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Claudia Gray - Lost Stars

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Claudia Gray Lost Stars

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Lost Stars by Claudia Gray Dedication This book is dedicated to the memory of - photo 1

Lost Stars

by Claudia Gray

Dedication

This book is dedicated to
the memory of Karen Jones,
friend and fangirl extraordinaire.

We were lucky to know you.

A long time ago in a galaxy far, far away

Eight years after the fall of the Old Republic, the Galactic Empire now reigns over the known galaxy. Resistance to the Empire has been all but silenced. Only a few courageous leaders such as Bail Organa of Alderaan still dare to openly oppose Emperor Palpatine.

After years of defiance, the many worlds at the edge of the Outer Rim have surrendered. With each planets conquest, the Empires might grows even stronger.

The latest to fall under the Emperors control is the isolated mountain planet Jelucan, whose citizens hope for a more prosperous future even as the Imperial Starfleet gathers overhead

Prologue

A ship sliced through the shale-gray sky overhead, so quickly it was no more than a line of light and a distant screech almost lost in the wind.

Thats a Lambda-class shuttle! Thane Kyrell pointed upward, jumping with excitement. Did you hear it? Did you, Dalven?

His older brother cuffed him and sneered. You dont know what the ships look like. Youre too little to know.

Am not. It was a Lambda-class shuttle. You can tell by the sound of the engines

Children, hush. Thanes mother never glanced back at them. She concentrated on holding up the hem of her saffron-colored robe so it wouldnt trail in the dust. I told you we ought to have brought the hovercraft. Instead were wandering down to Valentia on foot like valley trash.

The hangars will be a madhouse, insisted Thanes father, Oris Kyrell, with a contemptuous sniff. Thousands of people trying to land whether or not theyve got a reservation. Do you want to spend our whole day fighting over docking rights? Better to do it this way. The boys can keep up well enough.

Dalven could; he was twelve years old, long-limbed and proud to tower over his younger brother. For Thane, the downhill trek through the uneven mountain paths was harder going. So far he was shorter than most boys his age; the large feet and hands that hinted at his future height were, for now, merely awkward. His reddish-blond hair stuck to his sweaty forehead, and he wished his parents had let him wear his favorite boots instead of these shiny new ones, which pinched his toes at every step. But he would have made a more difficult trip than that to finally see TIE fighters and shuttlesreal spacecraft, not like some clunky old V-171.

It was a Lambda-class shuttle, he muttered, hoping Dalven wouldnt overhear.

But he did. His older brother stiffened, and Thane prepared himself. Dalven never hit him very hard when their parents were nearby, but those lesser shoves or punches were often a warning of worse to come later. This time, however, Dalven did nothing. Maybe he was distracted by the promise of the spectacle they would see that daythe display of flying power and fighting techniques by vessels of the Imperial fleet.

Or maybe Dalven was embarrassed because hed realized Thane had identified the ship when he couldnt.

He says hes going to the Imperial Academy, Thane thought, but thats just because he thinks it will make him important. Dalven doesnt know every single ship like I do. He doesnt study the manuals or practice with a glider. Dalven will never be a real pilot.

But I will.

We shouldve left Thane at home with the housekeeper droid. Dalvens voice had become sulky. Hes too little for any of this. In another hour hell be whining to go home.

I wont, Thane insisted. Im old enough. Arent I, Mama?

Ganaire Kyrell nodded absently. Of course youre old enough. You were born in the same year as the Empire itself, Thane. Never forget that.

How could he forget when shed reminded him at least five times already that day? He wanted to say so, but that would only earn him another cuff from Dalvenor, worse, a new barrage of insults from his father, whose words could cut deeper than any blade. Already he could sense them staring at him, waiting for any show of defiance or weakness. Thane turned as if he were looking down toward their destination, the city of Valentia, so neither his father nor Dalven would see his expression. It was always better when they didnt know what Thane was thinking.

He wasnt worried about his mother. She rarely noticed him at all.

The wind tugged at his blue-and-gold-embroidered cloak, and Thane shivered. Other worlds had to be warmer. Brighter, busier, more fun in every way. He believed this despite never having visited another planet in his life; it was impossible to think that the vastness of the galaxy didnt contain someplace better to be than here.

Jelucan had been settled late in galactic history, probably because nobody else had been desperate enough to want a nearly uninhabitable rock at the very edge of the Outer Rim. Nearly five hundred years before, an initial group of settlers had been exiled here from another world, equally obscure. Theyd fought on the wrong side of some civil war or other. Thane didnt know the details. His parents had told him only that those first settlers had gotten themselves mired in the valleys, in nearly total poverty, and had barely been able to keep themselves alive.

True civilization had only come later, a hundred and fifty years ago, with the second wave of settlers, who had come here voluntarily in hopes of building their fortunes. Theyd managed to establish mining, engage with galactic commerce, and lead modern livesunlike the people from the valleys, who behaved more like pre-technological nomads than modern people. Of course they were Jelucani, too, but they were unfriendly, isolated, and proud.

Or maybe it was only that the valley kindred were still mad about being dumped on this icy rugged rock of a world. If so, Thane didnt blame them.

A pity the Emperor himself wont be able to attend, his mother said. Wouldnt it have been something to see him for ourselves?

Like the Emperor would ever come here. Thane knew better than to say that out loud.

Everyone was supposed to love Emperor Palpatine. Everyone said he was the bravest, most intelligent person in the galaxy, that he was the one who had brought order after the chaos of the Clone Wars. Thane wondered if that was all true. Certainly Palpatine had made the Empire strong, and made himself the most powerful man within it.

Thane didnt really care if the Emperor was nice or not. The Empires coming was a good thing, because it brought its ships with it. All he wanted was to see those ships. Then, later, to learn to fly them.

And, finally, to fly far away from here, never to return.

Ciena! Your eyes on the path or youll fall.

Ciena Ree couldnt stop staring into the gray sky. She couldve sworn shed heard a Lambda-class shuttle, and she wanted more than anything to see one, too. But, MummaI know I heard a ship.

Its always ships and flying, with you. Her mother, Verine, chuckled softly and picked up her daughter, then placed her on the wide furry back of the muunyak they were leading uphill toward Valentia. There. Save your strength for the big parade.

Ciena buried her hands in the muunyaks shaggy hair. It smelled agreeably of musk and hay. Of home.

As she peered upward, she saw a thin line in the cloudsalready disappearing but evidence that the shuttle had been there. She shivered with excitement, then remembered to take hold of the braided leather bracelet around her wrist. Pressing the leather between her fingers, Ciena whispered, Look through my eyes.

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