meant meat from pink or brown
omnivores. "Two legs or four legs?"
"Four
legs." The girl turned to go again.
"Help
me, little angel of the treetops," Mothma said, quoting a
phrase she'd
heard often. "What do you have to cure this . . . " and
she realized
she had no word for
'wound'. The nearest phrase in her vocabulary
was 'I don't like'. Instead she put her hands on Piett's quiet
chest. The girl nodded, and went back down the ladder, cooing to her
child.
The
village shaman came into
the hut within half an hour. He carried a hollowed
dried fruit with a paste inside, and insisted on performing spells
before applying the compound. Mothma finally shooed him out as night
fell. She threw her cloak over Piett. He was moving now; asleep,not
unconscious. She sat by the door watching the stars. She fancied she still
saw the massive ships of the fleet glittering in the light of Endor,
the glowing gas giant that was the center of this little system.
Abruptly,
Piett woke and saw her framed in the doorway against the ghastly
light of Endor. "Who the hell are you?" he said,
bewildered."And
why am I in a log cabin, for the love of Khroy?'
She
did not turn around to reply. "I am Mothma, you have been
captured by
the Ewoks of Endor, and you have a concussion. Very badly."
He
groaned. That all seemed very familiar, and yet he remembered
nothing since
he had jettisoned the escape pod. Concussion, with short term memory
loss. It would kill him, in the end. The Emperor would seek someone
to court-martial for the debacle, and a disoriented, confused Admiral
would be the ideal choice.
"Are
you hungry?" She picked up a gourd containing a stew and came
over.He
sat up, suddenly ravenous. He hadn't eaten since he had left his ship.
How long was that? He didn't
know. Days or weeks. He began to eat with
his hands, not minding the sour meat and the bitter vegetables.
He
was surprised when that made her
laugh. "You might want to be
more cautious
with the food here," she said. "The Ewoks hunt any game,
and the
biggest game afoot is injured Imperial soldiers. The forest is crawling
with them." Rebels too, she thought, but did not let on.
He had
not guessed who she was, apparently thinking she was some sort of researcher
or field doctor.
He
stared at the food with sudden revulsion.
"That
is just meat," she said quickly. "I asked the chef."
"Why
are they feeding us? Are they fattening us up for a banquet?"
"No,
they read your insignia, Admiral. They would like to barter you for weapons.
You are not even a prisoner. You are technically a guest. Of course,
if you try to leave the village, you would cost them many blasters.
I don't think they will allow that." She had a sheaf of notes in
her hand, taking down details even as she spoke.
"How
long have you been studying them?"
"Not
long. Three weeks." She smiled. She was a prisoner just like
Piett, but
he had not made the connection between the Rebel stronghold and her presence.
She came over and lifted the cloth aside to look at his wounds again.
The bruising was diminishing, already yellow, and the infection was
gone. The cuts in his arm had almost disappeared.
"You
owe your health to them, Piett. The shaman brought a paste made from
vampire bats and - " she consulted her notes,
"mustard,
and it has taken
away all the swelling in a few hours. Must be some enzyme in the bats.
It has healed the bruise on your forehead, but take care. A paste cannot
heal the brain. You still have concussion."
He
sat up and looked for his tunic. It lay over a bench, tattered and slashed
beyond repair. To go native was unthinkable. Wearing Mothma's cloak
was not ideal, either. "Bats," he suddenly shouted. "You
are talking
about bats and my men are dying by the hundred thousand!"
"Neither
I, nor the bats, nor you, nor the Ewoks can stop that. Who brought
your men into battle?"
"The
damn Rebels," he said. "Squash the little insurgency, that
was my orders.
Who could have foretold that they would fling their women and children
at us like flak? Not one of my men felt honorable firing at a ship
that contained girls and children. We
held back. We were hammered. All
the Emperor desires is peace under his beneficent rule. One law to guide
them all. And now my men are dead and frozen in the vacuum of
space."
Mothma
looked down at her hands. Piett was clearly not a monster. He had been
misinformed. If she were to explain Tarkin's actions to him, surely
he would see the error of the Imperium? But she realized in her heart
that she would never reconcile their beliefs. There would be a war criminal
trial at the end of all this, and she would be required to explain
why she was better than Piett. Right now, as he sat on the bed of
straw, wringing his hands over the fate of his men, she could not think
of a reason to condemn him.
Later,
he slept. Endor set, leaving the
forest moon dark and quiet. The Ewoks
came home and extinguished their fires, superstition and commonsense
coming together. The dark night of the forest moon was filled with inhuman
noises. Mothma kept a vigil, perhaps unnecessary this high in the
tree tops, but important to her own peace of mind.
He
woke up again, his sleep interrupted by the flaring of bright red light
to the south, as it poured in the door. "That's no dawn,"
he said.
She
came to sit beside him. The bruises had gone, and the cuts were thin lines
of scar tissue. Something the Ewok shaman had done caused the wounds
to fade, as though they were nothing. "Something broke up in
the atmosphere
while you slept. Something big," she said.
"A
Star Destroyer," Piett said with a sorcerer's certainty. "All
those men
dead." He was silent for a while.
She
rose to look through the door. He got up with her and they peered into
the angry red false dawn of the crash. The jungle was untouched as far
as they could see. The tall
conifers of the Ewok nation stretched beyond
the horizon. The Ewoks themselves slept, quiet at night, regarding
nocturnal phenomena as supernatural. If they had seen the conflagration,
they were praying quietly at home. They had not come to the
communal fires.
She
thought of a Star Destroyer. Eleven miles long. "Are we going
to survive
the crash?" she asked him. A hundred asteroid tales crowded her mind
as she spoke.
No,
he thought. An impact like that will destroy all life on the whole moon.
But he heard himself say, "It
depends, Mothma." It depends
on the kinetic
energy. "A stalled Star Destroyer has no kinetic energy."
But it got
here within twenty four hours; it was powered. "A stalled StarDestroyer
reaches an atmosphere and the stern dips a little, but the ship
never plummets." Except under power. "The ship goes into a
flatspin
around the stern, and eventually it begins to corkscrew, a widespiral
about the spin. The atmosphere heats the underside, and when the lower
decks melt, the ship breaks up into a million pieces." Each one with
a screaming man aboard, he thought to himself. "The pieces
brake quickly
in the air and burn. The
impact on the planet is low."
She
grimaced, and found herself putting her arm around his waist for support.
"I'm not a fool, Piett. The
moon will die from the impact,
yes?"
"If
we did not smell it, we're not dead yet. We haven't heard it, so we will
not die within
the next two hours. But tomorrow will be the last visible
sunrise on this moon for ten or twenty years."
She
considered. "By the
time the star rises again, there will be
nothing but
moss and fungus on the whole moon. The Ewoks will not survive."
He
laughed, then.
How sad; the vicious little furry spear-carrying bastards
would fail to thrive. And yet one day, possibly a hundred thousand
years hence, a descendant would excavate the Star Destroyer's downed
reactor in its bottle. That would cause some grief. He found it funny,
though his new anthropologist friend was remaining serious, and solicitous.
"Why
are you laughing?"
"I'm
not an Ewok," he said, pulling her to his chest with all his strength.
"Who cares about this moon? The downed Star Destroyer will alert
all the search
crews, and I am sure we will be found." He
hugged her,
and she did not resist. "We may be dead within two hours or we
maybe
found by the pickup squadrons." He kissed her lips, hoping that
he had
been wrong about her sexuality. Suddenly it seemed important that he touched
the single human on the doomed moon. She responded, putting her hands
about his waist, tugging him towards the bed.
She
kissed him, too. His mouth was sweet and rewarding. He slid his tongue
into her mouth and she accepted it. She was writhing against him, hoping
for lovemaking. Piett gradually came to believe her, and pushed back.
Her control was lost, thrown off in an instant, and she became an animal,
hoping for completion. Piett gave it to her without reserve, pushing
up her garments with a single motion and then driving
inside,not
waiting for an assent, but pushing forward until she shouted as he reached
his depth. Then she called, "More!" He tried for more,
raising her
hips to push a leg over his shoulder.
Losing
himself inside her, Piett took up an animal rhythm, quick and thoughtless.
She began to gasp, to pant, to lose control as he pushed into
her. He bit her shoulder as she moaned, and could not say why, when she
thrust towards him. She spoke words that made no sense, encouraging his
movements. And then, abruptly, she froze as the power of her climax stole
all her thoughts. She tensed, and clenched
around him, in a jerking,
pulsing spasm that brought him over the edge. He lay on his elbows
as the power of his fulfillment overtook him. Each spurt unmanned him,
he thought he would die, until he let himself go into the little doctor
he had befriended. He was wrung out, hung to dry. It was five full
minutes before he realized he should pull out and move away, as a gentleman
does.
Mothma
purred; happy
for once. Many years had passed since a man hadtaken
her to these heights. She hugged Piett tight against her. The awful
false dawn shone into the hut. Mothma did not notice, her facetight
in Piett's passionate embrace.