My original plan for this month was to get started on the 30's story...but then, in the middle of the night about three weeks ago, I was thinking about "Princess Elena and the Trolls" and that I still had princesses rescuing princes on the brain. Well...does princesses rescuing merman smugglers count? This is kind of a blending of several ideas I had, including the Little Merman story and the medieval story.
I love stories that turn convention on its ear and has the girl rescue the boy, which is probably one of the reasons I love Star Wars so much. Princess Leia Organa is very good at coming to the aid of her men...including a certain prince of a smuggler who drives her crazy...
Saturday, August 6, 2016
Princess Leia and the Merman, Part 1
Princess
Leia and the Merman
Rating:
PG (violence; language)
Pairings:
Han/Leia
Disclaimer:
The franchise belongs to George Lucas and the Walt Disney Company. I
just got back into this fandom in January after more than a decade
away and decided I wanted to play, too.
Once
upon a time, a princess named Leia lived in a beautiful kingdom by
the sea named Naboo. She longed for a life of adventure as a sailor,
like her twin brother Luke had been. Luke had explored the ocean on
the vessel Twin Sunset...until the boat and its cargo and crew
were lost in a storm two years before. She loved her father, King
Anakin of Naboo, but she wished he'd stop treating her like a piece
of sea glass, and she missed Luke terribly. She knew in her heart
that he was alive. Father may have given up on him, but she hadn't.
She
loved the sea, knew every inch of a boat, just as well as her
brother. She could swim like a fish and swear like the officers on
her brother's boat. The sailors in her father's navy considered her
to be one of their own. She preferred being out on the ocean,
speaking out for her fellow sailors' rights, than being trapped in
some dusty court.
Leia
was Anakin's favorite, and in his eyes, she could do no wrong, but
even he thought it was time his daughter settled down. He said as
much to her as he lead her down the hall to Naberrie Castle's
ballroom.
“Leia,”
he began, “I know you claim you're not ready to get married, but
Baron Lando Calarissian is the head of the Bespin silver mining
colony. They say he's a very wealthy man. We need that alliance with
Bespin. Our army will protect their interests, and we could use that
silver. Ever since we lost the Twin Sunset three years ago,
our treasury has been...unstable.” He frowned. “And we all miss
your brother. He was my heir, and I loved him. I already lost your
mother. You're all I have left.”
Leia
wasn't paying him any mind. She almost seemed to be looking for
someone. “I'm sure the Baron is very nice, Father,” she said,
“but I already have someone I'm interested in.”
“You
do? Whom?”
“I
don't know his name.” She scanned the many familiar faces in the
crowd. “He's been at every ball we've held for the past six months.
I've danced with him many times. He's told me so many things even I
didn't know about the ocean, and fish, and sharks, and even
mermaids.”
Anakin
snorted. “Mermaids? That's just fairy stories.”
“That's
what I said, too.” She lifted her white tulle skirts that billowed
like foam around her sea-blue satin shoes. “He says they're real.
He's seen them. Of course,” she added, “I told him he was crazy,
and we ended up getting into an argument...but that was actually
almost fun. Most men here never argue with me. They just agree with
everything I say to get on your good side.”
Anakin
chuckled. “I'm surprised you let him get a word in edgewise. I know
how you can get when you're discussing your beliefs.”
Leia
took a drink the family's butler Cedric handed her. “Thank you.”
She stirred the cool chocolate drink with a spoon. “That's the
strange thing, Father. He talks about the sea and the animals and
traveling, but he hasn't said a word about himself. I don't know who
he is, or what he does. When I ask, he either changes the subject or
runs out the door.” She looked thoughtful. “And he won't go near
the ocean, for all his talk about it.” She sipped her chocolate. “I
won't let him run tonight! I'll find out what's going on.”
“Meanwhile,
your date for the evening has arrived.” Anakin looked up as Cedric
announced the Baron. “Come on. You'll like him. I've had long
conversations about boat races and the latest models of boats with
him, and he discusses fashion with the women of the court like he's a
designer.”
Baron
Calarissian was a tall man, with dark curly hair, a neatly trimmed
mustache, and soft coffee-colored skin. He wore a sky-blue uniform
trimmed with gold braiding, with navy trousers and the most dashing
cape. He swished over to them and took her hand, kissing it softly.
“Hello,
Your Majesty. This must be your daughter, Leia.” He smiled, showing
off blinding white teeth. “She's more beautiful than all of the
goddesses of the heavens.”
Leia
curtsied before him. “Thank you, Baron.”
Anakin
coughed. “Well, yes, I'm going to leave you two to get acquainted.
Besides, Leia, I see your godfather, Bail of Alderaan. Probably wants
me to sign some peace treaty.”
Lando
gave her that dazzling smile again. “Would you like to dance, Your
Highness?”
“Yes,
Baron. I'd enjoy that.”
The
Baron was a very good dancer, as light as a feather on his toes. “Is
something troubling you?” he asked after the third time Leia
tripped over her hem. “Your mind doesn't seem to be on the music.
Am I really such boring company?”
“It's
not you. It's just someone I met a few months ago. He's been coming
to our castle ever since, but I haven't seen him tonight.” He took
her hand, but she barely noticed. “Baron, do you believe in
mermaids?”
Lando
chuckled. “I've never seen one, but since I've heard they're
amazing beauties with voices like angels, I wouldn't complain if I
met one.”
“I
don't know if I'd want to. The stories say merpeople use their voices
to lure ships into rocks and drag humans down to the sea.”
The
baron grinned. “Then it would be a beautiful way to go.”
“Still...”
She sighed. “I wonder...”
That
was when she saw him descending the gilded staircase. Tonight, he
wore a fine black silk vest and cream-colored blouse. The buttons
were made from abalone, the flowing red-brown mane pulled back by a
circle of frosted sea glass. The tight navy trousers with blood-red
stripes amply showed off his long legs. A weatherproof oilskin bag
was slung on his hip. A heavy gold collar clung to his strong neck.
He had a chiseled jawline, with a distinct scar on his chin.
The
tall man tried to hide the wince when he strutted up to Leia and
Lando. “I told you I'd come back, Your Worship. I have for six
months. Wouldn't miss your old man's parties for anything.”
Lando
was giving the man a strange look. “Who might you be?”
He
gave him a half-grin. “Han Solo, sir.” He bowed before Leia.
“Glad to see you again, Your Worship. Is your old man still trying
to marry you off?”
Lando's
smile became tighter. “I was dancing with her first.”
“Then
give the next guy a turn.” Han took Leia's hand and walked her to
balcony that overlooked the garden.
The
moment they got outside, Leia yanked her hand out of his. “What are
you doing?”
“Taking
you out to spend time with a real man.” He sat down, still
smirking. “Who was he, anyway? Looked like a jellyfish to me.”
“Lando
is a good man.” Leia glared at him. “You have no right to talk.
You won't even tell me who you are and what you do.”
“I'm
Han Solo. Isn't that enough?”
She
turned away. The sea roared, lapping against the sparkling beach.
Twilight was falling. There would be a full moon tonight, a good,
solid moon. A moon like that can make people do strange things. Old
Maz, the lady who sold seashells and told fortunes by the beach, said
that when the moon was full, the mer-creatures came out to play, to
lure, to dance.
He
looked out at the rising moon. “I came to say good-bye. This is my
last night here. I have a friend I have to get back to.”
That
got her attention. She swirled around, her velvet brown eyes
surprised. “You're leaving? How will I find you? Will I ever see
you again?”
He
smiled at her, a big, playful grin. “Maybe in your dreams.”
Han
had such beautiful eyes, large and hazel-green, with gold flecks. She
just wished they weren't placed over that cocky smirk of his. “You
can be so infuriating. I wouldn't dream about you if they gave me all
the pearls in ever oyster in the entire Naboo Sea!”
“So
you say.” He slowly took her hands as a muffled waltz struck up in
the ballroom. “Hey, Your Highnessness, wanna dance?”
He
didn't give her a chance to reply. They slowly moved to the dreamy
music. She leaned on his chest, her mind swirling in time with the
song. Who was this man? There was something about him that didn't
feel...normal. It was all such a mystery. She wanted to know more. He
challenged her in a way that no man had before. She lay her head on
his shoulder, wishing there was a way the song could last forever.
They
were so caught up in the moment, they didn't even realize the music
had ended, or that they were now in the ballroom. It wasn't until she
heard applause that Leia knew there was anyone else around them and
saw the crowd laughing and sighing. Han nudged her. “Looks like we
won the door prize, Your Worship. Better take a bow.”
She
rolled her eyes but did what he suggested, curtsying for the crowd
with flourish. He gave the assembled guests a small, awkward bow and
wave. He finally lead her away, back towards the patio looking out at
the gardens and the beach. “Sure did the old fi...feet in.
Sometimes, I forget I have these darn things.” He kept up the
smile, but it was tight and unconvincing. “I really need to get to
the beach, and I really need to talk to your dad.”
“I
could walk you there.”
“Sorry,
sweetheart, but this isn't a job for princesses.” He took her hand,
rubbing it gently. His hazel eyes softened as they gazed intently
into her warm brown ones.
She
frowned. “Stop that.”
“Stop
what?”
“Stop
that. My hands are sweaty.”
“So
are mine.” He had both hands now, running his rough fingers over
the delicate knuckles. “What are you afraid of?”
“I'm
not afraid of anything!” She looked away. “I'm a princess. I'm
expected to marry someone noble and respectful. You act like a
scoundrel.”
He
lifted her chin to meet his own face. “Scoundrel? I like the sound
of that.”
“I
don't! I...” She couldn't resist anymore. His soft, gruff voice was
compelling and soothing. “I think there's something about
you...when you talk...”
He
ignored that. “You're trembling.”
“I'm
not trembling.” She moved in closer. “Ok, hotshot, I...”
She
never finished her sentiment. They were about to kiss when she saw
the moon out of the corner of her eyes. It was full and high and
perfectly round and white, looking like she could reach out and touch
it. The moment its light fell on them, Han let out a yell of pain.
“Han?”
She put her arms around him tightly. “Are you all right?”
“No...yes...”
He pushed her arms aside and stumbled to his feet. “I have to talk
to your dad. It's important.”
She
grabbed his arm. “Han, please. Stay. If your legs hurt, I could get
the palace doctor to look at them.”
His
eyes looked for all the world like he wanted to, was even considering
it...but then she heard laughter. Big, booming laughter that floated
out over the water like a cannon. “Thanks, but I can't. I have to
get back to Chew...my friend.” He kissed her forehead and gently
stroked her neck, then ducked away, pushing through the crowd.
She
tried to follow him, but King Anakin blocked her way. “Where have
you been?” He touched her neck. “What happened to your pearl
necklace? The one your mother and I gave you for your last birthday?”
Leia's
fingers went to her now-bare neck. “I don't know. The clasp must
have broken.” She was already making her way towards the front
entrance. “Father, the man who ran through, his name is Han Solo. I
need to talk to him.”
“So
do we.” His face looked grave. “We have reason to believe he's a
thief. Valuables have gone missing from the palace for the last three
nights. Several of our guests have complained about jewelry and
cufflinks and purses being stolen. We thought they were lost, but
someone saw him taking the silver spoons from the table and stuffing
them in his bag.”
“Father,
perhaps he's poor. He may have a family he needs to sell that for.”
“That's
no excuse. He broke the law. Not to mention, half the nobles in the
kingdom no longer think we're trustworthy because we allowed a thief
to take whatever he wants for months on end.”
His
daughter gave him her most innocent smile. “I could help you,
Father. I know these grounds as well as your men, maybe better. I
could figure out where he went.”
Anakin
was already directing her towards the hall that lead to the bedrooms.
“Oh no. You're going to tell your guests that you aren't feeling
well, then go to your room. We'll discuss this in the morning.”
She
yanked her arm away...but then gave him an exaggerated sigh. “Very
well, Father. I am feeling a bit sleepy.”
“Good.”
He gently put a hand on her shoulder. “Leia, this is for your own
good. You'll find a better man than a criminal.”
She
curtsied before him. “Yes, Father.” She started towards the
hall...but the moment he turned to his men, she darted in the
opposite direction. She had to find out what happened to Han. Why did
he run from her? Why was he stealing? Who was his mysterious
employer?
As
she stepped onto the staircase that descended into the front garden,
she saw the top of a reddish-brown head limping towards the
shoreline. She followed him, taking off her dance slippers for easier
traction in the grainy sand. The trailing tulle skirts of her white
ball gown tripped her up as she hurried along.
Han
stood on the edge of the beach. Leia hid behind a beach plum bush,
watching as the largest, ugliest creature she'd ever seen waddle out
of the waves. Rolls and rolls of fat sloshed over slimy, wrinkled
mud-brown skin and large yellow eyes. It didn't have legs, though it
did have a thick cigar of a tail. A long chain of gold links dangled
in its stout fingers. It looked like an enormous version of the slugs
Leia often saw in Father's garden.
“Jabba,
I have the goods.” Han held out the purse to the slug-like monster.
“I brought you what you asked for. Now, about giving me an immortal
soul and releasing my best friend...”
The
creature inspected every piece of jewelry and every spoon in the bag,
including her pearl necklace. “Very good. Very nice merchandise,
Solo. Very good quality. However, there's one treasure missing.
Where's the girl?”
Han
shook his head. “No girl. The jewels should be more than enough to
pay off my debts and free Chewie.”
Jabba
poked a sausage-like finger at him. “Why do you think I let you
keep your voice while you were on land? You were supposed to bring
the girl to the water and drown her. I must have King Anakin's
daughter's immortal soul. I already have her brother's.”
Han
wobbled away from the water that lapped at his feet. His knees shook.
The moon was just about at its full height. “I'm not killing her.
Not now.” He looked at his booted feet. “I can't hurt her.”
Jabba's
hoots boomed over the waves. “You love her. You fell in love with a
human.”
The
auburn-haired man glared at him. Leia's breath caught in her throat.
“So what?”
The
slug-thing kept hooting. “You're no more human than I am. You're
just a petty sea-crook. You can't even walk on land without feeling
like you're running on sharp knives.”
Han
gave him his infamous lazy grin. “Now, Jabba, that hurt. If you
give me one more chance with Her Worship, I'll forget you even said
it.”
“Nothing
doing, Solo.” He started towards Han with the chain. “You told me
you'd get the girl, and you didn't. I can't give you an immortal soul
if you didn't earn it.”
“Jabba,
I'll pay you triple, just as soon as I get back to the castle! You're
throwing away a fortune!” Han was caught between the slug and the
water. Jabba's fat hand shot out, shoving him head over heels into
the moonlit sea.
“No!”
Leia burst out of her hiding place. “Don't touch him, you piece of
overgrown lard!” She reached for a sharp piece of driftwood.
The
moonlight wreathed around the lower half of Han's body as he tried to
get on his elbows. “Leia, run! Tell...your dad...Jabba will...”
His vocal chords stiffened, and his throat became raw.
“He...wants...to...” Slender legs melted together, forming a long
navy fish tail ringed with red stripes. A white light emerged from
his mouth, flowing into a lavender shell in the slug's hand.
Leia's
eyes widened. “Han?” She staggered into the water. His hand
reached for her hand, putting it against her smaller one. Was he so
different, now? Part of him was still like her. “You didn't want me
to know you're a merman.” He shook his head.
Jabba
moved far faster in the sea than he did on land. He was easily able
to block Han from the shocked princess. “Ahh, the fairest
sea-flower in all the coastal kingdoms has come for her precious
lover. As you can see, you're too late.”
Leia
glared at him, drawing the sharp piece of driftwood up to his chest.
“I order you to release him at once!”
Jabba
chuckled the girl's chin. She shoved his hand away. “Feisty and
gorgeous. No wonder Solo was so determined to protect you.”
Leia
raised her chin in the most royal manner she could manage. “I can
protect myself, thank you.”
The
sea slug was not expecting this short human girl to stab him in the
arm with her very sharp stick. Nor could he have predicted Han biting
hard on the tip of his tail. The merman immediately regretted that.
Jabba tasted like the old rubber shoes he sometimes found in garbage
heaps near the surface. Leia had to stifle her giggles at his sour
expression.
The
moment the slug started nursing his sore tail, Han grabbed Leia's
hand and propelled her across the water, towards the sheltered cove
on the edge of the Naboo peninsula. “Han,” she gasped as they
swam at a blistering pace, “Old Maz lives near the cove. She might
be able to make you human again.” He nodded, giving her a far
gentler and more genuine smile than his flirty smirks at the ball.
They
were half-way to the cove when Leia heard the laughter again. Han
nudged at her, trying to move her along. “I can't swim any faster!”
Her lungs were burning and her legs were cramping as it was. “I
don't have the tail for it!”
His
strong arm wrapped around her waist. Han gave her another genuine,
soft smile as he sped easily over the waves. Somewhere in Leia's
bosom, her heart turned into mush.
The
cove was one of her favorite places. It was hidden at the edge of
Theed Town by the sand dunes and tall grasses that had been planted
to prevent erosion. She and Luke used to explore the cove when they
were younger. She knew every rock and beach plum bush and cave.
She
was breathing heavily when they finally floated to the nearest rock.
Han lifted her onto the rough granite as easily as if she were a
child, then pulled himself onto the rock next to her. “Thank you.”
She smiled as he kissed her hand. “Turning into a merman seems to
have improved your manners.”
Her
palm ran down his tail. It was beautiful, smooth as a piece of sea
glass on the beach. His fin was gossamer red that glimmered like
rubies. “I can't believe this is real. You're really a merman.”
He grinned mischievously and splashed a little water on her with his
tail to prove it was real. She laughed. “Oh, so you want to play?”
She splashed him back. They continued their little water war for the
next few minutes, until they were out of breath and Leia was laughing
so hard, tears ran down her cheeks.
Han
was fascinated by her tears. He trailed his fingers down their
tracks, even licked one finger to see what they tasted like. “What?
Haven't you ever seen someone cry before?” He shook his head. “Why
won't you talk to me? You haven't said a word since you turn...since
it happened.” She realized, even as she spoke, that he didn't need
to. His soft hazel eyes told her everything. “Han,” she whispered
as he pulled her closer, still holding her head, “I...”
Black
starlight shot between them, just as they were about to kiss. The
dusty black mass threw Leia hard into the rock and Han back into the
waters of the cove. Pain exploded in her temple as her head met the
jagged stone.
She
managed to get on her elbow long enough to see Han surrounded by five
mermen with silvery shark-like tails, pointing tridents at him. Each
had chains looped under their arms. The merman tried to bite Jabba
again, but one of the guards shoved a length of sail cloth in his
mouth. The remaining shark-men threw chains around Han's arms,
wrists, and chest. “No,” she panted, “he's not your servant!”
“That's
where you're wrong, Little Beauty.” The defeated look on Han's face
as Jabba snapped the leash on his collar broke Leia's heart. “He
belongs to me. Soon, so will you.” The round yellow eyes roamed
up...and around...her, resting on her considerable bust line. “You'll
look lovely in nothing but seashells.”
“You
can stop using me for a model right now.” She rubbed her head. “I'm
not going with you, and Han isn't, either.”
“Come
to the wreck of the SS Alderaan, ten miles off the coast of
Naboo, if you want to see him again.”
Leia
ignored Han shaking his head. “I'll come,” she puffed. “I won't
leave him.”
“We
shall see.” Jabba shot another blast of black magic in her
direction. The last thing Leia saw was the forlorn expression on the
merman's face before she finally passed out.
Princess Leia and the Merman, Part 2
Han
was hauled like a crate of cargo to the underwater cart owned by Boba
Fett, Jabba's most feared lieutenant. It was he who ensnared Han and
his spotted dogfish partner Chewbacca while they were trying to flee
to the Alderaan Reefs. Chewie was being held at Jabba's ship palace
as extra incentive for his friend to do the fat sea slug's bidding.
If
he still had legs, he'd be kicking himself with them. He had to break
out and find Leia. If he could warn her somehow without talking to
her, she could warn her father. The king would come and smack Jabba's
wrinkly rear, and he could go back to his old life.
If
I want to now. Scrounging through old shipwrecks, singing to lure
innocent humans to their deaths, doing the dirty work for monsters
like Jabba...what kind of life was that? He'd enjoyed being on land,
walking on two feet, mingling with the humans. Being part of their
world. Leia and her family had treated him with nothing but kindness.
They gave him food and drink and seemed to respect him...or at least
they had, until they figured out he was just some mer-ruffian. If he
could just get back on land, he'd make it up to them somehow. He'd
never lure another human to their death ever again.
Two
of Jabba's tiger shark guards shoved him into what had once been the
ship's brig. Jabba had refitted it into a dungeon for holding
prisoners and the occasional mermaid being ransomed for her father's
wealth. Small, barred portholes shut out what little light penetrated
the deep waters. The room was empty except for a warped wooden bunk
and grimy chains.
Han
thought he was alone...but then, he heard the snuffle. Two wide
spot-covered fins reached out and hugged him so tightly, he gasped
for breath for a moment. Chewie! The brown and cream-spotted
dogfish nudged and patted him playfully. I missed you too, buddy.
He
looked up as a mermaid swam to the bars, carrying a tarnished brass
plate of plankton and seaweed. “Here's your dinner,” she croaked.
She wasn't exactly what you would call a blushing sea anemone. Her
fin looked like a great white shark took a bite out of it; her
reddish black tail was rusty. She had pasty skin and black eyes that
were little more than craters in a white sea. The keys to the brig
dangled on a belt on her waist, just out of reach.
The
hungry merman managed to crack open a few plankton before Chewie ate
the rest of their meal in one gulp and whimpered that he wanted more.
Dogfish ate a lot. Jabba hadn't been feeding him nearly enough to
keep his belly from grumbling.
Han
patted his friend on the back, then gave the mermaid one of his
toothy grins that sent the heart of every female in the Naboo Sea
racing. She ignored him. He winked at her. She didn't even turn
around. He slowly stretched his long arms and tail across the floor,
letting his red fin “accidentally” brush her black one. She
slapped his tail away. He pulled the sea glass ring off his hair and
put it on her wrist. It would make such a nice bracelet! She threw it
in his face.
Ok.
Time for Plan B. The moment she turned away, he tried to reach
for the ring of keys around her waist. Whenever she turned back
around, he'd yank his hand in and look as innocent as possible.
The
moment Boba Fett popped his head in, he managed to get the keys off
her waist. He slid one key into the hole. No click. The second went
in less easily. Still no click. Chewie growled in the background to
hurry. Fett and his mermaid friend would be coming back any minute.
It
was just his luck that they returned the moment he heard that
tell-tale “click.” Fett came at him with his gun-like mechanical
trident, only to be met by Han grabbing at his helmet. Chewie swished
his tail as hard as he could, knocking the mermaid into Fett.
The
dogfish and the merman sped down the hall, trying to make his way to
the nearest open window. Chewie found the huge porthole at the tail
end of the ship. He was just able to sprint through it. Han could see
the light at the end of the passage. He'd make it! He'd see Leia
again! He'd be able to warn King Anakin about Jabba! He'd...
His
tail never made it out of the porthole. A pair of powerful shark jaws
bit into his fin and yanked him back. Boba Fett, surrounded by two
very ugly shark men, thrust their rock crystal tridents in his face.
The featureless shark man threw the chain leash back on Han's collar
and clapped his wrists in irons.
Jabba
reclined in an enormous golden chair, among the treasures that came
with the wreck. The sea slug chose to live in the deteriorating
vessel because, for all its warping wood and tarnished trim, what
remained was still quite intimidating.
“Solo,”
he hooted as Fett and the mermaid shoved Han into the throne room,
“what have you done this time?”
“He
flirted with me, or tried to.” The mermaid's croak dripped with
contempt. “Bribed me, too.”
Fett
tugged harder at the chain. “The dogfish got away, but we snatched
Solo before he made it out.”
Jabba
snorted. “Forget the dogfish.” The corpulent slug waved them
away. “Leave us. I can deal with my slaves.”
Fett
handed him the leash and bowed before him, then left with the
mermaid. Jabba yanked hard at the chain, forcing Han to the floor on
his hands and tail. “Even without your voice, you think you can
bring all the little mermaids swimming into your hands with your
charm and good looks.” He attached the chain to the side of his
throne, then glided to a shelf behind it. The captive merman tried to
pry the collar off his neck while Jabba went through the glass
bottles, looking for just the right potion.
For
you see, Jabba was a wicked sea warlock. He mixed nasty potions and
evil-smelling drugs to keep his minions helpless and make his rivals
and those who displeased him conveniently die, disappear, or change
their appearance in such a way that they'd go mad from looking at
themselves. His shipwreck palace was filled with traps and mazes that
could ensnare even the most innocent of merfolk.
“Ahh,
here it is!” He brought a sickly green bottle as the bound merman
tried to draw back. “Let's see how many mermaids you'll attract
when you're too ugly to look at.” Thick, stubby fingers wrapped
around Han's cheeks, forcing his lips open. Dark green liquid gushed
into his throat.
Jabba's
booming guffaws filled the air as the merman choked and reared
back...and the shadow of a monster replaced him. The rotund warlock
stroked the Beast's jagged skin, whispering to it. “Calm yourself.
When the girl comes, you'll be ready.”
~*~*~*~*~*~
When
Leia awoke, the sun was just starting to peek over the hills behind
the castle. Her head still ached, and her limbs were stiff and sore.
She forced herself to her feet. Maz. Maz would know what to do. The
elderly beachcomber knew everything about the sea and the
supernatural beings who were said to live there. She was the one who
used to tell stories of merfolk and monsters to Leia and Luke when
they were children.
It
was said that Maz was a sea witch and a seer. She could see in the
future, transform herself into anything. She knew everything that
went on in Naboo and in the waters below it. According to the rumors,
her potions and magical shells could stop the very tides, calm a
storm at sea...or allow a human to breathe underwater.
Maz
lived on the outskirts of Naboo, in a shack nestled between dunes.
The elderly woman had a small store in town where she told fortunes
and sold jewelry and intricate boxes and bags made from shells,
quartz, and sea glass. Thankfully, she was at home today. Leia could
see her bustling around in her one room, stringing quartz beads
together for earrings.
“Maz?”
Her small knuckles pounded on the intricate door, probably taken from
a shipwreck. “Maz, please, it's Leia. I need your help! It's a
matter of life or death!”
The
door opened, and Leia found herself staring into a pair of owlish
dark eyes, blinking under enormous round spectacles. “Well, child,
come in!” The elderly woman shooed her inside. “There's no need
to disrupt the neighborhood. You're lucky I always get up before
dawn.”
Maz
moved aside two cartons of wire and string and shells from a battered
old chair. “You can't stay here long.” The old woman was quite
spry for her age, moving easily from her work bench to a wide shelf
made from driftwood. “Princess Leia of Naboo, what were you
thinking, running off like that?”
“I
was following someone,” Leia said obstinately. “He's the reason
I'm here. Maz, those stories...the ones about the mermaids and the
underwater witches and warlocks...”
Maz
put up a tiny, wrinkled red hand. “Say no more. I know. You fell in
love with the merman who stole the jewels from your father's guests.
There's men searching all over the kingdom for both of you.”
“I'll
go back to Father and tell him everything,” Leia explained. “But
first, I have to get Han back.”
The
older witch flung open the top of a heavy trunk. “You do know the
risk involved,” said a disembodied voice from inside the wooden
box. Maz leaned so far in, she looked like the trunk was trying to
eat her.
“I
know Han Solo well. He's a merman, to be more specific, a male siren,
and a scavenger. He lures ships to their doom, then scavenges the
contents and sells them to wealthy sea magicians like Jabba. He ran
from his boss after losing one of his shipments. Jabba hates it when
merfolk double-cross him.” Her sprightly voice darkened. “I've
seen the visions. Jabba is a strong black magic warlock. He cast a
nasty spell on Solo. He's not the merman you knew at the ball.”
“I
have to find him, Maz.” She leaned over the trunk. “Jabba was
treating him like a dog on a leash. Naboo outlawed slavery almost a
century ago for a reason.”
“Ocean
dwellers don't fall under your father's jurisdiction.” Maz finally
popped out from the trunk, holding a necklace made of quartz beads
and three small spiral seashells. Leia could see, even with the
morning sun shining against them, that they each glowed faintly, one
pink, one sea-green, and one blue. “This will allow you to breathe
underwater for twenty-four hours, starting the moment you dive in.
You have to be out before the light in the last shell fades,
otherwise you'll die. Your human lungs aren't equipped to be in the
ocean for long.”
“Thank
you, Maz.” Leia pulled the trinket around her neck.
The
older woman rubbed the bracelet, softly chanting in an ancient
language Leia didn't recognize. “Jabba is a warlock. His powers are
not unlike mine, but far darker. He creates violent storms that wreck
wealthy boats on his reefs. His merfolk salvage the treasures on
board and lure the survivors to their deaths.” Maz nodded towards
the reefs. “He needs human souls. His magic feeds on them...and
your family has some of the strongest souls on land. He wants to get
on land himself. The stronger the souls, the stronger his magic will
be.”
The
princess' brown eyes lit with angry fire. “Luke's ship...Jabba did
it. He created that storm. It was out of nowhere.” Her slender
fingers gripped the necklace tightly. “He killed my brother and his
crew.”
A
small red hand took Leia's before she could leave. “One more thing.
Beware of the maze. Jabba sends his enemies into it, and even some of
his friends, to search for their heart's desire. There's monsters
there that will tear you to ribbons. Traps that can suck out your
blood in an instant. No one who goes in ever comes out.”
“Then
I guess I'll be the first.” She gave Maz a small hug. “Thanks
again. I owe you at least two days worth of shopping at your store.”
“Remember,”
Maz called over her shoulder as the girl headed across the dunes,
“see with your heart, not your eyes! Don't let the magic trick
you!”
~*~*~*~*~*~*~
Baron
Lando Calarissian saw Leia hiking to the docks in her stocking feet.
The poor girl looked like she'd been wrung out. Her white and blue
ball gown was ripped and wrinkled. One of her hair buns had come out
entirely. The porcelain cheeks were streaked with sand, and sand and
salt coated her arms and legs. A pair of once-white satin dancing
pumps dangled from her cramped fingers.
“Leia!”
He hurried over to her the moment she strode onto the docks. He'd
traded his fine cape and suit for a simpler white and navy sailor's
outfit. “Where have you been? Half the island out looking for you
and that thief.”
“Han's
not a thief!” Lando stepped back at her vehement tone. “He's in
trouble. I have to save him.”
“Not
in the state you're in, Your Highness.” Lando linked his arm with
hers. “Why don't you come to my yacht, The Lady Luck?
I'll give you something to drink, and then we can just take you back
to your father...”
“I'm
not going back to Father. Not right now.” She crossed her arms. “I
want to borrow your boat.”
Lando
gave her his most charming grin. “It's all yours, my lady. Whatever
you wish, it'll be granted.”
“Take
me to the reefs ten miles off Naboo. The one where the SS Alderaan
went down.”
The
charming grin fell quickly. “What? That's a ship graveyard! Those
reefs tear out the bottom of your boat before you have the chance to
say 'men overboard!'”
“I
have to go there.” She was already striding past him, down the
dock. “A warlock is holding Han in one of the wrecks. I think he's
the one who created those strange storms that have been sinking
ships, including my brother's.”
“Warlocks?”
Lando had to rush to catch up with her. “Your Highness, I don't
want you to get hurt. Going into the ships' graveyard is suicide.
Besides, warlocks are fairy tales.”
The
young woman turned towards the nearest boat. “If you won't help me,
I'll find someone who will.”
The
Baron sighed. “All right. I can't let you go running off on some
leaky tub. Your father would cut out my spleen, or worse. I'll take
you there...but after I do, I'm going to tell your father what's
going on.”
She
nodded. “Please do. I want Father to know what's going on. Tell him
about the ships and the storms. Tell him I know what happened to my
brother.”
“But
in the meantime,” Lando offered her his arm, “shall we?”
Though
her smile didn't quite reach her eyes, she did take his arm. “Of
course.”
Princess Leia and the Merman, Part 3
Lando
did treat Leia well once she was on-board. His manservant Laurence
brought her lunch and a change of clothing, a brown jacket and
trousers and white shirt from a short sailor that were only a little
baggy on her. She pulled her hair into a simple braid that swished
across her back.
“You
are truly beautiful,” the Baron insisted when she joined them
on-deck. “Even in trousers. You belong with us in Bespin, where the
mountains touch the clouds.” He gave her hand another kiss.
“Thank
you, Baron. I appreciate your kindness and your compliment.” Though
she spoke to him, her eyes were roaming out over the water.
Lando
tied down some rigging. “We should be there any minute. We're
making good time.” He looked up at the rapidly darkening clouds.
“It's a good thing you're doing this now. As soon as you get off,
we'll have to return to land. I don't like the look of that storm.”
A
puffed-up older man in a green and gray plaid officer's uniform
harrumphed from behind the ship's wheel. “I can't believe you're
doing this, Baron. On a day with weather that could break out into
thunder and lightning any minute!” He pointed at Leia. “You,
girl! Fetch my lunch. It's on the silver tray in the galley. I'll
have to eat it up here, I suppose.”
“I
can do it, Leia.” Lando clapped him on the shoulder. “We'll eat
together, Admiral Ashton.”
“No,
I'll do it.” Leia gritted her teeth, but she did retrieve the
demanded meal. It was more difficult to get it upstairs. The ocean
was becoming more choppy, with waves bobbing the yacht up and down
like a toy boat. She barely managed to get it to a barrel before it
slipped and dropped on the deck.
“Look
at what you've done!” A skinny finger lifted in Leia's direction.
“Your lordship, that woman is an idiot! What is she doing on this
ship? A boat is no place for a woman.”
Lando
was already helping Leia clean up the mess. “She's the reason we're
here, Admiral.”
The
look the admiral gave her was pure shock. “Are you insane, young
lady? Coming out in this storm?”
“No,
I'm not insane!” Leia threw the tray on the barrel and went right
up to the man's face. “And I'm not an idiot! I didn't have to bring
you lunch. You could have let someone else take the wheel while you
got your own damn lunch. I'm not your maid. I'm here to help a friend
who was kidnapped by a war...a crime lord. I am Princess Leia of
Naboo, and I have no time for your ignorance!”
Lando
applauded while the Admiral sputtered. “Thank you, Your Highness.
Admiral, you may take the rest of your lunch down below. I'll be
driving from here on in.” He handed the older man the tray and
gently pushed him towards the door to the staterooms.
Leia
was already looking towards the sea. “Leia,” Lando began, “I'm
sorry about the Admiral. I don't think he ever got used to taking
orders instead of giving them. He retired last year, and no one knows
ships better than he does. He's just cranky in his old age.”
Her
eyes were still focused on the horizon. “I don't take orders well
myself. Men like him are the reason I'm stuck dancing in fancy gowns
instead of doing something worthwhile, like fighting pirates or
rescuing shipwrecked sailors.”
“Well,”
Lando added, “at least you won't have to deal with him for much
longer. We're coming up on the reefs.”
The
coral reefs extended for miles across the waters. The deceptively
delicate white ridges could tear a boat's bottom to splinters in
minutes. Most boats that came to Naboo knew how to avoid them, but
during storms or at night, it was easier to be tossed into their
jagged embrace.
The
Baron slowed the boat as close to the reefs as he dared. He and Leia
threw the rope ladder over the side. “What am I going to tell King
Anakin?”
“Tell
him I went after a friend. I'll explain the rest when I return.”
The young woman nodded at the sun. “I should be back here in
exactly twenty-four hours with Han. Hopefully, you'll have two people
to treat to biscuits and cheese on the way home.”
“Are
you sure about this?” Lando watched as she went over the side and
down the rope. “You say you've only known this Han a few days.”
“He
did me a favor by not turning me over to his boss.” She gave him a
small smile. “I'm doing one for him in return.”
“But...”
It was too late. Leia had already dropped into the clear turquoise
waters. He sighed. “Good luck, Your Highness. I hope you find what
you're looking for.”
~*~*~*~*~*~
The
world beneath the coral was spectacular. As Leia dove deeper and
deeper, so many amazing varieties of fish and plant life swam before
her. She barely paid them any mind. She had one thought now – to
find Han and rescue him somehow from Jabba's clutches.
The
ship's graveyard was the home to many wrecks in various state of
decay, from ones still recognizable to old vessels so sunk in the mud
and covered in seaweed, they were more driftwood than ship. Jabba's
home was one of the newer ones, the largest in the entire graveyard.
Two
more of Jabba's shark men guards greeted her at the door. They were
different than the bounty hunters who captured Han. Their tails were
spinier, their muscles larger. The princess didn't stop to check if
they had teeth like sharks as well. She wordlessly followed them
through the winding, still richly-decorated halls.
Jabba's
throne room was in the captain's cabin. The bed had been made over
into a gilded lounge to hold the weight of the corpulent slug
warlock. Bizarre creatures brought him seaweed and red kelp. Their
bodies somewhat resembled humans, but they were so coated with slime,
mud, and seaweed, she couldn't really tell what they were. They all
had collars around their necks like Han's. Two mermen with spiny
tails and long, heavy iron tridents floated on either side.
Leia
swam in Jabba's face. “Where's Han? What have you done with him?”
The
warlock slug indicated the plates of various seaweed and shellfish
being served. “Have a seat, Your Highness. Enjoy a meal.”
“I
don't want to eat. I want Han back. I want to avenge my brother.
You're the one creating these storms, aren't you? The ones that are
destroying our ships and our treasury.” Her voice rose to a thunder
crack. “The ones that killed Luke and his crew!”
Jabba
shoved almost the entire plate of seaweed wraps in his mouth.
“Really, girl, you have very bad manners. You're supposed to eat
with the host.”
Leia
glared at his fat arms shoving every bit of food in reach in his
mouth. “You're not exactly one to talk. You have the table manners
of a fat spoiled five-year-old.”
One
of the slave-creatures brought Jabba another plate of seaweed wraps.
“I didn't invite you here to insult me.”
She
gave him a wicked grin Han would have loved. “Where do you want me
to do it?”
“Ahh,
Little Beauty, very amusing.” He let out one of his hoots. “A
jest at my expense. You're a clever girl with a strong soul.” One
of the sausage arms extended towards the reefs. “I think you'll do
well in the maze.”
“I
was told about your maze.” One small fist clenched. “You have Han
there. You will release him at once!”
One
of the slaves brought Jabba a piece of treated parchment and a fish
spine with squid ink on its tip. “Before I return your beloved
merman to you, I want you to perform a task for me.”
“Name
it.”
He
indicated the reefs outside. “Find your heart's desire at the
center of the maze. It won't be easy. It's guarded by the Beast,
who's holding Solo prisoner.”
Leia
frowned. “The Beast?”
“The
Beast is the keeper of the maze. A monster who protects the treasures
in the center.” Jabba slurped a whole bed of seaweed another slave
brought before him. “If you can kill the Beast and find Solo, you
can both go free, and I'll return your father's treasures. If you're
unable to, or if you die in the maze, your immortal soul is forfeit
to me. You'll become my servant, like these lovelies here.” He
stroked the arm of a small, slender being that was oddly familiar to
Leia. His appendages looked more like legs than fins. She thought she
spied a hint of sandy gold flowing around his head. It was hard to
tell, with all the slime on it...
“What
about Han?” She couldn't take her eyes off the slave. “Have you
already taken his soul?”
Jabba's
ho-hos and ha-has were even louder in the water. “Didn't you know,
Little Beauty? Merfolk have no souls. When they die, they turn into
foam on the waves. Had Solo done what I ordered him to, he would have
earned a soul. I can't imagine why you're interested in someone like
him anyway, when you could have, say, someone like me.” He sighed
noisily. “I suppose there's no accounting for human taste.”
“If
I get through this maze,” she said, ignoring his crack, “you have
to make Han human, body and soul.”
“And
if you fail to find your way through the maze,” Jabba's wide lips
turned up in a hideous sneer, “I take yours.”
Leia
nodded. “Agreed.”
“Good.”
She wrote her name on the bottom of the parchment. The slug warlock
handed it to one of the slaves. Two slaves brought what looked to
Leia like a giant pearl on a gold base. Jabba rubbed his slimy hand
over the lustrous gem. “I'll be keeping an eye on you through my
favorite pearl. If you even look like you're even remotely trapped or
confused, my court and I will know.”
“My
lieutenant Boba Fett will lead you to the maze entrance.” The shark
man wore a heavy visor of tarnished armor that made it impossible to
see his face...but there was something cruel in the tilt of his head,
the way he held his trident at the ready.
“I
can lead myself.” She pulled her arm away and followed him out one
of the portholes. She swore she saw one of the slaves, the one with
the bit of sandy yellow under the slime, duck down a hallway and out
a window.
Leia
turned so quickly, she didn't see Jabba nod at one of his men, a
merman wrapped in old sail cloth that gave him the look of a fish
mummy. The creature swam quickly out the window on the other side of
the throne room.
As
Boba Fett lead Leia to the maze entrance, the sea slug slid off his
throne and into a secret room behind his shelf of magic potions. A
pair of keen hazel eyes followed him in the inky darkness. “The
girl is here. You must destroy her. She will try to take your
treasure.”
The
spike-covered navy tail swung at the lock. Jabba reached out and
stroked the sharp, ridged back, calming the grotesque creature. “Stop
trying to break out. You won't get to her in time.” He snorted.
“Did you think she could love you? She never wanted you. She wanted
her father's money.” The sunken chin, with its crooked scar, bobbed
in agreement, even as heartbreak filled the hazel eyes.
“The
only way for you to become a merman again is for her tell her she
loves you and to give you one of those sappy kisses humans seem to
enjoy. If she declares her love to another, you'll remain a Beast and
my slave until the end of your days.” The sea slug hooted so
loudly, he nearly fell into his potion shelves. “Face it. You're
stuck that way. How could anyone love a monster?”
Jabba
threw a glowing net over the cage. After a few minutes, the bell
shape under it vanished. “You will reappear in the center of the
maze, my pet.” He hooted. “Little Beauty will never suspect in a
million reefs that instead of rescuing her heart's desire, she's
killing it!”
Princess Leia and the Merman, Part 4
The beginning of the maze was little more than the opening of a cave covered in red and green lichen. Most of the court, including Boba Fett and several of the slaves, watched as she swam into its depths. The crystal was beautiful, glowing purple and soft in the daylight. She followed the walls to the end of the wall. She was trying to find a way out, when she noticed several fish swimming upwards. The princess followed them through a hole in the cave's ceiling.
It took her into the most beautiful aquatic garden she'd ever seen. Rows of sea lilies waved in the turquoise waters. Stunning purple and gold flowers blossomed from delicate, powdery coral fingers. Walls of sea grasses surrounded her. Some of the coral grew as big as trees, with enormous flowers that brushed against her cheek.
She was quite enjoying herself when she came to a section where two paths branched off. One path was beautiful, well-lit and colorful, passing under rows of white and red coral. The other was dark and murky, going past a formation of granite rocks that didn't look stable. The lit path was safe...but there was something drawing her to the rocks...
“Follow the darkness.” The voice was scratchy and low, but...she knew it. “Follow my lead.”
Leia spun around. “Who said that?”
“I did.” Fingers, slender pale appendages, reached out of the rocks. “Come this way. It's safe.” Slime flowed off of them in tiny rivulets of dark green as they beckoned to Leia. She followed them, wondering, watching. Her smaller hands tried to reach for the green ones, but they danced away.
“Who are you?” she asked. A diminutive figure, all mucky green and brown seaweed and sludge, waved at her to follow before vanishing into the rocks. “Your voice...I know that voice.”
“I won't hurt you.” Two mucky green legs kicked out. “You must come.”
The young woman swam after the servant. It was the one with the sandy hair at Jabba's ship. She was certain of it. “Hello?” she called as she wound her way through the granite. “Is anyone there?” Darkness enveloped her. She touched the rough walls, feeling her way down.
Her fingers finally hit smaller rocks that wobbled. Heavy piles of rocks extended to the narrow ceiling. She could see more garden through the cracks. “Well, this is just great. How am I going to get through this?” She sighed. “I guess I don't have a choice.” Her fingers reached for the rocks, scraping them away.
There were a lot more rocks than she thought. “This is taking too long!” One of the shells in her necklace was already flickering. “I could be here all day if I keep on with this.”
Sounds carried longer in water. She'd just looked up as she moved a rock...to see a sail cloth-wrapped hand give the stones a good, hard shove. A flash of murky green yanked her arms, thrusting her backward into the muddy ground. The sound of stones over stones, though muffled by the water, still rang across the stone walls.
Leia sat up as the strange being moved her arms and legs, then his own, checking if anything was broken. “I'm ok.” She gave him a gentle smile. “Thank you for getting me out of there. That was very brave of you.”
His small fingers reached out and touched her cheek, as if trying to remember. Those eyes...they were blue, as blue as the sky above Naboo, blue as the ocean all around them. Blue eyes.... She took the hand, ignoring the ooze that was slowly melting away. “Tell me who you are! I know you! You're...”
The moment the shadow fell over them, the being broke away from her. He waved in her direction, indicating the light. She ducked away as another rock landed in her direction. “Would you stop that?” The trident just barely missed her left arm. “Ok, you're not friendly.” The young woman hurried over the rock barrier and into the light, following the figure just as more rocks landed in the spot she'd just vacated.
She looked down at her neck as she fled. The pink shell flickered, then faded out. “I have to get moving. I only have until tomorrow.”
~*~*~*~*~*~
Jabba watched the whole exchange through his pearl. He glared at the ball. “I gave a simple order.” His hand motioned to another guard, this one an upright-walking orange and green lizard in a diving suit. “Meet the Princess at the edge of the Garden of the Snapping Plants. Eliminate her, or at least keep her there as long as you can.” The lizard growled and snapped its jaws.
“Oh,” Jabba called, “one more thing. I know the slave who came to her aid. Get rid of him.”
The lizard nodded and swam off, picking up a metal spear on his way out. Jabba sighed and leaned against his throne-chair. “You just can't find good help these days.”Leia followed the figure through the cave, past several more turns, and into the light. Her heart thumped when she realized she knew where she was. The cave lead into another shipwreck. The vessel had once been a fine one, painted gold with the flaking emblems of two suns on the sides. The Twin Sunset, she realized in shock before she even read the name under the suns. She hoped Luke wasn't still here. She held out hope that Jabba had him somewhere whole, that he wasn't...gone, or turned into a sea cucumber, or crushed under rocks.
The
figure stopped and looked around. His – or its – face was both
indescribably sad...and gently hopeful. She followed his slime trail
into the former navy vessel.
The
back half of the wreck was torn to bits. Most of the barrels and
crates had been destroyed, the rusted trunks stripped of their
contents. There was no sign of her brother or his crew.
“I
guess it was too much to hope.” She felt her brother here. He'd
ordered everything stacked neatly, made sure it was all tied down and
not moving around when a storm hit. He wouldn't be happy to see the
way it looked now.
The
rest of the rooms mostly looked like the hold. Anything of value, any
rock or metal that could last for a while in sea water and bring a
profit, had been taken away months ago. Most of the furnishings were
in splinters. It broke her heart to see the beautiful ship her
brother loved so much reduced to driftwood and a part of a warlock's
insane labyrinth. She could barely keep up with the slime creature as
he flitted from room to room.
She
was about to go up to the deck when something caught her eye. Old
Commander Benjamin Kenobi had given her brother the ship after he and
his men secured the vessel from smugglers. It had many unusual hiding
compartments. Some were wrenched open, probably found by Jabba's
merfolk scavengers. They could not, however be expected to spot
everything. The trail of slime lead under the door and to the book
case.
The
book case at the end of her brother's room was left untouched. She
supposed books weren't of much interest to merfolk. Paper didn't last
very long after it got wet. She was surprised to see that the books
were in the wrong order. Luke liked an organized book shelf. She'd
gotten into enough arguments with him about it when they were very
little and shared a nursery at the palace. She didn't care how things
were organized. He had to have everything just so.
“How
would Luke do this?” Her fingers brushed against a copy of a
textbook on naval military maneuvers, shoved in with the penny press
thrillers her brother loved so much. The naval book went in on the
shelf with Luke's books from his Navy schooling. The book of poetry
they read as children went with the other poetry volumes, and the one
on sea animals went with the aquatic plants and animals titles...
As
she moved things around, she realized she was making a pattern. It
was starting to look like an arrow. The last book at the tip of the
arrow was a collection of their favorite fairy tales and folk
stories, including “King Arthur” and “Cinderella.” The moment
she moved that book, she heard something in the wall grind. The wall
with the bookcase swung open.
Her
legs kicked into darkness. As her eyes adjusted, they discovered a
narrow, closet-like room. This must have been the pirates' hidden
hold at one time. Luke must have turned it into a private sitting
room. Along with another bookshelf, there was a table, a chair, a
lamp, and several crates and long cases.
One
case almost seemed to call to her. It was long, shallow wood trunk.
The initials AS were carved into the wood over the lock. “What is
this?” she wondered. “AS...Anakin Skywalker? Father?”
The
trunk seemed to have been touched lately. The lock was broken and
covered in slime. She pushed it open, revealing the most magnificent
sword she'd ever seen. The shining steel blade glowed blue against
the sapphires inset into the finely-engraved silver handle. There was
a scabbard, too, made of soft leather.
“Luke
must have been bringing this to Father when the storm hit.” She put
the scabbard around her waist, then sheathed the sword. “I'll
complete his mission. This was probably part of the treasure. I'll
bet it's a family heirloom.” Her face turned back to the box. “But
why did he hide it here? He didn't want anyone stealing it?” There
was a small knife alongside it, sharp and golden.
Several
leather cases were piled on top of each other in a corner. The first
held a violin, the second, a trumpet. The third had a flute. “I
can't take the violin and trumpet along. They're too much to carry.”
She found a long piece of calico cloth that had once been part of the
shredded quit on the bed. “At least I can say I brought three
treasures back to Father.” The flute and the knife went into the
cloth, which she tied on the belt.
There
was nothing else to find in the remains of the ship. The merfolk
smugglers and scavengers had done their jobs too well. Not a single
gold coin or piece of jewelry could be found anywhere. The only thing
left that hadn't been smashed and wasn't disintegrating was a sign
pointing into a long wall of thick, mossy green sea grass. Her friend
seemed to have vanished, too, his figure disappearing into the
shadows.
Several
left turns took her away from endless walls of thick green and into
another colorful garden. The plants were larger here, and even more
beautiful. Some of the flowers were the size of a horse. Spiny
anemones and ridged white sea stars added more subtle shades of
lavender and off-white to the rainbow of sunset reds, peaches,
honey-gold, and luminous green. The flowers' wavy petals were
hypnotic, drawing her into their grasp.
One
flower in particular held her gaze firmly. The glowing red petals
extended in all directions, stroking the muddy dark sand like a
lover. Fish flowed around it, nudging it and watching its waving
arms. The center was filled with pale-pink spines. Petals that flowed
like blood caressed her cheeks, her legs, her arms. Watching the way
the tentacles danced filled her with a strange sense of calm. The
spines in the center beckoned her, glowing softly. She wanted to
touch them...to see what they were like...
Teeth.
They were like teeth. The teeth opened, revealing a hungry mouth that
waited for its prey. Leia screamed and kicked at it. Her boot hit the
side of its stem. It reared back, tentacles now bucking wildly. Two
blue and gold fish, fairly large in size, were dragged into those
spines. The sac devoured them whole, ignoring their squeals. It even
managed to spit out the bones.
Leia
screamed, reaching for her sword. The tentacle wrapped around her
hand before she could grasp the hilt. The young princess struggled
wildly as more pink and red limbs squeezed her wrists and ankles. The
fiendish creature had a damn good grip for a flower. It hardly
expected its prey to fight back.
Bits
of tentacles landed on the ground. She thought she could almost hear
it shriek through the waters. More plants waved tentacles and spines
at her, trying to capture this very large lunch. To her horror, the
bones of what were definitely merfolk stuck out through the sandy
ocean floor.
Her
strong legs moved fast – but the tentacles moved faster. No matter
how many her sword and knife hacked away, three more seemed to take
their place. She had to stop them at the source. Swiping at another
flower, she paddled her way to the center of the largest. The moment
its tentacles wrapped around her again, she stabbed it in the center.
The tentacles flared and bucked for a brief moment, then fell down,
lifeless.
As
she caught her breath, she heard the sound of a...a fish? She didn't
think most fish made noise. A whale? No, too high. Whales mostly had
deeper voices. She followed the sound further into the garden,
sometimes fighting off a tentacle or long petal that wrapped around
her waist.
She
finally came to the source of the noise towards the end of the wall
of flowers. Vines and tentacles wrapped around a flat, brown-spotted
shark. The poor thing struggled and bit at the vines, but that only
made them wrap more tightly. Leia swam as fast as she could, cutting
away the vines and tentacles. The shark did his bit, his sharp teeth
snapping through vines like they were soft moss.
The
moment the shark was free, they kicked off into the garden. Leia
grabbed hold of his upper dorsal fin as he wound around the sea
floor, ducking under tentacles and barking at any fish who came near
him. He pulled into a quiet corner near a cluster of waving sea
lilies.
“Are
you ok?” She checked him all over, making sure the flower didn't
crack any bones. He seemed all right. His fins were certainly in good
shape. His fishy hugs nearly knocked her to the sandy floor! “Yeah,
you're definitely all right.” The spotted shark nudged her side
playfully. “You're a really sweet fellow, for a shark. How did you
get caught back there?”
It
took a lot of creative interpretation of fin signals, but she finally
got the idea that he was looking for a friend who was lost in the
maze. He became trapped in the tentacles the same way she did. He saw
the wavy, colorful arms, and they hypnotized him until he was too
bound with vines to escape. He was in her debt now, just as he was in
his friend's debt.
“I
could use your help.” She patted him on the back. “Jabba didn't
say I couldn't have a friend with me. I don't know my way around this
part of the Naboo Sea, never mind a maze! If you help me through the
maze, I'll help you find your friend.”
She
didn't know dogfish could grin. And she certainly didn't know they
could give big, playful licks! The princess laughed, pushing him
away. “Ok, ok, I like you, too.” She saw an entrance under a
waving line of sea lilies. “Shall we move along?”
They
were just about at the end of the garden when the dogfish stopped.
She nearly swam into him. “What is it?” The shark let out a low
growl and dropped to the floor, its tail out and teeth bared.
Leia
barely swam away in time to avoid a long, sharp-tipped metal pole
being thrown in her direction. The pole stuck in the coral in back of
her. The creature that attacked her walked – or swam – upright
like a human, but otherwise resembled a reptile, with a long
snake-like snout and bumpy leather skin. The dogfish bit into his
rear. He screamed and tried to shove it off.
The
distraction gave her enough time to draw her sword. The lizard kicked
the flat brown fish away and reached for his spear, just in time to
see a flash of gold. She lunged for him, hoping to at least lead him
away from her new friend. Her sword stabbed him in the wrist. He
hissed and grabbed his hand, dropping the trident.
All
three went for the spear at once, but Leia was agile and quick. She
scooped the metal spear easily. The lizard looked even angrier now.
He came at her, his clawed hands lifted, ready to strike...
He
would have clawed Leia's face if a slime-covered body hadn't launched
onto him. The dogfish grabbed hold of his tail. They both dragged him
around, leading him under a small cave made from a mass of rocks. She
grinned when she saw that the large stones on the bottom were loose.
Her nimble fingers threw the spear at the heavy pile. He managed to
throw the other two off long enough to avoid the smaller avalanche.
The very last and largest stone finally hit him directly over the
head, knocking him to the floor.
She
quickly joined the other two, tossing the spear to the green-smeared
slave. “Here. You'll need this.” The young woman started into the
cave. The grungy slave was giving the dogfish very wary looks. Her
spotted friend was more amused than upset. “Are you two coming, or
what?” They finally followed her as they swam under the arbor of
coral and flowers that lead into the next part of the maze.
~*~*~*~*~*~
Jabba
roared with anger as he and his men watched from the throne room back
at the Alderaan. “You know,” Boba Fett adjusted his grip
on his trident, “I could take care of that little problem right
now, for the right price. Chewbacca, too. That's Solo's dogfish with
her.”
“No,
Fett.” Jabba's rubbery lips somehow formed a hideous sneer. “The
next part is the Mound of Traps and Trickery. No one has ever made it
out of those traps alive.” He patted Fett's arm. “You just can't
improve on Mother Nature.”
Fett
slid his arm out from under Jabba's. “And if she does make it out?”
Jabba's
eyes turned to the pearl. “Then you can do what you want with
her...but leave her soul to me.”
“As
you wish."
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