Author: Angel
E-mail: valarltd@hotmail.com
URL: http://www.oocities.org/lady_aethelynde
Rating: R, nudity and lots of foreplay
Warning: Slash. This means homosexual attraction and activity.
If two guys
in love squicks you, leave now. You have been warned.
Summary: The boys take a vacation
Archive: If you want it, just tell me where you're putting it.
Type: humor/romance Slash! There, I've said it three times and
what I tell
you three times is true.
Pairing: Luke/Han
Disclaimer: The boys belong to George, but if he kept them busy, they
wouldn't be making out in the stacks where any librarian doing her
shelving
could stumble on them.
Acknowledgments: To the Luke_and_Han list for insisting on nothing less
than
my very best, and putting up with me until I found it. To Irene,
my beta,
who stood over me with a bantha prod in one hand and chocolate in the
other,
and zapped and rewarded by turns as I needed it. To my
husband, Richard, who sang "Pride of the Angry Sea" and "Red is the
Rose" on
demand.
Notes: "Gather Ye Pipers" is property of Mikal the Ram (he said I could
use
it). "Pride of the Angry Sea" belongs to Dennis Drew (ditto,
he even sent
me the words). Red is the Rose is public domain and sung to the
same tune
as Loch Lomond.
Feedback: I crave it. It's my favorite high.
***
Postcards from Corellia
2000, Angelia Sparrow
***
The light footfall behind him was obviously intended to be sneaky, so
Luke
Skywalker withdrew his extended senses and let himself be surprised.
Large
hands clamped over his eyes.
"Gotcha!"
"On the contrary, I have you." The tendrils of Force solidified in an
iron
grip and pulled Han's hands above his head. "And right where
I want you."
Luke kissed his bondmate and then, seized by some imp of the perverse,
ran
light fingers over the spacer's ribs.
"Don't, kid." Han twisted in the immutable bonds, as Luke indulged his whim.
"Serves you right for sneaking up on me while I'm meditating, alone
and
unarmed."
"I give already," Han gasped, cursing the day he'd let Luke find
out he was
ticklish.
"Spoilsport. I was just getting warmed up." Luke kissed him again,
releasing his arms which immediately went around him.
"Mmm, keep the warming coming," Han mumbled against his hair.
Luke pulled
back first.
"You didn't come all the way over here just to pounce on me."
"Never know. You're fun to pounce."
"Spill!"
"Or what?"
"Or else?"
"Don't sound to confident on that else, kid." Han kissed him breathless,
hands sliding lower to cup his firm bottom, one leg sliding in between
Luke's, rubbing against the fullness at the top. "You're right,
though. I
came down to kidnap you. We're going away."
"Away? Where away?"
"Corellia. I'm taking you home to meet the folks."
Luke raised an eyebrow. "About time. Finally going domestic
on me,
pirate?"
"Never. I just got word from my youngest sister. Corellia
is having a
planet-wide festival to celebrate five years of freedom. We're
going."
"Mmmm, and what does that entail?" Luke asked, disentangling himself,
and
starting for the door. "Tall ships, too much booze, and wild
orgies?"
"I'm not sure whether to laugh or grumble about mind readers."
"When were you planning to leave?"
"Now. Everything's packed and the Falcon's ready. It'll
be fun to get away
by ourselves. I'll take you sailing. You'll love it.
Elka has a lovely
little boat, totally wind powered."
"I don't recall being consulted about all this. Maybe I have plans."
"It's called a surprise. And after Stenov, Vuiam, and that trip
to Tatooine
in the middle of sandstorm season, you said you'd come quietly when
I
asked."
"You didn't ask. You ordered. Power going to your head...General?"
"Kid..." The jutting chin told Luke he was treading on thin ice
with that
last crack. With herculean effort, Han won the battle with his
temper.
"Would you like to go to Corellia with me for a celebration, Master
Jedi
Skywalker?" He tried to keep it to the same teasing level Luke
had, but
wasn't sure he succeeded. "My family wants to meet you."
"Of course. It might be fun to go somewhere not engulfed in crises,
wars or
insurrections. Let me change."
"Need help?"
"I can manage." The smile told Han his offer was not rejected, just
deferred
to a more appropriate time and place. Minutes later, Luke emerged
in his
familiar blacks. "Told you I could manage."
"Yeah, yeah, you always manage, don't you? Manage this." The kiss
was
fierce, possessive and intense, pressing the smaller man against the
wall.
Luke opened eagerly, and felt the old, familiar excitement begin to
build.
Feeling like his knees and stomach were melting, he kissed back, trying
to
make his mate feel all the passion he did.
Even so, Luke broke the kiss first. He ducked down, breathing
hard, his
fair face flushed. "We'll be the talk of the Academy if anybody
walks in.
Master Skywalker and his bondmate acting like a pair of teenagers."
"You're the boss, do you care?"
"Not really. But you said the Falcon was waiting. And there's
a party in
our honor waiting to get started." Luke gave a wicked grin that
only Han
ever saw. "Besides, waiting until we hit hyperspace will only
make it
sweeter." He rubbed his whole body against his lover, pressing
their hips
together tightly.
"Tease."
"You started it. Let me leave a message for Leia and Master Ral
and we'll
go." They walked out of the academy and caught a hover-car to
the landing
pads.
"Just us?" Luke asked. "Where's Chewie?"
"Went home for a while. Malla's getting grumpy with an absentee
mate."
They ran the preflight quickly, both wanting to get back to unfinished
business. Coordinates, jump, and it all went as smoothly as it
had a
thousand times before.
****
The celebration rioted through the streets of HyperMatrixCity, as it
had for
eight days and nights. But a non-Corellian could only stand so
much, and
less than two days after their arrival, Luke announced he had had a
splendid
time, but enough was enough. Although they had spent a good deal
of that
time at their hotel contacting family, he still felt as if he'd been
dragged
through half the streets of the city.
Now, he basked under the hot water, washing away dirt, sweat and second-hand
lip-paint from a dozen strangers. He'd been raised very strictly,
and the
effusive abandon with which the locals greeted everyone, friend or
stranger,
came as a surprise. He'd been hugged and kissed by more
people in the last couple days than in his previous thirty years.
His slightly fuddled brain watched as a stream of blue ran off his cheek
and
over his chest. He smiled. A tipsy young man, wearing appalling
blue
lip-paint, had kissed him before taking a good look and saying "Y'know,
you
look jus' like Luke Skywalker." He'd laughed and said,
"No, no,
Skywalker's much blonder." The guy had wandered off and kissed the
pretty
green haired girl who crossed his path.
Sleepy, Luke wandered out of the 'fresher, towel held loosely at his
hips.
The sight in the living area of the tiny suite made him clutch the
towel,
and press himself against the wall of the hallway. surreptitiously,
he
managed to get his bondmate's attention. Han joined him in the
hall.
"Han, there are a dozen women in there!" he whispered urgently.
"Yeah," Smug and just a little too careful from the brandy, Han
kissed him.
"Finally found them all. You sure you wanna go out like
that?" He licked
away a drop of water from his lover's collar-bone. "Not that
they'll mind."
"Han, _why_ are there a dozen women in our living area? And why
is their
lip-paint all over your face?"
"Han?" called one of them, "Are you coming back?"
"In a minute. There's not a dozen. There're fourteen.
Took a while to get
them all here."
The glaring blue eyes told him to talk fast.
"Little brother, I swear! You've forgotten every manner I tried
to teach
you." The stern-looking older woman strode into the hall and
looked Luke
over curiously. "He's pretty. Are you going to bring him
out to meet us
any time soon? Seska has to leave by 2."
"Elka, he's not dressed. Luke, my big sister, Elka. We'll
be going out to
her place tomorrow."
Luke held out a hand, only to have Elka hug him hard. "Uh, let
me dress,
I'll be right out," he managed before scooting to the bedroom and tossing
on
clean sleep pants and a robe. He calmed himself before walking
into the
living area.
All of the women smiled the same lopsided smile at him. Han introduced
five
sisters and nine nieces. Luke lost track of names after the sisters.
They
were all tall, some dark like Han, and some fair like Elka. The
women
blended into a strong-hugging, smiling blur of faces and kisses, welcoming
him to the family and cooing over finally meeting him.
***
The shafts of morning sun were filtered into tiny needles by the sheer
curtains. They prickled through the air and landed sharp and
hard on the
eyes of the sleeping man. He stirred, and moaned, opening his
eyes and
closing them again quickly. He lay still for a time and got his
bearings.
*The only thing worse than waking up with a hang-over,* Luke Skywalker
decided with the few brain cells not actively in revolt and razing
his
cortex, *is waking up with a hang-over and having to face a smug Corellian
who never gets them, and whose idea this whole vacation was.*
He finally
opened his eyes enough to see Elka's guestroom.
Or worse, facing half a dozen Corellians, all of whom would be teasing
him
about not holding his brandy. He lay looking at the white
ceiling, and
wondering if he could die in peace.
*Brilliant, Skywalker. Way to impress the family. And we
were doing so
well up until now.*
The low roar of breakers from the beach below the cliff where the house
perched hammered in his head like a bantha stampede, and he buried
his head
under the pillow. The sweet flower and herb scent of the sheets
nauseated
him.
He remembered sitting alone on the deck after supper, staring at the
ocean.
It still amazed him, even after all the worlds he'd seen, to see so
much
water in one place. Han had joined him, wrapping him in strong
arms, and
they had sat silently, watching the tide come in, as they had for the
past
four nights. Han never said anything, but Luke suspected the
ocean was one
of the things he missed living on Coruscant. The sun went down
and they
watched two of the moons rise.
Astri, Elka and Stom's oldest daughter, had brought out a small platter
of
sweets, and poured several glasses of brandy. The rest of the adults
joined
them when the children were abed. Luke had sipped the brandy,
and found out
it was the really good stuff. The conversation had been
wonderful; sharp wit obviously ran in the family. Those who married
in had
acquired it in self-defense, he noticed as well. He had lost
track of how
late they'd stayed up, and how much he'd had to drink.
The faint noises coming down the hall told him he wouldn't be allowed
to die
peacefully. The door opened almost silently, but to Luke it sounded
like a
sandcrawler with a bad engine. Han's bare feet made little sound
on the
thick carpet, but he would have sworn his mate was wearing metal-soled
shoes
on deck-plates.
"Kid?" came the soft whisper. "I brought kaf, and juice. Sit up."
He sat up, carefully trying to keep his head from going nova, and almost
succeeded. Yoda's voice complained "Do. Or do not.
There is no try." He
flinched as Han sat down beside him, then leaned back into the warm,
familiar chest, still bare above the light sleep pants. Once
vertical and
supported, he swung his legs off the bed, and looked for his clothes.
They
were all folded and clean, on a chair near the bed.
"After all these years, you should know better," Han scolded lightly
handing him the kaf. It was hot but not scorching. The
queasiness returned
with a vengeance. "You know three's as many as you can stand."
"Don't fuss," Luke rasped in a whisper, the effort making his
head pound
worse. He sipped the kaf. It helped.
"Elka says to drink this once you finish the kaf. Old family cure."
"Was it obvious?" Luke sipped the foul concoction and found it helped
more
than the kaf.
"Kid, not an off-worlder alive can drink eight of Stom's house label
and
come out without a hangover. Even I can't do it anymore."
"You let me drink eight?"
"No, you drank four. If you drank eight, you'd be dead."
"Degenerate. You're still corrupting me."
"If you can insult me, you're feeling better. Not gonna toss,
are you?" He
reached apprehensively under the edge of the bed.
"No." The soft, weak answer didn't sound too sure.
"Oh good." Straightening up, he tipped Luke's face back to him and kissed
him very gently. "Better?"
"Best help I've had. More?"
"Elka's waiting breakfast, and Stom gets really grouchy if his cakes
are
cold. Let's eat and you'll be all right."
They went down into the spacious kitchen. Elka took the cakes
and meat from
the oven, and Astri passed around the toasted buns and jam. Stom
fed the
smallest baby, while the older children watched animation. Hend
and his
wives helped around the edges. There was no haste,
just a smooth flowing morning routine.
"Hey, late sleeper. Thought you farmboys got up with the sterkls,"
teased
Stom. "Yosh, put the terminal away. The distillery will
be there after
breakfast." The order was so casually given, Stom not missing
a stroke in
buttering the cakes, that Han realized this, too, was a morning ritual.
"Stom..." Han's warning rumble drew Elka in between her husband and brother.
"He's not a Corellian, Stom. Luke, eat. And next time, let
that last glass
sit on the table."
Astri turned off the holo, amid groans, while Lissa and Marni chivvied
the
kids to the table. The high-pitched chatter of the children to
their
mothers and father made Luke's head throb. The toast was the
only thing
Luke could contemplate without nausea. Once it was inside him,
he felt well
enough to eat a couple of cakes and some sausage.
"Han, do you remember last time you were on-planet?" Elka began.
Stom
snorted, trying to swallow before he could laugh. She turned
to Luke. "He
was on leave from The Academy, and Stom broke out the house-label.
The boys
don't get the good stuff there, and after three, Han was
standing on his head, one eye shut and outscoring Stom at ring-toss."
Laughing, Luke discovered, brought the headache back with a vengeance.
He
drank more juice.
"Elka, could we borrow the Waveskimmer this afternoon if Luke's up for it?"
"Of course. I'll even pack a cold supper so you don't have to
hurry home.
Just be in before dark. She doesn't have lights."
Yosh excused himself to go to work. Stom stretched, fed the baby
the last
bite of his cake and followed. The younger women set to washing
faces and
picking up the dishes. The older children followed Hend from
the table,
calling the family cadence song as they marched to the schoolroom for
their
satellite downloads, eliciting a wince from Luke.
"Want the last kaf, Uncle?" Astri asked Han. He held up his mug
and she
emptied the pot into it, before dropping a toddler in each of their
laps.
"Keep them busy or they unload the sterilizer faster than I can load
it."
"Elka, how do you manage? Three grown kids, Hend's mates and more little
ones than I can count." Han bounced the knee the little one was on.
Luke
pulled his head out of range, wincing, as his charge tried to gum his
chin.
"Is that one supposed to--"
"The girls are a big help, and everyone does their part," Elka
stated as
Lissa scooped up the crawler who had pulled up on the sterilizer and
was
reaching for the dishes. Marni left to tend to other chores.
Han attempted to maneuver his kaf mug between the table and his mouth.
The
child seemed intent on intercepting it for a taste. "I'm not
ready to run a
blockade this early," he grumbled. "Luke, this kid a Jedi?
He's got the
reflexes of a TIE pilot."
Luke relaxed and looked at the child's aura. "No, he's not even sensitive."
"Here. I'll take _her_. You wouldn't like that, sweetie,"
she told the
baby who made one last-ditch reach for the mug. Elka put the
four babies in
the next room and activated the safety gate. "Now get dressed.
I made one
exception in the house rules for you two today, I won't bend two.
Tomorrow,
you're dressed before breakfast. You know that." Elka could
be pure steel
when she wanted. It was a necessity in a household her size.
"We're goin' sis." Han pulled Luke out of the chair. Elka opened
her mouth
and he cut her off. "I know. I know. Make the bed
and bring the kaf mug
back to the kitchen."
In their room, Luke looked at him. "She always this bossy?"
"Elka practically raised me. She thinks she owns me. She's
just grouchy
you're not going to give me a dozen kids. She likes you, though.
Thinks
you're good for me." They put the finishing
touches on the bed.
Luke looked at it, with a wicked smile. "Wanna mess it up?"
Han kissed him thoroughly. "You're definitely well. You
want to go
sailing? Hey, catch your kaf cup. If it's not there before
Astri turns on
the sonic sterilizer, you have to wash it yourself in the
sink."
"You OK, kid? You look a little green." Some random impulse made Han
add,
"Goes great with the white knuckles."
"Never, ever again," moaned Luke. "This has to be the worst
day of my
life. Why do I let you talk me into these things?" His
fair hair was limp
and dark from the salt spray, and he ducked to avoid the boom as Han
tacked
the sailboat around and headed to a quiet inlet.
"Cause misery loves company. Let go of the gunwales, and try to
enjoy the
ride. Sailing's as much a process as flying." He dropped
anchor, and let
the boat ride the waves.
"Yes, but explosions are so much cleaner a way to die than seasickness
and
drowning."
"It's not even rough today. Just nice, restful waves."
"I'm a desert boy. I'm still not used to bodies of water any bigger
than
the harvest holding tank. These oceans are too much for me."
"My ancestors sailed across this ocean to the Northern Continent in
boats
not much bigger than this one, and a lot worse equipped."
"We all know Corellians are crazy," Luke grumbled, finally having
decided
he wasn't going to lose his lunch over the side. "And the Solos
are the
worst of the bunch."
Han laughed. "You okay to tie up and unload her, or you want to
recover
some more?" He was suddenly serious, and a little worried.
His afternoon
plans seemed to be going sour.
"I'm ready to get back on dry land."
Han weighed anchor and sailed in closer to the shore line. When
he judged
the water was shallow enough, he leapt over the side and waded ashore
with
the mooring rope. He tied it to a tree at the edge of the water
and waded
back to the boat.
"Hand me the gear." He'd wrapped it in a waterproof bundle and
now balanced
it on his head as he waded ashore. "Are you coming, or are you
going to sit
out there and roll and pitch until you're seasick again?"
"I'm coming." Luke swung his legs over the side. "Unless you want
to carry
me."
"We're gonna have to do something about that sense of humor. It's
only
waist deep."
Luke slid over the side, relieved when his feet touched the bottom.
"Chest
deep you mean." He floundered ashore, and sat down on the black
sand well
above the tide-line. "Land at last. You don't have dry
clothes in that
bundle do you?"
"Nope, just a picnic supper."
"Oh stars, don't talk about food." Luke still looked green.
Han dropped to the sand beside him. "I can't believe you.
Never spacesick
a day in your life, but I take you out on my sister's boat and you're
vaporing like Threepio."
Luke smiled wanly. "At least I'm not singing."
"I wasn't singing!"
"Yes, you were. You, and your sister, and your niece and both
nephews.
Last night, when you thought I was asleep, the whole family was singing
on
the back deck. That piercing pipe someone was playing woke me
up. And
today, you were whistling the same song through your teeth when you
thought
I was too sick to listen. I only caught part of it. What's
it about?"
"If you're sick with the waves like this, you may not want to know.
It's
about a family of brothers. Four of them become sailors and die.
The
fifth, who sings the song, is having survivor guilt." He quoted,
not quite
singing, but not talking, more of a chant:
"I sit by my fireside lost and alone
Four empty places and one who stayed home.
I drink to my kin who walk the dark road
I drink to my kin who will drink here no more."
"Definitely Corellian."
"What's that supposed to mean?"
"Only that all your songs either include drinking or sex. Not
much
different than your lives."
"Yeah? And what are songs on Tatooine about?"
"We didn't sing." Luke looked thoughtful. "The guys in Anchorhead
liked
rhythm, so that was all they played. Machine noises to go with
repairing
machinery. Biggs was different. He liked folk music from
other systems.
He used to order cubes from off-planet, and we'd listen to them out
in the
garage. Uncle Owen would yell at us to turn down the unholy racket."
"Parents are the same all over. My folks sang, and they tried
to teach us
kids. My sisters did fine, but I lost my voice at 12."
"Where are your folks? I mean, we met your sisters, but--"
"Dead. Dad got caught in an Imperial roundup at the shipyards,
Mom caught a
weird alien virus. I skipped planet pretty soon after that.
This is first
time I've been back in years. Even when my oldest sister Marta
died, Elka
just got word to me." He lay back, hands behind his head, staring
up at the
sky through the leaves of the trees. Luke waited, but Han said
no more, and
his face held the tight, controlled expression that indicated he was
holding
strong feelings in check. After an uncomfortably long silence,
Luke reached
over and laid a light hand on his mate's elbow. They sat that
way for a
time, listening to the ocean and staring at the sky.
"Feeling better?" Han finally ventured, under control once more.
"Yeah. Good thing I like being wet."
"You don't have to stay in the wet clothes. Stom owns this island."
Taking the invitation for what it was, Luke stripped out of the wet
clothes,
and watched appreciatively as his mate did the same. He spread
the blanket
he'd found in the bundle out on the sand, and lay down on his stomach.
"Did Elka pack this, or did you? 'cause it's awful big to be thinking
'picnic.'"
"Told Astri to pack a big one, we might want to have a nap."
"And she bought it?"
"Of course not. She smiled and said 'Enjoy' as she hauled down
the
Imperator sized blanket from Stom and Elka's closet."
"I didn't want to know that." He was quiet for a minute as Han lay down
beside him. He slid closer, draping one arm over his mate's stomach
and
resting his chin on the broad, lightly haired chest. "Where's
Astri's
mate?"
"She never took one. All her kids are designer, from the reprolabs.
She
takes and discards lovers like some women change hair styles."
"What about Yosh? Where's his?"
"Yosh isn't interested in anything but the family business.
Boring, but
useful. He can tell you anything you want to know about
distilling and
marketing."
Luke digested the information, and returned to safer subjects.
"Imperator,
huh? Can we get one?"
"Wouldn't fit in our bedroom. We'd have to move. Thing's
as big as the
forward compartment."
"Can we borrow theirs?"
"If you don't do something with that mouth other than ask dumb questions--"
"Like this?" Luke kissed him, long and sweet and warm. The wet
silk of his
mouth was familiar territory, but Han explored anyway, enjoying the
known
quantity.
"More?"
"Always." Luke smiled and began to work the kisses lower. Tantalizingly
slow, and his hands were strong, cool, and gentle over every inch of
skin.
***
"Kid, roll over."
"Again?"
"No, not again, you insatiable mind-bender. Don't want you getting
sunburnt. Won't they laugh if you can't sit for a burned butt."
"Better?"
"Mm-hmm. Next time I remember the UV-block."
***
"Clothes are dry," was really unnecessary as the warm pants, slightly
stiff
from seawater, dropped on Han's head. "I'm hungry."
"So see what Marni packed us." Han struggled into his clothes,
trying to
shake the langour of an afternoon of love and napping on a beach.
"I looked. I can't identify anything. And the first rule
of the Jedi
Academy dining room is 'never eat what you can't identify.' Amazing
what
I've learned being a teacher."
Han looked in the basket. "Cold fried sterkl, pickled kenet, Spirl
and cerk
salad, cake, and chi."
"In basic?"
"In basic, good food. Try the sterkl."
The rich meat was fried to a golden crisp, and Luke nibbled around the
edges. "Hmmm, tastes like Ewok."
Han dropped his own piece laughing. "You insulting my nieces' cooking?"
"No, no." Luke finished the first piece and reached for a second.
The kenet
was some sort of vegetable. He tried it carefully. It was
crisp and
started sweet on the end of his tongue. Then the burn came, building
as it
slid over his tongue to explode in the back of his mouth. "Drink!"
he
gasped.
"That just intensifies the burn. Eat this." Han handed him some
of the flat
bread.
It seemed to peel the fire off his tongue. The kenet smoldered
sullenly in
his stomach. He took a drink of the chi. "Should have warned
me about
that."
"Sorry. Least I taught you the family trick for stopping it.
Astri's
infamous for that kenet. Elka says she developed it under a grant
from the
Imperial chemical weapons department."
The salad was a pasta with vegetable, and Han pronounced it safe for
off-worlder consumption. Luke ate some, and decided to stick
with the
sterkl.
"Did you say cake?"
"I warned Elka about your sweet tooth. She's had the girls baking
since we
left Coruscant." Han pulled out the carefully wrapped slabs.
"I could get used to this," Luke decided after the second bite.
"There are definite benefits to planet life, especially when the head
of the
house is the owner of the biggest distillery on Corellia. But
before you
get too comfortable with the idea, remember, it's a big house, and
a bigger
family. Family always comes with expectations." He glanced
at the shadows
and looked sideways at Luke. "We need to head back. Don't
want to be out
in the dark."
The smile he received in return invited delay. He decided to see
if that
smile tasted as good as it looked. It did. The shadows
were a little
longer when they packed up in companionable silence, and waded back
out to
the boat.
Luke was feeling well enough that Han began showing him the basics of
sailing. By the time they were within sight of the huge house
atop the
cliff, Luke was handling the tiller while Han furled the sail.
They tied up
on the huge covered dock and began the long climb to the top.
The stairs
were narrow, and dusk was falling. They took it slowly.
Elka and Stom met them at the door. "Onto the back deck with you
two." All
five adult children were sitting on the deck waiting for them.
Han and Luke
sat down on the swing, uncomfortable at being the focus of attention.
Stom stood up. "We discussed this while you were gone, and we're
all in
agreement. We've enjoyed this visit, and find your mate compatible
with the
family, Han. You are always welcome here, but we would like to
extend a
permanent invitation. We would like you to return home, and
live here. What are two more mouths at a table as long as ours?
We could
use a good man in the distillery, and a Jedi on retainer wouldn't hurt
either. And, as the last of your family names, I feel obligated
to point
out you show no tendencies toward honoring your fathers by continuing
them.
Marni and Lissa have both said they would be willing to carry for either
of
you two, and Astri volunteered for Luke. You don't have to decide
tonight.
But I want a decision before you leave."
Stom sat down. Luke was stunned by the offer, and Han was taken
aback even
though he had half-expected something like this. Elka had been
trying to
get him home for years.
"We're overwhelmed by the generosity, Stom. We'll let you know...tomorrow?"
Han glanced at Luke, who nodded. "Decisions like this need to
be slept on."
"Morning is wiser than evening," Luke added, quoting one of his aunt's
favorite proverbs.
"Very well. I will expect an answer at breakfast. Enough
seriousness.
Astri, start us. Yosh, put your readout aside. The distillery
will be
there in the morning."
Luke watched as Astri reached under the table and pulled out a flat
drum and
a tapered stick no longer than her hand. Hend dug out a metal
whistle, and
Lissa produced four bones that she held between her fingers and clacked
together.
"Pride of the Angry Sea," Astri announced, beginning a slow seven-count
drumbeat. Lissa took it up.
Hend pocketed the whistle and and started in a low bass voice:
"There's many a tale of the storm and the gale
Of sailors who no longer be.
And many a woman has wept late at night
for her lover who's lost to the sea."
Stom brought out the house label, and poured everyone one drink.
Luke
sipped half of his, being much more careful this time. Han even
took his
easy, seeming to prefer listening to his family. Luke moved in
a little
closer, and Han put an arm around him as they listened to the old,
old songs
of a time before star travel, when the sea was the biggest challenge.
Without warning, Astri stood up. "Here." She offered Han the drum.
He
shook his head. She insisted. He disentangled himself from
his mate and
took it. He moved a little farther away to give himself room
to play.
"Told you I couldn't sing. All right, Gather the Pipers, 'cause
Luke was
asking about it today." The whistle was sad and plaintive, and
the voices
raised in the old lament of the man for his sea-faring brothers.
Luke sat and watched as Han stood, and called for the next tune.
He began
to pace in time with the drum, focusing on the rhythm. He led
the family
through another few songs and finally said, "Marni, there's one I really
want to hear. Sing it for Luke. Red is the rose."
He set the four count. Marni sang in a heart-breakingly clear
alto, and
Hend's whistle rose as a piercing descant.
"Red is the Rose, by yonder garden grows,
and fair is the lina in the valley,
Clear is the water that flows to the ocean,
but my love is fairer than any.
Twas down in the dell and greenwood that we strayed
And the moons and the stars they were shining.
The moons shone their rays on his locks of golden hair
and he swore he'd be my love forever.
Tis not for the parting that my sister pains
Tis not for the grief of my mother
'Sall for the loss of my bonny, bonny lad
that my heart is breaking forever."
The last note lingered, echoing off the water, and Han looked up from
the
drum and saw that Luke was looking back. The three moons cast
shifting
shadows on his face, but could not hide his happiness. Luke was
frankly
staring, knowing the song was meant just for him, wishing Han had had
enough
confidence in his voice to deliver the message personally.
Han pushed the drum at Hend. "Wrist's giving out. Your turn."
He strolled
to the swing with feigned nonchalance and wrapped his mate in his arms.
The drum made the rounds of the family, and Lissa offered it to Luke.
"No, no. I can't play it." He stifled a yawn.
"You'll learn, Uncle," she smiled.
"But not tonight." He smiled and rose. "I'm going to bed before
I fall
asleep here. Excuse me, please. Good night."
Han made his good nights, and followed. The bed was turned down,
and Luke
sat quietly taking off his clothes.
Han tipped his face up. "I love you."
Luke smiled, but it was a sad smile. "All those sad songs.
Do any of them
have happy endings?"
"Not many of them. Life doesn't have a happy ending. But
we take what
happy moments we can." Han kissed him slowly.
"I love you too. Do we want to stay?" There it was, out in the open.
"I think we need to talk about it. Elka has been tempting us,
wooing us.
Life here is looking very, very good isn't it?"
"Han, have you ever been offered everything you ever wanted all at once?"
"No. But you were tonight, weren't you?" Han sat down beside him.
"For an orphan, the biggest dream is having a family, a real family.
My
aunt and uncle loved me, but they weren't my parents. They weren't
even
really related to me. Then, losing them and Ben, and then..."
Luke lay back
on the bed and stared at the ceiling. The unspoken words "my
father" hung
between them.
"Hey, if you don't want to talk about it--"
"It's been almost ten years. Why does it still hurt?"
"It never stops hurting. Not after five years, not after ten,
not after
twenty-three. It just doesn't hurt as much, unless you poke at
it."
"Is that why you left?"
"Part of it. My family can be really bad about poking. After
Mom died, I
was wild, and had a couple scrapes with the law. I was in disgrace
with
Elka, who said I was a bad influence on Astri and Hend. She sent
me to live
with Seska and her bondmates. That was a disaster. Seska's
lady was
interested and both men were jealous. If the tension had been
just a little
higher, that whole house could have achieved a high-arc trajectory.
Longest
year of my life. The Academy
was the best answer to that whole mess, and I went as soon as I was
old
enough. I hear things calmed down for them after I left.
Their bond was
just too new to handle a wild little brother dumped in it."
"And now they want you back?"
"I guess they figure you'll keep me out of trouble." The wry half-grin
was
back. "If they only knew how much you've gotten me into."
"There's a lot I don't know about your family but they've been so nice,
accepting. They've tried to make me feel like I'm not only welcome,
but a
member of the family. For some reason, hearing Lissa call me
'uncle'
tonight brought it all clear how much more we could have living here."
"What we're not seeing is how much we'd give up. You couldn't
run your
Academy from here. And there is no privacy in this house, Luke.
None.
Marni cornered me today and asked if we'd watch the little ones while
she
spent time with Hend, so she wouldn't hear about it from Elka.
I love my
sister, but she has to run everything. Always has."
"Do you want to stay?" Luke sat up and looked intently at his bondmate.
"Do you?" Han asked. Then he shook his head at the ridiculous
circle they
were going to get caught in with that line of questioning. It
was the
oldest comedy routine in the galaxy. "This has to be a joint
decision," he
warned. "I won't drag you off-planet if you really want to stay.
Five
years ago, I said forever, and I will stay with you, wherever you want
to
be." He half-laughed, half-snorted. "After all, you've already
dragged me
over half the known galaxy. What's one
planet more?" The unspoken fear of the expectations that lurked in
every
corner, under every piece of furniture and behind each pair of eyes
was
broadcast loud and clear.
Luke almost flinched away from the intensity of the thought. "I
said
forever, too. Elka and Stom made an attractive offer, but I think
you know
more than I do about what's under the surface of it."
Han nodded. "They're already making plans for our wing of the
house, you
know. As well as planning how to use you to corner negotiations
and writing
the job descriptions on a cushy sinecure for me at the distillery.
Stom
even told us we would be expected to add to the flock of kids.
I like what
we have now: you, me, and only the obligations we choose to take, rather
than ones that are thrust upon us."
"You're right."
"Of course I am."
Luke tried to kiss the smug look off his face, and only succeeded in
spreading it to his own. "I already have a family," he said,
blue eyes
earnest. "You. And home is where you are." He returned
to the kiss.
Han brought them up for air. "Settled then?" Luke's nod
confirmed it. "I
guess I need to teach you enough of the old language to tell Stom we're
leaving when he asks at breakfast."
"Can it wait?" Luke kissed him again, hands moving in and under his
shirt
and working at the closure of his pants.
"I think it can."
***
The next morning at breakfast, Han and Luke were dressed and on time.
Elka
smiled warmly at them. Stom sat at the head of the table.
"Well?"
"Stom, my brother, I thank you for your generosity," Han said
in the most
formal dialect of Old Corellian he could manage, "but at this time,
my
bondmate and I must decline."
"Very well. But what is more important than family?"
"Stom, my brother," Luke began, the Old Corellian coming slowly.
"You have
your wife, and your sons and your daughters. You have your sisters
and
brothers. You have your grandchildren. If we come here,
to all of these
people, we will leave my sister all alone. We are
all the family she has." He paused for breath, and to recall the next
bit.
Stom nodded and clasped his hands around his wrists in the old gesture
of
assent before Luke could finish. "You are welcome here as often
and as long
as you want to stay. And next time, bring your sister.
I have nephews who
need a mate. She could choose one or more of them.
When do you leave?"
"Tomorrow," Luke answered, his tongue still numb from the liquid
vowels of
the language. He glanced at Han, as if to protest not telling
the whole
truth. Han lifted a pacifying hand, just a little, telling him
not to worry
about it. The image of Leia picking out three of Han's nephews
made him
smile and shake his head. He suspected it might crop up at odd
moments, and
decided to tell her when he got back.
"Then today you must see the distillery."
The tour was long, taking all morning. They saw where the grain
for whiskey
was roasted, over open fires as it had been for millennia, and where
the
fruits for the brandies were crushed in century-old lika wood presses.
By
the time they hit the fractional distillation coils, Luke was bored
out of
his mind, but kept the same placid calm he always wore to his sister's
duller receptions. Stom had appointed Yosh to give the tour,
and his
droning nasal voice was stultifying.
At lunch, Stom caught up with them, and they took the tunnel cars back
to
the house at the other end of the distillery compound. A cold
lunch awaited
them, and the children chattered about their satellite studies.
Little Betta, the youngest of the school children, climbed boldly into
the
chair next to Luke and proceeded to tell him everything she knew about
the
fish of Corellia's oceans through mouthfuls of her sandwich.
He listened
patiently, understanding about half of what she said, and smiled at
her when
she excused herself.
The distillery executives excused themselves to return to work.
The
children had drifted off in ones and twos. Astri went with Hend
and Lissa
to supervise. Elka raised one elegant eyebrow almost to her tightly
pulled
bun and Han and Luke were on their feet helping Marni clear the table.
She
organized the sonic sterilizer but they did the legwork for all twenty-two
place settings.
When Marni left, Elka beckoned the men to sit with her. "Must
you really
go? You come home so seldom, baby."
Han rolled his eyes at the endearment, just as he had for the last
thirty-five years.
"We'll be back more often, I promise, Elka," Luke answered for
them. "Once
a year at least. If only so I can listen to you tease him before
the first
cup of kaf. Even I'm not brave enough to do that."
"Is it really your sister you stay on Coruscant for?" Stom was a simple
man
and would not question the obvious reasons, but his mate would.
"No, Stom didn't let me finish. I have an academy to run, and
Han is doing
intelligence work for the Republic, as well as star-ship design.
Our life
is there, together."
"I understand. I had hoped..."
"Hoped what?" Han asked.
"Hoped that you would come home and lead the family. Han, I was
fifty last
year. That's middle-aged, and it's time to start considering
my successor.
Seska, Ingi, Hele, and Wila all agree with me that it would be more
appropriate for the only son to head the household. We are
old-fashioned, I know. As it stands, I'm not sure Astri has the
spine to be
the matriarch."
"She'll be fine. You raised her a lot better than you did me.
Better
material to work with." He looked at Luke, "They're ganging up
on me, like
always. Sometimes I swore I had seven mothers. No wonder
I was so wild to
space. I stowed away on a barge when I was ten." The twinkle
in his eye
said it wasn't really as much a complaint as he made it sound.
Elka smiled the same cock-eyed smile and finished the story. "You
should
have seen him when the crew brought him home. Oh, he was mad!
The crew was
furious. He'd tweaked their systems up to 120% of the previous
output and
made them all look bad." Luke chuckled at the image of a meter tall
Han
scowling at his sister, flanked by two spacers with matching scowls
aimed at
him.
"Don't tell me you never ran away from home, kid."
Luke shook his head. "Where would I go? The Dune Sea or Beggars'
Canyon?
That trip to Mos Eisley was as close as I got."
Han sobered a little. "Well, I know where we have to go now."
"I know, too." Elka's smile was sad and knowing at the same time.
Han had
always been too restless. She was glad he finally had a touchpoint
in Luke.
"We'll see you off after breakfast."
"Love you, sis." He kissed her cheek lightly. Luke followed suit.
They
went to pack their few things.
***
The Falcon lifted into the clear blue morning. Luke watched as
the people
rapidly faded into indistinguishable specks on a promontory which melded
into a coast-line. The blue and white world dropped away.
"Good trip, huh, kid?"
"Wonderful."
"So why do you look like we've got eight TIEs on our tail?"
"It was harder to leave than I thought it would be. I've never
had that
much family, and it was like a dream come true to belong in it.
But, then
again, dreams don't measure up to my reality." He ran a slow
finger along
Han's jaw. "When we go back, I want to have Lissa teach me that
flat drum
all of you play." He stared at Corel Prime which was blending
into the rest
of the stars.
"Ready to jump." Han pulled the levers, and the stars streaked into
grey
nothingness. "I know. For a while, I wanted to stay and
be the patriarch
when Elka steps down. But we aren't cut out for it, either of
us. We'll
visit often."
"And I know exactly where I belong," Luke said as they walked
back into the
forward compartment
"Yeah, and where's that?"
He moved into his bondmate's arms. "Right here."