PROLOGUE
Dorsk 82 ducked
behind the stone steps of the quay, just in time to dodge a blaster bolt from
across the water.
"Hurry on
board my ship," he told his charges. "They've found us again."
That was an
understatement. Approaching along the tide embankment was a mob of around fifty
Aqualish, jostling each other and shouting hoarsely. Most carried makeshift
weapons—clubs, knives, rocks—but a few had force pikes and at least one had a
blaster, as the smoking score on the quay testified.
"Join us, Master
Dorsk," The 3D-4 protocol droid close behind him pleaded.
Dorsk nodded his
bald yellow — and — green mottled head. "Soon. I have to slow their
progress across the causeway, to give everyone time to board."
"You can't
hold them off yourself, sir."
"I think I
can. Besides, I need to try to talk to them. This is senseless."
"They've
gone mad," the droid said. "They're destroying droids all over the
city!"
"They aren't
mad," Dorsk averred. "They're just frightened. The Yuuzhan Vong are
on Ando, and may well conquer the planet."
"But why
destroy droids, Master Dorsk?"
"Because the
Yuuzhan Vong hate machines," the Khommite clone answered. "They
consider them to be abominations."
"How can
that be? Why would they believe that?"
"I don't
know," Dorsk replied. "But it is a fact. Go, please. Help the others
board. My pilot is already at the controls with the flight instructions, so
even if something happens to me, you'll be okay."
Still the droid
hesitated. "Why are you helping us, sir?"
"Because I
am a Jedi and I can. You don't deserve destruction."
"Neither do
you, sir."
"Thank you.
I do not intend to be destroyed."
He raised his
head up again as the droid finally followed its clattering, whirring comrades
to the waiting ship.
The crowd had
reached the ancient stone causeway connecting the atoll-city of Imthitill to
the abandoned fishing platform Dorsk now crouched on. It seemed they were all
on foot, which meant all he had to do was prevent them from crossing the
causeway.
With a single
bound, Dorsk propelled his thin body up onto the causeway, forsaking the cover
of the step down to the fishing platform. Lightsaber held at his side, he
watched the mob approach.
/ am a Jedi, he
thought to himself. A Jedi knows no fear.
Almost
surprisingly, he didn't. His training with Master Skywalker had been fretted
with attacks of panic. Dorsk was the eighty-second clone of the first Khommite
to bear his name. He'd grown up on a world well satisfied with its own
peculiar kind of perfection, and that hadn't prepared him for danger, or fear,
or even the unexpected. There were times when he believed he could never be as
brave as the other Jedi students or live up to the standard set by his
celebrated predecessor, Dorsk 81.
But watching the
large, dark eyes of the crowd that was drawing close, he felt nothing but a
gentle sadness that they had been driven to this. They must fear the Yuuzhan
Vong terribly.
The destruction
of droids had begun small, but in a
few days had
become a planetwide epidemic. The government of Ando—such as it was—neither
condoned nor condemned the brutality, so long as no non-droids were killed or
injured in the mess. Without help from the police, Dorsk 82 was the only
chance the droids had, and he didn't plan to fail them. He had already failed
too many.
He ignited his
lightsaber and for an instant saw everything around him at once. The setting
sun had spilled a glorious slick of orange fire into the ocean and lit the
high-piled clouds on the horizon into castles of flame. Higher, the sky faded
to gold-laced jade and aquamarine and then the pale of night. The lights in the
cylindrical white towers of Imthitill were winking on, one by one, and so,
too, were the lights of the fishing platforms floating in the deeps, spangling
the ocean with lonely constellations.
His own planet
hadn't any such untamed spectacles. Khomm's weather was as predictable and
homogenous as its people. Likely he, Dorsk 82, was the only person of his
entire species who could appreciate this sky, or the iron-dressed waves of the
sea.
Salt air buffeted
around him. He lifted his chin. Somehow, after all of these years, he felt he
was doing the thing he had dreamed about at last.
One of the
Aqualish stepped before the rest. He was smaller than many, his tusks incised
in the local style. He wore the dappled slicksuit of a tug worker.
"Move,
Jedi," he commanded. "These droids are none of your business."
"These
droids are under my protection," Dorsk replied calmly.
"They are
not yours to protect, Jedi," the Aqualish shouted back. "If their owners
do not object, you have no say in the matter."
"I must
disagree," Dorsk replied. "I also plead with you to see reason.
Destroying the droids will not appease the Yuuzhan Vong. They are beyond
appeasing."
"That's our
business," the self-appointed spokesman of the group shouted. "This
isn't your planet, Jedi. It's ours. Didn't you hear? The Yuuzhan Vong just took
Duro."
"I had not
heard," Dorsk replied. "Nor does it matter. Go back to your homes in
peace. I don't want to hurt any of you. I'm taking these droids with me. You
will not see them on Ando again. I swear it."
This time he saw
the blaster lift—held by an Aqualish deep in the crowd. Dorsk grasped it with
the Force and whisked it through the air until it came to rest in his left
hand.
"Please,
"he said.
For a long
moment, neither side moved. Dorsk felt them wavering, but the Aqualish were a
stubborn and violent lot. It was easier to stop a nova once it had started than
to calm a whole mob of Aqualish.
He heard a sudden
hum and saw a security speeder approaching. He stepped back and allowed it to
settle between him and the crowd. He did not relax his guard, even when eight
Aqualish troopers in bright yellow body armor piled out and started motioning
the crowd back.
The officer
stepped forward. "What's going on here?" he asked.
Dorsk motioned
slightly with his head. "These people are intent on destroying a group of
droids. I am protecting them."
"I
see," the officer said. "That's your ship?"
"Yes."
"Are there
any other Jedi on board?"
"No."
"Very
well." The officer spoke into a small comlink, too low for Dorsk to hear,
but the clone suddenly sensed what was about to happen.
"No!"
he shouted. He spun on his heel and ran toward the ship, but even as he did so,
several flares of light too bright to look upon struck it. A column of white
flame
leapt toward the
sky, carrying with it the fragments and ions that had once been his ship, his
pilot Hhen, and thirty-eight droids.
Dorsk was still
watching, mouth working soundlessly at the pointless destruction, when the stun
baton hit him.
He fell, turning
that same uncomprehending stare on his attackers. The officer he'd been
speaking to stood there, holding the baton.
"Stay down,
Jedi, and you'll live."
"What?
Why?..."
"I suppose
you haven't heard. The Yuuzhan Vong have proposed a peace. They will stop their
conquest with Duro, and leave Ando, so long as we turn you Jedi over to them.
They will take you dead, but they would rather have you alive."
Dorsk 82 summoned
the Force, washed away the pain and paralysis of the blast, and stood.
"Drop your
lightsaber, Jedi," the officer said.
Dorsk
straightened himself and looked into the muzzles of the blasters. He dropped
the one he had taken from the crowd. He hooked his lightsaber onto his belt.
"I will not
fight you," he said.
"Fine. Then
you won't mind surrendering your weapon."
"The Yuuzhan
Vong will not keep their word. Their only desire is that you rid them of
their worst enemies for them. With the Jedi out of the way, they will come for
you. If you betray me, you betray yourselves."
"We'll take
that chance," the officer said.
"I'm walking
away from here," Dorsk said with a slight wave of his hand. "You will
not stop me."
"No,"
the officer said. "I won't stop you."
"Nor will
any of the rest of you."
Dorsk 82 started
forward. One of the troopers, more strong willed than the others, lifted his
blaster in a shaking hand.
"Don't,"
Dorsk pleaded. He held out his hand.
The blaster bolt
grazed Dorsk in the palm, and he stepped back, but the action shook the other
troopers from the suggestion he had placed in their minds. The next shot seared
a hole through his thigh. He dropped to his knees.
"Stop,"
the officer said. "No more mind tricks."
Dorsk torturously
pushed himself back to his feet. He took another step forward.
I am a Jedi. A
Jedi knows no fear.
The dusk lit with
blasterfire.
Help.
The automated
signal was weak but faint.
"Got
'em," Uldir said. "I told you, didn't I?"
Dacholder, his copilot,
clapped him on the back. "No doubt about it, lad. You're the best rescue
flier in the unit."
"I have good
hunches, that's all," Uldir replied. "See if you can contact
them."
"Sure
thing." Dacholder activated the comm unit. "Pride ofThela to
injured vessel. Injured vessel, can you hear me?"
The answer was
static—but modulated static.
"They're
trying to answer," Uldir said. "Their comm unit must be damaged.
Maybe when we get closer. Hey, there they are now."
Long-range
sensors showed a craft dead in space, medium transport-sized. It ought to be
the Winning Hand, a pleasure craft that had made a jump from the
Corellian sector and vanished somewhere en route. The Hand's jump had
taken her dangerously near Obroa-skai, which was now in Yuuzhan Vong space.
Though they hadn't moved overtly on any planets since the fall of Duro, the
Yuuzhan Vong had been setting up occasional dovin basal interdictors near their
space, yanking from hyperspace ships bold or careless enough to approach their
somewhat fuzzy borders. Most were never found again, but
the Winning
Hand had managed to get off a garbled transmission placing them along the
Perlemian Trade Route not far from the Meridian sector. That was still a lot of
space, but search and rescue had been Uldir's business for the past six years.
At the ripe old age of twenty-two, he was one of the best fliers in the corps.
"Dead-on,"
Dacholder said. "Congratulations. Again."
"Thanks,
Doc."
Dacholder was a
little older than Uldir, his hair prematurely shot with gray and receding from
his forehead so fast Uldir could almost see it redshifting. He wasn't a great
pilot, but he was competent enough, and Uldir liked him.
"Say,
Uldir," Dacholder began, in an inquisitive tone, "I never asked
you—when the Vong came along, why didn't you request transfer to a military
unit? The way you fly, you could be an ace."
"Too hot for
me," Uldir replied.
"Carbon
flush. Rescue is twice the danger with a tenth of the firepower. During the
fall of Duro I heard you picked up three stranded pilots under fire from four
coral-skippers with no backup at all."
"I was
pretty lucky," Uldir demurred.
"You sure
it's not something else?"
"What do you
mean?"
"Well, I
heard you attended that Jedi academy of Skywalker's."
Uldir could only
laugh at that. "Attended isn't the right word. I was there, caused
a systemful of trouble in a real short time, and had no talent for the Jedi
thing at all. Still, maybe you're right. I guess I figured if I couldn't be a
Jedi, I could at least emulate 'em. Search and rescue seemed like the best way.
And we're needed in wartime just as much as the flyboys."
"And you
don't have to kill."
Uldir shrugged.
"That sounds about right. When did you start thinking about me so much,
Doc?" He flipped
the magnification
up on the visual. "Look there," he said, as the derelict ship came
on-screen. "She doesn't look half bad. Maybe they didn't have any
casualties."
"We can only
hope," Dacholder said.
"See
anything else out there?"
"Not a
thing," Dacholder replied.
"That's good.
We're outside of Yuuzhan Vong space, but not that far outside. Even with
all the tinkering I've done on this baby, I don't want to run up against one of
their interdictors."
"I noticed
you coaxed another twenty percent from the inertial dampeners. Good work."
"Shows what
you can do when you've got no life but the service, I guess," Uldir
replied. He adjusted their trajectory a bit. "Looks like they're limping,
but life support seems to be okay."
"Yeah."
Uldir gave his
copilot a sidewise glance. Doc seemed a little nervous, which was odd. Not that
he had the steadiest nerves in the unit, but he was no coward. Maybe it was
because they were out so far without backup. The war had forced everyone to
spread resources thin.
"Uldir,"
Dacholder asked suddenly.
"Uh-huh?"
"Do you
think we can beat them? The Vong?"
"That's a
crazy question," Uldir replied. "Of course we can. They just got a
jump on us, that's all. You'll see. Once the military gets its act together and
brings the Jedi into the equation, the Yuuzhan Vong will be on the run soon
enough."
Dacholder was
silent for a moment, watching the ship grow larger.
"I don't
think we can beat them," he said softly. "I don't think we ought to
be fighting them in the first place."
"What do you
mean?"
"Look,
they've kicked our butts right from the start. If
they make another
push, they'll have Coruscant before you can blink."
"That's
pretty defeatist."
"It's pretty
realistic."
" Then
what?" Uldir asked, a little heatedly. " You think we ought to
surrender?"
"We don't
have to do that, either. Look, there aren't that many Vong. They already have
as many planets as they need, they've said so themselves. They haven't made a
move since Duro, and they won't—"
The console got
Uldir's attention, so he didn't hear the rest of what Dacholder was saying.
"Hold that thought," he snapped, "and hail that ship."
"Why?"
" Because
she's playing dead, that's why. All her systems just came on, and she's trying
for a tractor lock." He quickly began evasive maneuvers.
"Let her
have us, Uldir," Dacholder said. "Don't make me use this."
To Uldir's
astonishment, this was a blaster his copilot had pointed at his head.
"Doc? What
are you doing?"
"Sorry, lad.
I like you, I really do. I hate doing this like drinking acid, but it has to be
done."
" What has
to be done?"
"The Yuuzhan
Vong warmaster was very specific. He wants all of the Jedi."
"Doc, you
fool, I'm not a Jedi."
"There's a
list, Uldir, and you're on it."
" List? What
list? Whose list? Not a Yuuzhan Vong list, because they couldn't possibly know
who went to the academy and who didn't."
"That's
right. Some of us are in high places."
Uldir narrowed
his eyes. "Us? You're Peace Brigade, Doc?"
"Yes."
"Of all
the—" Uldir stopped. "And that ship. That's what's going to take me
to the Yuuzhan Vong, isn't it?"
"It wasn't
my idea, lad. I'm just following orders. Now, slow her down like a good boy,
and let them have their lock."
"I'm not a
Jedi," Uldir repeated.
"No? I
always thought your hunches were a little too good. You seem to see things
before they come."
"Right. Like
this, you mean?"
"Doesn't
matter anyway. What matters is they think you're Jedi. And I'll bet you
know things they would be interested in."
"Don't do
this, Doc, I'm begging you. You know what the Yuuzhan Vong do to their victims.
How can you even think of making deals with them? They destroyed Ithor, for
space's sake!"
"The way I
hear it, a Jedi named Corran Horn was responsible for that."
"Bantha
fodder."
Dacholder sighed.
"I'm giving you a three-count, Uldir."
"Don't,
Doc."
"One."
"I won't go
with them."
"Two."
"Please."
"Thr—"
He never got it
out. By the time he got to the end of the word, Dacholder was in vacuum, twenty
meters away and still accelerating. Uldir sealed the cockpit back up, ears
popping and face tingling from his brief brush with nothingness. He glanced at
the missing acceleration couch.
"I'm sorry,
Doc," he said. "You didn't leave me much of a choice. I guess it's
just as well I never told you about all of my modifications."
He opened the
throttle, gaining quick ground on the
yacht. By the
time they overcame their inertia and started to gain, Uldir had punched into
lightspeed and was gone.
To where, he didn't
know. If he survived the hyperspace
jump, would he be
safe?
And if he wasn't
safe, what about the real Jedi? His mends from the academy?
He couldn't hide
from this. Master Skywalker had to know what was happening. He could think
about himself after that was done.
Swilja Fenn tried
to stay on her feet. Such a basic thing, standing. One rarely gave it a
thought. But the long pursuit on Cujicor, copious blood loss, and a foul,
cramped incarceration on a Peace Brigade ship rendered even such basic things a
struggle. She drew on the Force for her strength and lashed her lekku in
helplessness.
The Peace Brigade
goons had dumped her, bound and half senseless, on some nameless moon and
hauled gravity out of there. Not much later, the Yuuzhan Vong had shown up.
They had cut away her bonds and then replaced them
with a living,
jellylike substance, all the while spitting at her in a language that seemed
made entirely of curses.
After that, more
travel in dark places and finally here, rarely able to keep her feet under her,
in a vast chamber that looked as if it had been carved inside of a chunk of
that meat. Smelled that way, too.
Swilja squinted
at someone approaching from the murk and shadows at the far end of the room.
"What do you
lylek-dung-grubbers want with me?" she snarled, momentarily forgetting her
Jedi training.
The lapse got her
a cuff in the face hard enough to knock her off her feet.
When she rose, he
was standing over her.
The Yuuzhan Vong
liked to scar themselves. They liked cut-up faces and tattoos, severed fingers
and toes. The metier up the food chain they were, it seemed the less
there was of
them. Or at least, what had started as them, because they liked
implants, too.
The Yuuzhan Vong
standing above her must have been way up the food chain, because he
looked like he had fallen into a bin of vibroblades. Scales the color of dried
blood covered most of his body, and some sort of cloak hung from his shoulders.
The latter twitched, slowly.
And like the
other Yuuzhan Vong, he wasn't there. If he had been Twi'lek or human or
Rodian, she might have stopped his heart with the Force or snapped his neck
against the ceiling. Dark side or not, she would have done it and rid the
galaxy of him forever.
She tried to do
the next best thing—hurl herself at him and claw his eyes out. He was only a
meter away; surely she could take just one of these gravel-maggots with her.
Unfortunately,
the next best thing was exponentially less effective than the best. The same
guard who had struck her a moment before lashed out faster than lightning,
grabbing her by the lekku and yanking her back. He held her up to the monster
confronting her.
"I know
you," Swilja said, spitting out teeth and blood. "You're the one who
called for our heads. Tsavong Lah."
"I am
Warmaster Tsavong Lah," the monster confirmed.
She spat at him.
The spittle struck his hand, but he ignored it, denying her even the minor
victory of irritating him.
"I
congratulate you on proving yourself worthy of honored sacrifice," Tsavong
Lah said. "You are far more admirable than the cowering scum who delivered
you to us. They will merely perish, when their time comes. We will not mock the
gods by offering them in sacrifice." He suddenly showed more of the
inside of his mouth than Swilja ever wanted to see. It might have been a grin
or a sneer.
"If you know
who I am," Tsavong Lah said, "you know what I want. You know who I
want."
"I have no
idea what you want. Given what I know of you it would probably make even a Hutt
sick."
Tsavong Lah licked
his lip and twisted his neck slightly. His eyes drilled at her.
"Help me
find Jacen Solo," he said. "With your help, I will find him."
"'Eatpoodoo."
Tsavong Lah
shredded a laugh through his teeth.
"It is not
my job to convince you," he said. "I have specialists for that. And
if you still cannot be convinced, there are others, many others. One day you
will all embrace the truth—or death." With that he seemed to forget she
existed. His eyes emptied of any sign that he saw her or had ever seen her, and
he walked slowly away.
"You're
wrong!" she screamed, as they dragged her from the chamber. "The
Force is stronger than you. The Jedi will be your end, Tsavong Lah!"
But the warmaster
didn't turn. His stride never broke.
An hour later,
even Swilja didn't believe her brave words. She didn't even remember them.
Nothing existed for her but pain, and eventually, not even that.
PART ONE
PRAXEUM
Luke Skywalker
stood steady and straight before the gathered Jedi, his face composed and
stronger than dura-steel. The set of his shoulders, his precise gestures, the
weight and timbre of each word he spoke all confirmed his confidence and
control.
But Anakin Solo
knew it was a lie. Anger and fear filled the chamber like a hundred atmospheres
of pressure, and beneath that weight something in Master Skywalker crumpled. It
felt like hope breaking. Anakin thought it was the worst thing he had ever
felt, and he had felt some very bad things in his sixteen years.
The perception
didn't last long. Nothing was broken, only bent, and whatever it was
straightened, and Master Skywalker was again as strong and confident in the
Force as to the eye. Anakin didn't think anyone else had noticed it.
But he had.
The unshakable had shaken. It was something Anakin would never forget, another
of the many things that had seemed eternal to him suddenly gone, another
speeder zooming out from underneath his feet, leaving him flat on his back
wondering what had happened. Hadn't he learned yet?
He forced himself
to focus his ice-blue eyes on Master Skywalker, on that familiar age- and
scar-roughened face. Beyond him, through a huge transparisteel window, flowed
the never-ending light and life of Coruscant.
Against those
cyclopean buildings and streaming trails of light, the Master seemed somehow
frail or distracted.
Anakin distanced
himself from his heartsickness by concentrating on his uncle's words.
"Kyp,"
Master Skywalker was saying, "I understand how you feel."
Kyp Durron was
more honest than Master Skywalker, in some ways. The anger in his heart was no
stranger to the expression on his face. If the Jedi were a planet, Master
Skywalker stood at one pole, radiating calm. Kyp Durron stood at the other,
fists clenched in fury.
Somewhere near
the equator the planet was starting to pull apart.
Kyp took a step
forward, running his hand through dark hair shot with silver. "Master
Skywalker," he said, "I submit that you do not know how I
feel. If you did, I would sense it in the Force. We all could. Instead, you
hide your feelings from us."
"I never
said I felt as you do," Luke said gently, "only that I
understand."
"Ah."
Kyp nodded, raising one finger and shaking it at Skywalker as if suddenly
comprehending his point. "You mean you understand intellectually, but
not with your heart! The Jedi you trained and inspired are hunted and killed
throughout the galaxy, and you 'understand' it the way you might an equation?
Your blood doesn't burn to do something about it?"
"Of course I
want to do something about it," Luke said. "That's why I've called
this meeting. But anger is not the answer. Attack is not the answer, and
retribution most certainly is not. We are Jedi. We defend, we support."
"Defend who?
Support what? Defend those beings you rescued from the atrocities of Palpatine?
Support the New Republic and its good people? Shield the ones we have all shed
blood for, time and again in the cause of peace and the greater good? These
same cowardly beings
who now defame
us, deride us, and sacrifice us to their new Yuuzhan Vong masters? No one wants
our help. They want us dead and forgotten. I say it's time we defend ourselves.
Jedi for the Jedi!"
Applause smacked
around the chamber—not deafening, but not trivial either. Anakin had to admit,
Kyp made a certain amount of sense. Who could the Jedi trust now? Only other
Jedi, it seemed.
"What would
you have us do, then, Kyp?" Luke asked mildly.
"I told you.
Defend ourselves. Fight evil, in whatever guise it takes. And we don't let the
fight come to us, to catch us in our homes, asleep, with our children. We go
out and find the enemy. Offense against evil is defense."
"In other
words, you would have us all emulate what you and your dozen have been doing."
"I would
have us emulate you, Master Skywalker— when you were battling the
Empire."
Luke sighed.
"I was young, then," he pointed out. "There was much I did not
understand. Aggression is the way of the dark side."
Kyp rubbed his
jaw, then smiled briefly. "And who should know better, Master Skywalker,
than one who did turn to the dark side."
"Exactly,"
Luke replied. "I fell, though I knew better. Like you, Kyp. We both, in
our own way, thought we were wise enough and nimble enough to walk on the laser
beam and not get burned. We were both wrong."
"And yet we
returned."
"Barely.
With much help and love."
"Granted.
But there were others. Kam Solusar, for instance, not to forget your own
father—"
"What are
you saying, Kyp? That it is easy to return from the dark side, and that
justifies the risk?"
Kyp shrugged.
"I'm saying the line between dark and light isn't as sharp as you're
trying to make it, or exactly
where you want to
put it." He steepled his fingers beneath his chin, then shook them with
an air of contemplation. "Master Skywalker, if a man attacks me with a
lightsaber, may I defend with my own blade, that he not take my head off? Is
that too aggressive?"
"Of course
you may."
"And after I
defend, may I press my attack? May I return the blow? If not, why are we Jedi taught
lightsaber battle techniques? Why don't we learn only how to defend, and
back off until the enemy has us in a corner and our arms grow tired, until an
attack finally slips through our guard? Master Skywalker, sometimes the only defense
is an attack. You know this as well as anyone."
"That's
true, Kyp. I do."
"But you
back down from the fight, Master Skywalker. You block and defend and never
return the blow. Meanwhile the blades directed against you multiply. And you
have begun to lose, Master Skywalker. One opportunity lost! And there lies
Daeshara'cor, dead. Another slip in your defense, and Corran Horn is slandered
as the destroyer of Ithor and driven to seclusion. Again an attack is neglected,
and Wurth Skidder joins Daeshara'cor in death. And now a flurry of failures as
a million blades swing at you, and there go Dorsk 82, and Seyyerin Itoklo, and
Swilja Fenn, and who can count those we do not know of yet, or who will die
tomorrow? When will you attack, Master Skywalker?"
"This is
ridiculous!" a female voice exploded half a meter from Anakin's ear. It
was his sister, Jaina, her face gone red with internal heat. "Maybe you
don't hear all the news, running around playing hero with your squadron, Kyp.
Maybe you've started feeling so self-important that you think your way is the
only way. While you've been out there blazing your guns, Master Skywalker has
been working quietly and hard to make sure things don't fall apart."
"Yes, and
see how well that's gone," Kyp said. "Duro,
for instance. How
many Jedi were involved there? Five? Six? And yet not one of you—Master
Skywalker included—smelled the rank treachery of the situation until it was too
late. Why didn't the Force guide you?" He paused and then smacked a fist
into his palm for emphasis. "Because you were acting like nursemaids, not
Jedi warriors! I've heard one of you even refused to use the Force." He
looked significantly at Jaina's twin, who sat stone-faced halfway around the
hall.
"You leave
Jacen out of this," Jaina snarled.
"At least
your brother was honest in his refusal to use his power," Kyp said.
"Wrong, but honest, and in the end when he had to use it, he did. The rest
of this group has no excuse for its ambivalence. If saving our galaxy from the
Yuuzhan Vong is not a good enough cause to flex our true might, let
self-preservation be!"
"Jedi for
Jedi!" Octa Ramis shouted, still in the clutches of renewed grief over
losing Daeshara'cor.
" It's both
ourselves and the galaxy I'm trying to preserve," Luke said. "If we
win the fight against the Yuuzhan Vong at the price of using dark-side powers,
it will be no victory."
Kyp rolled his
eyes and crossed his arms. " I knew it was a mistake to come here,"
he said. "Every second I waste talking with you is a torpedo I might be
firing at the Yuuzhan Vong."
" If you
knew that, why did you come?"
" Because I
thought even you must see the pattern on the Huj mat by now, Master Skywalker.
After months of doing nothing, of watching our numbers dwindle, of listening
to the lies circulating about the Jedi from the Rim to the Core, I thought now,
at last, you had decided it was time to act. I came, Master Skywalker, to hear
you say enough is enough, to lead the Jedi, united, in a just cause. Instead I
hear only the same vacillating I've grown tired of."
"On the
contrary, Kyp. I called this meeting to make
some real
decisions about how we should face this crisis."
"This isn't
a crisis," Kyp sputtered. "It's a massacre. And I already know what
to do. I've been doing it."
"The people
are frightened, Kyp. They're living in a nightmare, just as we are. They only
want to wake up."
" Yes. And
in hopes of waking up, they feed the dream monsters whatever they ask for.
Droids. Cities. Planets. Refugees. Now Jedi. By refusing to act against this
treachery, Master Skywalker, you come dangerously near condoning it."
"Bantha
fodder!" Jacen snapped, finally breaking his silence. "Master
Skywalker hasn't been complacent. None of us has. But the sort of naked aggression
you condone is—"
"Effective?"
Kyp sneered.
"Is
it?" Jacen challenged. "What have you and your squadron really
accomplished? Harried a few Yuuzhan Vong supply ships? Meanwhile we've saved
tens of thousands—"
"Saved them
for what? So they can flee from planet to planet until there's nowhere else to
go? Jacen Solo, who denied the Force, are you lecturing me on what is
and isn't effective?"
"What isn't
effective is this argument," Luke interjected. "We need calm. We
need to think rationally."
"I'm not sure
that's what we need at all," Kyp shot back. "Look where your rational
policies have gotten us. We're alone, now, don't you all see that? Everyone
has turned against us."
"You're
overstating."
Anakin switched
his gaze to the new speaker, Cilghal. The Mon Calamari's fishlike head bobbed
as her bulbous eyes searched around the chamber.
"We still
have many allies," Cilghal said, "in the senate and among the
peoples of the New Republic."
"If by allies
you mean people without the guts to actu-
ally turn us in,
yes," Kyp said. "But wait a bit. More Jedi will be killed or
captured. Stay here, meditate, and wait for them. I won't. I know what the
fight is and where it is." With that he turned on his heel and started
from the chamber.
"No!"
Jaina whispered to Anakin. "If Kyp leaves, he'll take too many with
him."
"So?"
Anakin said. "Are you so sure he's wrong?"
"Of course
I—" She stopped, paused, started again. " It won't help any of us if
the Jedi split. We have to try to help Uncle Luke. Come on."
Jaina followed
Kyp from the chamber. After a second or two, Anakin followed. The debate began
again behind rhem, in much more muted terms.
Kyp turned as
they approached. "Anakin, Jaina. What do you want?"
"To talk
some sense into you," Jaina said.
" I have
plenty of sense," Kyp said. "You two ought to know better. When did
either of you flinch from battle? It's not like you two to sit while others
fight."
"I haven't
been," Jaina flared. "Neither has Anakin, or Uncle Luke, or—"
"Spare me.
Jaina, I have the greatest respect for Master Skywalker. But he is wrong. I
can't see the Yuuzhan Vong in the Force any more than he can, but I don't need
that to know they're evil. To know they have to be stopped."
" Couldn't you
just hear Uncle Luke out?"
" I did. He
didn't say anything I was interested in, and he wasn't going to." Kyp
shook his head. "Your uncle has changed. Something happens to Jedi Masters
as they grow older in the Force. Something that isn't going to nappen to me.
They become so concerned with light and dark they can't act, but can
only be acted upon. Like Obi-Wan Kenobi—rather than act himself, he allowed
himself to be struck down, become one with the Force, so Luke could then take
all of the moral risks."
"That's not
how Uncle Luke tells it."
"Your uncle
is too close to it. And now he's become Kenobi."
"What are
you saying, exactly?" Jaina said. "That Uncle Luke is a coward?"
Kyp shrugged and
flashed a little smile. "When it comes to his life, no. But when it comes
to the Force ..." He gestured with the back of his hand. "Ask your
brother Jacen—seems to me he's going gray early, in that respect. The whole
galaxy is falling apart around him, and he's dithering over theoretical
philosophy."
"He did use
the Force, though, as you pointed out," Jaina retorted.
"To save his
mother's life, from what I heard, and almost not then. How long was she in a
bacta tank?"
"But he did
save her, and me, too."
"Of course.
But would he have called on the Force to save some Duros he didn't know? Given
the fact that he had ample opportunity to do so before that, the answer is
self-evidently no. So it wasn't some universal respect for preserving life or
anything of that sort that led him to break his self-imposed ban, was it?"
"No,"
Anakin murmured.
"Anakin!"
Jaina snapped.
"It's
true," Anakin replied. "I'm glad he did it, and I'm glad he hurt the
warmaster, even if he did call for the heads of all the Jedi, but Kyp's right.
If you and Mom hadn't been there..."
"Jacen was
going through a hard time," Jaina said.
"Like the
rest of us aren't," Anakin returned.
"I've got to
go," Kyp told them. "Any time either of you wants to fly with me,
find me. Other than that, I sincerely hope Master Skywalker comes around. I
just can't wait for it. May the Force be with you."
They watched him
go.
"I wish I
didn't more than half think he was right,"
Jaina whispered.
"I feel like I'm somehow betraying Uncle Luke."
Anakin nodded.
"I know what you mean. But Kyp is right, about one thing anyway.
Whatever else we do, we're going to have to look out for our own."
"Jedi for
Jedi?" Jaina snorted. "Uncle Luke knows that. I'm not sure where he
sent Mom, Dad, Threepio, and Artoo, but it's got something to do with setting
up a network to help Jedi escape before being turned over to the Yuuzhan
Vong."
Anakin shook his
head. "Fine, but that's what Kyp meant by only defending. We'll never win
this war by being reactive. We have to be proactive. We need intelligence. We
need to know which Jedi are at risk before they come for us."
"How can we
know that?"
"Think
logically. Any planet already taken by the Yuuzhan Vong is obviously
dangerous. The planets near occupied space are the next most dangerous,
because they're desperate to strike a deal."
"The
warmaster said he would spare the rest of the galaxy, but only if they turn all
of us over to them. That sort of spreads the desperation out, at least for
people dumb enough to believe him. We saw what Yuuzhan Vong promises meant on
Duro. Don't cooperate with them and they mow you down. If you do cooperate with
them, they mow you down, laughing about how stupid you've been."
Anakin shrugged.
"Obviously a lot of people would rather believe Yuuzhan Vong lies than
take their chances. The point is—"
"The point
is, what are you two doing out here rather than in the meeting?" Jacen
Solo asked from the end of the corridor.
"We were
trying to talk Kyp into staying," Anakin told his older brother.
"It'd be
easier talking a siringana into a box."
"True,"
Jaina said, "but we had to try. I guess we ought to go back in now."
"Don't
bother. A few minutes after Kyp walked out, Uncle Luke called a recess. Too
much angst and confusion."
"It's not
going well," Jaina said.
"No. Too
many people think Kyp is right."
"What do you
think?" Anakin asked.
"He's
wrong," Jacen said without hesitation. "Answering naked aggression
with naked aggression can't be the solution."
"No? If you
hadn't used that particular solution, you, Mom, and Jaina would be dead right
now. Would the universe be better off?"
"Anakin, I'm
not proud of—" Jacen began.
Jaina cut him
off. "Don't you two start again. Anakin and I were talking about something
constructive when you joined us. Let's not degenerate into bickering, like the
others. We're siblings, after all. If we can't talk through this without losing
it, how can we expect anyone else to?"
Jacen held his
gaze on Anakin for another few heartbeats, waiting to see who would flinch
first.
It was Jacen.
"What were
you discussing?" he asked softly.
Jaina looked
relieved. "How to figure out where the worst hot spots are, which Jedi are
in the most immediate danger," she said.
Jacen quirked his
mouth as if tasting a Hutt appetizer. "With the Peace Brigade out there, that's
an open question. They aren't tied to the interests of a single system.
They'll hunt us from the Rim to the Core if they think it'll appease the
Yuuzhan Vong."
"The Peace
Brigade can't be everywhere at once. They can't follow every rumor they've
heard about Jedi."
"The Peace
Brigade has plenty of allies, and good intelligence," Jacen countered.
"Given what they've managed already, they must have more than a few
insiders,
maybe even in the
senate. They don't have to chase rumors. More often than not, from what I can
tell, they don't even make half the captures they boast about. They're just the
flesh merchants who turn Jedi over to the Yuuzhan Vong."
"I still
have a bad feeling about the senator from Kuat, Viqi Shesh," Jaina
muttered.
"My point is
this," Anakin said. "It's hard to predict which single Jedi might be
next on their list. But if they could get a package deal, wouldn't they jump at
it?"
Jaina's eyes
widened. "You think they'll move against us while we're gathered
here?"
Anakin drew a
negative arc with his chin. "Things aren't that bad yet, and who would
want to face all of the most powerful Jedi in the galaxy at once? That would be
crazy—us they'll pick off one at a time. But—"
"The
praxeum!" Jacen interrupted.
"Yes,"
Anakin agreed. "The Jedi academy!"
"But they're
just kids!" Jaina said.
"Have you
noticed that makes any difference to the Yuuzhan Vong, or to the Peace Brigade,
for that matter?" Jacen asked. "Besides, Anakin's only sixteen, and
he's killed more Yuuzhan Vong in hand-to-hand combat than any of us. The
Yuuzhan Vong know that."
"What about
the illusion the Jedi have been maintaining around Yavin Four? That's been
keeping strangers away."
"Not since
almost all of the Jedi Knights have left," Anakin said. "They've
either come to Coruscant to this meeting, or gone off to try to help comrades
who've disappeared. Last I heard, only the students Kam and Tionne are left,
with maybe Streen, and Master Ikrit. They might not be strong enough. Where did
Uncle Luke go? We should talk to him about this, right away. It may already be
too late."
"That's a
good call, Anakin," Jacen admitted.
"Thanks."
What Anakin
didn't mention to his siblings was how
he had awakened
in the night, heart thrumming, gripped by a nameless dread. And though he
couldn't remember the dream that had torn him from sleep, one image had
remained with him: the blond hair and green eyes of Tahiri, his best friend.
And Tahiri was at
the academy.
CHAPTER TWO
Luke Skywalker
sank into a chair in his study, ran his hand across his brow, and stared out at
the night, or what passed for it on Coruscant, the hundred shades of nightglow,
shimmering lanes of aircars and transports, bright-studded skyhook tethers
lancing toward the unseeable stars. How many thousands of years had passed
since anyone had seen a star in the night sky of this city world?
On Tatooine the
stars had been hard, glittering promises to a boy who wanted more from life
than to be a moisture farmer. They had been everything, and yearning toward
them was the seed of everything Luke had become. Now, at the heart of the
galaxy he had fought so long to save, he couldn't even see them.
Something drifted
in the Force, an embrace waiting to happen. Waiting for permission to happen.
"Come in,
Mara," he said, rising.
"Stay
there," his wife answered. "I'll join you."
She settled into
the chair next to him and took his hand. He felt her touch move closer, and
found himself flinching away.
"Hey,
Skywalker," she said. "It's not like I'm here to tall you."
"That's a
comforting thing to say."
"Yeah?"
Her voice took on an edge. "Don't think it hasn't occurred to me. Like
when I couldn't hold down breakfast, or when I take one of these twenty-minute
lightspeed tours
of every emotion I've ever had plus a few that I never knew really existed—and
then start over. When my ankles start ballooning up like a Gamorrean boar's and
I'm well on my way to Hutthood, I'd advise any responsible parties to start watching
their backs."
"Hey, wait a
minute. I don't recall the two of us conspiring in this matter. I was just as
surprised as you. Besides, your last plan to kill me started this whole thing,
pregnancy included. Keep it up, and we'll be ahead of Han and Leia in no
time."
Mara clucked.
"Darling," she said in disingenuous tones. "I love you, you are
my life and my light. If you ever do this to me again, I will vape you where
you stand." She squeezed his hand fondly.
"As I was
saying," Luke said. "How can I please you, sweetheart?"
"Tell me
what's wrong."
He shrugged and
turned his face back to the cityscape. "The Jedi, of course. We're
breaking apart. First the galaxy turns against us, then we turn against each
other."
"It's too
bad I didn't take care of Kyp years ago," Mara said.
"Don't even
joke about that. And it isn't Kyp's fault— ultimately it's mine. You explained
as much to me once, remember?"
"I remember
setting you straight about a few things. That doesn't make Kyp right now."
"No, he
isn't right. But when children stray, doesn't that say something about the
parents?"
"This is a
fine time to tell me you're going to be a lousy father. Or maybe you don't
think I'll be a good mother?"
She was joking,
but he felt a sudden wave of fear, depression, and anger from his wife.
"Mara?"
he asked. "It was just a metaphor."
"I know.
It's nothing. Just go on."
"It's not
nothing."
"It is
nothing. Hormones. Mood swings. Very annoy-
ing, being jerked
around by chemicals, and not your prob-aem, Skywalker. Go on with what you were
saying. Sans the parenthood metaphor."
" Fine. What
I mean is, my teachings weren't durable enough, or strong enough, or satisfying
enough, if the others look to Kyp for their answers."
"We've been
betrayed and we're being slaughtered," Mara said. "Kyp's given them
an answer to that. You haven't."
"Wait. Now you
agree with Kyp?"
"I agree we
can't just sit and wait. I know you don't want to do that either, but you
aren't expressing it well enough. Kyp has given the Jedi a vision, as clear and
simple as it is wrong. All we've done is give a muddy nimble of assurances and
prohibitions. We need to tell them what to do, not what not to do."
"We?"
"Of course we,
Skywalker. You and me. Where you go I go."
Her Force presence
kissed lightly against his again, and for an instant he trembled. It felt good,
a warmth against the cold hard nest of his doubts and pain. How could he afford
to doubt? How could he let anyone else see it, when it might mean the end of
everything?
The touch eased,
as if retreating, and he relaxed, and it came again, stealthier and stronger.
He gave up, opening himself to her so they mingled in a bright stream. He took
her in his arms and let her stroke away the worst of his doubts with her hand
and the radiance within her.
"I love you,
Mara," he breathed, after a time.
"I love you,
too," she replied.
"It's hard
to watch it all fall apart."
"It's not
falling apart, Luke. You have to believe that."
"I have to
be strong for them. I have to be an example. But today—"
"Yes, I saw
it. You had a moment of weakness. I think I'm the only one who noticed."
"No. Anakin
noticed. It upset him, a lot."
"You're
worried about Anakin?" she asked, picking up on the subtext of his spoken
word. "He adores you. If there is someone he's always wanted to be, it's
you. He wouldn't side with Kyp."
"That's not
my worry. He's more like Kyp than he thinks, but he doesn't see it. He's been
through so much, Mara, and he's too young to easily absorb what he's had to
deal with. He still carries the blame for Chewbacca's death with him, and in
the back of his mind part of him still thinks Han blames him, too. He watched
Daeshara'cor die. He blames himself for the destruction of the Hapan fleet at
Fondor. He's carrying around all that pain, and some day that's bound to add up
to something he's not experienced enough to handle. Grief and guilt are only a
micron away from anger and hatred. And he's still reckless, still thinks he's
immortal despite all of the death he's seen."
"That's what
upset him about your weakness today," Mara guessed. "He thinks you're
immortal, too."
"He did believe
that. But now he knows if he can lose Chewie, he can lose anyone. That's not
making things better. He's losing faith in everything he's counted on his whole
life."
"I didn't
have exactly a normal childhood," Mara said, "but doesn't that happen
to most children at a certain point?"
"Yes. But
most children aren't Jedi adepts. Most children aren't as strong in the Force
as Anakin, or as inclined to use it. Did you know when he was a boy, he once
killed a giant snake by stopping its heart with the Force?"
Mara blinked.
"No."
"Yes. He was
defending himself and his friends. It probably seemed like the only thing to do
at the time."
"Anakin is a
pragmatic lad."
"That's the
problem," Luke sighed. "He grew up
around Jedi.
Using the Force is like breathing for him, and for Anakin there is nothing very
mystical about it. It's a tool he can do things with."
"Jacen on
the other hand—"
"Jacen is
older, but he grew up like Anakin. It's two different reactions to the same
situation. What they have in common is that neither of them thinks I really
have it right. And what's worse, I think at least one of them is correct. I've
seen—" He broke off.
"What?"
Mara gently urged.
"I don't
know. I've seen a future. Several futures. However this ends with the Yuuzhan
Vong, it won't be me that ends it, or Kyp, or any of the older Jedi. It will be
someone new."
"Anakin?"
"I don't
know. I'm afraid to even talk about it. Every word spreads, puts ripples in the
Force for every person who hears it, changes things. I'm starting to know how
Yoda and Ben felt. Watching, trying to guide, hoping I'm not wrong, that I'm
seeing clearly, that there is such a thing as wisdom and that I'm not just
fooling myself."
She laughed
softly and kissed his cheek. "You worry too much."
"Sometimes I
don't think I worry enough."
"Worry?"
Mara said softly. She took his hand and placed it against her belly. "You
want worry? Listen."
Once more she
enfolded him in the Force, and once more they merged toward one another and the
third life in the room, the one growing inside of Mara. Tentatively,
hesitantly, Luke reached in to touch his son.
The heart was beating,
a simple beautiful rhythm, and around it drifted something like a melody, an
awareness both alien and familiar, sensations like taste and smell and sight
but not like them at all, a universe with no light but with all of the warmth
and security in the world.
"Amazing,"
he murmured. "That you can give him that. That you can be that for
him."
"It's
humbling," she said. "It's worrisome. What if I make a mistake? What
if my sickness comes back? And worst of all—" She paused, and he waited,
knowing she would get to it in time. "It's easy, in a way. To protect him
now, all I have to do is protect myself, and I've been doing that my whole
life. Right now, my life is his life. But after he's born, it will never be
like that again. That's the part that worries me."
Luke wrapped his
arm around her and hugged. "You'll do fine," he said. "I promise
you."
"You can't
promise that, any more than you can hold the young Jedi inside of you or keep
them safe. It's the same. It's the same fear, Luke."
"Of
course," he replied. "Of course it is."
They sat and
watched the skies of Coruscant, and spoke no more until someone came to their
door.
"Speak and
they will come," Luke murmured. "It's the Solo children."
"I can send
them away."
"No. They
need to talk to me." He raised his voice. "Come on in."
He stood and
brightened the lights. Anakin, Jaina, and Jacen entered.
"Sorry we
left the meeting," Jaina said.
"I knew what
you were doing, and I thank you for trying. Kyp—Kyp must walk his own path for
a while. But that's not why you came, is it?"
"No,"
Jacen said. "We're worried about the Jedi academy."
"Right,"
Anakin joined in. "It occurred to me that if I were Peace Brigade, and
wanted to catch a bunch of Jedi all at once—"
"You'd go to
Yavin Four. Good thinking."
Anakin's face
fell visibly. "You already thought of it."
Luke nodded.
"Don't feel bad. It was only a few days ago that we had enough reports to
spot the trend and realize just how seriously the warmaster's promise has
been taken.
Trying to deal with all the local fires, trying to find government support to
put a stop to this or at least slow it down, I didn't realize that there
are no longer enough mature Jedi in the system to maintain the illusion we were
projecting."
"So what do
we do?" Jacen asked.
"I requested
the New Republic send a ship to evacuate them, but they're dragging their
heels. They might continue to for weeks."
"We can't
wait that long!" Jaina said.
"No,"
Luke agreed. "I've been trying to find Booster Terrik. I think the best
thing for the moment would be to not only evacuate the academy but keep the
kids on the move, in the Errant Venture. If we just move them to another
planet, we don't really solve the problem."
"So they're
with Booster?" Anakin said.
"I can't
locate him, unfortunately. I'm still working on it."
"Talon
Karrde," Mara said softly.
"Perfect,"
Luke said. "You know where to find him?"
"What do you
think?" Mara said, smirking.
"But what if
the Peace Brigade is already at Yavin Four, or on the way?" Anakin asked.
"It's the
best we can do, for the moment," Luke told him. "Besides, the danger
is still hypothetical. The Peace Brigade might not even know about Yavin Four.
And even if they did, Kam and Tionne and Master Ikrit are there. They aren't
exactly defenseless."
"It's not
the best-kept secret in the galaxy," Jacen said. "And with the
illusion gone, what could Kam do against a warship? Let us go."
"Out of the
question," Luke replied. "I need you all here, and with the bounty on
our heads—especially your head, Jacen—it's too dangerous for you to go
off alone. Your parents would never forgive me if I sent you into that with
them away."
"Ask them,
then," Jaina said.
"I can't.
They're out of contact now, and could be for sometime."
"Shouldn't
we at least go check on the praxeum?" Jaina persisted. "We could just
hide at the edge of the system until Karrde shows up, keep an eye on things,
run back here to report if things go wrong."
Luke shook his
head. "I know you're all restless, especially you, Jaina. But your eyes
still haven't fully healed—"
"Not to
Rogue Squadron specs, maybe," Jaina protested, "but I can see well
enough to fly."
"Even if
your vision were fully restored," Luke went on, "I still don't think
sending any or all of you to Yavin Four is the most productive course. There's
important work to do here. Weren't you just telling Kyp that, Jaina, Jacen?
"
"Yes, Uncle
Luke," Jacen said. "We were."
"Anakin? You
haven't said much."
Anakin shrugged.
"There isn't much to say, is there?"
Luke detected
something a bit dangerous in that, but it quickly passed.
" I'm glad
the three of you are thinking about the situation. We agree that the academy
is one of our most vulnerable spots. Help me find the rest. Don't think for a
second I've thought of everything, because obviously I haven't. And don't
forget, we'll reconvene the meeting tomorrow morning."
The three of them
nodded and left.
When they were
gone, Mara clucked. "They might be right."
Luke sighed
again. "They might be. But I have a feeling that whoever goes to Yavin
Four must go in force, or they won't be leaving it again. I've learned to trust
feelings like this."
"You should
have told them that, then," Mara said.
He flashed her a
sardonic smile. "Then they would have gone for sure."
Mara took his
hand. "No rest for the weary. I'll contact Karrde." She touched her
belly again. "Meanwhile,
Skywalker, find
me something to eat. Something big and still bleeding."
Anakin checked
over the systems indicators. "How do we look, Fiver?" he asked
quietly, studying the cockpit readout display.
SYSTEMS WITHIN
OPTIMUM VARIANTS, the R7 Unit 3S-
sured him.
"Good. Just
hang on while I get clearance. Meanwhile calculate the first jump in the series
to get me to the Yavin system."
That took a certain
amount of finagling, including forging a code that would allow him to fly
without a check that might alert Uncle Luke or anyone else who would try to
stop him.
Because Uncle
Luke was wrong, this time. Anakin could feel it in his very center. The Jedi
trainees were in grave danger; Talon Karrde would not get there in time. It
might already be too late.
It was strange
that Uncle Luke still insisted on thinking of Anakin as a child. Anakin had
killed Yuuzhan Vong. He had seen friends die and caused the deaths of others.
He was responsible for the destruction of countless ships and the beings who
crewed them, and that only scratched the most recent skin of the matter.
It was a blind
spot the adults in his life had, an ambivalence and a denial. They didn't
understand who he really was, only what he appeared to be. Even his mother and
Uncle Luke, who had the Force to help them.
Aunt Mara
probably understood—she had never really been a child, either—but even she was
blinkered by her relationship with Uncle Luke; she had to take his feelings
into account, as well as her own.
Well, there would
be anger. He could explain to Uncle Luke about the feeling he had in the Force,
but that might only alert the Master to Anakin's certainty in this
matter. Even if
Uncle Luke could be convinced to send someone now, it might be someone
else, someone older. But Anakin knew it had to be him, he had to go. If
he didn't, his best friend was doomed to a fate much worse than death.
It was the only
thing in his life he was really sure of right now.
"Cleared for
takeoff," the port control said.
"Power it
up, Fiver," Anakin murmured. "We've got someplace to be."
CHAPTER THREE
When the stars
rushed back into existence, Anakin put his XJ X-wing into a lazy tumble and cut
power to everything but sensors and minimal life support. Ordinarily he
wouldn't play it so cautious; after all, someone would almost have to be
watching for the hyperwave ripples of an X-wing entering the system to have any
chance of detecting it. But given the feeling in his gut, there might just be
someone doing that.
The roll and yaw
he'd put the X-wing in wasn't random, but was designed to give his instruments
a full accounting of the surrounding space in the least possible time. While
the sensors did their job, Anakin reached out with the sense he trusted
most—the Force.
The planet Yavin
filled most of his view, its vast orange oceans of gas boiling into fractal,
elusive patterns. Its familiar face had marked the days and nights of much of
his childhood. The praxeum—his uncle Luke's Jedi academy—was located on Yavin
4, a moon of the gas giant. He could remember watching Yavin in the night sky,
a colossal mirage of a planet, wondering what could be there, pushing his
evolving Force senses to explore it.
He'd found clouds
of methane and ammonia deeper than oceans, hydrogen so stressed by pressure it
became metal, life crushed thinner than paper but still thriving, cyclones
heavier than lead but faster than the winds of any world habitable by humans.
And crystals, sparkling Corusca gems climbing those titan winds, spinning in an
ancient dance,
capturing what light they could find in the thinner upper atmosphere and
gripping it tight in their molecules.
He saw none of
this as one might with eyes, of course, but over the nights, through the Force
he had felt them, and with references to the library gradually understood
them.
In his
imagination he had seen more. Pieces of the first Death Star, which had met its
end in these very skies, pounded into monomolecular foil by fierce pressure and
gravity. Older things, relics of Sith, and species even more lost and distant
in time. Once a planet like Yavin swallowed a secret, it wasn't likely to give
it up again. Given the other secrets that had turned up in the Yavin system—
and the Sun Crusher Kyp Durron himself had once managed to pull from
the belly of the orange giant—that was for the best.
Just beyond the
vast rim of Yavin, a bright yellowish star winked—Yavin 8, one of the three
moons in the system blessed with life. Anakin had a friend there, a native of
that world who had trained briefly at the academy and returned home. He could
feel her, very faintly. Yavin 4 was just around the rim, where he had other
friends. In a way, the whole system was like a familiar room to Anakin, the
sort he could walk into and immediately know if something was out of place.
And something
felt very out of place.
In the Force he
could feel the Jedi candidates, for they were all strong with it. He could feel
Kam Solusar and his wife Tionne, and the ancient Ikrit, not students but
full-fledged Jedi. These were seen as through a cloud, suggesting they were at
least trying to maintain the illusion that hid Yavin 4 from the casual eye.
But even through
that, one presence shone brilliant, made brighter by familiarity and
friendship. Tahiri.
She felt him,
too, and though he could not quite hear any actual words she might be trying to
send, he did feel
a sort of rhythm,
as of someone talking quickly, excitedly, without pause for breath.
One corner of
Anakin's mouth turned up. Yes, that was Tahiri, all right.
What felt wrong
was a little nearer and much weaker. Not Yuuzhan Vong, for they could not be
felt in the Force, but someone who shouldn't be there. Someone slightly
confused, but with a growing sense of confidence.
"Hang on,
Fiver," he told his astromech. "Get ready to run or fight in a hurry.
It might just be Talon Karrde and his crew here ahead of schedule, but I'd
sooner bet against Lando Calrissian in sabacc than to count on it."
affirmative, the display blinked.
They tumbled into
sensor range, and his computer built a silhouette from the magnified image.
"That's not
so bad," he murmured. "One Corellian light transport. Maybe it is one
of Karrde's bunch." Or maybe not. And maybe there were a hundred Yuuzhan
Vong ships on the other side of the gas giant or Yavin 4, invisible to his Jedi
senses and hidden from his sensors. Whatever the case, waiting around wasn't
going to improve matters. He powered up, corrected his tumble, and engaged the
ion engines.
He activated his
comm system and hailed the stranger. "Transport, acknowledge."
For a few
moments, he got nothing, then the audio crackled. "Who is this?"
"My name is
Anakin Solo. What are you doing in the Yavin system?"
"We're
Corusca gem miners."
"Really.
Where's your trawler?"
Another pause,
then words underlined with a bit of anger.
"We can see
the moon now. We knew it was here all along. Your Jedi sorcery has failed you."
THE TRANSPORT IS
ARMING WEAPONS SYSTEMS, Fiver
noticed. Anakin
nodded grimly as the other vessel swung toward him.
"I'm only
warning you once," Anakin said. "Stand down."
For an answer, he
got a blast from a laser cannon, which at that distance he managed to avoid as
easily as he might deflect a blaster shot with his lightsaber.
"Gee,"
Anakin muttered. "I suppose that says it all." He opened his S-foils.
"Fiver, give me evasive approach six, but I still want the stick just in
case."
ACKNOWLEDGED.
He dropped toward
Yavin 4 and the transport at full thrust, spinning and dancing as he went, and
when he felt his target firmly enough in the Force, he sliced the night of
vacuum with ruby red. The transport returned fire and began its own evasive
maneuvers, but that was like a bantha trying to dodge a mace fly.
They had good
shields, though. As Anakin completed his first pass, his opponent was still
essentially untouched. To make matters more interesting, four winks of blue
flame and his instruments agreed that the transport had just fired proton
torpedoes at him. Anakin had been preparing to turn for another pass; instead
he continued his noseward plunge toward the moon.
"Four proton
torpedoes. These guys really don't like us, Fiver."
the transport seems hostile, Fiver
acknowledged. Anakin sighed. Fiver was a more advanced astromech than R2-D2,
but he missed his uncle's droid's personality at times. Maybe he ought to do
something about that.
Two laser blasts
hit his shields in quick succession, but they did their job. On his tracker,
the proton torpedoes continued to close as Anakin met resistance from the atmosphere.
He plunged on, and the ship began to vibrate faintly. His nose and wings were
starting to heat up from the upper atmosphere. If he didn't time this exactly
right, he would scatter all over the jungle kilometers below.
When the lead
torp was almost on him, he cut his engines and yanked the nose up. The
atmosphere, still thin, was nevertheless able to give the XJ X-wing a good
strong slap, hurling him away from the moon. Servos whined and something
somewhere made a startling ping. Using the momentum from the atmospheric
skip, Anakin turned further spaceward, blood rushing from his head as the g's
mounted, then he kicked in the engines again.
Behind him, the
proton torpedoes didn't fare as well. They tried to turn after him, of course.
Two didn't make it, and continued plunging moonward. The other two skipped
along wildly different courses than Anakin and would never find him again
before running out of fuel.
"Nice
try," Anakin said grimly. Now he was climbing uphill, out of the gravity
well, his lasers pumping a steady rhythm. He took another hit from the enemy's
more powerful gun, and for an instant the lights dimmed in the cockpit. Then
they flared back to life as Fiver rerouted, and Anakin took a hammer to the
transport. Their shields faltered, and he slagged their primary generator. Looping
around them nose to tail, he drilled laser turrets, torpedo ports, and
engines.
Then he tried the
comm again. "Ready to talk now?" he asked.
"Why
not?" the voice from the other end replied. " You can still surrender
if you want."
"That's—"
Anakin began, but Fiver interrupted.
HYPERSPACE JUMP
DETECTED. 12 VESSELS HAVE ARRIVED, DISTANCE 100,000 KILOMETERS.
"Sith
spit!" Anakin muttered, bringing his sensors to bear.
They weren't
Yuuzhan Vong ships, he saw that immediately, just a motley collection of
E-wings, transports, and corvettes.
They were hailing
him. He opened the link.
"Unidentified
vessel, this is the Peace Brigade," a voice
crackled.
"Stand down and surrender, and you won't be harmed."
They were too far
away to hit him. Soon they wouldn't be. Anakin closed his S-foils, rolled,
opened the throttle, and raced toward the distant viridian of Yavin 4.
Anakin vaulted
from the cockpit of the X-wing into silent near darkness. A twilight line of
illumination in the distance was the entrance he had flown through into what
had once been a part of an ancient Massassi temple complex, much later the
central hangar for the Rebel fleet, and which now saw little use at all, since
most ships landing at the academy set down outside.
Anakin's flight
boots scuffed the ancient stone surface, and the sound grew around him into the
hushed beating of enormous wings. He smelled stone and lubricant and more
faintly the musky jungle outside.
Someone was
watching Anakin from the darkness.
"Who is
that?" a voice asked, each word stretching to fill the abyss.
"It's me,
Kam. Anakin."
A faint glow
appeared, and then a bank of light panels came on. Some ten meters away Kam
Solusar stood, hooking his lightsaber back into his belt.
"I thought
it felt like you," Kam said. "But there's been an unknown ship in
orbit for several standard days now. We've been trying to keep them
confused."
"Peace
Brigade," Anakin explained. "And the one ship has friends now, about
twelve of them. And they aren't confused anymore."
He'd been walking
toward Kam while he spoke, and suddenly his old teacher swept forward, clasping
his arm. "It's good to see you, Anakin. And you? You're alone?"
Anakin nodded.
"Talon Karrde is on the way with a flotilla. He's supposed to evacuate you
and the students. Uncle Luke wasn't expecting the Peace Brigade to show up so
soon, I guess."
Kam's eyes
narrowed. "But you were, weren't you? You came here without
permission."
"I came
against orders, actually," Anakin corrected. "That's not important
now. Getting the students to safety, that is."
"Of
course," Kam agreed. "How long before the Peace Brigade can
land?"
"An hour?
Not long."
-And
Karrde?"
"He could be
days."
Kam grimaced.
"We can't hold out here that long."
"We might.
We're all Jedi."
Kam snorted.
"You need a sense of your limitations. I have a sense of mine. We might do
very well, but we'll lose kids. I have to think of them first."
They were
approaching the turbolift when the door hissed open and ejected a
blond-and-orange blur. The blur smacked Anakin at chest height, and he suddenly
found surprisingly strong arms wrapped around him in a fierce embrace. Bright
green eyes danced centimeters from his own.
He felt his face
go warm.
"Hi,
Tahiri," he said.
She pushed back
from him. "Hi, yourself, great hero-irom-the-stars who's too good to keep
in touch with his best friend."
"I've—"
"Been busy.
Right. I know all about it—well, not all about it because we get the
news so late here, but I heard about Duro, and Centerpoint, and—"
She stopped
suddenly, either because she saw it in his face or felt it in the Force.
Centerpoint Station was a sensitive subject.
"Anyway,"
she went on, "you won't believe how boring it's been without you. All the
apprentices have gone off, and that just leaves these kids—" She
stepped away, and for the first time, he really saw her.
Whatever she
detected in his eyes cut her off in midsen-tence. "What?" she asked
instead. "What are you looking at?"
"I—"
Now his face felt like it had been grazed by blasterfire. "You look . . .
different."
"Older
maybe? I'm fourteen now. Last week."
"Happy
birthday."
"You should
have thought of it then, but thanks anyway. Dummy."
Anakin found
himself suddenly unable to meet her eyes. He dropped his gaze. "You're,
uh, still barefoot, I see."
"What did
you expect? I hate shoes. I only wear them when I have to. Shoes were
invented by the Sith to keep our delicate toes in anguish and misery, I'm sure
of it. Did you think just because I grew a centimeter or two I'd start
torturing my feet?"
She looked up at
Kam suspiciously. "What's he doing here, anyway? I know he didn't come to
see me."
Anakin flinched
at the hurt he heard in that.
"Anakin's
come to warn us of trouble," Kam replied. "In fact, you'll need to do
your catching up later."
"Really?
Trouble?"
"Yes,"
Anakin said.
Tahiri put her
hands on her hips. "Well, why didn't you say so? What's going on?"
"We need to
talk to Tionne and Ikrit," Kam told her, continuing forward into the
turbolift.
"Now," Anakin added, following him.
"But what's
going o«?" Tahiri shouted at their suddenly retreating backs.
"I'll
explain on the way," Anakin promised.
"Fine."
She ducked into the lift just as the door was closing.
"The Yuuzhan
Vong warmaster basically put a price on our heads," Anakin said. "On all
our heads, all the Jedi. He announced that if what's left of the New Re-
public will turn
over all of its Jedi to him—and Jacen especially—he won't take any more
planets."
"Boy, that
sounds like a lie," Tahiri said.
"Doesn't
matter. People believe him. Like the people in the ships approaching right
now."
"They want
to turn us over to the Yuuzhan Vong? Let them try!"
"Don't
worry, they will."
The door opened
and they emerged onto the second level. Kam started down the main corridor and
then through a series of passages that were utterly familiar to Anakin, though
they all seemed somehow narrower than when he had last seen them. The Massassi temple
that housed the academy had once seemed impossibly huge. Now it seemed merely
large.
They reached the
central area, and twenty-odd faces turned toward them. Human, Bothan, Twi'lek,
Wookiee— more than a dozen species were represented. All were quite young
except one—Tionne, Kam's wife, a graceful silver-haired woman with pearl-white
eyes. Her eyebrows lifted in surprise and her lips in pleasure.
"Anakin!"
she said.
"Tionne,"
Kam said gently but urgently, "we need to talk."
"Anakin!"
Sannah, a girl of thirteen with brown hair and yellow eyes, waved at him. Even
younger Valin Horn was waving, though he wasn't shouting.
"He's
busy!" Tahiri told them. But when Anakin went to talk with Kam and Tionne,
Tahiri came along.
"Tahiri—"
Kam began.
"Oh,
no," she said. "You aren't leaving me out of this."
"I wasn't
going to," Kam said gently. "I was going to ask you to find Master
Ikrit and meet us in the conference room."
"Oh.
Okay."
She whirled off
down the corridor on bare feet.
Tahiri was back
with Ikrit only moments later. The old Jedi Master padded into the room on all
fours, his long floppy ears dragging the ground. His normally bright eyes
seemed a little dull to Anakin, and he felt an inexplicable pang.
"Master
Ikrit."
"Young
Anakin. It is good to see you," Ikrit replied. "Though you bring
troubling news."
"Yes."
He raced through the details once again, for Ikrit and Tionne.
"They would
take our children?" Tionne murmured, more darkly than was her wont.
"The Peace
Brigade? Absolutely. Tionne, it's bad for Jedi out there right
now."
"I
understand," she said, then clenched her fist. "No, I don't understand.
Has the galaxy gone mad?"
"Yes,"
Kam said softly. "It's an old madness, war."
"You don't
have any ships, do you?"
"No. Streen
went with Peckhum in the supply ship."
"Whereto?"
"Corellia.
He should be back soon. Though I suppose they won't, now."
"We'll have
to hide them here, then," Anakin said. "Where?"
"Down the
river! The cave beneath the Palace of the Woolamander," Tahiri offered.
"Master Ikrit's cave."
Anakin raised his
eyebrows. "That's a good idea. They'd be really hard to find there,
especially if the Peace Brigade doesn't start looking right away."
"What do you
mean by that? " Kam said, his voice suddenly cautious. "Why would
they delay the search?"
"I'll stay
behind," Anakin said. "I'll make it look as if we're still in the
temple trying to make a stand. They'll waste time shooting their way through
while you and Tionne get the kids to safety."
"You're
leaving out one little detail," Tahiri said. "What about yow? What
keeps you safe?"
I'll hide the
X-wing. I know a good place. I can slip through them. Then I'll play
hide-and-seek until Talon Karrde shows up. Once he's mopped up the Peace Brigade,
I'll lead him to you."
"You've been
thinking about this," Tionne said.
"All the way
down," Anakin admitted. "It's the best way."
"He's
right," Kam said.
"Kam—"
Tionne began.
"He's
right," Kam went on, "except that he's not the one staying behind—I
am."
"I'm the
better pilot," Anakin said bluntly. "I'm the only one who can pull it
off."
"Anakin is
correct," Ikrit said in his scratchy voice. "It is part of his
destiny. And mine."
"Master
Ikrit—"
"You will
say I am no warrior. That may be true—it has been long since I wielded a
lightsaber, and it was not what I preferred even then. But it is not
lightsabers that will prevail here today, not weapons. Not all uses of the
Force are aggressive."
Anakin pursed his
lips, but he couldn't bring himself to contradict the ancient Master.
Kam gnawed his
lip for a moment. "Very well," he said at last. "I don't like
it, but we don't have time for a debate. Tahiri, come along. Help me and Tionne
get the students on the boats."
"Fine,"
Tahiri said, "but I'm staying with Anakin."
"No,"
Anakin said.
"Yes!"
Tahiri retorted. "I've been stuck on this mud-ball while you've been out
fighting the Yuuzhan Vong. I'm sick of it! I'm ready to do something!"
"You're too
young for this," Tionne said.
"Anakin's
only two years older than me! He was fifteen at Sernpidal!"
"That's
right," Anakin said, "and I got Chewbacca killed. Tahiri, please go
with Kam."
Her eyes widened
in shocked betrayal. "You don't want me with you! After all we—you
think I'm a kid, just like they do!"
No, Anakin thought.
/ just don't want to see you killed, too.
"Come on,
Tahiri," Tionne said gently. "There's no time to lose."
"Fine.
That's just fine," she said, and without another glance at Anakin she
darted from the room.
Kam placed his
hand on Anakin's shoulder. "It's been hard on her without you here."
Anakin nodded.
"Anyway," he said gruffly, "I'd better get to work."
" Be
careful, Anakin. You don't have to buy us a lot of time. When you need to go,
go. We need you alive."
"I don't
plan to die," Anakin assured him.
"Most people
don't. It happens anyway. Trust the Force, listen to Ikrit. May the Force be
with you."
CHAPTER FOUR
"It will
burn you, Anakin," Ikrit's pleasant, familiar rasp solemnly pronounced.
Anakin looked up
from his work on the intercom. He and the old Jedi were in what had once been
the command center when the Great Temple had been a Rebel base. Most of the
wartime equipment was gone, but some remained—the various communication
systems, including an intercom that piped information throughout the temple
and its surrounds.
"Master?"
" Your
anger. You have built yourself a vessel to contain it, but the crucible itself
will one day melt from the heat. Then you will burn, and others with you. Many
others, possibly."
Anakin slipped
the modified data chip in place and straightened. "The Yuuzhan Vong make
me angry, Master. They're destroying everything I know, everything I
love."
"No. You make
you angry. People die; you are angry because you could not save them."
"You mean
Chewbacca."
"And others.
Their deaths are inscribed on you."
"Yes.
Chewbacca died because of me. A lot of people have died because of me."
"Death comes
to call," Ikrit replied. "You cannot hold water in your hands for
long. It leaks away, goes where it
is meant to go.
To the soil and sky. To ions, and then space, where stars are born."
Frustration
hijacked Anakin's lips. "That's poetic, Master Ikrit, but it's not an
answer. My grandfather was Darth Vader, and he killed billions. But that was
after decades of the dark side. I'm only sixteen, and look what I've done.
Darth Vader would be proud."
Ikrit fixed him
with luminous blue eyes. "It is to your credit that you feel those deaths,
that you mourn. But you did not kill those people. You did not wish them dead
and then bring it to pass."
"No,"
Anakin said. "But at Centerpoint I wished the Yuuzhan Vong dead. I wanted
to kill every last one of them. If my brother hadn't stopped me, I would have.
I think—often—that I should have."
"Your
brother didn't stop you."
"You weren't
there, Master Ikrit. I would have done it."
"I was
there, Anakin. In every important way, I was. Anakin, you must let your anger
go. Angry steps have worn a rutted path to the dark side. It is an easy path to
follow, difficult to avoid."
Anakin turned to
the power generator remote panel and fiddled with it a bit. "This might
work," he murmured. "I wish I had time to go out to the
generator."
"Anakin."
The Master's voice carried a note of command.
Anakin didn't
look up from his work. "You know, Master Ikrit," he said, "I
used to dream every night that I would turn to the dark side, become my name,
what my grandfather became. Now that seems silly. The Force doesn't make a
person good or evil. It's a tool, like a lightsaber. Don't worry about
me."
"Listen to
me, young Solo," Ikrit said. "I never said the Force would lead you
to evil. I warned you your feelings might."
"Feelings
are tools, too, if you don't let them control you," Anakin said.
Ikrit clucked his
soft laugh. "And how are you to know when a feeling controls you? When
anger guides your hand or guilt stays it?"
Anakin sighed.
"With all due respect, Master Ikrit, we don't have time for this
discussion. The Peace Brigade will be here any moment."
"This is the
perfect time for it," Ikrit replied. "Perhaps the only time."
"What do you
mean?"
Ikrit blinked,
very slowly, then scratched out a long breath.
" I am
centuries old, Anakin. I came here to Yavin Four to free the spirits of the
imprisoned Massassi children, or so I thought. Now I think there was another
reason, an even greater one."
"Master?
What could that be?"
"The task
that drew me here was beyond my power to complete. It was beyond the power of
any adult Jedi. You and Tahiri were the only ones who could have done it."
"With your
help and advice. Without you, we never could have released them."
Ikrit ruffed his
fur. "With or without me you would have done it," he purred.
"That is why I say I was drawn here for another reason, slept for centuries
for another cause."
"What
reason?"
"To see
something new born in you and Tahiri. And to give you whatever small help I am
able to give to see that birth arrive."
A chill spidered
up Anakin's back. He couldn't say why, but Ikrit's words struck something in
his core.
Ikrit walked to
the window. "They are here," he said.
Anakin bolted
over. Peace Brigade ships were settling everywhere.
"I'm not
ready!" Anakin said.
"You are
ready," Ikrit replied.
"Not as
ready as I would like. Ten more minutes would have been nice. I could have
brought the automated defenses of the power generator on-line."
"Tell me
what you have done."
"Well, I've
got an energy shield up, though not much of one, and it's only over the
compound. A little pounding will bring it down." Anakin switched on the
intercom. Faint sounds of speech and movement bustled around them. "It'll
sound like a bunch of us are in here. And this—" He went to what
had once been the local sensor control panel. "—I'm using the old sensory
array to generate the illusion of small, local movements in the temple."
"Scurrying,"
Ikrit said. "As if we're running about."
"Right. Of
course, they won't see anything, if they get close, but their
instruments will tell them we're all over the place."
"They will
see also," Ikrit said. "Come."
The Great Temple
was a ziggurat with three giant steps. The old command center was on the second
tier. The ancient structure had five openings that led out to the flat, paved
surface that was the roof of the lowest tier. Anakin and Ikrit made their way
to the one that faced the landing clearing and peeked out.
Beyond the vague
distortion of the energy shield, Anakin saw five ships settled in the
clearing. Two were already disgorging armed Peace Brigaders.
"I hope they
go for this," Anakin said. "I hope they believe. If they start a
search for Kam, Tionne, and the kids now, they might find them."
"They will
believe," Ikrit assured him. "They will believe the children are
here because they want to, and because they are weak. Do not worry, Anakin. As
I said, a warrior I may not be, but the Force is not weak with me."
"I'm sorry,
Master Ikrit," Anakin said. "I should not doubt you."
"Then do not
doubt my words. Search your feelings, every day. Keep careful watch. The worst
monsters are not those from without." Then the Master closed his eyes,
humming faintly to himself. Anakin felt a surge in the Force as Ikrit's will
went out to touch the beings below, to nudge their credulity over the edge.
Anakin lifted a
remote comm unit and keyed into the outdoor speakers.
"You are
trespassing on the grounds of the Jedi academy," he said. "Please
leave immediately."
At the sound of
his amplified voice, some of the Peace Brigaders dived for cover. A moment
later, the exterior speakers of one of the ships boomed on.
"You inside
the temple," the voice said. "This is Lieutenant Kot Murno of the
Peace Brigade. We have been empowered to take control of this facility."
"On whose
authority?"
"The
Alliance of Twelve."
"Never heard
of it," Anakin replied. "Whoever they are, they don't have any
jurisdiction over this system."
"They do
now," Murno answered. "We are their authority. Surrender, and you
won't be harmed."
"Really? You
don't think that the Yuuzhan Vong will harm the children you've come to kidnap
when you hand them over to them?"
There was a pause
this time before Murno answered. "It is the price of peace," he said.
"I regret it, but it is the case. Weighed against what the Yuuzhan Vong
could do to every inhabited world in this galaxy, a handful of Jedi isn't much
to ask. You brought this disaster upon us. You must pay the price."
"You're
blaming the Yuuzhan Vong invasion on the Jedi?" Anakin asked incredulously.
"Jedi have
provoked this war at every stage, hoping to use it as a way to embellish their
own power. Your plans
for the
domination of this galaxy have long been known. This time, your tactics have
reverse-throttled on you."
"That's the
biggest trough of bantha fodder I've ever heard anyone spit up in my
life," Anakin said. "You are cowards and traitors. You want us? Come
and get us."
He fired his
blaster through the narrow window and ducked as return fire heat-spalled the
ancient stone. Particle shields like the one he had erected did nothing to
stop energy blasts. The thick jungle air filled with the hiss and whine of
blasters as the fire expanded to other parts of the temple complex.
"What are
they shooting at up there?" Anakin wondered aloud.
"Ghosts of
mist and madness," Ikrit told him.
"They don't
notice no one is shooting back?"
"Not yet.
They believe they see the bolts of energy weapons."
"How long
can you keep that up?"
"Longer if
the occasional bolt is real."
"Got
you," Anakin said, leaning around the door frame. Aiming carefully, using
the Force, he blew a blaster rifle out of a hooded man's hands. He continued
that way for about twenty minutes, picking his shots carefully. Each second
felt like a burden lifted from his shoulders; each movement of the chrono took
Tahiri and the rest farther from danger.
"They've
found the generator," Ikrit murmured. "Your shield will be down
soon."
"It's
okay," Anakin said. "We're almost done here. Even after it's down
they'll come in cautiously. We'll have plenty of time to get to the hangar and
get my X-wing out. Then all we have to do is run their little blockade."
He'd noticed three of the five ships had landed facing the closed hangar doors.
No surprise there, but what they didn't know was that one of the ion cannons
that guarded the hangars was still operational—and had a self-contained power
supply good for at least a blast or two.
He leaned out for
a parting shot.
A blaster bolt
seared by over his shoulder, lanced down into
the Peace Brigaders. Anakin jerked his head around.
"That shot
came from above us!"
" Yes,"
Ikrit said. "Didn't you notice? Didn't you know sue would come?"
"Notice
who?" But in a flash he knew. Tahiri was up there, Tahiri and two other
people. All Jedi.
"Hutt
slime!" he swore. "Just what I need!" He turned to Master Ikrit.
"There won't be room for all of us in the X-wing. Meet me in the deep
grotto. I'll think of some-thing on the way."
With that he
raced down the corridor, blaster in one hand and lightsaber in the other.
He found them in
the refectory—Tahiri, Valin Horn, and Sannah. They had barricaded the outer
door with tables and had two blasters between them, no telling where they had
gotten them. When Anakin entered, Tahiri waved the gun at him.
"What are
you doing?" Anakin exploded.
"Helping
you," Tahiri said with a grin.
" How did
you—"
"Kam thought
we were on Tionne's boat, Tionne thought we were on his. Simple, with a little
planning."
"But Valin?
Valin's only eleven!"
"Twelve!"
Valin said very seriously. "I can help."
"This is
insane."
"Fine one
you are to talk, Anakin," Tahiri snapped. You're the one who left
Coruscant without permission, aren't you? You get to do everything while we
just run away and do nothing? I don't think so, best friend."
"Yeah? Well,
my plan was to get away in the X-wing. Now we have too many people for that.
What does the brilliant Tahiri propose we do, exactly?"
"Oh."
Her green eyes went round. "I hadn't thought that far."
"No, I guess
you didn't."
The floor
suddenly vibrated like the shell of a Hapan lute.
"What's
that?" Sannah asked.
Valin, peeking
out the window, answered. "The shield is down. Now they're shooting at the
doors. Some men are coming up the stairs, too."
"No more
time," Anakin said. "We'll have to think as we go. I told Ikrit to
meet us in the grotto."
"Then we'll
be stuck underground."
"I didn't
have much time to put this together, Tahiri."
"You mean
there's more to your plan than hiding in the grotto?"
Anakin blew out a
deep breath. "Sure. We'll take a Peace Brigade ship."
Tahiri smiled.
"There. That wasn't so hard, was it?"
They reached the
turbolift just as a clump of Peace Brigaders appeared at the end of the
corridor facing onto the outside stairs.
"Hey!
Stop!" one of them shouted.
Two blaster shots
pinged against the doors as they closed. Anakin let out a breath as the lift
started to descend, then sucked it back in.
"It's going
to stop," Anakin said. "At the second level."
"Override
it."
"I
can't," he said, activating his lightsaber with a snap-hiss. "The
door will stay open for a few seconds. If they're out there.. ."
The door opened
on the muzzles of six blasters. Anakin didn't think. He'd already slapped the
"down" button— now he leapt into the midst of his enemies, blocking
the first two blaster bolts with his weapon and sending them burning back
through the press. He cut a blaster rifle in half and spun. Shouting in alarm,
his attackers gave ground, trying to find a range where they could use their
weapons. Two came at him with stun batons. He leapt and whirled, disarming one
with a cut that took several
fingers and
another that sheared the baton in half. He felt another blow coming, one he
wasn't quite fast enough to avoid.
When he landed,
he was facing another lightsaber, its blade a vibrant blue.
Behind
it—gripping it and grinning fiercely—was Tahiri. She'd just slashed the force
pike in half that had almost impaled him.
He didn't let his
astonishment faze him. The turbolift with Sannah and Valin was long gone. Find
Master Ikrit, he sent after the young candidates, hoping that if they could
not make out actual words, they would at least get the sense.
Then he squared
his shoulders and faced the Peace Brigaders who were warily regrouping about
two meters away. "You don't stand a chance," Anakin told them. "
I've been trying not to hurt you. That ends with the next person who fires a
weapon at me."
"They can't
get all of us," a woman in front said. She had a seamed brown face and
dark eyes.
"Of course
we can," Anakin said.
"All of
us?" She smirked. From behind her came the sound of what could only be
reinforcements.
Anakin hit the
woman, hard, with a telekinetic shove that took all of her companions down,
too. Then he whirled and made four quick slashes that opened a gaping hole
into the turbolift shaft.
"Go,"
he told Tahiri. "You say you're ready for all this? Jump."
Tahiri nodded and
without the slightest hesitation leapt down the shaft. Anakin followed her,
bolts flashing above him. Together, they hurled through darkness.
CHAPTER FIVE
Anakin reached to
Tahiri through the Force, and for an instant met a wall as hard as the stone of
the temple. Then she reached back, and they clicked as if they had never been
apart, so intensely that it actually frightened him. They fell in a sort of
acrobatic dance, Anakin using the Force to slow Tahiri's fall and she slowing
his as they spun around a common fulcrum somewhere between them, like two
children clasping hands and leaning back, turning around on their feet. If
either let go, the other would go whirling off, out of control
An old game, one
they had invented long ago.
He noticed
something was falling with them—a pair of glop grenades. He sent them humming
back up the shaft and out the hole he had cut.
The two young
Jedi touched down, feather light, on top of the turbolift.
"Wow!"
Tahiri said. "It's been a long time since we did that. That was terrific.
And the way you got the grenades, too—that was artl"
"I-"
The car of the
lift suddenly started again.
Desperately
Anakin cut into the power couplings and superconductor casings in the walls.
The lift jarred to a stop. Meanwhile, Tahiri sliced into the roof of the car itself
and jumped back, in case there was blasterfire.
But there was
none.
"I don't
feel anyone on the lift," Tahiri said.
"No. I sent
it down to the third hangar level below the temple. I think Valin and Sannah
got off, and then someone called it back up—probably someone on the ground
level. Judging by our drop, we're probably somewhere between—"
An explosion six
meters above him cut him off as one of the outer lift doors blew in.
"'There's
the ground floor, right there," Anakin said. •Come on!"
He jumped down
into the car. With his lightsaber, he cut through the car and the wall beyond,
revealing an underground hangar that hadn't been used since the battle against
the first Death Star.
" You block
their shots," Anakin told Tahiri.
As bolts rained
down and Tahiri deflected them, Anakin cut the fail-safe magnetic bolts that
had locked the turbolift in place. He flicked off his lightsaber.
"Cut your
lightsaber, now!"
"But—"
"Quick!"
She did,
flattening against the lift walls as blasterfire poured through the hole above
them. Another grenade plinked against the lift floor.
"There.
Throw that back at them," Anakin said.
The grenade
whizzed back up the hole. "Why didn't you do it?" Tahiri asked.
"Because I'm
holding the lift car up."
Above them, the
glop grenade went off, and Anakin let gravity have the car.
It dropped like a
stone.
"Remember to
jump up just before we hit bottom," Anakin gritted, as the lift hurled
down through the layers of hangars and Massassi caverns below the temple.
"Somebody
wasn't paying attention in physics lec-rures," Tahiri said.
"Nope. Mind
the roof." And then they did jump, pushing away from the lift floor with
the Force, up through
the jagged hole,
into the turbolift shaft. Below them, the car hit bottom with a terrific din.
Once again they drifted each other down upon it, but this time the car wasn't
exactly level. It had wrenched the lowest doors from their hinges, and they
were able to step through.
The Rebel
Alliance had converted square kilometers of Massassi caverns into hangars, but
below that there were chambers and caverns more or less untouched. The
turbolift went down only as far as the Alliance had used the caverns. After
that it was stairs, winding corridors, and secret panels.
"They'll
look up there first," Anakin said. "They'll think we went through
into the hangar where I cut the wall. By the time they think to look down
here—in fact, hang on." He activated his wrist comm.
"Fiver."
affirmative. Fiver's response scrolled across the small
display.
"I need you
to fly the X-wing out of the hangar. Avoid all pursuit until I call you again.
Got that?"
AFFIRMATIVE.
"Good luck,
Fiver," Anakin whispered.
After a long
descent, Anakin stopped in front of a blank wall. "Remember this?"
"Is Dagobah
up to its neck in mud?" Tahiri pushed a patch in the wall and it swung
open. The two stepped through and closed it behind them. Anakin felt around in
the rocks and came up with one of the two glow lamps that were usually secreted
there.
"Master
Ikrit has already been here," he murmured. "With Valin and
Sannah."
"Yeah. I can
feel them."
"That was,
umm, good back there," Anakin admitted. "Where did you get the
lightsaber?"
"Anakin
Solo. You don't think I can build a lightsaber?"
"I didn't
say that. I just didn't think—"
"Right. You
didn't think, and you're still not thinking, and you'd better fix that before
you say anything else. Now, let's find Master Ikrit."
The pungent,
rotten-egg scent of sulfur would have led them to their destination if their
memories had not. Ikrit, Valin, and Sannah sat on the edges of an underground
hot spring, just outside of a shaft of light that fell from a hundred meters or
more above, where some long-ago force, natural or artificial, had cut through
the soft stone.
"I've never
seen it in daylight," Tahiri murmured.
When they were
younger they had come here with Kam and Tionne to drift in the warm water and
turn from inward to outward in the Force, to contemplate the stars above and
the person within. It was a place all the students knew, but which was never
spoken of to anyone else.
"Good that
you have come," Ikrit sighed.
"You knew I
would," Anakin said.
"Yes. Still,
it is good."
"What will
we do now?" Valin asked. He was trying to look brave, but Anakin could
feel his fear.
"Now? You
guys will keep waiting here. It should be safe enough. I'm going to climb up
there—" Tahiri elbowed Anakin in the side. "I mean," he
corrected, "Tahiri and I will climb up there while we have light to see
by. Then we'll hide until dark and stea—er, commandeer one of their
ships, one big enough for all of us."
"And small
enough to bring down here," Tahiri added.
"Right.
There's a light transport I think might fit the bill."
"Do you
remember the way up?" Tahiri asked.
"You two did
this before?" Ikrit asked. "Climbed up to the surface from
here?"
"Um, yes,"
Anakin replied. "When we were bored, once."
"I thought I
always had my eye on you," Ikrit said. "I must be getting old."
Somehow, the Jedi
Master looked old, older than Anakin had ever seen him. He sounded old,
too.
"Are you
ill, Master Ikrit?"
"Ill? No.
Sad."
"Sad at
what?"
Ikrit ruffled his
fur. "It is inappropriate, my sadness. It is nothing. Go, succeed as you
always do. Remember—" Ikrit paused, then began more strongly in a voice
that made Anakin feel, suddenly, that he was eleven again. "Remember. You
two are better than the sum of your parts. Together, you two could—" He
paused again. "No. Enough. I've said enough. Together, that's the important
thing. Now go."
They reached the
top by nightfall and took shelter in a small cavern just under the lip of the
pit. It was a tight fit, but impossible to see unless you were hovering right
in front of it. They sat shoulder to shoulder, breathing deeply and working the
cramps from their muscles.
"You thought
I was going to mess things up," Tahiri said suddenly.
"What
brought that up?"
"There
hasn't been time to talk about it until now."
"Well, keep
your voice down. It's not exactly the brightest thing for us to be
talking."
"We'll feel
them in the Force long before they hear us."
"Unless they
have Yuuzhan Vong with 'em. You can't feel them in the Force."
"Really? Is
that true?"
"Yeah."
"So?"
"So
what?"
Tahiri punched
his shoulder lightly. "So you thought I was going to mess things up. Get
us all caught."
"I didn't
say that."
"No, of
course not. Wouldn't want to upset baby Tahiri."
"Tahiri, now
you're acting like a kid."
"No, I'm
not. I'm acting like someone whose best friend has completely forgotten she
exists."
"That's
ridiculous."
" Is it?
When you left the academy with Mara, did you even bother to say good-bye? And
since then, have you sent me a single message, or even reached out in the
force? And just a while ago, when we did our old falling dance—you didn't like
it. I almost had to catch myself!"
"You're the
one who resisted," Anakin said. "We were tailing like rocks, and you
resisted me."
"That was
you, you big dumb gundark."
"That's
crazy. You—" But the whole scene flashed suddenly though his mind again.
Maybe it had been him. When he and Tahiri worked together it was
sometimes hard to tell who was feeling what.
"See?"
she said frostily.
Anakin was silent
for a moment, and so, miraculously, was Tahiri.
"I did miss
you," Anakin finally said. "No one knows me the way—" He broke
off.
"Right,"
Tahiri said. "No one knows you like I do, and you don't want anyone
to. You want to keep all of that stuff in you, where no one can touch it.
Chewbacca— even last time you were here you wouldn't talk about him. Now you
pretend you're past it. And the thing at Centerpoint—"
"You're
right," Anakin said. "I don't want to talk about that. Not right
now."
Tahiri's
shoulders began to shake, just a little, and Anakin realized she was crying.
"Come on,
Tahiri," he said.
"What are
we, Anakin? A year ago you were my best friend in the world."
"We're still
best friends," he assured her.
"Then the
way you treat your other friends must really stink."
"Yeah,"
Anakin admitted. Almost without thinking, he reached for her hand. For a few
seconds, she didn't respond. Her fingers were cold and motionless in his, and
he suddenly believed he had made some kind of mistake. Then she gripped back,
and warmth rushed around him like a whirlwind. She nodded her head over onto
his shoulder, still weeping, and silence folded around them again. But this
time it was an easier silence. Not happy or even quite content, but easier.
After a while her
breathing became regular, and Anakin realized she was asleep. By the faint
orange light of the gas giant outside, he could make out traces of her features,
so familiar and yet somehow different. It was as if, below the girl's face he
had always known, something else was pushing up, like mountains rising, driven
by the internal heat of a planet. Something you couldn't stop, even if you wanted
to.
It made him want
to hang on and run away at the same time, and in a mild epiphany he realized he
had felt that way for some time.
As children they
had been best friends. But neither of them was a child anymore, not exactly.
His arm had gone
numb from her weight, but he couldn't bring himself to shift, for fear of
waking her.
Anakin woke
Tahiri an hour before the orange planet set. The sun was not yet out.
"It's time,
"he said.
"Good,"
Tahiri mumbled. "It's getting cramped in here." She shifted into a
crouch. "Are the others still okay?"
"I haven't
heard or felt anything. Are you ready?"
"Ready as
rockets, hero boy."
Carefully they
climbed from the pit and padded through the jungle. The spicy scent of bruised
blueleaf shrubs sug-
gested a lot of
searching had been done in the area, but for the moment it was quiet. Anakin
and Tahiri made it to the ship landing clearing without incident.
"I like that
one," Anakin whispered, pointing at a light transport a little apart from
the rest. "I don't think I'll have trouble flying it, and we can get it
down the pit."
"You're the
captain, Captain."
Anakin peered
more closely at the ship and then began sneaking across the clearing. A guard
several hundred meters away glanced in their direction, but it took only a
faint suggestion to turn Anakin and Tahiri into shadow and planetlight.
They found a
guard in front of the ship, too, sitting on the open ramp. He came quickly to
his feet when they saw him.
•'You're needed
around the other side of the temple," Anakin told him, with a slight wave
of his hand.
The fellow
hesitated an instant, scratching his chin. "I'm needed elsewhere," he
allowed. "I'll go, then."
"See you
later," Anakin said as the man started away, pace quickening as he went.
"What the—?"
A young man's face stuck around the corner. He looked as if he had just
awakened. Seeing Anakin and Tahiri, the fellow's eyes went wide and he reached
for his blaster. He stopped with the snap-hiss of Anakin's lightsaber
igniting, probably because the glowing purple tip was centimeters from one of
his gray eyes.
"Easy,"
Anakin said.
"Hey,"
the fellow said. "I'm always easy. Ask anyone. Would you, uh, mind getting
that a little farther from my race?"
" You have
restraining cuffs here somewhere?"
"Maybe."
Anakin shrugged.
"I can cut your arms off and get more or less the same effect."
"In the
locker over there," the fellow said, pointing.
"Get them,
Tahiri. What's your name?"
"Remis.
Remis Vehn."
"You pilot
this thing?"
"Sure."
"Any
surprises I need to know about before I fly her?"
Vehn winced as
Tahiri pulled his arms back and snapped them in the cuffs. "Not that I can
think of," he said.
"Good. I'll
keep you aboard though. If any occur to you, let me know."
Anakin shut his
lightsaber down, made his way to the controls, and looked them over. They
weren't that different from those on the Millennium Falcon, his father's
ship.
Vehn cleared his
throat. "I just remembered. Before you engage the repulsorlift you have to
enter a clearance code."
"Really? Or
what happens?"
"The cabin
will sort of electrify."
"I'm glad
you remembered that," Anakin said dryly. "The code, please?"
Vehn recited it
while Anakin entered it. Then the young Jedi turned back to his captive.
"Let me explain something to you," he said. "My name is Anakin
Solo, and this is my friend Tahiri Veila. We are Jedi Knights, some of the
people you came here to betray to the Yuuzhan Vong. If you lie to us, we'll
know it. If you try to keep something from us, we'll find it out. The only uncertain
factor is how much we'll have to damage you to do so."
Vehn snorted.
"They were right. You Jedi and your high-minded ideals—it's all smoke
screen."
Anakin shot him a
withering glance. "Next time I'm trying to capture children for Yuuzhan
Vong sacrifices, I'll be sure to have a talk about 'high-minded ideals' with
you. Until then, or until you have something useful to say, you keep your
garbage lock cycled shut."
He turned back to
the controls. "Hang on, Tahiri. This
might go a little
rough until I get the feel of it. And pay attention to Vehn. If you feel the
slightest twinge from him, dig it out."
"Yes, sir,
Captain Solo."
Anakin engaged
the repulsorlifts, and the ship began to rise. Before he closed the ramp, he
heard someone shouting outside.
"Call out to
Master Ikrit," Anakin told Tahiri. "Use the force to let him know
we're coming."
And it's going to
be tight, he finished, to himself.
CHAPTER SIX
Talon Karrde
clasped his hands beneath his goatee and studied the scene on the Wild
Karrde's command deck viewscreen through pale blue eyes.
"Well,
Shada," he told the striking woman at his right hand, "it appears
that our baby-sitting chore has become somewhat more . . . interesting than
anticipated."
"I would say
so," Shada D'ukal replied. "The sensor shroud shows at least seven
ships in orbit around Yavin Four and another six on the surface."
"None of
them are Yuuzhan Vong, I take it."
"No. A mixed
bag, but I'd lay odds that they are Peace Brigade."
"Gambling is
a foolish occupation," Karrde said. "I want to know. And I
want to know what they're doing." He ticked his finger against the
armrest. "I knew we should have found some way to leave sooner. Skywalker
was right." He sighed and leaned forward, studying the long-range sensors.
"There's
some sort of firefight on the surface, yes, H'sishi?"
"Looks like
it," the Togorian mewled.
"Solusar?"
Karrde wondered. "Maybe. How long before we can be there?"
"They
outnumber us badly," Shada pointed out. "We should call the rest of
our ships before we do anything."
"We should
certainly call them, but we can't wait for them. Someone down there is fighting
for his life, most
likely one of the
people I told Skywalker I would protect. What's more, the fact that there are
still ships on the surface suggests they haven't finished what they came here
to do. That is, they don't have the Jedi children yet. If we wait until they
have them aboard, in space, the job of rescuing them will become much more
complicated."
"I see
that," Shada said. "But it will be more complicated yet if they blow
us out of the sky."
Karrde laughed.
"Shada, when will you learn to trust my instincts? When have I ever gotten
you killed?"
"You have a
point there, I suppose."
Karrde pointed at
Yavin 4, at the moment a dark disk silhouetted against the larger orange
profile of its primary. "So I want to be there, now. Dankin, keep full
cloak, but let me know when they notice us."
"Of course,
sir."
That point came
an hour later, when they were almost sitting on the nearest of the orbiting
ships.
"They're
hailing us, sir," Dankin told him. "And powering up weapons."
"Put them
on."
A moment later, a
thick-featured human male with thin, graying hair appeared on the communication
holoscreen.
"Transport,
identify yourself." He chopped the words out in even syllables.
"My name,
sir, is Talon Karrde. Perhaps you've heard of me."
The man's eyes
pinched warily. "Yes, I've heard of you, Captain Karrde. It's rude to
sneak up on someone like that. And dangerous."
"And it's
rude to be given a name and not offer one," Karrde returned.
A look of
annoyance crossed the fellow's face. "Don't try me, Captain Karrde. You
may call me Captain Im-satad. What do you want?"
Karrde favored
the man with a wan smile. "I was going to ask you the same question."
"I don't
follow you," Imsatad said.
"You seem to
be having some sort of trouble. I'm offering my assistance."
"We need no
assistance, I assure you. And to be blunt, Captain Karrde, I don't believe you.
I remember you as a smuggler, a pirate, and a traitor to the Empire."
"Then
perhaps you remember, as well, what became of those who treated me with
disrespect," Karrde said icily. "But if we are being blunt—and
perhaps that is best here, since you seem to lack the education for more civilized
discourse—I am undoubtedly here for the same reason you are—to collect the
bounty on the young Jedi below."
"I don't
know what you're talking about."
Karrde leaned
toward the screen, eyes glittering dangerously. "You are a liar, Captain,
and a poor one. I see no reason for us to play games."
"I trust
you've noticed you're outnumbered."
" I trust you
noted I was able to drop in on you in, shall we say, an unannounced
fashion. Do you really think I brought only one ship?"
Imsatad glared at
him, then cut his visual. Karrde waited patiently until, a few moments later,
the image returned.
"This is
none of your business," the man said.
"Profit is
always my business."
" There is
no profit here, and if there were, you would already be too late."
"Oh, I don't
think so. Why are your ships still on the surface? Why do my sensors show what
seems to be protracted search activity? You've let your quarry slip through
your fingers, Captain." Karrde smiled and leaned back in his chair.
"Consider my offer of help. I ask little in return, and I could be a
nuisance if you spurn my kindness."
" That
sounds like a threat."
Karrde spread his
hands. "Take it however you please. Shall we discuss this further or
not?"
"You say you
ask for little. What, exactly, would that be?"
"A few kind
words in the ears of the Yuuzhan Vong. An introduction. You see, Captain, for
some years now I've been retired from my chosen profession. But these are very
interesting times, exactly the sort of times my kind thrives on, if you know
what I mean. I'd like to come out of retirement."
"Go
on."
Karrde stroked
his mustache thoughtfully. "The Yuuzhan Vong have promised a truce if the
Jedi are delivered to them. I would like to bargain for passage through Yuuzhan
Vong space, once the borders are established."
"Why should
they allow a smuggler to use their space?"
"There may
be things they need. I can get them. If not, I would be doing them no harm; all
of my activities would be aimed at the scattered remnants of the New Republic.
But those remnants are separated, at times, by Yuuzhan Vong-occupied systems.
The cost of circumventing them, frankly, would be prohibitive."
Imsatad nodded,
and a brief look of disgust wrinkled his features. "I see. You realize I
can promise none of that."
"I only
asked for a mention of my help in this affair. You can promise that."
"I
could," Imsatad acknowledged. "What exactly can you offer me?"
"Better
sensors than you have, for one thing. Detailed knowledge of Yavin Four that I
believe you lack. A crew that is very, very good at finding things. Certain
special defenses against Jedi—and the means of finding them."
Imsatad
stiffened, and his voice dropped low. "I was with Thrawn at Wayland. You
still?. . ."
"Ah. You
know what I mean, then."
"I know you
betrayed him."
Karrde rolled his
eyes. "How tiresome. Very well,
Captain, if you
don't wish my services, there are others who will."
"Wait!"
Imsatad chewed his lip for a moment. "I need to consult with my officers
on this."
"Take a few
moments," Karrde said, lifting a finger. "But do not bore me."
He cut the transmission.
CHAPTER SEVEN
"Hutt
slime!" Remis Vehn snapped, as the transport scraped along the wall of the
pit. "Watch my ship!"
"The
controls have too much play in them," Anakin complained.
"No, you're
flying like a Twi'lek on spice," Vehn replied.
"Quiet,"
Tahiri said, "or we'll restrain your mouth, too."
Vehn yelped again
as they scraped stone. The fit was tighter than Anakin had thought it would be.
Still, a moment
later, they settled into the steaming water of the underground pool. Anakin
dropped the landing ramp, and an instant later Ikrit and the two Jedi children
were on board.
"Strap in,
everyone," Anakin told them. He hit the lifts and back up they started.
An instant later,
the whole ship shuddered and their ears were filled with the screech of metal.
"The landing
ramp, you vac-brain!" Vehn screamed. " You didn't pull up the
ramp!"
Belatedly Anakin
flipped the appropriate switch, but all he got was a grinding noise.
"Great,"
he muttered.
"Anakin,"
Tahiri said, "I think we may have trouble."
"We'll make
it, even with the ramp down. We'll figure out what to do about that
later."
76
"That's not
what I meant." She pointed up through the cockpit.
Something dark
was eclipsing the morning light.
"Sith spawn.
They've moved one of the big freighters over the hole."
"Continue,"
Master Ikrit murmured.
"But—"
"Continue."
The diminutive Master was crouched on the floor, eyes closed, his voice a
serene purr. Anakin felt a powerful surge in the Force.
"You should
strap in, Master."
"No
time."
Anakin nodded.
"As you say, Master Ikrit." He throttled up. Banging, sparking, and
shaking, they shot up toward the belly of their enemy.
"He's
pushing it up," Tahiri said in awe. "Master Ikrit is pushing the
freighter up."
And indeed, when
they emerged, rather than sitting right over the hole, the freighter was some
eighty meters off the ground. Its thrusters were burning, pushing it down, but
it wasn't budging. Anakin darted his gaze about. The other ships and people on
foot had sidled in on all sides but one, so he cut toward the hole as a brutal
barrage struck them.
"My
ship!" Vehn howled, as the deck pitched wildly. Not blinking, Anakin took
them through the storm, just as two more ships closed in, completing the trap.
"Help Master
Ikrit," Anakin told the Jedi candidates. "Push the freighter up
farther."
"Master
Ikrit is gone, Anakin," Valin said. "He jumped out of the
hatch." "He what?" "There he is!" Tahiri
shrieked, pointing ahead of them.
There Ikrit was
indeed, walking toward the blocking ships, a corvette and a light freighter. As
he approached them, they were parted as if by two gigantic hands. "I don't
believe it," Anakin said. But he gunned for-
ward,
nevertheless, aimed at the gap the Jedi Master had created for them. Blaster
bolts and laser beams sizzled and hissed in the air, but every shot that might
have hit either Ikrit or the ship bent away, missing by centimeters, and still
the small Jedi strolled sedately along.
They were almost
free now, passing over Ikrit.
"He can't
keep that up," Anakin said. "Tahiri, use the Force. Snag him as we go
by."
"You
bet," she answered. Her confidence rang false; Anakin heard a tremor in
her voice.
That was when the
first bolt slipped through and struck Master Ikrit. Anakin felt it in the
Force, a spike of clarity. No pain, no fear, no remorse, only... understanding.
Two more shots
hit Ikrit in quick succession, and then fire was pounding their ship again.
With a sob of anguish, Anakin jetted the ship through the hole and spun. At
the same moment, with an inarticulate growl, Tahiri leapt from the open hatch,
lightsaber glowing, and ran toward the downed Master.
" No!"
Anakin howled. He brought the forward guns— the only ones under his direct
control—to bear, and opened up on the ships that were suddenly closing between
him and Tahiri. They returned fire. He caught a glimpse of her, Ikrit's body in
her arms, dodging back toward him. Absurdly, his eyes were drawn to her bare
feet, white against the brown soil.
The transport
turned halfway over under a barrage, and every light in the ship went out.
Cursing, Anakin started furiously trying to reroute, and then the power whined
back on. The shields were gone.
"Valin,
Sannah, one of you!" he shouted. "Get to the laser turret! Now!"
He did the only
thing he could. In seconds they would be cooked. If he stood any chance of
getting Tahiri back on board, he needed a plan.
He spun and fired
the jets, leaping above the other
ships, strafing
them as he went. He was absorbed now, his senses in the Force stretched to
their limits, dodging shots before they were fired, sensing the weakest spots
to place his own rounds, pinwheeling and jagging above them.
The ships came up
with him. He fought for altitude, all the time aware that Tahiri was farther
and farther below him. He could still feel her. She was still alive.
Master Ikrit was
not. Anakin felt the old Jedi's life go, felt it pass through him like a sweet
wind.
/ am proud of
you, Anakin, it seemed to say. Remember—together, you are stronger than
the sum of your parts. I love you. Good-bye.
Gritting his
teeth against another concussion, Anakin clenched the tears in his skull. Cry
later, Anakin, he thought. Right now you have to see.
One of his
engines was limping. He couldn't win this, not here, not now. With a curse that
bordered on being a sob, he flipped, slid between two ships that collided an
instant later, and punched toward the upper atmosphere.
Below him,
Tahiri's presence dwindled.
Like Chewie. Just
like Chewie.
He jerked the
ship back around and aimed it at the nearest ship, a corvette, and went to full
throttle.
"What
the—" Vehn gasped. "You're going to kill us!"
Anakin fired. The
other ship held steady, steady.
Anakin pulled up,
just slightly, and skipped off the top of the corvette the way a hurled stone
might skip across a lake. The collision tossed them up with a terrible shrieking
of metal.
The counterforce
hurled the corvette down, not far, but far enough to slam it nose-first into
the Great Temple. An orchid of flame uncurled from its engines.
A gasp later, the
turbolaser in the turret began talking as Sannah took control of the gun.
Anakin put the ship into a climb, fighting for distance though every meter he
put behind him tore another stitch from his heart.
"I'll be
back, Tahiri," he said. "That I swear. I'll be back."
Kam Solusar
gasped and sagged against the damp stone wall of the cave. Tionne, nearby,
stifled a cry of anguish. Some of the children, the more sensitive ones, began
to cry, probably not even sure what they were crying about.
He groped through
the darkness until he found Tionne and took her in his arms. He could smell the
salt on her cheeks, feel the torn place in her.
Tionne felt
things so deep, so strong. She had no fear of the pain that such openness could
cause. It was one of the things he loved about her. While he put on armor
against the universe, she took it all in and gave it back as something better.
Her wound would heal, and from it a song would come. Others thought she was
weak, because her powers in the Force weren't so great.
Kam knew better.
Ultimately, she was stronger than he.
"Master
Ikrit," she whispered.
"I
know," Kam replied, stroking her silver hair. "He knew all
along."
They stood that
way for a few precious seconds, drawing strength and comfort from each other.
It was Tionne who moved away first.
"The
children need us," she said. "We're all they have, now."
"No,"
Kam whispered back. "Anakin is still out there."
CHAPTER EIGHT
Talon Karrde was
a hostage, but he wasn't supposed to know that. Imsatad probably thought
himself clever and subtle for maneuvering Karrde into joining the search party
on the moon's surface and equally clever to make certain that there were twenty
of his own people to Karrde's four.
Karrde was quite
content to allow him that illusion of shrewdness.
"We've
already searched here," Maber Yeff, the leader of the Peace Brigade
segment of the team, said in his shrill little voice, waving his hand at a long
row of vine-smothered ruins.
"I'm sure
you did," Karrde replied. "But not with vornskrs."
Yeff's pale,
ax-nosed face turned dubiously toward the long-limbed beasts loping ahead of
the group. "How do you know they don't just smell womp rats or something?
" he asked.
"If they
could do that, they would be valuable indeed," Karrde replied. "As
there are no womp rats on Yavin Four, it would require hyperwave noses to sniff
them out all the way over on Tatooine."
"You know
what I mean."
"Vornskrs
sense the Force, and especially those creatures that use the Force.
They are particularly suited for hunting Jedi."
"Yeah? Where
can we get some? That would be useful in our line of work."
"Alas, mine
are the only tame ones in existence. You don't want to meet a wild one, I
promise you."
"Still.
We've got plenty more of these Jedi to hunt down, and with all of the
advantages their sorcery gives them—and if these things do what you say—"
"Observe,"
Karrde said. The beasts had pricked up their ears and were panting eagerly.
They darted through a crumbling entranceway.
"But we
looked in there," Yeff repeated.
"How many
Jedi do you estimate are hiding in there? Based on my information, at least two
adults and perhaps thirty children. Do you think you could see them if they
didn't want to be seen? Or that you would remember them if you did see
them?"
"Can they
really do that?"
"They can
really do that."
"That's what
Captain Imsatad said. He also said you have a way around that."
Karrde smile
thinly. "Indeed. A certain creature from the same planet as the vornskrs.
It projects a bubble that repels the Force."
"That's what
your pretty lady has in the covered cage."
From the corner
of his eye, Karrde saw Shada's brows lower dangerously, but she continued to
play her part. "Exactly. My sweet Sleena is as delicate as they are. She
understands their needs."
"Yeah."
Yeff spared "Sleena" another leer. "Can I see it?"
"Sunlight
harms them, and they are easily agitated. If you wish, after the hunt, I'll
show them to you. For the time being, I suggest you have your people ready
their weapons. The children shouldn't put up much of a fight, but the adults
will be formidable, even without their Jedi powers."
They followed the
vornskrs into the ruins, through crumbling galleries incensed with the
crushed-spice scent of blueleaf and the grainy, wormy smell of rotting wood. At
first the light was dim but sufficient, falling in shards through gaps in the
wall and roof, diffused by mist, leaves, and stringy mosslike stuff. But as
they followed the vornskrs, it grew darker, and eventually they reached the
opening to a stairwell that dropped steeply down into the bedrock foundations
of the place.
Karrde drew his
blaster and nodded to Shada, on his right. Most everyone else already had
theirs out.
"After
you," Karrde suggested.
"Your
beasts," Yeff told him. "You go ahead."
"As you
wish."
The tunnel took
them down through ages of stone scribed now and then in alien figures and
script. Eventually it debouched into a large cavern. The vornskrs stood
snarling and spitting at the darkness.
"Sit,"
Karrde commanded, the hair on his neck pricking up. Had he just seen a motion,
part of a face, or was he just fooling himself? His own life depended on the
answer.
He looked again
at the vornskrs, at the way their eyes moved. As if watching something walking,
very near.
"Where are
they? I don't see anything." Yeff swung his lamp around.
"No,"
Karrde said. "Neither do I." He raised his blaster and stunned the
Peace Brigader.
He managed to
nail another one before the return fire came, and by then he was already diving
for the rocks. Team members Halm and Ferson, alert for his signal, were already
doing the same. Shada, on the other hand, was a gyroscoping blur in the midst
of their enemies. Too bad Yeff was already stunned; otherwise he would be
learning a whole new appreciation for the "pretty lady" right now.
When they had
allowed him only three of his crew,
they hadn't known
exactly how good Shada was. How could they? Now it was too late.
The air went
thick with energy, and the cave strobed.
By his count it
was now four to fifteen.
He heard Halm cry
out, and regretfully amended his own forces to three. He pulled his other
blaster and leapt up, both weapons blazing, searching for better cover.
"Come on,
come on," he shouted. "I know you're here! Regards from Luke and
Mara's wedding!"
A bolt singed
across his arm, and he stumbled on the uneven floor. I'm getting too old for
this, he thought, rolling on his back. Without cover he would last a few
seconds, maybe long enough to shoot two more. Shada might still manage to kill
them all, but that would leave the galaxy short one Talon Karrde, which would
be a terrible tragedy.
Grimly, he raised
his weapons and pointed over his feet. Muzzles flashed.
And suddenly a
glowing wand of energy appeared above him, cutting complex hieroglyphs in the
air. The blaster bolts that had meant to end the glorious career of Talon Karrde
whined off into the cavern.
Karrde blinked up
at the man standing over him. "Nice to see you, Solusar. What took you so
long?"
Then he opened up
on the Peace Brigaders, climbing to his feet as he did so. Solusar was his
cover now, deflecting the fire directed at them with that eerie Jedi certainty.
Another
lightsaber flashed into existence across the room. That would be Tionne.
Karrde now
counted five for his side, an estimated ten on the other.
When the Peace
Brigaders were down to three, they fled back up the passageway.
"We can't
let them get away," Karrde said.
"They
won't," the shadowy figure beside him promised. Then he was gone.
And somewhere
behind him in the cavern, Karrde heard the voices of children.
Kam Solusar
returned a few moments later. Karrde made out his stern face and receding
hairline in the dim light of a glow lamp. Solusar walked up to Karrde and
regarded him for a moment.
"You're
lucky I didn't cut you down," he said. "Bringing those men down here
where the children are. Using your vornskrs against us. What if they had
attacked the students?"
Karrde cocked his
head. "My pets are very well trained. They attack only on my order. Look,
Solusar. I had to find you. I couldn't do it without the interference of those
fools, and when I did find you I had to get rid of them. They thought I had an
ysalamiri with me, that your Jedi powers would be blocked."
" But you
didn't bring one."
"It's an
empty cage."
"So you
turned on them, not knowing if we were really here or not."
"I know my
pets. I was certain you were down here, and I didn't want to cripple you by
actually bringing an ysalamiri."
"That was
quite a risk."
"I told Luke
Skywalker I would take his students off of Yavin Four. If keeping my word requires
risk, that's acceptable."
Solusar nodded
impatiently. "Understood. But how am I to know you're telling the truth? I
know you, yes, and you've been on the right side. But a lot of people are
joining the Peace Brigade, and you've changed coats before, Karrde."
"So have
you. Have you ever wanted to put the old one back on?"
Solusar's eyes
narrowed, then he chopped his head in a single affirmation. "I'll trust
you. What now?"
"Now I
suggest we get out of here, before they send reinforcements."
Unfortunately,
Captain Imsatad had not underestimated Karrde as badly as he might have. When
they reached the surface, the forest was teeming with Peace Brigaders.
"Perfect,"
Kam Solusar muttered, ducking a blaster bolt that vaped a fist-sized hole in
the stone near him. * At least before, we were hidden."
Karrde
straightened the front of his outfit and glanced casually at his chrono.
"Solusar, I'm injured. Don't you have any faith in me?"
"Faith is
blind, unquestioned belief. What do you think?"
"I think I
would cover my ears if I were you." He raised his voice. "Tionne,
children. Cover your ears."
"Wha—"
Solusar began, but was drowned out by what might have been two hands the size
of Death Stars dapping.
Karrde grinned
with fierce satisfaction as turbolaser fire set the surrounding jungle ablaze.
It was good to have a crew he could trust. He stepped from behind cover and,
carefully aiming and picking off the few Peace Brigaders who were still paying
attention, trotted toward where the Wild Karrde was landing. When the
landing ramp came down, Kam Solusar and Tionne shepherded the children on board
as Karrde and his crew provided cover fire. In moments, they were all inside.
Karrde was the
last aboard, and even as his feet hit the deck, the modified Corellian transport
pirouetted and tossed itself at the sky. Through the closing hatch, Karrde saw
several enemy ships already on their trail.
He had known it
would be a near thing. He almost couldn't believe they had pulled it off.
Of course, he
would never say that aloud.
Humming, he went
at a brisk but dignified pace to his bridge.
By the time he
got there, the sky was already a deep blue bruise getting blacker by the
second.
"Well,
gentlebeings," Karrde said as he took his seat. "What's the
situation?"
H'sishi shot him
a harried look from the sensor station. "We did some damage to our
watchdogs in orbit, but they're all still flying. Now we have the ships from
the surface to deal with as well."
"Well. Deal
with them."
"Yes,
sir."
The ship
shuddered, and the inertial dampeners whined.
"Opur,"
Karrde shouted at one of his security men. "Make certain the children are
secured somewhere. I don't want one hair on their little Jedi heads
harmed."
"Yes,
sir," Opur said, hurrying off.
"Now."
Karrde studied the layout. "They've got us penned in, don't they?"
"Unless we
can make the jump to lightspeed."
"With big
Yavin right there?" Karrde mused. "No, not today. I think we'll punch
through the cage instead." He tapped the console. "Here."
"That's
their most heavily armed ship," Shada observed.
"When a pack
of vornskrs comes for you, always kick the biggest and meanest one right in the
teeth. It will certainly get their attention."
"I believe
we already have their attention."
"One can
never have too much good wine, beautiful women, or attention," Karrde
said. "Go, and keep the throttle open."
"We won't
get their shields down before we reach them," Shada said.
"No, we
won't. Buy we'll certainly see who blinks first." He reflected for an
instant. "Give me the controls."
"I thought
you said gambling was a foolish occupation," Shada remarked, as the
frigate grew larger on their screens.
"Indeed I
did," Karrde replied. "But I'm not gambling. On my mark, release
proton torpedoes. Don't fire them—just release them."
"As you wish,
sir," the gunner replied, sounding puzzled.
"They're
trying for tractor lock," Shada said.
" Yes. Let
them have it."
"What?"
"Drop the
shields."
This time the
dampeners couldn't absorb all of the shock; the deck felt as if it was buckling
beneath their feet as the tractor beam caught them, killing their forward
motion.
"Torpedoes.
Now," Karrde said.
"Torpedoes
released." Shada looked up. "The tractor beam has them."
"Good. Arm
them and put our shields back up."
"Sir,
they've commenced fire on the torpedoes."
"Have they
released the tractor beam?"
"No,
sir."
" Detonate
the torpedoes, then."
He reengaged the
drive as the screen went white.
CHAPTER NINE
Treetops snapped
as Anakin wrestled with gravity. Vehn's complaints had deteriorated to a steady
moan. Valin, strapped in the copilot's seat, looked very ill. Sannah was still
firing the turbolaser; from her, Anakin could sense both frustration and anger.
Tahiri had been her friend, too.
Was still her
friend. Tahiri was alive. Anakin could feel that as certainly as he could feel
his own skin.
The transport cut
a smoking swath across the tree line for a kilometer before Anakin saw what
passed for a clearing. He dropped in, straining the inertial dampeners well
beyond their parameters, fetching up against a wall of vines and secondary
growth—dense, but without much mass. If he hit a big tree . . .
He tried not to
think about it. Instead he dumped a torpedo and reversed direction, traveling
into the more open forest beyond on repulsors, drifting back toward the
treetops, hiding in the canopy.
The torpedo went,
taking a hundred square meters of the forest with it in a carbon-rich plume.
"Come on,
you vultures," Anakin muttered.
"Got
them," Sannah called softly.
"No,"
Anakin replied. "Wait."
He could make it
out through the smoke, a Sentinel-class shuttle.
"They think
we've crashed," Valin said.
"Yes,"
Anakin replied, punching the engines back on.
The modified
shuttle tried to swing around as he rose out of the trees, but it was too late.
He fired his last proton torpedo, and the Peace Brigade ship became a ball of
fire, sinking into the already burning jungle.
"Anakin!"
Sannah shrieked.
Instinctively,
Anakin threw the ship skyward, but not before multiple impacts ripped through
the failing transport.
"There you
are," he muttered. "After you, I'm done."
Of the three
ships that had chased him halfway around the moon, only this one—an
E-wing—remained. Unfortunately, while Anakin's commandeered transport was
limping so badly it would soon go down on its own, the speedy little fighter
was undamaged.
"You only
have to hit it once, Sannah," Anakin said. "Maybe twice."
" I can't
get a bead," she shouted back.
The little ship
made a pass, and the air suddenly smelled sharply of ozone and vaporized metal
as the transport tremored.
" Let me
have a shot!" Vehn demanded.
"What?"
"Look, I
don't wanna die. This is my ship, those are my guns. I know 'em better than
that kid back there. She's never even handled a gun before, that much is clear—
yii!" Vehn blanched as Anakin put the ungainly craft in a barrel roll.
"You think I
trust you ?"
"Use your
poodoo-stinking Jedi powers. Can't you tell I'm serious?"
To Anakin's
surprise, he really didn't sense deception from the fellow.
" You'd
shoot down your own friends?"
"They're not
my friends."
Again, no
deception.
Anakin made his
decision. "Valin, uncuff him. Take
him to the gun.
Vehn, I promise you, if this is a trick, no matter what else happens, you'll
be sorry."
"Sorrier
than I am now? I doubt it."
Anakin dropped
low again, trying to buy a few more seconds. He had only one engine left
on-line, and one more hit would finish that quickly enough.
"I'm on
it," Vehn reported from the turret. "Give me a little altitude,
that's all I ask."
"You've got
it," Anakin said. Once more he put the ship in a climb. The E-wing saw its
opportunity then, darting in and chewing what was left of the engine to shreds.
It coughed off-line, and for an instant the transport seemed to hang suspended
a hundred meters above the treetops. In that in-between moment, Vehn needled
red lines across the sky, stitching through the E-wing. It spun wildly out of
control. Then the transport was falling, and Anakin hit the repulsors, and the
sound of tearing metal deafened him.
Anakin came to
with the taste of blood on his tongue. He didn't know if he had been out for
seconds or days, and a glance at the controls didn't help. Through the cockpit
transparisteel he could see only crushed vegetation.
"Sannah! Valin!"
"They're
okay," Remis Vehn said from behind Anakin. "A little battered, but no
worse for the wear."
Anakin twisted in
his seat and found himself confronting the muzzle of a blaster. He blinked,
then looked up at the young man's cool gray eyes.
"You want to
put that down, don't you?" Anakin asked, pushing with the Force.
"Well. . .
," Vehn considered.
"You'll put
it down," Anakin commanded.
"Sure,"
Vehn replied. "I'll put it down."
"Great."
Anakin unfastened himself from the flight harness. He took the blaster and
stuck it in his belt.
"Vaping
moffs!" Vehn swore. " You Jedi are sorcerers."
"Keep it
sealed," Anakin warned him, turning to Sannah.
Sannah was
unconscious but breathing evenly. Valin was awake, but the hull near him had
crimped in such a way that Sannah's harness was stuck. Anakin sliced through it
with his lightsaber. The Melodie girl moaned softly.
"Vehn, carry
Sannah out," Anakin told the Peace Bri-gader. "The ship may have a
few surprises for us yet."
"My
ship," Vehn said. "I can't believe what you did to my ship."
"Your
buddies did it," Anakin said. "The same buddies who just murdered a
Jedi Master and took my best friend captive. Don't expect me to cry any tears
for you."
"First of
all," Vehn said, "they aren't my buddies. I was strictly in this
business for the money, and I thought we were taking on adult Jedi, not little
kids. Second of all, I don't expect you to get all weepy, but without my ship,
how do you plan to get off this snarly jungle?"
Anakin didn't
answer Vehn, but examined Valin instead. "Are you okay?" he asked.
"Can you walk?"
"I'm
fine," Valin answered.
"Good. I
want you to go outside and find cover in the trees. Be careful—the jungle isn't
exactly safe, though the crash probably scared most everything off."
He then examined
Sannah. She was bruised, but he didn't sense anything seriously wrong with her.
"Take Sannah
out," he repeated to Vehn. "I'm right behind you."
On his way out,
he picked up the stun cuffs.
"This isn't
right," Remis Vehn complained. "You just finished talking about how
dangerous the jungle is and you not only won't give me a weapon, you've
restrained me. What if something comes along wanting lunch?"
"It would
have to be a carrion eater to stomach the likes of you," Anakin replied.
"Very funny.
I helped you."
"You really
think you're going to get thanks from me?" Anakin snorted. "You were
saving your own skin, nothing more. Now, quiet."
"Is she
going to be all right?" Valin asked, staring down at Sannah.
"I think
so." Anakin touched the Melodie girl's forehead and very lightly brushed
her with the Force, strengthening her where she was weak, gently tugging her
toward consciousness.
With a faint sigh
she opened her eyes, blinked at Anakin, then started violently.
"Tahiri!"
she gasped.
"Shh," Anakin
said. "We crashed. You're banged up, some. How do you feel?"
"Like I've
been poisoned by a purella and hung up in its web. Is Valin okay?"
"I'm right
here," Valin answered.
"We're all
okay," Anakin assured her.
Tears started in
the girl's yellow eyes. "No, we're not. Master Ikrit, and Tahiri..."
"Master
Ikrit sacrificed himself for us," Anakin said, around the gall in his
throat. "He wouldn't want us to grieve. He's one with the Force now.
Tahiri—"
"She's dead,
too, isn't she?" Valin asked.
"No."
Anakin shook his head. "I can hear her in the Force." Calling me, he
added. He could feel her fear, mixed liberally with anger. He didn't get the
sense that she was in immediate danger.
Anakin turned
toward Vehn, who sat a few meters away, his arms cuffed around a young Massassi
tree. "What will they do with her, Vehn? Where were you supposed to take
the children you kidnapped?"
"I told you,
I didn't know our targets were children," Vehn said sullenly. "And I
don't know where we were supposed to take them."
"But you were
supposed to turn them over to the Yuuzhan Vong."
Vehn studied the
leaves above his head. "Yes," he said at last.
"Where?
Where is the rendezvous?"
"I don't
know."
"You're
lying."
"Look—"
"I can make
you tell me," Anakin warned. "You won't like it." It occurred to
him that his brother, Jacen, wouldn't approve of that sort of threat, nor would
Uncle Luke. At the moment, Anakin didn't care.
Vehn fidgeted,
but said nothing. Anakin suddenly surged to his feet and stalked toward the
Peace Brigader.
"Hold it!
Just wait a second, Jedi. Don't slag my brain! I don't know much, but I can
tell you something I overheard. Something I wasn't supposed to hear at
all."
Anakin took
another step, then squatted until his ice-blue eyes were millimeters from
Vehn's dark gray. "Well?" he prompted.
"I'm not
supposed to know this, but—the Yuuzhan Vong were planning to come to this
miserable hole already. The Peace Brigade decided to head 'em off, capture
you guys before they arrived."
"What, to
save them the trouble?"
"Exactly. A
present, of sorts. These Peace Brigade guys, they're serious. They really think
everyone in the galaxy is doomed unless we give the Vong what they want, and
then some."
"Why do you
say 'these Peace Brigade guys' as if you aren't one of them?"
"They hired
me to pilot. That's all."
Anakin frowned,
but let that pass. "What will the Peace Brigade do now that they've
botched the job?"
"How do you
know they've botched it? They figured out you hid the other kids someplace.
They have some pretty good trackers and search equipment with them."
"They won't
find anyone," Anakin said. "What will they do? The Yuuzhan Vong might
assume the Brigade really came here to hide the kids. At the very least they'll
be upset that you were so inept you let thirty or more Jedi slip through your
fingers and caught only one."
Vehn looked
thoughtful. "They might cut and run. They might try to bluff it out with
their one captive. I don't know them well enough to say."
"Anakin,"
Sannah said softly. "You and Tahiri saved my people. I can't let anything
happen to her. I can't."
"Why didn't
you think of that earlier?" Anakin snapped. "You three should have
gone with Kam and Tionne. You thought this was all some sort of game. It
isn't."
"Anakin!"
Sannah's eyes widened further, then dropped. "You're right," she
whispered. "It is our fault. My fault. I could have told Kam, and none of
this would have happened. Master Ikrit would still be alive." Tears
streamed down her face, and for a second Anakin was happy she was crying,
satisfied she finally saw how stupid she had been. He wanted to agree with her.
Grinding his
teeth, he quickly stood and walked into the woods.
He didn't go far,
but leaned against the bole of a giant tree, breathing heavily, composing
himself. Then, when he thought he could do it, he want back into the clearing,
where Sannah sat, still crying. Valin was wiping his own silent tears.
"That was
wrong of me," he said quietly. "None of you is to blame. You were
only trying to help. The Peace Brigade is to blame. The Yuuzhan Vong are to
blame. You guys aren't. Feeling guilty isn't going to help us right now. There
are plenty more ships on this planet. For all we know they have a perfect lock
on us already, so we need to get ready. If they don't, we need to figure out
how to get this ship running again."
Remis Vehn vented
a bitter laugh.
"We have
parts from three ships here," Anakin said evenly. "We ought to be
able to cobble something together. Besides that, help is on the way, so maybe
all we really have to do is hold out for a little while. Valin, I'm putting you
in charge of taking inventory of what food and medicine we have. Vehn, you'll
tell him where to find it on your ship—all of it. Sannah, I'm giving you the
blaster. I want you to watch the camp, while I go do recon at the other wreck
sites. If you hear anything—I mean anything—coming from the sky, you both hide
and stay hidden. Understand?"
"Yes,"
Sannah replied. Valin nodded dutifully.
"Good. And
ignore everything Vehn says. Don't touch his restraints, don't go near him.
I'll be back soon."
CHAPTER TEN
Karrde didn't
black out, but time stretched weirdly as his harness tried to cut him in half
and his ship spun madly, power blinking on and off, finally settling on off
before minimal emergency systems kicked in. The inertial compensator started
up, and gravity reasserted itself, but the screen was a confusing jumble.
"Report!"
he snapped. "What's going on?"
H'sishi looked up
reluctantly. "Minimal damage to the frigate," she said. "We took
a pretty hard bounce, and we're limping a bit."
"Limp away
from them, at least," Karrde said. "Head for the outer
system."
"The
hyperdrive core took some of the worst damage," Dankin pointed out.
"I don't think we can jump."
"Well, we
certainly can't here, not in the hole Yavin's dug for itself."
"The big
ships we can still outrun, at least for a while. The frigate will catch us
eventually, but we've got a lead it will take them at least an hour to cut
down. We've got a couple of E-wings that will be harassing us shortly."
"Good luck
to them," Karrde grunted.
"We do have
some weak points in the hull, now," Shada pointed out.
"That's why
we'll shoot them out of space, Shada my dear," Karrde answered.
"And our
shields—"
"Will hold
up long enough."
"Long enough
for what?" Shada said. "Without hyperdrive—"
H'sishi suddenly
grated out a yowling snarl.
"What's the
matter, H'sishi?"
"I can give
you something better than a working hyperdrive, Captain," the Togorian
said.
"And what
might that be?"
Her toothy grin
nearly split her head in half. "The rest of our fleet, sir."
"You asked
what I was waiting on, Shada? Don't ever doubt that the gods favor me. How far
out are they?"
"Umm,
urr." H'sishi was suddenly more sober. "Two hours at least,
sir."
"Well,"
Karrde said cheerfully. "Then I'm taking suggestions on how to stretch
the—it's what, eight minutes now? Into the two hours we need."
The hull suddenly
rattled.
"E-wings on
us, sir," Dankin reported.
"Well, don't
keep them waiting. Show them what this helpless old transport has in store for
them. Shada, you have the bridge."
"You're
leaving in the middle of a fight?"
"It won't be
a long one. When that capital ship catches us, give me a call. I need to talk
to Solusar."
Four hours later,
a weary Imsatad appeared on Karrde's screen.
"You're a
fool, Karrde," he opined.
"What does
that make you, Captain?" Karrde replied. "In any event, our positions
are now reversed. I have considerably more firepower than your little
flotilla."
"And yet, as
you once observed of me, you're still here, which means you aren't
finished," Imsatad said. "What do you want?"
"By my
count, four of the young Jedi are still missing. You wouldn't know anything
about that, would you?"
"As a matter
of fact, I wouldn't."
Karrde stood and
locked his hands behind his back. "I can be a very serious man, at times,
Captain Imsatad. This is one of them. I gave my word to deliver the Jedi
students and their teachers safely from the hands of scum like you, and I
intend to do that. Not in part, but in full."
"You're
endangering our work here," Imsatad said. "The Yuuzhan Vong will not
stop until they have all the Jedi. If we do the work for them, show our good
faith—"
Karrde cut him
off with a mordant chuckle. "The Yuuzhan Vong have conquered half of our
galaxy in an unprovoked crusade. What about this obligates us to show them
good faith?"
"Listen,
Karrde. I was at Dantooine, with the military. I saw what they can do. We can't
stop them. We can't. This is simple self-preservation. Besides, they
weren't unprovoked. It was the Jedi who started this war, and it's the Jedi
who continue to provoke it."
Karrde sighed and
returned to his seat. He tapped his fingers on the armrest. "I don't know
if you really believe that sump muck, and I don't care. But it's good you bring
up self-preservation, because you are now faced with a crisis in that
department."
Imsatad lifted
his chin defiantly. "If you suppose I have your missing Jedi, you won't
destroy my ships."
Karrde gestured,
and Kam Solusar strode into view.
" Let me
introduce you. This is Kam Solusar, one of the teachers at the Jedi academy
whose curricula you have so rudely interrupted. He is a Jedi, and they can
sense one another. Did you know that?"
Imsatad's eyes
flicked back and forth between the two. "I've heard such things."
"None of the
children are on your ship, Captain," Solusar said in a voice that
could saw through bones. " Nothing prevents us vaping you."
Imsatad blinked,
twice. " I do what I do for the good of the galaxy," he said.
"Yes, you've
said that already," Karrde said. "Personally, I think you might best
serve the galaxy as star food."
Imsatad massaged
his forehead. "What do you want?" he asked wearily.
"I want all
of your ships grounded so I can conduct a ship-to-ship search."
Imsatad shrugged.
"I don't have the children you seek. You may search my ships. Give me
eight hours to get them all on the ground."
"You have
five." Karrde signed for the connection to be severed.
"He's hiding
something," Solusar said. "I can't sense what."
"He doesn't
think he's beaten?"
"No, that's
the strange thing. He feels utterly defeated. But he is being deceptive
about Anakin and the others."
"You really
think they're still alive?"
"Anakin is,
I'm certain of that much. And Tahiri. If they are alive, Sannah and Valin must
be. After all, the Peace Brigade didn't come here to kill them, but to capture
them."
Karrde nodded
thoughtfully. "I'm going to have the Idiot's Array come alongside.
She's a corvette and her captain is one of my best. I want to get these
children we have aboard safe on Coruscant, now."
"An
excellent idea, though they won't be safe on Coruscant, not for long."
"No. Luke
Skywalker has another plan in the works for that."
"I'm staying
until we find the rest," Solusar said.
"I imagined
you would. And Tionne?"
"The
children need one of us."
"Very good.
I'll arrange the transfer, now."
Solusar nodded
and held out his hand. "I didn't thank you before. I'm glad I didn't kill
you."
Karrde grinned
wryly and took the proffered hand.
"The perfect
gift for the perfect occasion, that's you, Solusar."
"Sithspawn,"
Shada snarled from across the bridge.
"What? What
is it?"
"Karrde, if
you're going to get those children out of this system, I suggest you
hurry."
"What? More
Peace Brigade?" He stared at the long-range sensors. Blips were
appearing—lots of them. "H'sishi, what do we have there?"
The tactician
looked up grimly. "Yuuzhan Vong, sir, lots of them. At least two warship
analogs and a whole lot of smaller ships."
Karrde gripped
the back of his chair until his knuckles turned white, cursing inwardly, trying
to keep his face calm.
"How
long?"
"No more
than an hour, sir."
"Long enough
to get the Idiot's Array away. Do it now, and have the Demise run
with her."
"What about
us?" Shada asked.
"We can't
fight them head-on," Karrde said.
"Anakin and
the rest are still down there," Solusar snapped. "If you're thinking
of leaving them—"
Karrde cut him
off with a wave of his hand. " I'm thinking of no such thing. If we leave
this system, they'll button it up so tight only the New Republic Fleet could
get in here. But our tactics will have to change. And we need reinforcements.
Shada, I want you on the Idiot's Array. Bring back whatever it
takes."
" You're
crazy if you think I'm leaving you here."
"We'll be
fine. It's a big system, and we're not without resources. If the Yuuzhan Vong
plan on occupying Yavin Four, we can makes things very unpleasant for them. You
ought to know by now, Shada, that if there's anything I'm good at, it's
surviving. Now go. We have no time to argue about this."
"I'll be
back," Shada promised. "Of course you will. And I'll be here to meet
you. Now get going."
CHAPTER ELEVEN
Anakin watched
the distant dots buzzing around the crash site. They'd been there for hours,
but in the last few minutes they'd been leaving, one by one. He felt a constriction
in his belly. If he had one of those fliers, he could get back to the temple and
find Tahiri.
And do what?
Leave Valin and Sannah with Vehn and a sky full of flitters? Try to drag them
all along on another aerial battle and then a rescue?
No. He couldn't
pin all of their hopes on that.
He felt a tremor
in the tree, and his hand went to his lightsaber. But then he felt Valin, below
him, climbing up.
The younger boy
reached him and settled in the crotch between two branches. As he watched, the
last of the flitters seemed to be moving off.
"You should
have stayed in the cave," Anakin told Valin.
"Maybe,"
Valin replied. "But I didn't." He nodded at the departing craft.
"I thought they would search longer," he said.
Anakin shook his
head. "Two days is longer than I thought they would give it. They're after
the bigger prize— the rest of the students. They've got a time limit, remember?
When the Yuuzhan Vong show up, they've got to be successful or gone. The last
thing the Peace Brigade would want the Vong to know is that they were the ones
who spoiled their mother lode." He motioned down. "Get
back in the cave,
though. They might make a last-minute sweep."
"Anakin, why
do the Yuuzhan Vong want us so bad?"
Anakin blew out a
breath. "I'm not sure. Mostly because they hate us. The fact that they
don't seem to exist in the Force cuts both ways. We can't sense them or affect
them directly, but we can do things they can't understand. And we're the ones
who have hurt them most. I guess the last stroke was when Jacen humiliated
their warmaster."
" But those
guys with Vehn weren't Yuuzhan Vong."
"No, they're
worse. They think by turning us in they'll get the Yuuzhan Vong to stop their
conquest at the planets they have."
"Will
they?"
Anakin snorted.
"Senator Elegos A'Kla turned himself over to them. He hoped he could come
to understand them, forge a common bond of trust, something to begin the
process of finding a peaceful solution."
"They killed
him," Valin said quietly. "I heard about that."
"And sent
his polished bones back to us."
" But then
my dad killed the Yuuzhan Vong who killed Elegos."
Anakin hesitated.
He hadn't thought through where his example might lead.
"Yeah,
"he said briefly.
"But now
everyone hates my dad, and not the Yuuzhan Vong."
Anakin shook his
head. "No. It's not like that. It's just—it's politics, Valin."
"What does that
mean?"
"I don't
know. I hate politics. Ask my brother, next time you see him, or my mom."
"But—"
"What it
means," Anakin interrupted, "is that your father, Corran Horn, is a
good man, and everyone with
even a little
sense knows that. The problem with people is that a lot of them don't have any
sense, and a lot of others are liars."
"You mean
they would say my dad was bad even if they didn't think so?"
"You got it,
kid."
"I'm not a
kid."
Anakin looked
into the determined young face, and suddenly saw what Kam, Tionne, Uncle Luke,
Aunt Mara—all the adults in his life—must be used to seeing by now on his face.
"Maybe
not," Anakin replied. "But here's what I was trying to get around to
saying a minute ago. The Yuuzhan Vong have never shown the slightest tendency
to keep their word. I don't think they even believe lying is wrong. And
Elegos—well, it was a worthy try, and I honor him. But what the Yuuzhan Vong
want from us is our worlds and our people as slaves. They believe our machines
are abominations, and they won't rest until they've all been destroyed. The
only way to avoid fighting them is to surrender and let them do whatever they
want with us. That's the only terms of peace they can understand. The Peace
Brigade think they can do something in between. Elegos was brave, noble—and
wrong. It cost him his life, and that was his to spend. The Peace Brigade are
cowards and they're stupid, and they want to spend our lives. Our lives
are not for them to spend."
Valin nodded,
then smiled a little. "You talk more than you used to. Tahiri said she
would rub off on you eventually."
It struck Anakin
that Valin was right. He'd been practically pontificating, something he
wouldn't have dreamed of doing a few years ago except maybe in an argument with
his siblings or Tahiri. It was something he wasn't good at, didn't like,
avoided like raw cobalt. His father had once joked that it was easier to drag a
neutron star
with a
landspeeder than it was to drag two words out of him.
But more and
more, people seemed to want something like this from him. Some of the things he
had done had gotten around, and he guessed he had something of a reputation.
That part was fine, and though he wouldn't say so out loud, he sort of liked
it. It made him feel that he could be like Uncle Luke, back when he was young
and fighting the Empire—like a hero, though he knew he wasn't really that.
He felt a pang,
and suddenly knew where these thoughts were taking him.
"Why did you
and Sannah and Tahiri come to help me, Valin? Why didn't you go on with Kam and
Tionne?"
Valin looked up
at him with guileless eyes. "We want to be like you, Anakin. We all
do. And you—you would never have run from a fight."
Anakin's lips
tightened and his eyes felt gritty and hot. That settled that. He'd lied when
he told Sannah and Valin that the Yuuzhan Vong and the Peace Brigade were
responsible for this mess. Like Chewie's death, like Centerpoint, this was his
mess, Anakin Solo's mess.
But this time he
would clean it up. Somehow.
"Doesn't
look like they took much," Sannah observed, as they picked through the
wreck of Vehn's transport. Four days had come and gone since the crash, and a
day since they had seen the last of the flitters.
"Why should
they?" Valin asked. "There's not much left they would want."
"No,"
Anakin said. "There's plenty. It would have taken too much time to salvage
it, that's all."
"But you
think you can?" Vehn sneered from where he sat, cuffed hands
resting on his knees.
"I can fix
it," Anakin replied. "The hyperdrive is fine."
"That's
great. We'll just go to lightspeed from here. At
least no one
would have to worry about disposing of our remains. And we sure wouldn't have
to worry about the Vong anymore."
"If Anakin
says he can fix it, he can fix it," Valin snapped.
"Shut up, you
smelly little Hutt," Vehn grunted. "I may be your prisoner, but that
doesn't mean I have to listen to your smart mouth all day. I—hey! Ow!"
Vehn was suddenly
scratching furiously at his legs, then thrashing on the ground.
Anakin
straightened. "Stay away from him. It's a trick!"
"Trick?"
Vehn screamed. "I'm being eaten alive!"
That's when
Anakin noticed Valin was laughing. So was Sannah, but she was hiding hers
behind her palm.
"Valin, are
you doing that?"
"He deserved
it."
"Stop it.
Right now. Immediately."
"I
just—"
"Now."
"Yes,
sir," Valin said. And he didn't sound sarcastic.
Anakin knelt by
Vehn. A swarm of multisegmented worms a centimeter in length were detaching
themselves from the pilot's arms and face, leaving purplish welts behind. Vehn
pushed at them frantically, but when Anakin moved to help him, he jerked away
with a hoarse rasp of anger.
When they were
all finally off, Vehn turned his head toward Valin. His chest was heaving.
"You did
that, didn't you? With some kind of Jedi magic." He rose clumsily to his
feet. "I hope the Vong do get you. The whole lot of you."
"Yeah?"
Valin started. "Well—"
"Valin!"
Anakin said a little sharply. "Keep quiet and listen. You know better than
that. I know you know better than that, because we had the same
teachers." He turned on Sannah. "And you were laughing. You think
it's funny to use
the Force to torture a helpless captive for no better reason than that he
called you a name? "
Sannah reddened.
"No," she said.
"Valin?"
"No,"
the boy said. "I guess not."
" There are
times to use the Force in self-defense, Valin, and there are times when defense
means attack. And if I have to squeeze Vehn's brain to learn what we need to
rescue Tahiri, I might even do that. But torture for the sake of torture—never."
Valin nodded and
sat down. To Anakin's surprise Valin didn't look so much sullen as reflective.
In fact, like a flash, for an instant, he looked almost impossibly like his
father, Corran. It was so bright and true that Anakin wondered if it was a real
vision of an older Valin or just a striking resemblance.
He cleared his
throat. "Let's just get to work, shall we? The engines aren't as bad as
they could be. I think with parts salvaged from the other ships we can get it
limping, and that's all I need—a way to orbit. At the very least we can get the
comm unit fixed."
Anakin actually
had his doubts about this, but it would give them something to do while he
figured out how he was going to get halfway around the moon to find Tahiri. If
they were occupied, they wouldn't worry as much. Meanwhile, Talon Karrde must
have arrived by now.
And Tahiri—she
was still here, and he was pretty sure she was even still on Yavin 4, not in
orbit.
Still, it galled
him. It made his very bones ache not to set off on foot, though in his head he
knew that it would take him months to cross the wilderness separating him from
the Great Temple. Maybe he needed the work as much as Valin and Sannah.
With a sigh, he
went to see what the power cell couplings looked like.
Something beeped
and whistled. His hand was already
on his lightsaber
before he realized the sound was coming from his wrist comm. He was being
hailed.
He stared at the
comm for a moment. It could be a trick by the Peace Brigade, an attempt to
triangulate his location. It might be Talon Karrde, trying to find them.
Reluctantly, he
acknowledged, and words began to scroll across the display.
PURSUIT EVADED.
X-WING BADLY DAMAGED. AWAITING FURTHER INSTRUCTIONS.
"Fiver!"
AFFIRMATIVE.
"Fiver, lock
on this signal and come straight here. Where are you?"
252.6 KILOMETERS
FROM YOUR PRESENT POSITION.
"Great. How
long will it take you to get here?"
20 STANDARD
HOURS.
"What?
Why?"
REPULSORLIFT
MOTIVATION ONLY. SHIP BADLY DAMAGED.
"But you're
okay?"
OPERATIONAL.
"Good. Good
going, Fiver. Get here as soon as you can. We need you."
AFFIRMATIVE,
ANAKIN.
"Anakin?"
Despite everything, Anakin grinned. The astromech hadn't been memory-wiped
lately. He was starting to develop a few quirks. Flying the X5 X-wing alone—a
task Fiver wasn't really built for—had probably contributed. In fact, Anakin
couldn't believe the little droid had really done it. He'd thought he was
sacrificing his ship and Fiver as a diversion. Finding that it hadn't worked
out that way was an unexpected break. He now not only had more parts to work
with, but an astromech droid to help with repairs.
Things weren't
exactly looking up, Anakin thought, but maybe he could take his eyes off his
feet, at least.
CHAPTER TWELVE
Darkness wrapped
around Anakin like a cloak and whispered to him like a mother. It promised him
a face of durasteel and a heart of ferrocrete. It offered him supernovas of
power and the unflinching will to use it.
He had been to
this place before, often. It was his oldest dream, perhaps dreamed for the
first time when the clone of the Emperor Palpatine touched him through his
mother's womb. And when he learned about his namesake, his grandfather Vader,
the dreams grew stronger, more detailed. He saw futures in which he was grown,
his blue eyes gone as gray as hull plating. He saw himself in Darth Vader's
mask, the Knight of Darkness reborn.
He had made a
sort of peace with his dreams in the cave on Dagobah, the same cave where his
uncle Luke had faced his own dark side and failed. But peace did not mean
silence, and here, on a moon as deeply stained by the dark side as the Sith
themselves, the dreams were particularly troubling.
But now,
something broke, a dam holding back ebon waters that hit him so cold and
strange that the tattoo in his chest stopped, as if a fist had closed on his
heart.
Soft laughter
began, familiar yet strange; the pitch and timbre were wrong, but the cadence
was as known to him as his father's speech. A woman's laughter, throaty and sardonic.
It made the hair on his neck prickle up.
He turned and saw
her.
Her hair was
gold, the gold of a vein in a sunset on
Coruscant or of
the sudden spark from an inferno. One of her eyes was jade and the other
obsidian. Her lips were fringed by a hundred incisions, and a white scar ran
from the top of her forehead to her chin. Armor of a black-and-gray-banded
chitinous substance fit close to her body, a very adult, very human body,
though the armor was plated and jointed like an insect's. Knobs and spurs stuck
out from her shoulders and elbows.
She smiled at him
through those split lips and held up something baton-shaped, which flexed in
her grip like a sluggish pupa. Sudden light blazed from one end of it and
resolved into a blazing blue blade. Dark-side energy crackled around her,
calling to him, and he felt a sudden terrible attraction to her, every part of
him yearning for her in a way he had never even begun to feel before.
She grinned more
widely and laughed again, and with sudden understanding Anakin realized that
she wasn't looking at him at all, but at someone else in the vision, someone
Anakin couldn't see.
"The last of
your kind," the woman said, her voice made whispery by what had been done
to her mouth. "The last of my kind." And she raised the blade,
and Anakin recognized her.
"Tahiri!"
he shrieked. She paused, as if she might have heard something very far away.
Then she came forward, sweeping the weapon down, and Anakin choked on the look
in her eye, the mixture of glee and despair, joy and sickness.
He awoke still
choking. A strong hand was clamped over his mouth. He squirmed, but the grip on
him was sure and strong. He tried to get his feet under him and failed.
Calm. No fear, he thought. Get it together, Anakin. You're supposed to be on watch.
They won't even hear this, in the cave, if you die.
He used the Force
to twist the hand away from his mouth and shove his attacker sprawling, and in
the next
instant got his
feet under him and his lightsaber in hand. In its sudden light he made out a
bearded face, a blaster. He leapt forward.
"Wait! Jedi!
I'm—I'm a friend."
"Yeah? Why
did you attack me?"
"Didn't
know—didn't—" He wheezed off, his voice sounding strange, weak, as if he
rarely used it. "Name's Qorl. I have been a friend to Jedi. I didn't know
who you were."
"Qorl? My
brother and sister knew a Qorl. He made them fix his ship at
blasterpoint."
"Jacen.
Jaina," the old man said. "Qorl also saved them from the Shadow
Academy."
"You were a
TIE fighter pilot, stranded here when the Death Star was destroyed. You went
off—"
"And came
back. I left as an enemy to your brother and sister. I came back their friend.
You're really their brother?" He squinted. "Can't see so well
anymore."
"What are
you doing here?"
"Saw some
ships fly over, fighting. Thought I saw one go down, so I followed to
see." He shrugged. "Seven days later, here I am."
"So you
are." Anakin struggled to remember what he knew about this grizzled old
man. Jacen and Jaina had found his wrecked TIE fighter and set about fixing it,
not realizing its pilot was still around, hiding in the jungle, unaware that
the war was over. Qorl had forced them to finish the repairs and left them to
die, but had later helped them escape the Shadow Academy. Anakin remembered that
Qorl had ended up back on Yavin 4, but none of the details. He did know that
Jacen and Jaina counted him a friend, and Uncle Luke had been content to leave
the old man alone.
Qorl gestured at
the lightsaber. "Could you put that away, please?"
"Oh.
Sure."
"Who were
you fighting?"
"Peace
Brigade."
"Who?"
"Er—how long
since you've had news from the outside, Qorl?"
"I don't
know. Old Peckhum dropped off some supplies for me, maybe two or three years
ago. I told him not to come back."
"Oh. Well,
this will take some explaining, then. A lot of explaining."
"Will it
explain the new ships I've seen? The strange ones?"
Anakin felt his
chest constrict. "What ships?"
"They look
like—growths of some kind. Ugly."
"Oh,
no," Anakin whispered. "Okay, I'll have to tell this as fast as I
can, and then—" He remembered his vision, that future Tahiri, a dark Jedi
with Yuuzhan Vong scarring and implants. "And then there's something I
have to do, no matter what."
"I need to
talk to you, Vehn." Anakin settled down across from the man.
"So talk.
Hey, who's the old guy?"
"A hermit of
sorts. I'm putting him in charge of you."
"What do you
mean?" Vehn asked suspiciously.
Anakin drew a
deep breath and plunged into it. "Okay. Here's the thing, Vehn. I need
your help."
"I've been
telling you that for a while."
"And you
were right."
"Yeah,
well—too bad. You've treated me like Hutt slime. Why shouldn't I return the
favor?"
"The Yuuzhan
Vong are here."
That got his
attention. Vehn's face closed over his fear, but Anakin could still feel it.
"Qorl's seen
their ships."
"They'll
find us," Vehn said flatly.
"Why should
they? They aren't looking for us. Unless the Peace Brigade tells them about the
crash—but I don't
think they will.
It would only show their incompetence, right? So the Yuuzhan Vong see us only
if they notice us on a random patrol, and the odds of that—"
"Depends on
how many ships they have patrolling," Vehn interrupted. "You don't
know the one, so you don't know the other."
"True. The
thing is this—I'm going after my friend, back at the temple. I'm going now. I
want you and Qorl to get Sannah and Valin off of this moon."
"What? Have
you got some kind of fever?"
"You can
finish the repairs on your ship, can't you?"
Vehn continued to
stare at him as if he was crazy. "No. The sublight drive—"
"Is nearly
repaired. I'll show you."
"Impossible."
"Nope. You
still need some parts, but Qorl knows where you can get them. And you have
Fiver. I've programmed him with everything you'll need."
"And why
should I do this again? I keep missing that part."
"Because
it's your only chance, too. You think the Yuuzhan Vong are going to hail you as
an ally when they find you? I doubt it very much. You say you were only in the
Peace Brigade for the money, you say you don't really share their cause—let's
say I'm going to take you on your word about that. Get these kids to safety,
and I can guarantee you a profit."
"How do you
know I won't just fly straight to the Vong and turn Valin and Sannah over to
them?"
"A couple of
reasons. The first is that Qorl will blast a very large hole in you if you try
it. I don't completely trust the man. He was an Empire stalwart twenty years
after the death of the Emperor. By the same token, he would never turn humans
over to the Yuuzhan Vong— or let you do it. He might take off for the Imperial
Remnant the instant he gets the chance, but the way I see it, that's parsecs
better than staying here.
"The second
is that I think you'll do whatever gives you the best chance of getting out of
this with a whole skin—and you're smart enough not to gamble on the milk of
Yuuzhan Vong kindness. The third—" He leaned close. "Third, if you
bring any harm to Valin or Sannah, you'd better pray I'm dead. Because if I'm
not, no matter what, I will find you. That I swear."
"Ease up,
Jedi. I'll do it. Anything has to be better than hanging out in the jungle
waiting to die of a lizard bite. But I don't want you to threaten me again. I'm
really sick of that."
"I've said
what I meant to say. I won't say it again." Anakin raised his voice.
"Qorl. Could you come here, please?"
The old pilot
shuffled over and treated Vehn to a thorough once over. He knelt on creaky
joints and shook his finger in Vehn's face. "I know you," he
muttered.
"You're
crazy," Vehn said. "I've never seen you before in my life."
"Oh, no.
Even if you saw somebody like old Qorl, you wouldn't recognize him. You don't
have the database. On the other hand, old Qorl has seen a hundred like you. You
won't give Qorl any trouble. You'll do what he says."
"Right,"
Vehn said. "Just . . . stay away from me, yeah? Or take a bath, at least.
You smell like a Wookiee's armpit."
Qorl laughed
brusquely, put his hands on his thighs, and rose painfully to his full height.
He looked squarely at Anakin. "You sure about this, then?" he asked.
"I've got to
do it," Anakin said. "The Force is pulling me to do it."
"The Force.
Huh. Will the Force get you halfway around the moon in less then a year?
Because that's how long it will take you to walk it, if you don't get gobbled
by piranha-beetles or die of creek fever. You might as well wait until we have
the ship fixed."
"I don't
have to walk," Anakin said. "The repulsorlift system in the E-wing
was salvageable. I cobbled together something that will pass for a
speeder."
"Already?"
"Days ago.
But until you came along, I couldn't really talk myself into going. I couldn't
take Valin and Sannah, and I couldn't leave them behind." But now I
have two signs, he finished to himself, Qorl, and my dream. It felt
right to go. It felt terribly wrong not to. It felt— Chewbacca's face flashed
in his mind, as he had last seen it, and Tahiri, alone, surrounded.
Tahiri, grown,
wearing Yuuzhan Vong armor and wielding dark-side Force.
It was a risk he
had to take.
"I'm going
to explain this to Valin and Sannah now," Anakin said. "I'll leave in
the morning."
CHAPTER THIRTEEN
Commander Tsaak
Vootuh aimed his opalescent eyes at the trembling human, restraining the part
of himself that wanted to put the pathetic creature out of its misery.
Which was most of
him.
"You are
Imsatad?" he asked.
"Yes,
sir."
"Straighten
yourself," Vootuh snarled. "The mewling of a Yuuzhan Vong infant in a
creche has more fierceness than your whine." As he spoke, he cherished the
thin hiss of breath through the deep chevrons that cut through his cheeks. He
clasped his hands behind his back so that the cloak gripping into the flesh of
his shoulders fell open to reveal the full glory of the tattoos and burn
puckers that adorned his torso. He silently praised Yun-Yuuzhan for not
condemning him to be one of these smooth, honor-less infidels.
"Yes,
sir," Imsatad replied, his voice slightly firmer.
"You
explained to my subordinates that you are an ally of ours? One of the—" He
frowned, trying to remember the name of the group in Basic. "Peez Brigade?"
The tizowyrm in
his ear translated the first word as "willing and appropriate submission
from the submissive to the conqueror."
"Yes,
sir."
"I wonder
how you will confirm that," Tsaak Vootuh said. "Our information was
that this moon was home to
many young Jeedai.
And yet I find none at all. This is peculiar, and I suspect you are to
blame."
"No!"
Imsatad said. "We came here in good faith, to keep the terms of the peace
your warmaster Tsavong Lah proposed."
"And failed
miserably to do so. Where are the Jeedai? "
Imsatad
hesitated. "We have one. The others are with Karrde."
"The
commander of the flotilla that fled our approach?"
"That's him.
He tricked us into—"
"I have no
interest in the details of your failure. Two of this Karrde's ships made the
jump to hyperspace. I assume those ships contained the prize you let slip
through your fingers."
"With all
respect, Commander, if it weren't for me and my crew, you wouldn't have even
one Jedi. Karrde would have taken them all before you arrived."
"Perhaps,
perhaps not. But tell me—why does he remain in this system?"
Imsatad frowned.
"Does he?"
"Yes. He has
withdrawn to the edge of the system, but remains there. I do not complain, for
it will give me and my warriors combat when I feared we must sit idle. But I
wish to know his reason. I do not imagine that he would stay for the sake of a
single immature Jeedai." He leaned close, dropping his voice to a
whisper. "What have you failed to tell me?"
The human cleared
its throat. "There—I think there are perhaps a few more Jedi here on the
moon. I think one of them might be Anakin Solo."
"Solo?"
"Brother to
Jacen Solo, whom Tsavong Lah so desires."
"Interesting,
if true."
" I would
like to offer my ships and crew to help find him and any others who might still
remain on Yavin Four."
Tsaak Vootuh
fixed a venomous stare on the creature. "You have helped us quite enough.
As for your ships, they are abominations and will be destroyed."
" But
what—how will we return home?"
Tsaak Vootuh
allowed himself a grim smile. "How indeed, Imsatad?" he said.
"How indeed?"
"Now, wait a
minute—" Imsatad began, but Tsaak Vootuh cut him off with a look.
"I wish to
see the captured Jeedai," he told the human. "You will take
me, now."
" I'll do no
such thing until you—"
Tsaak Vootuh
nodded in a certain way, and Imsatad was suddenly staring in astonishment at
the head of an amphistaff poking out of his belly. He looked question-ingly at
Tsaak Vootuh, coughed blood from his mouth, and died. Vo Lian, Tsaak Vootuh's
lieutenant, withdrew the amphistaff he had struck through the man's back.
Tsaak Vootuh
gestured at the human who had been standing behind Imsatad. "You. Take me
to see the Jeedai."
"Oof course,"
the creature stammered. "Whatever you wish."
Tsaak Vootuh
nodded and stood. Before leaving the room, he turned to Vo Lian.
"Supervise the landing and make secure the space around this moon. I want
the damutek on the ground within the next cycle. I will give the shapers no
cause for complaint."
Vo Lian snapped
his fists against his opposite shoulders. "Belek tiu," he
said. "It will be done, Commander."
PART TWO
THE SHAMED AMD
THE SHAPERS
CHAPTER FOURTEEN
Borsk Fey'lya,
Chief of State of the New Republic, offered an apologetic expression that
looked as false to Luke as it was well-practiced. His words followed suit.
"I'm
sorry," he demurred, violet eyes unblinking. "I can be of no help in
this matter, Master Skywalker."
Luke fought down
the urge to shout and sought the calm he so often implored of his students.
"I beg you to reconsider, Chief Fey'lya. Lives are at stake." Grief
over Ikrit's death was still raw.
The Bothan
nodded. "I am painfully aware of that, Master Skywalker. However, whereas
you are concerned with the lives of four—count them, four—Jedi, I must consider
a great many more. I must consider the lives we will lose in an attempt to
retake the Yavin system, a system with no tactical or strategic advantage. I
must consider, further, that this action would quite effectively end the truce
with the Yuuzhan Vong and cost even more lives in renewed warfare."
"They've
already broken the truce," Luke replied, still trying to keep his voice
even. "They promised not to take any more of our worlds if Jedi are turned
over to them, something that the whole galaxy seems eager to do. And yet
they've now taken Yavin Four."
"Of course,
neither I nor the senate sanction the purported purge of Jedi."
"Purported?"
Luke allowed the word to absorb all of the incredulity he felt at Fey'lya's
implication.
"And as for
Yavin Four," the chief continued evenly, "it is not one of 'our
worlds,' not if by the use of the plural pronoun you mean the New Republic.
Yavin Four is your pet project, Master Skywalker. You Jedi have made it
clear that you are not bound by the laws and decisions of the senate. You
fight unsanctioned battles and provoke needless dissent. And now, suddenly,
after spurning our wishes, you desire our aid? Really, can't you see the
hypocrisy in that?"
"Chief,
putting aside for the moment that you are confounding the action of a handful
of Jedi with our order as a whole, these are children we're talking
about. They've done nothing, and they don't deserve to suffer for the mistakes
of others."
"But you
would ask me to jeopardize millions, perhaps billions for those same mistakes?
Your mistakes? Listen to yourself."
"That's the
most—" Jaina Solo exploded. Luke was surprised she had kept silent for so
long.
"Quiet, Jaina,"
he said.
" But he's
twisting—"
"Child, you
have all of your mother's fire and none of her common sense," Fey'lya
said. "Listen to your Master."
"There's no
need to insult my niece," Luke said. "Her brother is one of those
missing."
"Would this
be Anakin Solo, who forged a fake departure authority in order to leave
Coruscant surreptitiously?"
"Anakin is a
little . . . overeager."
"He did not
proceed under your authority?"
"No, Chief
Fey'lya, he did not, but he thought the students at the praxeum were in
imminent danger. As it turns out, he was correct."
"Another
example, however, of what I'm talking about. Young Solo ran off against orders,
breaking several laws in doing so, with no say-so from anyone. This, so far as
I can tell, is the essence of what the Jedi have become."
"I'm coming
to you now, Chief Fey'lya."
"Yes. Now
that the matter is too large for you to handle on your own. And I note that you
did not come here first. At the very least, you went to General Antilles—and, I
suspect, to others. And they all sent you here."
"I was
inquiring into what was possible," Luke said. " Not making
requests."
"How
diplomatic. And where is your sister in all of this? She and her husband also
seem to have disappeared."
" That's not
relevant to this," Luke said.
"Oh, isn't
it? Are they engaged in yet more unsanctioned covert activity? Are they a part
of the little government you're trying to run on the side, as if the elected
officials of the New Republic are incompetent to do their jobs?"
"We're
following our Jedi mandate, Chief Fey'lya. We protect. We serve. I'm sorry if
these goals are incompatible with yours."
"The
arrogance," Fey'lya said. "The sheer arrogance. And you wonder why
you are disliked."
Luke felt matters
rushing to a heated conclusion and knew part of it was his own fault. Perhaps
the rage he felt pulsing from Jaina was partially responsible, but he was
dangerously near losing his own head in the matter. He placed his palms
together. "Chief Fey'lya, if you won't consider military action, at least
consider a diplomatic solution."
The Bothan
reclined in his chair. "The matter has already been brought to our
attention. Negotiations have been and are occurring."
"Brought by
whom?"
"The Yuuzhan
Vong, of course. The Yavin situation has already generated a good deal of
tension."
"What? You
knew?"
"The Yuuzhan
Vong assure us that their occupation of the system is temporary. They went
there in search of
raw materials,
not captives. They knew nothing about your Jedi praxeum."
Luke bore down on
the chief of state with his gaze. " I ask again," he said softly.
"You knew the Yuuzhan Vong were going to Yavin, and didn't see fit
to warn me?"
"Don't be
absurd," Fey'lya snorted. "Do you think I could keep that from your
Jedi spies? No. The Yuuzhan Vong entered the Yavin system peacefully. There was
already some sort of scuffle between smugglers going on when they got there,
and some of those smugglers remain and continue to harass the Yuuzhan Vong
water-mining activities on Stroiketcy. It took considerable diplomatic effort
to convince them that these outlaws have nothing to do with the New
Republic." He cocked his head. "You know nothing of these pirates, do
you, Master Skywalker? This wouldn't be yet another example of
unsanctioned Jedi activity, would it?"
Luke narrowed his
eyes. "You sold my students out. I won't forget that. Ever."
"I see.
Instead of answering my question, you threaten me." Fey'lya waved the back
of his hand. "You've taken up enough of my time, Skywalker. Let me just
leave you with a warning. I'm formally cautioning you that the Yavin system is
off-limits to you and your followers. If the forces there are in any way
connected with you, you will recall them. Under no circumstances are you to go
there yourself or send Jedi in your stead. If you make any move in that
direction, you will be placed under arrest. You are already, I rather
needlessly point out, under close observation. Is that clear?"
"Oh, it's
clear all right," Luke replied. "Suddenly, a lot of things are very
clear indeed." He felt Fey'lya's mind snap down and vacuum seal. The
interview was over. He turned to go—and stopped when he noticed that Jaina
wasn't moving, was standing stock-still, tears of anger streaming down her
face.
"Chief
Fey'lya," she said in a quiet voice. "You are a poor excuse for a
sentient being. I hope one day you really smell the stink in your heart and
choke on the fumes."
Fey'lya returned
her gaze. "You're very young," he said. "When you've
accomplished a fraction of what I have for the people of this galaxy, come back
and we'll talk again."
" It makes a
certain amount of sense from his perspective," Jacen said later, when
Luke and Jaina had returned to the Jedi Master's quarters. Luke had just
finished relating the substance of his talk with the chief of state to Shada
D'ukal, Tionne, Mara, and Jacen.
"I do not
believe you said that," Jaina snapped. "This is Anakin we're
talking about. It's the praxeum!"
"You don't
have to remind me who my brother is," Jacen said. "But that's the
point, don't you see? We can hardly be impartial in this case."
"Vape
impartiality!" Jaina replied. " Fey'lya's not impartial."
"No, he's
not. But his concerns are different."
"Yeah. He's
more concerned about the Vong than he is about his own citizens."
"That's not
true," Luke said gently. "To be honest, I never thought he would send
ships to the Yavin system. I had to ask, though, and we did learn some
things."
"Right. Like
Fey'lya sent the Vong there in the first place."
"I doubt
that very much," Luke said. "I think things happened pretty much as
he said. When the Yuuzhan Vong showed up they found Karrde fighting the Peace
Brigade, and when they took occupation, Karrde turned on them. They then
contacted the New Republic. And Fey'lya's right—I should have seen this coming,
long ago. The Yavin system has been at risk for months now.
Only the
concentrated effort of the Jedi there even allowed us to think it was
safe."
"That's
perfect, Luke," Mara said. "Blame yourself."
Luke lifted his
eyebrows, surprised at the brittle anger in her tone. "I'm not trying to
allocate blame, Mara."
"Then spare
us your apologies for Fey'lya and the senate. What are we going to do?"
"What Anakin
did," Jaina said. "Talon Karrde is out there right now, fighting a
holding action for help that will never come. He'll stay there until they pick
all of his ships off, one by one. Won't he, Shada?"
"Yes."
Luke fixed her
with his gaze. " I understand your concern, Jaina, but what good will one
more X-wing do Karrde or Anakin?"
"More good
than sitting here. And we can contact Mom and Dad, have them bring the Millennium
Falcon."
"First of
all, Han and Leia are still out of contact. More important, you heard what
Fey'lya said."
"Oh, please
let them try arresting us," Mara grunted.
"You think I
care even faintly what that scruffy Bothan said? " Jaina chimed in.
"Uncle Luke, we can't do nothing."
Luke placed his
hand on Mara's arm. "Listen to me, all of you. I'm not worried about
arrest as such, and I think you all know that. But things aren't good for the
Jedi now. If we have any friends left in high places, we can't afford to
alienate them. We're already considered rogues. We can't allow ourselves
to be cast as enemies of the state."
"If they're
stupid enough to think that, let 'em," Jaina snarled. "They're
hopeless."
"Right,"
Jacen said sardonically. "That's really what we need right now, Jaina—a
civil war within the New Republic, as if the war with the Yuuzhan Vong isn't already
enough. Besides, Uncle Luke is right. I don't think
the weight we
could add to the battle would help, not considering the situation as Shada
outlined it."
"What,
then?" Shada asked. "Karrde can't do it alone."
"What if we
added a Star Destroyer to the equation?" Luke said.
Shada looked
thoughtful for a moment, then nodded slightly. "If the Yuuzhan Vong don't
get more reinforcements—maybe."
"Terrik,"
Mara said.
"Terrik,"
Luke agreed.
"I thought
you said you couldn't find him?" Jacen asked.
"No, but I
have some ideas about where to look. All I need is someone to look for
him."
Jaina stared.
Jacen nodded. "Yes," he said.
"No, now
wait a minute," Jaina said. "You want us to chase halfway around the
galaxy for a Star Destroyer we might never find—"
"Jaina,"
Jacen interrupted. "Do you think Anakin is dead?"
She hesitated
fractionally. "No. I know he's not."
"Right. I
don't think he's dead either. I don't even think they've caught him. Anakin
knows Yavin Four as well as we do, maybe better. The Yuuzhan Vong don't know it
at all. If they didn't catch him when they landed, it would take a miracle for
them to find him."
"Unless he
ran right up to their ships, lightsaber swinging, which is just what Anakin is
likely to do," Jaina said.
"He's
headstrong," Jacen said, "but he isn't stupid. He knows help is on
the way. He probably knows Karrde is there already. The problem is, he can't
get to Karrde or Karrde to him because the Yuuzhan Vong are in the way. Uncle
Luke is right—a couple more X-wings or even the Falcon won't change that
equation much. The Errant Venture would."
Jaina's nostrils
flared. "Uncle Luke, you aren't just trying to get us out of the way, are
you?"
Luke shook his
head. "How do you plot that course? No. Jacen's laid out the
situation perfectly. Let me add to that the fact that since Valin is Booster
Terrik's grandson, Booster will be more than happy to help."
"And Terrik
isn't tied directly to the Jedi."
"What are
you talking about?" Mara interrupted. "Corran Horn is Valin's father,
and last I heard, he was with Booster."
"Corran
distanced himself from us after Ithor," Luke replied. " Fey'lya might
suspect something, but he won't be able to prove it. Which reminds me—Shada got
here without revealing she has most of the Jedi candidates with her. If they
turn up here on Coruscant, with us, Fey'lya will know we're behind Karrde being
there. That may or may not be a situation I can control. But they aren't safe
here anyway. When you go to find Terrik, I want you to take the candidates with
you."
"What, in an
X-wing?"
"We have
Shada's ships—" Jacen began.
"Oh,
no," Shada said. "They aren't my ships, they're Karrde's, and he
needs them. I'm returning to the Yavin system, and I'm doing it very soon, no
matter what you work out here."
"We'll take the
Jade Shadow," Mara said. "I can convert some space. It may still
be a little cramped, with all of the kids, but she'll do the job."
"You and I
can't leave Coruscant," Luke said bluntly.
Mara's eyes
flashed. "Skywalker, if this is about my 'delicate state,' you can
shove—"
"It's not,
Mara. We can't attract suspicion. Fey'lya's watching us. It'll be hard enough
to get Jacen and Jaina out without raising eyebrows, but that can be
done."
Mara seemed to
roll that around in her mouth. / don't like playing these games, she
practically hurled at him.
/ don't
either, he replied.
The room was
silent for a score of heartbeats, during which time Luke realized that everyone
else in the room
was staring at
them. Their mouths were admirably closed, but their read in the Force was
purely gape-jawed.
No, not all of
them are surprised, Luke suddenly knew.
It was typically
Jaina who broke the silence. "Mara? You're? ..."
"Bright
kid," Mara said. Her eyes narrowed a little.
•Jacen?"
Jacen seemed to
be trying to see the individual atoms in the floor. His face was redshifting.
"You peeked,"
Mara accused.
"I, uh,
didn't mean to," he mumbled. "But when I started using the
Force again at Duro ..." He looked around helplessly for support.
'We were going to
tell you soon, anyway," Luke said.
"That's
wonderful!" Jaina exploded. "Mara, congratu-lations." Her brows
scrunched a bit. "I guess? I mean, I didn't think—"
"What?"
Mara said, nailing the younger woman with a pointed gaze. "Didn't think
what?"
"Oh,
I—nothing," Jaina replied, her face suddenly
twinning her
brother's in hue.
"It's just
suprising," Jacen said, for her. "You were
sick for so
long."
Mara nodded.
"Yeah. Well, the universe surprises you sometimes. And sometimes—on rare
occasions—in a good way."
•'In the best way,"
Jaina burbled. "Congratulations. To both of you."
"Thank
you," Luke said.
" 'Cousin
Jaina.' I like the sound of it."
"So do
I," Mara replied, lips twitching in a smile. "But that doesn't solve
the immediate problem. So, 'Cousin Jaina'—why don't you take the Jade Shadow
and go find Booster, already?"
Jaina's eyes
widened. "You're offering me your ship?"
"Loaning it
for a good cause. Just don't get her dinged up, understood?"
"Understood,"
Jaina replied. "But if we don't find Booster within a standard week—"
"We will
find him," Jacen interjected.
"Either
way," Jaina warned, "you won't keep me away from Yavin Four. Not if I
have to fly there on a repulsorsled."
CHAPTER FIFTEEN
Anakin sped over
what might have been the billows and curls, thunderstorms and circlestorms of a
vast sea of green clouds. The illusion was nearly perfect as the sun reddened,
puddled, and shrank against the horizon like a fusion explosion going in slow
reverse, condensing back into the bomb that had released it. The real clouds
were orange-and-umber lace, and the gas giant was just dipping under the
horizon as well. A rare true night was settling, the first in the three
standard days since he'd left the crash site.
But the green
clouds were an illusion, a potentially deadly one. They were really treetops,
and if he passed through one at this speed, he wouldn't experience the slight
dampness and negligible turbulence that flying through a cloud produced; he
would shatter his makeshift speeder and possibly his own bones against them.
And so he closed
his eyes and used the Force, feeling the life below him, watching for it
thrusting too high.
It was
exhilarating to be flying again, so much so that for moments at a time Anakin
nearly forgot what he was doing and where he was going. He kept reaching for
the throttle, to really open her up, to feel the wind in his face rum into a
fluid, cheek-biting sheet of speed.
But the throttle
was already open; the "speeder" quite simply wasn't. He'd tinkered
with it as much as he could, but no
amount of jury-rigging could transform a cannibalized A-wing repulsorlift
welded to an awkward strut-work
chassis into a
fleet steed of the winds. The pilot seat from his X-wing perched atop the
improbable cagelike thing, and before him were exactly four controls—an on-off
switch, a throttle and lift control circuited to the re-pulsor, and a tiller
that wagged a large aluminum rudder behind him. Not the most wieldy craft he'd
ever flown, and his maximum speed was a poky ninety klicks an hour. Still, it
would get him there faster than walking or waiting for the repairs on the
transport.
He stretched out
farther in the Force, touching Tahiri again. She was in a dark place and he
felt pain, or the fading of pain. He couldn't tell where.
Anakin.
That startled
him. His name rang like an H'kig chime, nothing fuzzy about it.
"I'm coming,
Tahiri," he whispered.
Anakin. . . But the sense of words dissolved into emotion. Fear, grief, hope.
Wordlessly, he reached for her, to give her the equivalent of a squeeze on the
hand, and found himself instead in a tight, desperate embrace.
/'// find you,
he projected to her. Just hang on.
No! He couldn't tell if she was warning him away or responding to the blade
of pain that suddenly cut between them, tore her away from him, leaving him
once more alone with the treetops.
He searched for
her again, but found nothing, not even a faint presence.
"You're
okay, Tahiri," he mumbled. "I know you are."
He did sense
someone else, however. It was like seeing a faint star, the faintest star in
the sky.
"Jaina,"
Anakin said. "Hello, Jaina."
But he couldn't
tell if she felt him back.
Days passed,
blurred and monotonous. The forest broke into narrow savannas and sparkling
stretches of marsh and then ocean that shimmered like planished copper be-
neath Yavin and
liquid gold by sunlight. He watched the crawling, V-shaped wakes of behemoths
he had no names for and could make out only as shadows in the deep. He flew day
and night, sleeping only in tiny naps, drawing on the Force to replenish
himself. He ate the last of his rations after ten days, but even two days later
did not feel hungry. He felt light and humming, like a flash of lightning
given human form.
Water he did
need, and stopped to distill it when his body required more. But mostly he
flew, and lost himself in the life around him. He searched for Tahiri, trying
to understand what was happening to her, trying to give her hope.
Yavin eclipsed
the sun and then rolled under the sky, and once more Anakin found himself in
full darkness. He was slipping into the arms of fatigue, considering a short
nap. when he heard an odd noise. At first he thought he was imagining it, for
he felt nothing in the Force, but as it grew louder, he opened his eyes,
turning carefully to see what it might be.
Pacing him,
perhaps fifty meters away, was something large and dark. Something that did not
exist in the Force at all.
"Oh,
Sithspawn," he muttered under his breath. Otherwise he froze, watching
the thing. It was flying perfectly parallel to him, which couldn't be an
accident. It wasn't as big as a coralskipper, but not much smaller, either. A
speeder analog, maybe? Something better designed for atmospheric flight than
the ships he had thus far seen? He couldn't make out a silhouette, only a
tactile impression of size. And there, again, he could be wrong.
Did they think he
hadn't seen them yet, or were they soil trying to figure out what he was?
He got his answer
a few moments later, when the craft subtly changed course and their flight
paths began to converge.
"This is no
good," Anakin muttered.
He turned the
lift control down two-thirds and dropped through what felt like a small gap in
the treetops. A branch caught under one corner of the speeder and flipped it
over, and with no gyro to correct, Anakin found himself hurling toward the
ground. Desperately, he wrenched at the craft with the Force, flipping it back
over with a very raw, unsubtle use of strength, exactly the kind of thing his
brother was always berating him for. "The Force isn't a torch for you to
weld plating with," Jacen might say.
Of course,
without that macrofuser, Anakin would be a bag of broken bones on the forest
floor right now. The Force was about everything, wasn't it?
Stabilizing in
the midlevel canopy of the forest, Anakin was in more complete darkness than
before, deprived even of starlight. He dropped his speed a little; his rudder
was too crude to allow him the kind of hot flying that might take him between the
great boles at full throttle. He let the Force guide his hands on the rudder
and used his gaze to track the dark for any sign of his pursuer.
But it was his
ears, again, that alerted him. Something crashed through the treetops behind
him, and all of the hairs on his neck stood up. What was he facing? A living
ship? A beast?
He dropped and
cut a sharp turn, slipping between two trees, scraping one of them. For an
instant, he thought it had worked, but then he heard the whirring turn to
follow him.
How does it see? he wondered. Infrared? Or, given that the Yuuzhan Vong used only living
technology, maybe it smelled him. Whatever the case, it certainly had a lock on
him. It was faster, too, though less maneuverable in the trees due to its
greater size.
He thought he was
evading it pretty well until something hissed past his ear—not a branch, not
anything he could feel in the Force. Desperately he increased his eva-
sive tactics,
spinning and rolling, coming as near the trees as he dared, slipping through
the narrowest spaces he was able to.
Dark things
licked past him, hissing in the leaves, and then something caught the speeder
in a grip that stopped it dead in the air.
Anakin didn't
stop, however. With all of the forward momentum that had just been stolen from
his craft, he was hurled into the night, a rocket of blood and bone. He tucked
and spun, slowing himself with the Force, and dropped onto a branch bigger
around than he was.
He turned and
found himself facing a hole in the night.
A thin tendril
whipped out from the thing and wrapped around his waist, cinching painfully
tight. With a hoarse cry, he snapped on his lightsaber and cut, just as the
strand started to tighten further, as if reeling him in. Incredibly, the
strand—it seemed no thicker than his thumb—resisted the first cut, though it
yielded to the second.
By then he had
been jerked off the branch, and once again he was falling. Closing his eyes, he
nudged his course to another branch and used it as a springboard to propel
himself toward the next unseen landing place. He never made it. Another of the
strands caught him in midair. He managed to twist himself and chop it, but by
that time another had fastened on him. He managed to cut it, too, but noticed
the severed pieces weren't dropping off, but retained their grip on him. If
this kept up ...
He saw pretty
clearly what he had to do. The next time his feet hit a branch, he hurled
himself up and out, feeling the breath of several strands passing beneath and by
him. He aimed himself at the hole in the Force.
The problem with
that, of course, was that he couldn't sense a landing place. He came down on
top of the craft, but the surface was uneven, and he slipped, bounced once on
the rear of the thing, and slid off. He caught a projection as he fell, and for
a brief moment felt an odd disorientation, as his inner ear suddenly told him
that
down was in two different directions, as if he stood on the dividing line
between two different gravities.
In a flash, he
knew what that must mean. Whatever this thing was, it was, like other Yuuzhan
Vong craft, propelled by a dovin basal, the creatures that somehow generated
gravitic anomalies. He was hanging next to the craft's lifts.
The craft jerked
and spun over. Anakin lost his grip, but he had a fix on the gravity source
now. The Yuuzhan Vong and their creatures might not exist in the Force, but
gravity did.
As he fell, he
hurled his lightsaber up, guiding it with the Force. It struck at the heart of
the gravitic anomaly, and sparks showered the canopy below. As Anakin fell
through the first layer of leaves he saw his lightsaber rupture into a bright
purple flare.
Concentrating on
the weapon, Anakin glanced off a branch, falling like a rag doll. Trying to
focus through the pain, he found the forest floor, pushed against it, pushed...
Until it pushed
him back. All of his breath coughed out in a rush, and he folded around his
gut, sucking for wind that would not come.
The morning sun
found Anakin turning blue and black over much of his body, but still
functional. In the dim light, he cautiously climbed from his hiding place in
the hollow of a tree and looked around.
The Yuuzhan Vong
craft was down, perhaps eighty meters away. It reminded Anakin of some sort of
flat, winged sea creature, though it looked as if it were grown from the same
stuff as the coralskippers. It was fetched up against a tree. The cockpit was a
transparent bubble extruding from the top. The pilot inside looked quite dead.
Anakin found he'd
been right about the dovin basal. It looked roughly the same as the larger ones
he'd seen, except it had a huge, oozing gash in it. His lightsaber lay-
nearby. When he
picked it up and tried to activate it, his fears were confirmed—nothing
happened.
"Perfect,"
he murmured aloud. "No weapons at all. Perfect."
He found the
remains of his speeder, still attached to the cable snaking from the Yuuzhan
Vong craft. It didn't take much of an inspection to tell him that this time he
wouldn't be salvaging anything.
From here on out,
he was walking.
CHAPTER SIXTEEN
Nen Yim watched
the damutek ships settle amongst the alien trees, with a giddiness she tried
hard to conceal. No reward could come from a display of emotion, especially
childish ones. A shaper was circumspect; a shaper was analytical. A shaper did
not stare in wonder and joy and wave the tendrils of her headdress in abandon.
So Nen Yim did
none of that. But by the gods, she felt like doing it. This was a
planet! Perhaps technically a moon, but a world, an unknown world! The unfamiliar
smells of the place, the unanticipated movement of the air, the unimagined
oddness of a gravity that wasn't exactly right had her senses buzzing. But the
real excitement came from within her. Like the thick-trunked damutek, she was
a seed, finally come to the right soil to sprout in.
Soil. She reached
down, bent, and scratched up a fistful of the rich black dirt. It smelled like
nothing she had ever known—a bit like the sluices beneath the mernip breeding
pools, or the exhalations of the maw luur of the great worldships. The latter
took in waste through its vast capillary network and digested it into
nutrients, metals, and air. As a child, she'd often stood where the maw luur
exhaled; until now, it was the only wind she had ever known.
"Your first
time on a true world, Adept?"
Nen Yim turned,
thinking to find one of her fellow adepts speaking to her, but suddenly
arranged the tenta-
cles of her
headdress into genuflection when she saw it was no such lowly creature, but her
new master, Mezhan Kwaad.
The master let
her finish, then beckoned her to face her. " You may turn your eyes on me,
Adept."
"Yes, Master
Mezhan."
Mezhan Kwaad was
a female nearing the final edge of youth. If she were not a shaper, she might
yet bear a child, but of course that was the one form of shaping forbidden to
masters of their caste. She was lean but still wore the form of a mature
female, despite her high status. Her broad, high-cheekboned face bore the
ritual forehead scars of her domain, and her right hand was an fight-fingered
master's hand. Her other alterations, in keeping with the aesthetic of the
shapers, were more discreet. The marks of her sacrifices were not external, as
they tended to be for the other castes. She wore the body-hugging oozhith of a
master, its tiny cilia rippling in subtle waves of color as it sought and
captured the alien microorganisms in the atmosphere to feed itself.
"And answer
my question," the master went on.
" Yes,
Master. I have never before known a world outside of our worldships."
"And what
are your impressions?"
"Our
worldships are built for centuries, perhaps millennia. Yun-Yuuzhan created
planets and moons for millions and billions of cycles. The resources in the
moon's interior are released slowly, by tectonic processes, or by life adapting
to lack." She looked back down at the dirt beneath her feet. "But it
does feel so strange, the un-imaginable wealth I'm standing on. And the life!
Dif-ferent from our own, and varied, and none of it made to serve us!"
The master shaper
narrowed her eyes. " It is made to serve us," she said
quietly. "It is the will of the gods that life serves us. You were taught
this."
"Of course,
Master," Nen Yim said. "I only meant we have not shaped it yet. But
we shall."
"Yes, we
shall," Mezhan Kwaad agreed. "And I emphasize we. Do you know
why you are an adept, Nen Yim? Do you know why you are here, and not correcting
the mutations of methane-fixing recham forteps in a decaying maw luur?"
"No,
Master."
"Because I
saw your work on the endocrine cloister in the worldship Baanu Kor.n
Nen Yim knotted
her headdress in a humble posture. "I only did what needed to be
done," she said.
"You did it
optimally. Many would have stopped short at the molding of tii, but you went
beyond that. You applied the Vul Ag protocol, though such has never been used
in an endocrine cloister."
"I thought
it would make the outer osmotic membranes more efficiently transpire—"
"Yes.
Tradition and propriety are of absolute importance to our task, and yet
immersion in those qualities can lead to hidebound thinking. I need adepts who
are resourceful, who can use the sacred, unchanging knowledge in new ways. Do
you understand?"
"I believe
so, Master," Nen Yim answered cautiously. A small lump of fear formed in
her throat. Did the master know")
But she couldn't.
If she knew that Nen Yim had dabbled in heresy, she would never have promoted
her. Unless she herself—
No. Not a master.
That was impossible.
"Don't
believe," the master said. "Know, and you shall go far. Do you see?
As you say, after generations we have a whole new galaxy of life at our
fingertips. It is time to demonstrate exactly what Yun-Yuuzhan intended us
for."
Nen Yim nodded,
watching the damuteks again. They were already splitting from their protective
skins and be-
ginning to
expand, to grow into highly specialized shaper compounds.
"Come,
Adept," the master said. "It is time to receive your hand."
"So
soon?" Nen Yim asked.
"Our work
begins tomorrow. We have one of the Jeedai, you know. Only one, but we
shall have more. Supreme Overlord Shimrra himself is watching what we do here most
carefully. We will not disappoint him."
Nen Yim stepped
from the ceremonial bath into a darkened oozhith. At her touch it wrapped
itself firmly about her, and she felt the tingle as it inserted cilia into her
pores. It was not a full-skin oozhith, but a shortened garment that left her
arms and most of her legs bare. She smoothed back her short dark hair and held
out her right
hand, looking at
it as if for the first time rather than the last. Then she allowed the
attendant to escort her into me darkened grotto of Yun-Ne'Shel, where the
master waited.
The grotto
smelled of brine and oil. It was close and damp and reacted faintly to the
touch. The grotto was a distant relative of the yammosk; what you felt in the
chamber came back to you, enhanced.
And so now both
her eagerness and her trepidation
-ad her pulse
hammering as she knelt at the mouth of the grotto, a hole the size of a fist
surrounded by a massive bulge of muscle. Without pausing or flinching, she
placed her hand through the opening.
For a moment,
nothing happened. Then the teeth slid out of their sheaths, eight of them, and
pricked into her wrist.
Sweat started on
her brow as she surrendered to the pain, as the teeth, with glacial slowness,
sank through tissue, grated into bone. The lips closed occasionally to sock
away the blood. The grotto gave her back her pain, amplified, and her breath
went choppy. She lost her sense
of time; every
nerve ending in her body was raw, as if the cilia of her garment were writhing
needles.
Until, finally,
the teeth met in the center of her wrist; she felt them click together. She
tried to take a long, calming breath to prepare for what was to come next.
It happened
quickly. The mouth suddenly rotated ninety degrees. Her arm twisted with it no
more than a degree or so, and then the hand came off with a wet snick. Nen
Yim held up the stump of her wrist and stared at it in dull astonishment. She
barely noticed the attendant taking her by the shoulders, guiding her toward
the dark basin in the center of the grotto.
"I can do
it," she whispered. She knelt by the basin, her head spinning. Dark things
moved in the waters, five-legged things that came to the scent of her blood
eagerly. She pushed her gushing stump into the water.
She had thought
her body could feel no greater pain than it already had. She was wrong. She
didn't feel it in her hand at all, but in a great spasm that arched her body
like a bow and kept it cramped there. She couldn't see the creature grappling
with her wrist. For a horrible moment, she didn't want to. A great flash of
light exploded in her head, and for a time she knew nothing.
She awoke, and
tears of shame started. Through them she saw the master standing over her.
"No one has
ever endured it without a brief lapse the first time," she said.
"There is no shame, on this occasion. If you ever receive your master's
hand, it will be different. But you will be ready."
Hand. Nen Yim raised it before her.
It was still
seating itself, a thick greenish secretion marking the line between it and her
wrist. It had four narrow fingers and a thumb protruding from the thin but
flexible carapace that now served as the top of her hand. Thousands of small
sensor knobs covered the fingers and palm. The two fingers farthest from her
thumb ended in
small pincers.
The finger nearest the thumb had a thin, sharp, retractable claw.
She tried to
wiggle the fingers; nothing happened.
"It will
take some days for the nerve connections to complete themselves, and some time
after that for your brain to become used to the finer modifications," the
master said. "Rejoice, Nen Yim—you are now truly an adept. You will join
me in shaping the Jeedai, and will bring glory to our caste, our domain,
and the Yuuzhan Vong."
CHAPTER SEVENTEEN
Anakin sank
farther beneath the roots of a marsh-grubber tree and submerged himself up to
his mouth, peering through the twisted growths at the elusive sky. For long
moments he thought perhaps he had been mistaken, that the noise from above had
been his imagination, but then he saw a shadow much too large to be any native
bird pass across the fetid U-shaped lake that concealed him.
His hand went to
his useless lightsaber and then fell away.
For three days he
had been avoiding the Yuuzhan Vong speeder analogs. It helped that he knew the
sounds of the jungle moon; the irritated cries of Woolamanders in the distance
or a flight of a group of lesser kitehawks had become his best allies, warning
him of approaching fliers kilometers before they passed overhead. Still, as he
approached the site of the academy, the searchers came with greater regularity.
He didn't think they were random flights, but rather that they were part of
some sort of expanding search net spiraling out from the flier he had brought
down with his lightsaber.
Well, at least
now he knew better than to cut into a dovin basal. From what he could tell, his
weapon had passed through or very near the part of the thing that warped
gravity; the crystal in his weapon had been subtly warped, then fused by the
energy it generated. That was both good news and bad; focusing crystals had
been
found on Yavin 4
before, in the old Massassi temples, and they could be used in lightsabers.
Unfortunately, Massassi temples had been in short supply lately.
Sighing, he
renewed his grip on the makeshift staff he had managed to cut with his utility
knife. He doubted very much that it would be of any use whatsoever against
Yuuzhan Vong armor, but it was better than nothing. He'd run across some
explosive grenade fungi earlier—a local plant that, when dry, could generate a
respectable bang. At the moment, however, they weren't available. He'd stashed
them on dry ground before hiding here.
So he sat,
waiting for the shadow to return, and tried not to think about what would
happen when he finally reached Tahiri and her captors. How many Yuuzhan Vong
were there? Why were they still here?
All good
questions, all totally moot if Anakin Solo died or was captured on the way.
He would have to
face the answers soon enough, of course. By his calculations, he was only about
twenty kilometers away from the academy.
He was so busy
watching the sky that he didn't notice ripples of a wake approaching him until
it was nearly too late.
Even then he
first thought it was a large crawlfish, one of the harmless crustaceans that
had been furnishing him with food since he came to ground. He caught a glimpse
of mottled chiton as it approached.
But crawlfish got
to be only a meter or so long, and he suddenly realized that this creature was
more on the order of three meters.
He quickly
lowered the sharpened end of his staff, which was promptly yanked from his hands
by something very strong. The head surfaced then, a nightmare of mandibles and
hooked feelers reaching for him. For an instant, fear and shock got the better
of him, then he grabbed its mass with the Force and pushed. As it blew
back and up, he
got a good view of it: flat, wide, and segmented with thousands of legs.
It splashed down,
milled about, and started for him again. Quickly, he clambered out of the
water.
Someone called
behind him, in a language he didn't understand. He spun and saw one of the Yuuzhan
Vong craft, side extruded open. A Yuuzhan Vong warrior was just stepping out.
The warrior
hesitated for a second, then stepped back into the craft. As it rose into the
air, Anakin uttered a brief curse and ran. He paused only long enough to grab
his pack.
The flier stayed
with him, but kept its distance. Adrenaline hummed in Anakin's blood, but his
mind was curiously calm. He dodged through the undergrowth, looking for a cave,
temple ruins, any place to remove him from his observer. His fatigue sloughed
from him like dead cells in a bacta tank, and the Force flowed through him like
a river, wild, almost frightening in its sheer, joyous strength.
It was not a
state he had quite ever achieved before, an utter awareness of everything
around him. Yavin 4 was so alive. And in that matrix of living, pulsing
Force, the fliers were bubbles of nothing. The Jedi had learned to detect the
Yuuzhan Vong by not detecting them, but before it had always been a matter of
focus. He would look at a suspected Yuuzhan Vong, and if he felt nothing, that
was likely what he had.
But this was
different. It was like suddenly noticing the spaces between words. It was a
fragile thing, probably something he could never have achieved if he had tried
for it, something that might go away if he thought too hard about it.
But for the
moment he wasn't doing much thinking. He knew before he should have that the
first Yuuzhan Vong he came across on foot was there. The warrior sprang
from behind a
tree, long, snakelike amphistaff held in a guard position. He was missing two
fingers at the knuckle, and his ear had been cut into fringe. He wore the usual
vonduun crab armor and an expression of gratification.
Anakin snapped a
heavy tree bough, already rotten and fatigued, and yanked it with more than the
force of gravity down upon the warrior. The Yuuzhan Vong was quick and nearly
dodged, but nearly wasn't enough as half a metric ton of tree crushed him into
the ground. Anakin didn't know if the warrior was dead or alive, injured, or
merely compromised. He didn't care, but changed beats, aiming himself away from
the bubbles of nothing crawling at the edges of his expanded senses, tightening
themselves around him like a vast noose.
The next Yuuzhan
Vong caught him by surprise, telescoping his amphistaff across the path so it
caught Anakin just below the knees. Pain was a bright line across his shins,
but he wrapped himself in the life of the forest and lifted himself up,
returning to ground three meters away. The Yuuzhan Vong was charging by then,
weapon retracted but ready to flip out once more. Anakin spun to face him,
dancing back from the attack, until his enemy whipped the weapon out with a
peculiar snap of the wrist. Not entirely limp or stiff, the amphistaff arced
over Anakin's shoulder, poisonous fangs aimed at some spot on his lower back.
Anakin didn't try
to parry; the staff would only wrap around his weapon and find its target
anyway. Instead he leapt toward and to the left of the warrior, closing the
distance so quickly that the staff slapped painfully against his shoulder. The
head, however, snapped short, and by then Anakin was ducking, driving the point
of his weapon up into the warrior's armpit. He pushed his own body and the
staff away from the forest floor with the Force, resulting in a blow that sent
the warrior hurling almost vertically, three meters in the air.
Again, without
waiting to see what the effect was,
Anakin hurried
on, opening his pack and tossing out the dried fungi he had gathered earlier.
He didn't let them fall, but held them gently aloft with the Force, spread out
around and just ahead of him. Two exploded because his Force grip was too
tight, but then he was in the zone again, one with everything but the Yuuzhan
Vong.
A pair of
warriors hit him next, but he hardly slowed down. Each got two explosive
grenade fungi. One of the Yuuzhan Vong managed to block one of the spheroids
with his amphistaff, but the resulting explosion broke the warrior's
concentration, and the next hit him in the head. His companion went down as
well, venting a hoarse cry of anger.
The net was
tightening, but there was a way out. Anakin could feel a hole in their search
pattern. He lunged on ahead, lifting a virtual cloud of stones and sticks to
join his remaining fungi. He was like a strange, strong wind, rushing through
the trees.
Then something
thudded dully into his left shoulder, and he stumbled, his legs refusing
service. He hit the forest floor, wondering what had happened. The forest
resounded with the sounds of his explosive grenade fungi rupturing on the
ground.
He tried to sit
up, then he saw the blood, spattered on the dead leaves and along the sleeve of
his flight suit.
A Yuuzhan Vong
stepped from out of the bushes, holding something about the size of a carbine,
a tube that swelled into a sort of stock or magazine.
Grunting, Anakin
struggled to his feet. The whole left side of his body felt curiously numb. He
reached back and found that a hole had been gouged in his shoulder. He felt
something hard in the hole and pulled it out.
It was a mass of
cracked chiton.
His legs
threatened to buckle again. The Yuuzhan Vong was advancing, weapon trained on
him. All around him, Anakin could hear more enemies rushing toward him.
Oddly enough, he
still didn't feel frightened or angry. He didn't feel much of anything, except
the Force.
And a familiar
presence, something not too far away. Not one presence, really, but one that
was legion.
"Two can
play that game," Anakin whispered.
He dropped his
weapon and held his hands up. "Nice going," he told the Yuuzhan Vong.
"You shot me in the back with a bug. Very brave."
He could see
three or four of them now, with his peripheral vision.
He hadn't
expected the warrior to answer, but he did, in Basic.
"I am Field
Commander Sinan Mat. I salute your bravery, Jeedai. I must deny you the
embrace of death in battle. For this I apologize."
A little closer, Anakin thought. If they don't mean to kill me. . .
"Will you
fight me, Sinan Mat? Just you and me?"
"That is my
desire. It cannot be. I am to bring you living to the shapers."
"I'm sorry
to hear that. And . . . well, I'd feel worse about this if you hadn't shot me
in the back, but. . . forgive me."
Mat frowned and
touched his ear. "The tizowyrm doesn't know that word, forgive. What—"
Then his eyes widened. The forest was screaming a song of death.
The
piranha-beetles fell upon the Yuuzhan Vong in a cloud. Sinan Mat dropped his
weapon and clawed at his face as it disintegrated beneath the fierce mandibles.
The piranha-beetles didn't spare the other Yuuzhan Vong, either, and a chorus
of pain and rage rose counterpoint to the strident song of the insects.
Anakin picked up
his staff and hobbled away, knowing his legs wouldn't carry him much farther.
He needed to find a place to hide.
Ten minutes
later, he leaned heavily against a tree. In the distance the ravenous
piranha-beetles had finished
their task, and
now, finally, Anakin felt his control of the Force slipping. His shoulder at
last understood what had been done to it, and the pain was like burning liquid,
dripping down his ribs, drooling across his chest and the side of his head.
Each footstep brought a new wave of dizziness and nausea.
He tried to take
another step and found he couldn't. With a sigh, he sank down onto the moss.
Just a little rest, and then—
A shadow fell
across him. He looked up to find two Yuuzhan Vong warriors looking down at him,
obviously not a part of the group he had just killed.
He called on all
of his energy, trying to find the piranha-beetles again, but they were a
distant presence and gorged now, not as easily attracted to a meal by Anakin's
will.
A third warrior
appeared from the forest behind the first two. He looked different,
somehow—mutilated like every other Yuuzhan Vong Anakin had seen, but he was
more strikingly grotesque. Unlike the other two, this one was empty-handed.
The newcomer
snarled something in his language, and the other two turned.
Anakin wondered,
then, if he had slipped into a dream. The first two warriors grunted and spat
words at the third. Anakin had heard the tone before—when the Yuuzhan Vong
spoke of machines, or other things that they considered abominations. It was a
tone of pure contempt.
For a moment the
newcomer seemed to cringe beneath this abuse, but then he grinned, all needle
teeth and malice. Then he slashed one of the warriors in the neck with the
edge of his gloved hand. The other warrior gave a hoarse cry of outrage,
lowered his amphistaff, and thrust at the attacker. The unarmed warrior caught
the shaft, leapt high in the air, kicking with both feet and striking the
staff-wielder in the face.
The first warrior
down was coming back up, clutching
his throat. The
unarmed one grabbed him by the hair and drove stiffened fingers deep into his
eyes, lifting him from the ground by the sockets. The warrior went rigid, and
when the newcomer let him drop he fell to the forest floor, twitching.
The warrior who
had been kicked in the face didn't get up. Anakin suspected his neck was
broken. The unarmed Yuuzhan Vong was the only one still standing. He squatted
next to Anakin and peered at him with eyes like algae-infested pools of water.
He looked—sick.
The Yuuzhan Vong showed their rank by scarification and the sacrifice of body
parts, but this one looked like an example of that gone horribly wrong. His
hair hung in dank patches, and his face and neck were covered with scabs and
open wounds. His scars looked swollen and unhealthy. Spiky growths that looked
like dead or dying implants moldered on his shoulders and elbows. He stank of
putrefaction.
After observing
Anakin for a long moment, the Yuuzhan Vong rose, approached one of the bodies,
and dug into its ear. He pulled out what looked like a worm of some sort and
fed it into his own ear—or, rather, the festering hole that might once have
been an ear. He shuddered, and his body spasmed as if in great pain. A thin
drool of blood leaked from the orifice.
He turned back to
Anakin and held out his hand.
"I am Vua
Rapuung, Jeedai. You will come with me. I will help you."
CHAPTER EIGHTEEN
The young Jeedai
fell, her body gripped with convulsions. A strangled cry filled the
vivarium.
"Interesting,"
Mezhan Kwaad said, watching the reaction. "Do you see, Adept Yim,
that—"
"I fail to
see what interests you, Master Mezhan Kwaad," a voice said from behind.
Nen Yim turned
and immediately supplicated. Another master had just entered the vivarium, one
so incredibly ancient the signs of his domain were entirely obscured. His
headdress was a fragile, cloudlike mass, and both hands were those of a master.
Both of his eyes had been replaced by yellow maa'its. He was accompanied by an
adept aide.
"Master Yal
Phaath," Mezhan Kwaad said. "How good to see you, Ancient."
"Answer me,
Mezhan Kwaad. What so interests you about this creature's agony? She is an
infidel and cannot embrace the pain. There is no surprise in that and nothing
interesting in it."
"It is
interesting because the provoker spineray causing her pain has been designed to
do so selectively," Mezhan Kwaad replied, "one nerve array at a time.
What we have just seen is a reflex unknown in Yuuzhan Vong. We may now
confidently map a part of the human nervous system that has no counterpart in
our own."
"And this is
of what use?" Yal Phaath asked.
"We cannot
shape what we do not know," Mezhan Kwaad answered. "This species is
new to us."
"It strains
the protocol," the older master said. "What can be discovered that is
not codified already?"
"But, Master,"
Nen Yim said, supplicating as she did so. "Surely in a new species—"
She broke off when the master flicked the gaze of his maa'its toward her.
"Are all of
your adepts so insolent?" he asked dryly.
"I should
hope not," Mezhan Kwaad said stiffly.
Yal Phaath turned
back to Nen Yim. His headdress writhed slightly in the air, turning a pale
blue. "Adept, if knowledge is not to be found in the archives and sacred
memories, what then does a shaper do?"
Fear glittered in
Nen Yim's nerves. What could he see, with those strange eyes? The maa'its
probed the hidden regions of the spectrum, of course, and the domain of the
microscopic, but did they peer farther yet, into the sins crouched beneath her
skull? She contracted the tendrils of her headdress into a ball, a deep
supplication. "We petition the Supreme Overlord, Master, that he might
ask of the gods."
"Correct.
There are no new species, Adept. All life comes from the blood and flesh
and bone of Yun-Yuuzhan. He knows them all. Knowledge cannot be created; that
is the stuff of heresy. If the gods do not grant us knowledge, it is for good
reason, and to seek further is an attempt to steal from them."
"Yes, Master
Yal Phaath."
"I suspect
this is not your fault, Adept. It is your own master who uses the provoker
spineray so. You are susceptible to her influences."
Mezhan Kwaad
smiled gently. "The protocol of Tsong specifies the use of the provoker in
just such a manner."
" I am aware
of that. But you strain the intent of that protocol. Not to breaking, perhaps.
And yet who knows what I might have observed had I arrived a little
later?"
"Are you
accusing me of something, Master?" Mezhan Kwaad asked mildly. "If
not, one might believe you are merely jealous because Lord Shimrra chose Domain
Kwaad for the honor of this shaping."
"I accuse
you of nothing, nor am I jealous. But dangerous heresies have surfaced in
recent years, most often among Domain Kwaad."
"I have
never been accused of heresy, nor have any of my subordinates," Mezhan Kwaad
said. "If you try to bathe me in the filthy secretions of slander in a
pitiable attempt to regain the favor of your domain with Lord Shimrra, you
will discover I can be a most unresting foe."
The old shaper
drew himself very erect. "I do not slander. But I watch, Mezhan Kwaad.
Rest assured, I watch. And now—"
He broke off
suddenly and staggered. His aide caught him. Nen Yim was still wondering what
had happened when she suddenly felt something pressing her entire body, as if
she were deep under water. Her lungs labored to draw the syrupy air and her
pulse hammered.
Through flashes
of blue and black, she saw that Mezhan Kwaad and Yal Phaath's aide were also
struggling to breathe.
The pain
increased sharply. Soon her eyeballs would collapse, then her heart. Striving
for calm, she spun her failing gaze around the room.
The young Jeedai
stood at the side of the vivarium, hands pressed against the transparent
membrane. Her green eyes blazed and her teeth were drawn back from her lips in
a rictus of fury. Nen Yim saw murder there, and suddenly understood.
She staggered
toward her master. Mezhan Kwaad had already collapsed. The ol-villip that
controlled the provoker spineray had fallen from her hands. Nen Yim took it up
and stroked the variable tissues, all of them at once.
The Jeedai screamed
and pounded on the membrane, and for an instant the pressure actually
increased, crush-
ing so hard that
Nen Yim couldn't breathe at all. Then, more suddenly than it had come, the
uncanny pressure relented, and her lungs jerked in a much-needed breath.
The Jeedai writhed
on the floor of her chamber. Nen Yim watched her, reaction starting to set in.
An eight-fingered
hand fell on Nen Yim's shoulder.
"Adept,"
her master said, in a strained voice. "The ol-villip, please. Before the
specimen dies."
Nen Yim nodded
dumbly and handed Mezhan Kwaad the organism. Mezhan Kwaad adjusted it until the
Jeedai stopped her contortions and succumbed to unconsciousness.
"That was
well-wrought thinking, Adept," Mezhan Kwaad told her.
"What
happened? Tell me," Yal Phaath demanded impatiently.
"The Jeedai
did it," Mezhan Kwaad replied. "Surely you've heard of their
powers."
"Do not
insult me. I am, of course, current on the information concerning the
Jeedai. They can move objects, communicate with one another as villips do,
even influence the minds of weaker creatures. But there has never been any
evidence that they can affect Yuuzhan Vong. Quite the contrary."
"I beg the
master for permission to speak," Nen Yim said.
Yal Phaath gave
her a reluctant glance. "Speak."
"The Jeedai did not affect us, not directly. She affected the molecules of
the atmosphere, compressing them."
"She tried
to crush us with our own air?"
"And would
have succeeded but for my adept," Mezhan Kwaad observed.
"Amazing.
And this power—it is not generated by implants of any kind?"
"She has no
implants, either biological or"—her voice lowered—"mechanical. From
our earlier interrogation,
she believes that
she is manipulating a kind of energy produced by life."
"Ridiculous,"
Yal Phaath said. "If such a power existed, why would the gods deny it to
the Yuuzhan Vong?"
Mezhan Kwaad
smiled a carnivorous smile. "The gods have not denied it to us, they
merely withheld it for a time. And now they have delivered it." She stepped
to the vivarium membrane and parted it with a flick of her fourth finger. She
knelt by the unconscious Jeedai and stroked her face.
"She is
young, her body and mind still pliant to shaping. The warriors promise us more
like her, soon." She stood, looking down at the creature for a few
moments, then stepped away and resealed the membrane.
The old master
shrugged. "For the glory of the shapers and the Yuuzhan Vong, I wish you
success." He sounded doubtful.
"You may
observe anytime you wish," Mezhan Kwaad said. To Nen Yim it seemed as if
her master was taunting Yal Phaath.
But the old
master ran a negative ripple through his tendrils. "Among other things,
I've come to take my leave. The new project awaits me, a shaping that will end
this Jeedai threat forever."
Mezhan Kwaad
stiffened a bit. "Oh?" she said politely.
"Indeed.
Under interrogation, the infidels who serve us admitted that they were tricked
by those who presently harass our ships in space. From this information came a
most interesting item, about a certain sort of beast, one that can sense and
hunt these Jeedai."
"The
infidels knew where to find these beasts?"
"No,"
Yal Phaath said. "Not those on this moon, at any rate. But we have sources
in their senate, and one of them was able to discover and provide the
information. As it turns out, the beasts are native to a world already in
possession of our Lord Shimrra, a planet the infidels call Myrkr. I am to
oversee the shaping of these beasts."
"Interesting,
about these beasts, if true," Mezhan Kwaad allowed. "For the glory of
the Yuuzhan Vong, I wish you well. I also wish you success in leaving the
system. Apparently the infidels have been quite successful in preventing
outgoing traffic."
"I have no
fear," the ancient master replied. "If Yun-Yuuzhan wants my life, it
is his to take. But I suspect he has many tasks for me yet."
"Captain,
one of the Yuuzhan Vong warships has broken orbit," H'sishi said. "It
has a substantial escort."
Karrde stroked
his mustache. "Get Solusar up here. Meanwhile, close distance, and have
the Etherway and the Idiot's Array lay down a barrage. Let's keep
her in the gas giant's mass shadow for as long as we can."
"Yes,
sir," Dankin, the pilot, returned.
"And get
Solusar up here," Karrde repeated. "We'll need him for this."
"I'm already
here, Captain Karrde."
Indeed, Solusar
was standing just behind him. "Ah. Perfect. The Yuuzhan Vong are trying to
punch a ship through our defenses, presumably to leave the system. My question
is, should I let them go?"
"You haven't
let any others go," Solusar pointed out.
"True. But
none of those tried in such force. If we fight here, I'll lose ships, more than
we can spare. If I thought relief was on the way, I might risk it. As it is, I
need to know—are there Jedi on that ship?"
For an instant,
Karrde saw a twinge of what might pass for fear in the Jedi's eyes.
"I can't be
certain," Solusar said stiffly.
"Why
not?"
"I can't
sense the Yuuzhan Vong in the Force. Their ships might as well be lifeless
asteroids as far as my senses are concerned."
"Then I
should think the children would stand out in quite a spectacular manner."
"They
should, and they don't. If it weren't important, I would say there are no
non-Yuuzhan Vong on any of those ships. But it is important. If I'm
wrong, we might end up letting them go—then we'd be fighting here for
nothing."
"How might
you be wrong? I don't understand."
"The Yuuzhan
Vong not only don't exist in the Force—they make me doubt my Jedi senses
altogether. They make the whole area . .. murky, somehow. I've no better
way to explain it."
Karrde looked
back at the screen. The Yuuzhan Vong had scrambled fighters.
"I can't
wait much longer, Solusar. I have to decide. Forget the ships; try to sense
them on the moon. If they're still there, they can't be on that warship."
"I'll
try," the Jedi said. He closed his eyes.
Karrde watched
the enemy fighters race closer. So far, he had managed hit-and-run operations
at minimal risk to his people. He'd made good use of mines and asteroids and
other classic guerrilla weapons of intrasystem war.
But if he had to
stop that ship, he would have to commit to a real stand-up-slug-it-out battle,
a battle he could win—at the cost of the war.
Maybe that was
all they wanted. His instincts certainly told him that this was a decoy of
some kind, not what he was fighting for. Solusar seemed to concur. But if they
couldn't be sure . . .
"First
fighter wave in thirty seconds," H'sishi said tonelessly.
"Get ready,
people."
A good crew. They
would die if he asked them to.
"Tahiri,"
Solusar breathed. His face was beaded with
sweat.
"What's
that?"
"Tahiri. And
Valin. Sannah. Anakin. They're all down there." His voice dropped lower,
into a register of anguish, "Tahiri's been tortured."
"But they're
down there."
"Yes. I'm
sure of it."
"Thank you,
Jedi Solusar. Dankin, break off the attack. We're letting this one go. Lay
down minimal cover fire and tell the other ships to burn jets. We'll fight another
day, people—when it really counts." Karrde took a deep breath, trying to
release the pent-up tension in his neck and shoulders.
"And hope
those Solo kids find that rogue Terrik before we have to fight that fight.
After this, I'm definitely looking into getting my own Star Destroyer."
CHAPTER NINETEEN
Anakin arched his
back and tried not to cry out as whatever the Yuuzhan Vong put on his wound
sent cosmic flares of pain through his body.
"You hate
pain," Vua Rapuung said with evident disgust.
Anakin couldn't
and didn't disagree. He just gritted his teeth and waited for it to pass. He
knew the Yuuzhan Vong venerated pain in themselves and others. It was one of
many unlikable tenets of their unhealthy religion.
"What hit
me?" Anakin asked instead.
"A nang
hul," the warrior grunted. "Thud bug."
"Poison?"
"No."
The two sat in a
damp cave behind a waterfall. It was slick with fungus and moss. The Yuuzhan
Vong had evidently been hiding in the cave for a day or two, for various of his
possessions were already in it, including the patch he had just applied to
Anakin's shoulder. He'd peeled it from a pale green, roughly rectangular pad
several centimeters thick. The pad consisted of many thin layers, like leaves
of flimsiplast glued together. Rapuung had pressed one of these detached skins
over Anakin's wound. Like everything else the Yuuzhan Vong used, it was alive.
Anakin could feel it squirming, digging into his wound. It occurred to him that
the warrior might be poisoning him or something even worse. But if Vua Rapuung
wanted him dead, he could have accomplished
that anytime.
After all, he had made short work of two Yuuzhan Vong warriors, and Anakin
didn't have the strength to fight off a wokling.
"You saved
my life," Anakin said reluctantly.
"Life is
nothing," Vua Rapuung said.
"Yeah? Then
why take the trouble?"
Vua Rapuung's
black eyes glimmered murkily. "You, Jeedai. You fight your way
toward the shaper compound. Why?"
" Your
people have a friend of mine. I'm going to get her back."
"Ah. The
female Jeedai. You wish to save her life. How pitiful. What a pitiful goal."
"Yeah? Well,
I didn't ask for your help, you offered it. So explain or kill me. I haven't
got time to waste."
"Revenge,"
Vua Rapuung said, his voice low, his eyes slitted. "Revenge, and to prove
that the gods—" His eyes suddenly went hard and glittering. "I need
not tell you, human. I need explain nothing to you, unsanctioned offspring of
machines." He spat the last word out as if it were poison he'd suddenly
discovered in his mouth.
"You need
know only this," he continued. "I will stand at your side or your
back. Your foes are my foes. We will kill together, embrace pain together,
embrace death together if such is Yun-Yuuzhan's wish."
"You'll help
me rescue Tahiri," Anakin said dubiously.
" It's a
stupid goal, but finding her will serve my purposes well."
Anakin searched
that black diamond gaze, trying to understand. There was nothing there,
nothing. The Yuuzhan Vong was more like a holo than a person, an image, an
appearance. How could such a thing have feelings to be understood? Without the
Force, how could he hope to comprehend such an alien creature?
"I don't
understand," Anakin said. "What did your people do to you? Why do you
hate them so?"
Vua Rapuung
slapped him, hard, and bounded to his feet, chest heaving.
"Do not mock
me!" he shrieked. "You have eyes! You see! Do not mock me! The gods
did not do this to me, they did not!"
As the Yuuzhan
Vong started toward him again, Anakin hefted a rock with the Force and sent it
straight for the warrior's sternum. It caught Rapuung completely by surprise,
smacking him against the side of the cave. He sank down, looking a bit dazed.
Anakin hefted the
rock again and poised it over Rapuung's head.
The Yuuzhan Vong
looked up at the stone and suddenly started hacking as if he had the Dagobian
swamp cough.
It took half a
minute of this before Anakin recognized it as laughter.
When he calmed
down, Vua Rapuung fixed the young Jedi with a curious gaze. "I saw what
you did to the hunters, but still, to have it turned on me—" His face
hardened again. "Tell me the truth, one warrior to another, if you can.
In the warrior caste there are rumors. It is said your Jeedai powers
come from machine implants. Is this true? Are your people that sick?"
Anakin returned
the challenging stare. "Our powers do not come from machines. Furthermore,
some of your people must know that, because they've had ample opportunity to
dissect some of us. Your rumor is a lie."
"Yes? Then the
Jeedai Master does not have a machine hand?"
"Master
Skywalker? He does, but—" He broke off. "How do you know this?"
"We hear
many stories from converts and spies. So it is true, then. The leader of the Jeedai
is part machine." Rapuung's face probably couldn't have shown more
disgust without being surgically altered.
"One has
nothing to do with the other. Master Luke
lost a hand in a
great battle. He had it replaced. But his power, like mine, flows from the
Force."
"Do you have
implants like your master?"
"No."
"Will you
receive them as you attain rank?"
Anakin laughed
briefly. "No."
Vua Rapuung
nodded. "Then it is as I said. We will fight together."
"Not if you
keep flying off course like you did a minute ago," Anakin replied. "I
may be injured, but as you've seen, I'm not without resources."
"I
see," Rapuung growled, "but do not challenge me. I dislike it."
"You keep
the same thing in mind, pal. Now. You say we're going to fight together but you
won't tell me why. Can you at least tell me how?"
"The shapers
have planted five damuteks on this moon. That is where your Jeedai companion
is held."
Anakin let pass
the precise definition of damutek for the moment. "Why? What will
they do to her?"
Murder flashed in
Rapuung's eyes again, but this time he mastered it without an outburst.
"Who can know the mind of a shaper?" he said, softly. "But you
can be sure they will shape."
"I don't
understand. What is a shaper?"
"Your
ignorance is—" Rapuung stopped, blinked his eyes slowly closed, open,
closed, and started again. "The shapers are a caste, the caste nearest the
great god, Yun-Yuuzhan, who shaped the universe from his body. It is they who
know the ways of life, who bend it to our needs."
"Bioengineers?
Scientists?"
Rapuung stared at
him for a second. "The tizowyrm that translates for me makes no sense from
those words. I suspect they are obscene."
"Never mind.
There was a Jedi named Miko Reglia. Your people tried to break his will with a
yammosk. They
tried to do the
same to another Jedi named Wurth Skidder. Is that what you think they'll do to
Tahiri?"
"I do not
care what they do to your Jeedai. But what you describe is—" He
grimaced. "I once knew a shaper who spoke of such things, of warriors who
thought they could do the task of shapers, as you describe. But breaking is
not shaping. It is a child's parody of it. Understand, the shapers make our
worldships. They make the yammosk. They will not try to break your
Jeedai—they will remake her."
A chill seeped
into Anakin's veins, and he remembered his vision of an older Tahiri.
He knew what they
would make of her. And they would succeed, if Anakin failed.
What Rapuung
offered might be a cruel trick, a part of some devious plan; Anakin would have
to take that risk. Without the Force to guide him, he could never be certain
the Yuuzhan Vong wasn't telling the truth. Now was no time to dither. Any
course that would take him closer to Tahiri was worth plotting, even if he had
to let someone he didn't trust do some of the figures.
"Okay,"
he said. "Let's go back to an earlier vector. You said something about
damuteks?"
"The sacred
precincts within which the shapers live and work."
"How many of
them? How many shapers?"
"I don't
know for certain. Around twelve, if initiates are included."
"That's all?
That's all the Vong on this world?"
Rapuung spat
something Anakin didn't understand. He didn't seem to be so much angry as in
genuine shock.
"Do not—never
refer to us in that way," he sputtered. "How can you be so
ignorant? Or do you wish to insult?"
"Not that
time," Anakin said.
"To use the
word Vong alone is an insult. It implies that the person so addressed
does not have the favor and kinship of gods or family."
"Sorry."
Rapuung didn't
answer, but stared out into the forest.
"We should
go," he said, "I have hidden our scent from the trackers, but they
will find us soon enough if we stay still."
"Agreed,"
Anakin said. "But first—how many Yuuzhan Vong on this moon, total, would
you think?"
Vua Rapuung
considered briefly. "A thousand, perhaps. More warriors in space."
"And we'll
fight our way through all of them? "
"Was that
not your plan?" Rapuung asked. "Does the number we face mean
anything to you?"
Anakin shook his
head. "Only in terms of tactics. Tahiri is there. I'll find her and get
her out, no matter how many Yuuzhan Vong I have to walk through."
"Very well.
You can walk, now?"
"I can walk.
Soon I can run. It might hurt, but I can do it."
"Life is
suffering," Vua Rapuung said. "We go."
CHAPTER TWENTY
Vua Rapuung
gnashed his teeth. "No, ignorant one," he growled. "Not that
way."
Anakin didn't
look at him, but kept his gaze wandering through the whispering Massassi
trees, searching for shadows that did not agree with the wind in their motion.
The two stood at
the divide of the ridge top; one stone spine snaked down and away to Anakin's
right, the other continued up and to his left. Anakin had started up the
steepening trail.
"Why?"
he asked. "The search craft are over there." He waved toward the
lowlands off the left ridge.
"They are
not 'craft,' " Rapuung snapped.
"You know
what I meant."
"How do you
know where they are, when you cannot sense Yuuzhan Vong or the life shaped for
us?"
"Because I
can sense everything native in this forest," Anakin replied. "Every
whisper bird and runyip, every stintaril and Woolamander. And the ones over
there are agitated. I get flashes."
"This is so?
How many fliers? Five, yes?"
Anakin focused
his concentration. "I think so."
"They will
split into a lav peq pattern, then. First the lowland, then arcs tightening to
the highest point. If they find us up here, they will converge and release
netting beetles."
"What are
netting beetles?"
"If we do
not isolate ourselves on an elevation, you will not find out. This is not air
warfare, Jeedai, and unless you plan to fortify this high spot and
fight all of the warriors on this moon, altitude is of no use to you."
"I want a
look at the lay of the land."
"Why?"
"Because
you've gotten us lost, that's why. You no more know where the Vo—the Yuuzhan
Vong base is than a mynock knows how to play sabacc."
"I can find
the shaper damutek. But if we slash a straight line toward them, they will
snare us."
"I know this
moon," Anakin said. "You don't." He stopped, staring
suspiciously at the warrior. "How did you find me, anyway?"
"I followed
the search parties, infidel. You were slashing a straight path, weren't
you? Yes. Without me, you would have been captured ten times by now."
"Without
you, I would have been in your shaper base by now."
"Yes. I just
said that," Rapuung said. He closed his eyes, as if listening to
something. "What do your Jeedai senses tell you now? "
Anakin frowned in
concentration. "I think they've split up," he said reluctantly.
"I can hear
them," Vua Rapuung said. "Not as well as I once could. Once my ears
were ..." He reached and lightly touched the festering, oozing scar tissue
on the side of his head. He snarled and dropped his hand.
"We go
down," he said.
"I go
up," Anakin replied. He started up the trail. He didn't look back, but
after he had gone perhaps thirty strides, he heard what he guessed to be a
Yuuzhan Vong profanity and the sound of footsteps pacing up behind him.
"Gee,"
Anakin breathed. Tears stung his eyes.
He stood at the
crest of the height, where he could see
the familiar
meander of the Unnh River. He'd seen this spot from the air maybe fifty times,
and knew it as well as he knew any place.
Except that
things had changed. The Great Temple— which had stood for untold thousands of
years, watching the passage of the people who built it, of Jedi dark and
brilliant, the destruction of the Death Star—was gone without a trace.
In its place near
the river were five spacious compounds formed like many-rayed stars. The walls
were thick and perhaps two stories high, and probably had chambers in them. The
inner courtyards were open to the sky. Two seemed to be filled with water,
another with a pale yellow fluid that probably wasn't water. Another had
structures in its central space—domes and polyhedrons of various shapes, all
the same color as the larger structure. The fifth was full of coralskippers and
larger spacegoing ships. Lots of them.
It looked like
canals had been dug from the river to connect the compounds.
"We must
descend before they scent us," Vua Rapuung insisted again.
"I thought
that stuff you rubbed on us fools the sniffers, or whatever they are."
"It causes
confusion. It gives us time to hide. There is no place to hide here, and they
will see us. There is no fooling that."
There is for
Jedi, usually, Anakin thought. But he could no more cloud a
Yuuzhan Vong mind than he could dance on the surface of a black hole.
"There's
cover," he said. The hill was blanketed mostly in scrub and lacked the
high canopy that grew over most of the moon's land surface, but the bushes were
usually more than head-high.
"Not from
heat-pit sensors," Rapuung demurred. "Not from netting beetles. No
water."
Anakin nodded
thoughtfully, but he was really still ex-
amining the
shaper base, barely paying attention to the Yuuzhan Vong beside him.
"Outside of
the big compounds—all of those little structures that look like somebody just
threw them down and let them grow—what's all that? It looks like a
shantytown."
"I don't
know that word, shantee. That is where the workers and slaves and Shamed
Ones live."
"Support
colony. They do the drudge work."
"If the
tizowyrm translates correctly, yes."
"Workers and
slaves I know. What are Shamed Ones?"
"Shamed Ones
are cursed by the gods," Rapuung said. "They work as slaves. They are
not worth speaking of."
"Cursed
how?"
"When I say
they are not worth speaking of, how do my words confuse you?"
"Fine,"
Anakin sighed. "Have it your way."
"My way is
to leave this ridge, work spiralwise toward where the gas giant sets.
Quickly."
"That's the
wrong direction! We're only a few kilometers away!"
"All the
forest below is trapped," Rapuung said. "The river, too. There is
only one way in for us, and I know it."
"Tell me
what it is, then," Anakin said. "Convince—" But he stopped.
"Listen."
Rapuung nodded.
"I hear them. They are weaving the lav peq. I was foolish to trust you.
You think with something other than your brain." He pressed his frayed
and ulcerous lips together in an expression of contempt.
"We aren't
caught yet. Is there a weak spot in this search pattern?"
"No."
"We'll make
one, then. These fliers they're using—"
"Tsik
vai."
"Right. Are
they the same as we've seen before? "
"Yes."
"They're
just atomospheric fliers, right?"
Rapuung looked
wary. "How do you know that?"
"They look
like they have some sort of air intake vents—gills—on the side."
"Correct."
"Come on,
then." Anakin started down the hill. Rapuung started after him, for once
without objection.
Anakin was
feeling considerably better today. Jedi healing and relaxation techniques had
drained much of his weariness, and Vua Rapuung's artificial skin—or whatever it
was—seemed to have done its part with his shoulder. He loped down the hill in a
series of long, flat, Force-aided leaps. Rapuung kept up, barely, winding
nearly soundlessly through the dense underbrush. It actually raised the hackles
on Anakin's neck to look at him. It was hard to believe something so deadly
looking could be sentient at all.
Most of the trees
were gone, no doubt burned off in one of the many battles that had occurred on
the jungle moon since the Rebel Alliance located its resistance here before the
battle against the first Death Star. What remained was waist-high scrub.
Farther down, the trees began again, a green necklace around the hill, and Anakin
suddenly understood what Rapuung was concerned about. Fire burned up. Anything
caught up here when the blaze started had probably died. If these netting
beetles were anything like fire . . .
He realized,
reluctantly, that Rapuung was right. Anakin thought too much like a pilot,
where the high ground was everything. He wasn't a pilot right now; he was prey.
But dangerous
prey—a feral rycrit, not a tame one, he reminded himself, when the first tsik
vai flier came over.
Anakin didn't
hesitate; he knew what he wanted to do. He reached in a ten-meter radius and
lifted everything that wasn't fastened down—leaf litter, twigs, stones— and
hurled them in a cyclone at the intake slits on the side of the flier.
"Fool!"
Rapuung shouted. "That was your plan?"
The tsik vai
swooped in low, and the tentaclelike cables fired out at them. Anakin dodged,
keeping up his barrage. Undeterred, the flier followed close, dropping lower. A
tentacle caught Rapuung. The warrior leapt, gripped the upper part of the
tentacle in his hands, and started climbing, a grim expression on his scarred face.
Getting the idea, Anakin tried to do the same, but without the Force to give
him certainty—without being able to feel the tentacles as well as see them—he
missed.
The flier
suddenly made a peculiar whine, and its flexible wings began to shiver as if in
spasm. The tentacle holding Rapuung released him, and he instantly leapt for
the ground. The flier hung there, shaking itself.
"Run,"
Rapuung shouted. "It will clear its lungs quickly. These tsik vai were not
shaped by idiot children, as you seem to think."
Anakin fell into
step with him. "Where are the other fliers?"
"They know
where we are now. They will seed the netting beetles into the lowland, as I
told you."
"I wish you
had told me what these things do."
"They draw
fibers from tree to tree, from bush to bush. They come in waves that overtake
one another, the first wave weaving and the waves behind feeding to replenish
their fiber. They move very quickly."
"Oh. That's
not good." A sudden thought occurred to him. "You were climbing
toward the flier when it had you. Did you think you could capture it?"
"No. I
thought I might die gloriously rather than igno-miniously. My bare hands are
not capable of forcing open the cockpits."
" But if we
can get above the net, somehow ..."
"Some of the
beetles will draw strands up into the air and cross them above our heads. If we
could fly at this very moment, we might escape."
Anakin came to a
halt. "Why are we running, then?
Whichever way we
go, we're only coming nearer to the net."
"True. And
if we go uphill, we will only delay our confrontation with it. Do you have
your Jeedai blade-that-burns? It might cut the fibers."
"No."
Anakin was peering downhill. The trees started perhaps a hundred meters away,
but he had enough elevation to see their swaying tops stretching off to the
horizon, bending this way and that in a fickle wind.
Except in a
strip, where they weren't moving at all. Following the strip, he saw it curving
around the hill.
"That's it,
isn't it," he murmured. "The net is holding them together."
"Yes. The
fibers are very strong, the net very fine."
Even as Anakin
watched, more trees froze in place, and the strip deepened.
"Will the
netting beetles eat us?"
"They will
attach to our flesh and draw fiber, using some of our cells in the process. It
will not be fatal."
"Right.
Because it's not going to happen." Anakin stopped, knelt, and took off his
pack. After an instant of rummaging, he'd found what he was after: five phosphorous
flares.
"Are those
weapons? Machines?"
"Not
usually," Anakin said. "Don't look directly at this." He struck
one alight, then, using the Force, hurled it in a long arc downhill.
He struck another
and hurled it similarly, along a different vector.
"I don't
understand," Rapuung said. "How will the light stop the netting
beetles?"
"The light
won't. The fire will. The beetles can't attach to trees and bushes that aren't
there."
He struck another
flare. As he cocked his arm back to throw it, Vua Rapuung backhanded him in the
face.
Anakin's nostrils
filled with the iron scent of blood, and he fetched hard against the ground
before he could
react to cushion
himself. Rapuung was all over him, snarling like a beast, fingers curled around
his neck. He smelled sour and sick.
Spots dancing
before his eyes, Anakin did the only thing he could. He found a stone with the
Force and hit the crazed warrior right between the eyes with it. Rapuung's
head snapped back and his hands came away. Anakin hit him in the chin so hard
that sparks of pain exploded in his knuckles. The Yuuzhan Vong fell off of
him, but by the time Anakin had scrambled to his feet, Rapuung was up, assuming
a martial stance.
"Sithspawn!"
Anakin snapped. "What are you doing?"
"Combustion!"
the Yuuzhan Vong roared. "The first abomination is the use of fire from a
machine!"
"What?"
"This is
forbidden, you stinking infidel! Don't you understand what you've done?"
"You're
insane!" Anakin shouted back, rubbing knuckles that felt shattered,
drawing breath through an aching windpipe. "You were just asking me if I
could use my lightsaber! You think that's not a machine?"
A look of what
might have been horror dawned on Rapuung's face. "I ... yes, I prepared
myself for that, But fire, the first of all sins—"
"'Wait,"
Anakin snapped. "You're not making any sense. The Yuuzhan Vong have used
fire breathers against as in the past."
" Living
creatures producing flame is another thing entirely!" Rapuung shrieked.
"How can you possibly imagine it is the same as what you've just done? As
well say that the hand of a Yuuzhan Vong warrior and the metal grip of one of
your made-thing abominations are the same because either can hold an
amphistaff."
Anakin took a
deep breath. "Look," he said. "I don't pretend to understand
your religion. I don't even want to. But you've chosen to fight with an infidel
against your own people, haven't you? You were perfectly willing for
me to use my
abominable lightsaber. Now you deal with this or go your own way. Unless you've
got another way out."
"No,"
Rapuung admitted. "It's just the shock ..." He dropped his head.
"You really don't understand. The gods don't hate me. I know they don't. I
can prove it. But if I soil myself like this, they will have reason to hate me!
Ah, what have I become?"
The wind shifted,
and the charred pepper scent of burning blueleaf set Anakin to coughing. The
last flare had gone only about three meters, and now the bushes upwind of them
were blazing merrily. It was the dry season, and jungle burned very well in the
dry season.
"You'd
better get a grip fast, Vua Rapuung, or the first abomination is going to eat
you alive."
The Yuuzhan Vong
stood there for a long moment, head cast down, but when he raised his head, his
eyes were beacons of rage. Anakin tensed, preparing to fight again.
"She has driven me to this," the warrior said. "These sins will
settle on her. I leave it to the gods to judge."
"Does that
mean we can go?" Anakin asked, watching the fire sweep toward them. Down
the hill, smoke poured thickly from where the other flares had lodged.
"Yes. Let us
go. We still embrace pain together, Jeedai."
The fire drove
them around the side of the hill and up it; the change in the wind seemed to be
a lasting one. Smoke boiled and crept close to the ground.
The jungle burned
fast.
"My opinion
of you as a strategist improves," Rapuung said. "The fire drives us
directly into the other side of the net. We have our choice of being burned to
death by the first abomination, or being captured and then burned."
"The wind
shifted. My plan was to follow along the
fire's exhaust,
walk on the ashes. The net will collapse where the fire burns through, and then
we're clear."
"Then
perhaps the gods have spoken after all," Rapuung said. He coughed
violently on the smoke, which was becoming so thick that Anakin was seeing
spots in front of his eyes. He remembered most people who died in a fire were
dead before the flames ever reached them.
"Keep
low," he said. "The smoke rises."
"Low.
Crawling like a tso'asu."
" If you
want to live, yes."
"I do not
fear death," Rapuung choked out. "But my revenge will not be
thwarted. I..." He convulsed in another series of racking coughs, fell,
climbed back to all fours, and collapsed again.
"Get
up!" Anakin exhorted him.
Rapuung quivered
but did not move.
Through the
smoke, the yellow teeth of the fire appeared, chewing toward them.
CHAPTER
TWENTY-ONE
Everything went
pale gold as Anakin dropped to his knees next to Vua Rapuung. His breath felt
like broken shards in his lungs, and his head rang like an alarm.
He lay flat,
trying to find sweeter, cooler air, but if it was there, it was traveling in
disguise. If he was going to find something he could breathe, it would be
somewhere above him. Sure, it would be smoky up there, too, but it was worth a
shot.
Anakin reached up
and pulled, creating a tube that sucked higher air straight down on him
and the Yuuzhan Vong. His breathing eased immediately.
The fire liked
it, too. The underbrush exploded like a bomb. Anakin felt the heat briefly,
heat he knew would blacken and crack his flesh in seconds. He had not tried to
alter energy before, but Corran Horn could do it. Their lives depended on his
success. Anakin opened himself again to the Force, focused his efforts, and
leached the fire's heat from a radius around them both.
How long he kept
this up, Anakin did not know. He slipped into a sort of fugue state, each
breath pulling life from the sky, each exhalation bleeding heat into the crust
of Yavin 4. But eventually he blinked and realized it was over, that the fire
had burned past him and he knelt in ashes.
Vua Rapuung still
lay motionless. Anakin shook him. Where did one check for vital signs on a
Yuuzhan Vong?
Did they have
hearts like humans, linear pumps, something stranger?
He slapped
Rapuung, hard, and the warrior's eyes flickered open.
"Are you
okay?" Anakin asked.
" Pray me
you are not one of the gods," Rapuung muttered. "If you are, death
will be tedious."
"Yeah,
you're welcome," Anakin replied. "Can you walk? We need to go before
the fliers think to look here."
"Smoke and
heat will confuse them," Rapuung said. He sat up and looked around.
"The fire—it passed over us."
"It
did."
"And we
live."
"We
do," Anakin assured him.
"This was
your doing? Another Jeedai sorcery?"
"Something
like that," Anakin admitted.
"Then you
saved my life. How disgusting. How unfortunate."
"No, don't
gush on so," Anakin said. "It was nothing, really." He offered
his hand to help Rapuung up. After a long moment of staring at it as if it were
nerf dung, the warrior took it.
"Come on,"
Anakin said. "Now all we have to do is follow the fire."
Under cover of
the smoke, they slipped through the ruins of the netting beetle web. The
strands themselves had not burned, but lay silvery and glistening in the ashes,
draped like shrouds on the smoking trunks of trees. When Anakin's foot tangled
in some, he found that it had cut into his boot a little. None of the web had
broken, and he didn't try to tear it with his fingers, but instead gently
untangled it. After that he was more careful where he stepped.
The fire had
burned on past the end of the web. Anakin could see fliers nosing around in
front of it. One made a pass back, far to their left.
They pushed
right, eventually cutting out of the path of the fire into unburned, unnetted
woods, and though they did not slacken their pace for another two hours, Anakin
felt suddenly safer, surrounded by the living pulse of the forest.
But in that pulse
was a raw edge of pain.
Only then did it
strike him what he had done. To save himself, he had burned countless square
kilometers of forest. He had felt beasts dying, peripherally, but in the moment
his own pain had been paramount. Now the forest's anguish hit him like a hard
slap in the face. He was a swarm of stintarils, clustered in the top of a tree,
the fire climbing after them. Their fur was beginning to singe. He was a big,
harmless runyip, too slow to outrun the flame, trying to nose its calves ahead
to safety, but not herself knowing where that was. He was charred flesh and
scorched lungs. He was dead and dying.
"You were
right," he told Rapuung later, when they stopped to splash water on
themselves, to clear the ash from their eyes, nostrils, and lips.
"About what,
infidel?"
"What I did
with the fire. It was wrong."
The Yuuzhan
Vong's eyes narrowed. "Explain."
" I killed
innocent life to save us."
Rapuung laughed
harshly. "That is nothing. Killing and dying are nothing; they are the way
of the world, part of the embrace of pain. What you did was wrong because it was
an abomination, not because you killed. Do not fool yourself. I see now how
determined you are to rescue your Jeedai companion. If you could reach
her only by filling in a chasm with corpses to walk over, you would do
it."
"No,"
Anakin said. "I wouldn't."
"A goal
desired so lightly is not a goal at all."
Anakin sighed.
"We'll get her. But I don't like to kill."
"Then the
warriors will kill you."
"Warriors
are different," Anakin said. "I will defend
myself with
extreme prejudice. But the forest did nothing to me to deserve what I did to
it."
"You make no
sense," Rapuung said. "We will kill who and what we must."
"And I say
no."
"Indeed. So
you would have me pollute myself with the first abomination in order to achieve
your purposes, and yet you will force me to cling to a childish fear of
killing? All life ends, Jeedai."
Anakin felt that
one. Did the Yuuzhan Vong really think nonbiological technology was as wrong as
the Jedi philosophy taught indiscriminate killing was? Intellectually he
supposed he'd understood that, but it had never reached his gut. Only now, when
they both agreed something terrible had been done—but for absolutely different
reasons—did it make any kind of sense to him at all.
If only he could
feel Rapuung in the Force. If only he could tell if the Yuuzhan Vong were of
the light or of the dark side.
Or was that even
a relevant question, without the Force? Were Jedi so dependent on their
Force-given senses that without them they were moral cripples?
Rapuung had kept
a stinging gaze on Anakin as the Jedi searched for a response. Now he suddenly
looked away toward some middle distance.
"You make no
sense," Vua Rapuung said. "But... I acknowledge you have saved my
life. My revenge will owe to you, when it is complete."
"You've
saved me a couple of times," Anakin replied. "We're not even
yet."
"Not what?
What is that word?"
"Never mind.
Vua Rapuung, what is this revenge you seek? What has been done to you that
would make you turn against your own people?"
Rapuung's eyes
hardened. "Do you really not know? Can you really not see? Look at
me!"
"I see your
scars fester. You have implants that seem
dead or dying.
But I don't have the faintest idea what that means."
"It does not
concern you," Rapuung said. "Do not presume, infidel."
"Fine. Then
tell me this plan of yours, the one that will get me to Tahiri."
"Follow and
see," Rapuung answered.
They crouched in
a tangle of roots at the water's edge on a tributary of the great river.
"We're
farther away from the shaper base than we were yesterday," Anakin
complained.
"Yes, but in
the right place, now," Rapuung said.
"Right place
for what?"
"Wait.
See."
Anakin's mouth
twitched around a retort but didn't form it. Was this what people were
complaining about when they accused him of being tight with words? Rapuung
was as stingy with facts as a Bothan courier. Six days running and fighting
together, and Anakin still knew nothing about the warrior except that he was
mad about something. Maybe even crazy. He'd mentioned some "she" and
seemed to have an obsession with his worthiness before his gods.
But maybe all
Yuuzhan Vong were like that. It was not like Anakin had chatted with a lot of
them. Maybe Rapuung was as normal as normal could be. Maybe he kept his
motives and plans secret because that's just the way Yuuzhan Vong were.
Or maybe he was
afraid—afraid that if Anakin knew what he was up to or knew how to get into the
shaper base, Anakin would kill him or abandon him.
He sneaked a
glance at the fierce, flat-nosed visage and gave that a silent negative. He
couldn't imagine Vua Rapuung being afraid of anything. Maybe prudent was
a better word.
So Anakin waited,
quietly, and found himself gradu-
ally mesmerized
by the gentle flow of the stream. He stretched out tentatively to the life
around him, feeling again the shadow of the pain and death he had caused.
I'm sorry, he told the forest.
How close was he
to the dark side? Was Rapuung right?
He'd argued with
Jacen that the Force was a tool that was neither good nor evil, but that could
be used, like any tool, to do good or evil with. Could evil be as simple as not
thinking? He supposed so. Corran Horn had once told him that selfishness was
evil and selflessness good. In that light, selfishly causing death to save
himself was evil, regardless of the fact that he simply hadn't considered the
consequences of his actions at the time. And yet he wasn't just fighting for
himself, was he? Tahiri's life was at stake. Maybe more than her life, because
if the Tahiri of his vision ever came to be, it could mean the end of a great
many people.
If he was honest,
he had to admit he hadn't been thinking about those larger consequences,
either. He'd had a problem to solve, and he'd solved it, the same as he might
solve a mathematical equation or a problem with the hyperdrive motivator in his
X-wing. He just hadn't thought about the problems his solution might cause,
which seemed pretty typical of him lately.
Mara Jade had
pointed out this tendency of his ages ago, when they were camping together on
Dantooine. Apparently he hadn't learned anything. Maybe it was time he started
to.
Which brought him
back to Vua Rapuung. The man was self-admittedly out for revenge, and if there
was one thing that had been drilled solidly into Anakin, it was that revenge
was of the dark side. If he continued working with Rapuung, would he be
implicated in that revenge? What tragedy was he helping to bring about by
cooperating with this half-crazed Yuuzhan Vong?
Something stirred
the life of the forest. A thousand
voices changed
slightly as they smelled and heard something unfamiliar, something not
included in their limited vocabulary of predator and prey, hunger and danger.
Something new to
Yavin 4 was approaching, on the river.
"Are you
expecting someone?" Anakin asked.
"Yes."
Anakin didn't ask
who. He was tired of asking questions that he knew wouldn't be answered.
Instead he sharpened his senses and watched.
Soon something
appeared on the river, coming upstream.
At first he
thought it was a boat, but reminded himself that if it was a Yuuzhan Vong boat,
it was something organic, as well. Studying it, he picked out the details that
proved him right.
The major visible
portion was a broad, flat dome poking up from the water, banded with scutes or
plates. Whatever moved it was below the surface of the water, but it did move.
Now and then something that might be the top of a head broke the water in front
of it. If it was a head, it was a big one, nearly as wide as the visible portion
of the shell, and scaled and dull olive in color.
Sitting on top of
it was a male Anakin could not feel in the Force, but the closer he came, the
less he looked like a Yuuzhan Vong. At first Anakin didn't understand why he
got that impression; he had the same sharply sloping forehead, and his
nostrils were set nearly flat into his face just like every other person of
that species Anakin had seen.
But he had no scars.
Not one. Not a single tattoo that Anakin could detect, and he could see most
of the fellow because he wore only a sort of loincloth.
Now and then he
touched something on the surface of the carapace, and the boat creature altered
course slightly.
"Stay
hidden," Rapuung said, and stood.
"Qe'u!"
he called.
Through the
concealing roots, Anakin saw the other man's head snap around in surprise. He
uttered a string of words Anakin didn't understand, and Vua Rapuung replied in
kind. The floater began turning in their direction, and Anakin dug himself
lower.
The two Yuuzhan
Vong continued their conversation as the floater drew nearer to shore.
Anakin took
several deep, steadying breaths. He'd been thinking about Vua Rapuung's
prudence; it was time to start thinking of his own. When would the Yuuzhan
Vong stop needing him? Now? When they reached the shaper base? When he'd
exacted whatever revenge he was after? It could be anytime. He remembered what
he had told Valin about the Yuuzhan Vong and their promises. Was there any
reason to believe Rapuung would keep his?
Anakin suddenly
noticed that the two had stopped talking. Just as he was thinking about taking
a look, he heard a loud splash.
"You may
come out from cover now, infidel," Rapuung said in Basic.
Anakin rose
warily from his hiding place. Rapuung stood on the floater. Alone.
"Where did
he go?" Anakin asked.
Rapuung gestured
toward the water on the other side of the floater. "In the river."
"You threw
him in? Will he drown?"
"No. He is
already dead."
"You killed
him?"
"A broken
neck killed him. Mount the vangaak and let us depart."
Anakin stood
there for a moment, trying to master his anger.
"Why did you
kill him?"
"Because to
leave him alive was an unacceptable risk."
Anakin almost
retched. Instead, he climbed up onto
the floater,
trying not to look at the corpse floating beyond.
That was one
innocent, unarmed sapient being dead because Anakin had saved Rapuung's life.
How many more would there be?
Rapuung began
manipulating several knobby projections on the carapace. Anakin assumed they
were nerve clusters or something of the sort.
"Who was
he?" he asked, as the floater turned sluggishly downstream.
"A Shamed
One. A person of no consequence."
"No one is
of no consequence," Anakin said, trying to keep his voice steady.
Rapuung laughed.
"The gods cursed him at birth. Every breath he drew was borrowed."
"But you
knew him."
"Yes."
They continued
down the river at a leisurely pace. "How did you know him?" Anakin
persisted. "What was he doing up here?"
"Trawling
the stream. It was his usual route. It used to be mine."
"You're an
angler?" Anakin said incredulously.
"Among other
things. Why so many questions?"
"I'm just
trying to understand what happened."
The warrior
grunted and held his silence for five minutes. Then, almost reluctantly, he
turned to Anakin.
"To find
you, I had to disappear, I faked my death out here, on the water. I made it
appear as if some water beast had eaten me. They gave Qe'u my route. I will return
and tell a story of how I survived, lost on this strange world, until I came
across the vangaak, pilotless. I will not know what happened to Qe'u. Perhaps a
Jeedai killed him, perhaps he met the same water beast I did."
"Oh. And
they'll let us through the security on the river. But why should they believe
that story?"
"They will
not care. He was a Shamed One. His death
will be of no
concern. Even if they suspect I killed him for some reason, no one will
question my story."
"And how
will you explain me?"
Rapuung grinned
nastily. "I won't. They won't see you."
CHAPTER
TWENTY-TWO
Nen Yim found her
master staring into the waters of the succession pool—the heart, lungs, and
liver of the damutek. It rippled slightly as the native food fish of the moon
investigated her shadow. It smelled faintly of sulfur, iodine, and something
oily and burnt, almost like singed hair.
Master Mezhan
Kwaad's headdress was woven into an expression of deep contemplation, so Nen
Yim stood behind her, waiting for her attention.
A drop of
something plunked into the succession pool, just below the master's feet.
Another followed, and another.
When Mezhan Kwaad
finally turned, Nen Yim saw it was blood, drizzling from her nostrils.
"Greetings,
Adept," the master said. "Have you come in search of me, or of the
succession pool?"
"Of you,
Master. But if you would speak at another time..."
"There will
be no better time until my cycle of sacrifice is complete and my Vaa-tumor is
removed. You had your first implanted yesterday, did you not?"
"I did,
Master. I cannot feel it yet."
"Bear it
well. It is one of the oldest mysteries." She cocked her head, focusing
her regard on Nen Yim's face. "You wish to know what it does, the
Vaa-tumor?"
"I am
content in the knowledge that the gods desire this sacrifice of our
caste," Nen Yim replied dutifully.
"Once
passing to adepthood, you enter the mystery,"
Mezhan Kwaad
said, as if speaking in a dream. "As warriors take on the outward aspects
of Yun-Yammka, so we take on the inner qualities of Yun-Ne'Shel,
she-who-shapes. The Vaa-tumor is her most ancient gift to us. Yun-Ne'Shel
plucked a fragment of her own brain to make it. As it grows, it models our
cells, changes our very thoughts, takes us nearer the mind and essence of
Yun-Ne'Shel." She sighed. "The journey is painful. It is glorious.
And, regrettably, we must return from it, excise her gift from our bodies. But
though we return to a semblance of who we were, each time that we are vessels
for that pain and glory we are forever changed. Something of it remains with
us. Until ..." Her words seemed to fail her.
"You shall
see," Mezhan Kwaad finally said. "And now—what have you come to tell
me?"
Nen Yim glanced
around, making certain no one was within hearing.
"It is quite
safe here, Adept," Mezhan Kwaad assured her. "Speak freely."
"I believe I
have finished mapping the Jeedai's nervous system and brain
structure."
"That is
good news. Very commendable. And how would you proceed now?"
"It depends
on what results we want. If we wish her obedience, then we should use restraint
implants."
"Why, then,
have we mapped her nervous system?"
Nen Yim felt her
headdress fidgeting and tried to calm it. "I don't know, Master. It was
your command."
Mezhan Kwaad
tilted her head and smiled faintly. "I am not trying to trick you, Adept.
I chose you for very particular reasons. I have told you some of them; about
others I have remained silent, but I suspect you are bright enough to know what
they are. Suppose, just for a moment, that there are no protocols to be
followed. In the absence of direction, what would you do? Hypothetically."
"Hypothetically,"
Nen Yim said. She felt as if she were
poised over the
digestive villi of a maw luur. She could almost smell the sour scent of the
acid. If she answered this question truthfully, she might be revealed as a
heretic. If what she had come to suspect about her master was wrong, this
conversation would be her last as a shaper, and one of the last in her life.
But she could not
surrender to fear.
"I would
modify the provoker spineray to fit our expectations of her nervous system, to
give us very fine control."
"Why?"
Nen Yim did not
hesitate this time. It was already too late, whichever way it went.
"Despite the
assurances of the protocol we followed, what we have now is only an educated
guess concerning how her nervous system functions. All we have done is to map
unknowns onto knowns. But the 'knowns' are Yuuzhan Vong norms, not human ones,
and we know already that she lacks analogs to some of our structures and has
others that have no comparable configuration in ourselves."
"Are you
saying, then, the ancient protocol is meaningless?"
"No, Master
Mezhan Kwaad. I am saying it is a starting point. It asserts certain things
about how the Jeedai's brain works. I suggest that we now test those
assertions."
"In other
words, you would question the protocols given us by the gods."
"Yes,
Master."
"And you
understand this is heresy of the first order?"
"I do."
Mezhan Kwaad's
eyes were oily pools, utterly unreadable. Nen Yim met her gaze steadily,
without flinching, for a very long time.
"I have
searched for an apprentice like you," the master shaper finally said.
"I have asked the gods to send you to me. If you are not what you appear
to be, you will
not be forgiven.
You will not profit from any betrayal of me, I promise you that."
That gave Nen Yim
a start. The thought that the master might be afraid of her had never
crossed her mind.
"I am your
apprentice," Nen Yim said. "I would not betray you. I have put my
life and my position in your thirteen fingers."
"They are
well placed, Adept," Mezhan Kwaad said softly. "Proceed as you have
just suggested. Do not speak to anyone but me about this. If our results are to
the liking of our leaders, I assure you they will not look closely at our
methods. But we must be discreet. We must move with caution." She glanced
once more at the pool and touched her head.
"When the
pain of the Vaa-tumor reaches its peak, :here are colors to be seen that have
never been seen be-rore, thoughts to be had, strange and mighty . . . Well, you
will see. At times I am almost ashamed to have it removed, to retreat from the
final embrace of it. I should like to know where it would take me." She
gave Nen Yim a rare genuine smile. "One day the gods shall ordain it.
Until then, I have much work to do for them." She draped her eight slender
fingers on Nen Yim's shoulder.
"Let us go
see our young Jeedai, shall we?"
The Jeedai watched
them come in. Only her green eyes moved, following them closely, like one beast
seeking the soft throat of another.
"I would
advise you not to attack us with your Jeedai tricks," Mezhan Kwaad
told her. "The provoker has been told to stimulate you to great agony if
we are af-flicted in any way. Though in time you will come to understand agony,
at the moment you seem to dislike it, and it clearly disrupts your
concentration. There are worse things we could do to you."
The Jeedai's eyes widened. "I can understand you,"
she said. Then
she stopped, looking even more confused. "I'm not speaking Basic. This
is—"
"You speak
our language now, yes," the master shaper said. "If you are to be one
of us, you must speak the sacred tongue."
"Be one of
you?" The Jeedai sneered. "Thanks, but I'd much rather be the
slime under a Hutt."
"That's
because you perceive yourself an infidel," Mezhan Kwaad said reasonably.
"You do not understand us, and there are things that confound us about
you and the other Jeedai. But we will understand you, and you will
understand us. You will become a tissue connecting the Yuuzhan Vong and the Jeedai,
nurturing both. You will make it possible for understanding to flow both
ways."
"That's what
you want from me?"
"You are the
path to peace," Mezhan Kwaad assured her.
"Kidnapping
me won't get you peace!" the Jeedai shouted.
"We did not
kidnap you," Mezhan Kwaad said. "We rescued you from the other
infidels, remember?"
"You're
twisting things," the Jeedai returned. "The whole reason they
captured me was to give me to you."
The master's
headdress rearranged itself into an expression of mild anger.
"Memory is a
most malleable commodity," Mezhan Kwaad said. "It is mostly chemical.
For instance, you now know our language. You did not learn it."
"You put it
there," the Jeedai said.
"Yes. Your
memory of the words, the grammar, the syntax. All introduced to you."
"So you can
implant memories. Big deal. We Jedi can do that, as well."
"Indeed. I
have no doubt those Jeedai abilities could do much to confuse one as
young as yourself. How many
of your memories
are real? How many manufactured? How could you tell the difference?"
"What's your
point?"
"My point is
this. Right now you think you are—what is it,Taher'ai?"
"My name is
Tahiri."
"Yes.
Tahiri, a young Jeedai candidate, raised by a tribe strange to
her—"
"Sand
People."
"Of course.
But soon enough, you will remember. After we've stripped away the false
memories and undone the disgusting modifications made to your body, you will remember
who you are."
"What are
you talking about?" the Jeedai exploded.
"You are
Riina of Domain Kwaad. You are one of us. You always have been."
" No! I know
who my parents were!"
"You know
the lies you were told, the memories you were given. Fear not. We will bring
you back."
Mezhan Kwaad
signaled, and Nen Yim bowed and followed her from the room. Behind them, the young
Jeedai wailed in the first sign of true despair that Nen Yim had heard from
her.
"Do not wait
for tomorrow," Mezhan Kwaad said. "Make your modifications and begin
your trials. We must show results, soon."
CHAPTER
TWENTY-THREE
Anakin rode in
the belly of the beast.
Literally. And it
stank. The Yuuzhan Vong equivalent of an organic gill, the gnullith
Anakin wore did nothing to buffer the confused and odious smells of river crawlfish,
silman eel, rotting wetweed, the viscous mucus that coated the inside of the
vangaak like jelly—or of the breather itself, which insisted on reminding him,
by slowly and constantly writhing, that he had a live animal shoving its
tentacles down his throat and nostrils.
The only bright
spot was that he hadn't eaten anything for a day and a half.
It had been better,
earlier, when the trawling-boat creature was still making its catch, swimming
with its mouth expanded into a flattened funnel ten meters across. The water
passed through and out the filtering membranes in its posterior, acting as the
underwater equivalent of a fresh breeze. Now that the belly was bloated, the
lips had sucked in on themselves, and water flow was cut to the minimum
necessary to sustain the live catch squirming all around him.
He was reminded
of the story of how his mother and father had met, on the Death Star, a story
he'd heard far too many times. Seconds after seeing each other for the first
time, they'd ended up fleeing stormtroopers into a garbage hold.
"What an
incredible smell you've discovered," his fa-
ther had
sarcastically told his future wife. He hadn't been very happy with her at the
time.
I've found a
better smell than you did, Mom, he thought.
The thought of
Rapuung above, in the warm breezes of Yavin 4 and no doubt delighted over the
discomfort of his infidel ally, did nothing to improve Anakin's mood. If he'd
had a working lightsaber, he would have long ago slashed his way through the
vangaak even if it meant facing a hundred Yuuzhan Vong warriors. Some things
made death seem pretty.
He immediately
regretted that thought. There were beings in the galaxy who endured misery that
made what he was going through look like a day in a garden on Ithor.
Well, back when
Ithor had gardens.
Still, he was
more than ready to get out. He passed the time by getting to know his
bellymates, gently convincing the more adventurous ones he wasn't something to
nibble on. He tried to relax and forget his body and the unpleasant sensory
data it was processing. He found Tahiri—in pain, but alive. He thought he
briefly found Jaina, then lost her again. Time stretched and ceased to have
meaning.
Some strange
motion jarred him. Had he been asleep? It was difficult to tell.
The motion came
again, a sudden contraction that squeezed water-dwellers against him.
Then a stronger
contraction hurtled him forward, blasting into the light in a stream of fluid
and fish, then plunging into new water. Something strong caught his arm and
hauled him up, and he found himself staring blearily into the face of Vua
Rapuung.
The warrior set
him down on his feet and detached the gnullith. Anakin coughed up water and
then took deep, grateful breaths. He looked up at Rapuung.
"I've just
been vomited by a fish," he said.
Vua Rapuung
cocked his head. "Obviously. Why are you telling me?"
"Never mind.
Where are we?" The vangaak had disgorged its prey at the narrow end of a
wedge-shaped pool. The larger end of the wedge, about twenty meters away,
opened into an even larger aquatic space. Anakin and Rapuung stood on a
landing, of sorts, bounded by slightly uneven coral walls six meters high.
Every six meters or so, the walls were marked by ovoids the size of doorways,
obvious because of their darker shade. The vangaak had apparently entered this
complex through one canal opening at the end of the wedge. Anakin could see
daylight and swaying Massassi trees beyond.
He could see the
sky above, too.
"I
see," Anakin said. "We're in one of the—what did you call them?"
"Damuteks."
"Right.
They're shaped like rayed stars. We're at the end of one of the rays. This is
one of the compounds filled with water."
"Each
damutek has a succession pool. Some have coverings over them so the space can
be used for other things."
Anakin pointed at
the canal. "We came up that. It goes to the river, right?"
"Correct
again."
"Why is the
water in the canal flowing toward the river, then?"
"Why ask
after such irrelevancies? The succession pool is filled from below. Its rooting
tubes seek water and minerals. The outflow goes to the river. And that is
enough talk."
"You're
right," Anakin agreed. "Let's find Tahiri and get out of here."
Rapuung glared at
him. "It isn't so simple. First we must disguise you. An unbound human,
walking free? Then we must locate your other Jeedai."
"I can find
her."
"I surmised
as much, from what I have heard of Jeedai. You can sniff each other out
at a distance, yes?"
"Something
like that."
"Then you
will be my hunting uspeq. But not yet. Even when we know where she is—"
"We have to
chart the course. I get it. You'll figure the layout of the place. And your
revenge ? What about that?"
"When we
find the other Jeedai, we will find my revenge."
The coldness in
Rapuung's voice touched a worry in the back of Anakin's mind. "Your
revenge is not against Tahiri, is it?" he asked. "Tell me now if it
is."
Rapuung showed
his teeth in grim humor. " If I wanted revenge on your Jeedai, I
need only to let the shapers nave her. Nothing could be worse than to be in
Mezhan Kwaad's fingers." Mezhan Kwaad?"
"Don't
repeat that name," Rapuung snarled.
" But you
just said it."
" If you
repeat it again, I will kill you."
Anakin drew
himself taller. "You're welcome to try," he said softly.
Rapuung's muscles
bunched and tensed and his mauled lips twitched. Again he seemed more like a
dangerous, poisonous animal than a person. But then he rasped a sigh.
"Here, / know what is best. You must learn to listen to me. How else would
you have entered the perimeter of the base? But from here, the dangers we face
have increased. You must make peace with my commands. Furthermore, the longer
we argue, the more likely it is that we will be thwarted here and now. We're
lucky no one has yet chanced by. You have passed through the nostrils of this
beast, but you will not live to find the beating heart without me."
That was probably
true, Anakin reflected. Pride was not the way of the Jedi. Rapuung kept
pricking at his pride,
and he kept
twitching like a Twi'lek's lekku. He could almost hear Jacen and Uncle Luke
scolding him now.
"I
apologize," Anakin said. "You're right. What do we do now?"
Rapuung nodded
curtly. "Now we make you a slave."
Anakin had
thought he'd been through some hard things before; but nothing had prepared him
for the ordeal of letting Vua Rapuung implant the coral growth on him. It
looked exactly like the sickening, ulcerous growths he'd seen on more Yuuzhan
Vong slaves than he could count. He'd watched and sensed sentient beings lose
their reason, grow thin and vanish in the Force, become mindless drones for
the Yuuzhan Vong, because of just such infections.
"It is not
real," Vua Rapuung told him, "but you must respond as if it is real.
You must follow certain commands."
How do I know
this isn't a trick? Anakin's brain screamed at him. How do I
know this wasn't the plan all along, to march me into the shaper base and have
me willingly give up my very being?
Again he felt as
if his eyes had been struck out, his tongue cut off, the nerves of his fingers
numbed. He had absolutely no way of knowing what Vua Rapuung was thinking.
But it seemed
somehow unlike the mutilated warrior to play out such an elaborate charade.
"So I have
to act like a mindless drone?"
"No. We do
not use that form of restraint on most work slaves anymore. It proved too
debilitating to them. What use is a slave that dies or becomes stupid? The implant
merely insures you can be restrained if need be. If it tingles, pretend pain
and paralysis. If it actually gives you pain, pretend to die."
"Got
it."
So Anakin let the
Yuuzhan Vong warrior prick the
thing into his
flesh, tried not to wince as it rooted. He concentrated on recognizing the
first sign—any sign— that his will was being taken from him.
When Rapuung was
done, he felt violated, as if his own flesh had become a hateful thing, but he
still felt in control. For the moment.
"Where can I
hide my lightsaber?" Anakin asked. Rapuung had made him shed his clothes
and gear back in the jungle. The broken weapon was the only possession he
retained.
" It does
not work."
"I know.
Where can I hide it?"
Rapuung hesitated
for a moment. "Here," he said. "In the far corner of the
succession pool. It will be unnoticed in the organic material on the
bottom."
Anakin
reluctantly followed Rapuung's advice. It was a hard thing to watch the
lightsaber he had built with his own hands sink into the water. But right now,
it could only get him caught.
Moments later,
Anakin was suddenly surrounded by Yuuzhan Vong, hundreds of them. They'd exited
the larger compound at the same point the boat creature entered it, walking
along the quay that ran parallel to the canal. The latter he could see curved
off to join the river.
Between the river
and the damutek complexes was the shantytown he had observed from the ridge.
Unlike the orderly compounds, the dwellings here seemed placed almost at
random, a series of organic domes and hollow circles pierced by openings. Most
seemed barely large enough to sleep in, and he didn't see many people coming in
or out of them. Most of the Yuuzhan Vong he saw were like the angler Rapuung
had killed. They were unscarred or had very few scars. Some had malformed or
festering scars like Vua Rapuung, and they wore the same sort of loincloth that
Rapuung and now Anakin had donned.
Of course it
wasn't a cloth at all, but something alive.
If he pulled it
away from his flesh, it slowly sealed itself there again.
He also had a
tizowyrm secreted in his ear, and the speech of those around him reached him in
little starts and flurries. But almost no one was talking. They went about
their business quietly, rarely making eye contact.
He wasn't the
only non-Yuuzhan Vong either, he saw. There were a fair number of them, all
with the coral restraining implants. Their expressions he readily recognized;
they ranged from utter hopelessness to mere misery. Now and then he caught a
glimmer from one that suggested he or she still hoped for escape. Like the
Yuuzhan Vong, none gave him more than a glance.
"You!"
a voice called from behind. Rapuung turned toward it, and Anakin shambled around
more slowly, trying to keep the expression of the humans he had seen.
The Yuuzhan Vong
who had addressed them was a warrior, the first Anakin had seen here. He
struggled to keep still; up until now being this close to a warrior meant a
fight to the death, and he had had more than his share of those.
The warrior
twitched when he saw Rapuung's face, and for a brief moment he looked almost as
if he were about to genuflect. Then his eyes turned to obsidian.
"It is you.
They told me at the port you had returned."
"I
have," Rapuung answered.
"Many
thought you had fled your shame. Many were glad not to have to look upon
it."
"The gods
know no shame is on me," Rapuung answered.
"Your flesh
says otherwise," the warrior answered.
"So it may
be," Rapuung replied. "Do you have a command?"
"No. What
task has your executor given you?"
"I go to
speak to him now."
"The
trawling schedules are filled for another four days. Perhaps you may spend that
time in sacrifice and
penitence begging
Yun-Shuno to intercede for you. A word could be planted in your executor's
ear."
"That is
most generous, Hul Rapuung. But I do not require favor."
"It is no
favor to be given time to beg, even of the gods," Hul Rapuung answered.
"Go." He turned brusquely and started to leave, then turned back.
"The slave. Why does it accompany you?"
"I found it
wandering aimless. I take it to my executor for assignment."
"Aimless,
you say? You know that in the wilderness several Jeedai skulk."
"This one
was here before I was lost. He has always been of a forgetful nature."
Hul Rapuung
lifted his chin. "Is it so?" His voice lowered. "There is a
story—a rumor, really, that one of these Jeedai is not a Jeedai at
all, but a Yuuzhan Vong, driven mad somehow by their powers."
"I know
nothing of such rumors."
"No. They
began only a short time ago." He spat. "Go to your executor."
"I go,"
Vua Rapuung said.
"Vua
Rapuung. You are a Shamed One," Anakin said, as soon as the warrior was
out of earshot. He kept his head down and tried not to move his lips too much.
Rapuung looked
briefly around, grabbed Anakin's arm, and propelled him into the nearest
structure. Inside, it was cozy, but smelled sour like an unwashed Bothan.
"Did I tell
you to hold your tongue?" Rapuung snapped.
"You should
have told me," Anakin replied. "If you want me to keep quiet, then
make it so I'm not surprised every ten seconds."
Rapuung clenched
and unclenched his fists several rimes. He gnashed his teeth.
"I must act
the part of a Shamed One. I am not."
" First of
all, what is a Shamed One? And don't give me that 'they aren't worth
speaking of fodder."
"They aren't—"
Rapuung began, then stopped. He closed his eyes. "Shamed Ones are cursed
by the gods. Their bodies reject proper scarring. They do not heal well. The
implants of utility and rank that set us apart as castes and individuals are
rejected by their feeble bodies. They are useless."
"Your scars.
Your sores. Your implants have rotted out."
"I was a
great warrior," Rapuung said. "A commander. None doubted my ability.
And then one day, my body betrayed me." He started pacing suddenly,
slamming his palms on the coral, cutting them. "But it was not the gods. I
know who did it. I know why. And she shall pay."
"The female
whose name you told me not to repeat again."
"Yes."
"And she's
the one you want to kill."
"Kill?"
Rapuung's eyes widened, then he spat. "Infidel. You think death, which
comes to all, is punishment in itself. My revenge will be to force her to admit
what she has done, so everyone will know that Vua Rapuung was never shamed! So
the Yuuzhan Vong will know her crime. My revenge will be to know that
when she does die, however she dies, it will be in ignominy. But kill her? I
would not give her the honor."
"Oh,"
Anakin said. That was all he could think of. Despite Rapuung's secrecy, Anakin
had at least thought he knew what the Yuuzhan Vong meant by revenge. In
two quick reversals, everything he knew about Rapuung fell apart.
"Is that
enough of my blood in your ears for the moment? " Rapuung asked in a low,
strange voice.
"One more
question. The warrior we just met. Part of your name is the same as his."
"As it
should be. He is a sibling of my creche."
"Your
brother?"
Rapuung inclined
his head slightly in the affirmative. "We go to the executor now. I will
suggest you once worked clearing fields for growing lambents. Those slaves live
the longest. We will meet when I can manage it without suspicion. Play your
part. Do not falter. Use your powers to locate the nearest point where the other
Jeedai is. I will see you in seven days or so. Until then we will not speak
another word. Watch the other slaves. Speak as they speak or not at all. Now,
come."
He glanced
outside, then walked out, towing Anakin by the arm. No one seemed to notice.
Together, they walked toward the largest building, unnoticeable among the other
slaves and Shamed Ones.
Or so Anakin
hoped.
CHAPTER
TWENTY-FOUR
A spike of pain
drove through Anakin's forehead, so unexpected and strange that his legs
buckled and he fell to his knees on the black jungle soil, grasping for the
wound in his forehead. It felt as if it had been gashed from his hairline to
the bridge of his nose. The blood stung his eyes and brimmed his nostrils.
But when he
brought his hands down, they were clean. Chapped, blistered, and friction-burned
from days of pulling tough weeds from the soil, but not bloody.
Cautiously he
felt his head again. The pain still throbbed, but now he felt only unbroken
flesh.
"You!
Slave!" the tizowyrm chittered in his ear, apparently translating the brutal
shout from one of the guards. The coral growth on his neck gave him a faint
shock, and he knew he was being given the force of command. He went rigid and
fell to the ground, jerking spasmodically. It was easy, given the agony
already creeping into his head.
When he thought
he'd played that role long enough, he climbed back to his knees and went back
to work, knotting his chapped, raw hands around plants and uprooting them.
The Yuuzhan Vong
did not care for machines even as complicated as a lever. They had biotic
methods of clearing fields other than slaves, but they seemed determined to go
through the slaves they had, first.
Grab weed,
wriggle, pull. For the ten billionth time.
The pain
reverberated behind his eyes, fading a bit, and he began to pick out details
through the static.
Not his forehead,
not his blood, not his senses. It was Tahiri who had been cut. Scarred like a
Yuuzhan Vong.
It was almost too
much. He had been feeling her pain sporadically since her capture. Sometimes it
was like an itch, sometimes like burning methanol poured down his nerves. But
this time it was somehow real, intimate. He could smell her breath and taste
her tears. It was like holding her, in that last moment of peace they had had
together.
Except she was
bleeding, and here he was pulling weeds. If his lightsaber was working . . .
But that was the
problem, wasn't it? Or one of them. And it was days before he would see Rapuung
again.
"Slave."
An amphistaff lashed lightly across his back, and it took everything in him not
to leap up into the guard's face, take his amphistaff, and kill every Yuuzhan
Vong in sight.
What are they
doing to you, Tahiri?
But he didn't.
Instead he stood compliant, arms at his side.
"Go with
this Shamed One," the guard told him.
He then turned to
the person indicated, a young female with no obvious scars. She had a deeply
worn look to her, but her eyes had a certain brightness many of the other
Shamed Ones' did not. "Go to the third lambent field, nearest the
perimeter. Show him how to harvest."
" I will
need more than one faltering slave to make my quota," she said.
"You feel it
is your place to argue with me?" the warrior snapped.
"No,"
she replied. "I think it is a prefect's place to assign workers."
"The prefect
is busy today. Would you rather make your quota alone?"
She maintained an
expression of defiance for another
beat, then
grudgingly hung her head. "No. Why are you doing this to me?"
"I treat you
as I treat everyone."
She narrowed her
eyes, but did not reply. Instead she beckoned Anakin. "Come along, slave.
We have a long walk."
He followed her,
trying to reestablish contact with Tahiri. She was still alive, he could get
that much, but more distant than the stars.
Almost as if she
was fighting contact.
"What's your
name, slave?" the woman asked. It so shocked Anakin that his step actually
faltered. "Well?"
"Begging
your pardon, but when did any Yuuzhan Vong care to dirty her ears with the name
of a slave?"
"Where did a
slave get the idea that insolence would go unpunished?" she responded.
"My name is
Bail Lars," he replied.
"What's
wrong with you, Bail Lars? I saw you nearly collapse. So did that filth-bather,
Vasi. That's why he sent you with me, so I'll fail to meet my quota."
"He has
something against you, personally?"
"Puul. It's
what he couldn't get against me that bothers him."
"Really? I
would think—" He suddenly thought better of what he was saying and didn't
finish the sentence.
The female did,
however. "Would think what? That I wouldn't refuse a warrior?"
"No, that's
not it," Anakin said. "I suppose I thought they—the rest of the
Yuuzhan Vong, I mean—were . . . well, that they didn't think Shamed Ones were,
you know, desirable."
"We aren't,
not by normal people. Not even by each other. But Vasi is not normal. He
likes sick things. He can command a Shamed One to do things that no true caste
would ever do, or want to do, or want done."
"But he
commanded you and you didn't?"
"He knows if
he commands me, I will make him kill
me. So he didn't
command me. He wants me to come to him." She stopped and dropped her
eyeridges angrily. "And this is not your business. Never forget—what I am
to them, you are to me. One day Yun-Shuno will grant me redemption, and my body
will take the scars and implants. I will become true caste, while you will
forever be nothing."
"Do you
really believe that?" Anakin asked. "I don't think you do."
She slapped him
then, hard. When he did not react to the pain, she nodded thoughtfully.
"Stronger than I thought. Maybe we can meet my quota," she said.
"If you help me do it, I will find some reward for you."
" I would do
it for no other reason than to disappoint Vasi," Anakin replied.
"Though I may feel differently if you keep slapping me."
"You say filthy
things, and don't expect to be punished?"
"I didn't
know it was filthy."
"I have
heard you slaves are infidels, but even infidels must know the gods and their
truths."
" I would
think that not knowing that is exactly what makes me an infidel," Anakin
said.
" I suppose.
It makes no sense, and I've never spoken to an infidel before, not like
this." She hesitated. "It is ... interesting. Perhaps as we work, we
can pass the time. You can tell me of your planet. But restrain yourself—
Shamed I may be, but I have not abandoned myself to shame."
"It's a
deal," Anakin said. "Will you tell me your name?"
"My name is
Uunu." She pointed ahead, to a low coral wall. "We're nearly to the
lambent field now. They are just past there."
"What is a
lambent?"
"Another
moment, and you shall see. Or, rather, you shall hear them."
"Hear?"
But suddenly he
did, a faint, buzzing rattle, like the voices of small animals.
And yet this
didn't come from the Force, not exactly. It didn't have the familiar touch, the
depth. It was more like having a staticky comlink in his head.
They rounded the
wall. Beyond was a field tilled into concentric circular ridges. On them,
spaced perhaps a meter apart, grew plants that resembled a nest of short,
thick, green knives. From the central clump two, three, or four short stalks
grew, and at the end of each of these was a sort of hairy, bloodred bloom. The
blooms were roughly the size of his fist, and it was from these that the
telepathic murmur seemed to come.
"What are
they?"
"Start
working now. I'll explain what they are later, if it looks as if we are
approaching our quota."
"What do I
do?"
"You will
follow me. I will stroke the down from the blossoms—like so." Almost
tenderly she rubbed away the red, hairlike petals until all that remained was a
yellowish bulb. "This attunes it. Once that is done, you must harvest it.
That is more difficult. Hold still, please." She withdrew something curved
and black from a pouch in her garment.
"Place it on
your thumb."
He looked at it.
It resembled a spur, about eight centimeters long. It looked very sharp. It
was hollow, and when he slipped his thumb into the hollow he winced as what
felt like many small teeth bit into him.
"It's
alive," he muttered.
"Of course
it is. Who would use a dead—" Then her eyes narrowed. "I told you not
to talk like that, didn't I?"
"I didn't
say anything wrong," Anakin objected.
"No. You
just implied it and let my mind do the dirty work. Stop that."
Anakin held up
his newly spurred thumb and looked at it.
"Don't get
airs," she said. "It's not a real implant. Even I can wear one for a
little while before the reaction sets in. It's not permanent. And in case
you're getting any unslave-like ideas ..." She took his wrist in a
surprisingly strong grip and jabbed her palm at the sharp tip of the spur.
It immediately
went flaccid.
"You might
cut another slave with it," she said softly. "I've heard of such
things, done for the amusement of the guards. But you will not cut a Yuuzhan
Vong with such a tool."
"I would
have taken your word for it."
"Good.
You're learning. So, you take your spur and split the lambent casing at the
top. Go ahead."
He knelt by the
plants and pressed the sharp tip into the yellow bulb. It split, and a pale
milky substance oozed out.
"Now cut
down the side. It will be difficult."
It was. The husk
was tough. When he had scored three sides, he managed to peel the skin
away. The entire time he did this, he was acutely aware of the thing's
telepathic voice, a quiet peeping somehow different from its companions,
probably because of Uunu's "attunement" of it.
The big surprise
was the inside. When he had cut it free, Anakin held it up, fascinated.
It looked very
much like a gem of some sort.
"What is
it?" he asked again.
"Later. Go,
now. You will be slower at cutting them than I am at attuning them. You must
work to keep up with me. Normally two or three huskers come after the attuner.
When you have a rhythm, and I am certain you are not losing ground, then we
will try talking. Not before."
It didn't happen
that day. While Anakin eventually caught the rhythm of the work, it was only
after he was far behind Uunu. The lambents distracted him. They could tickle
his mind and he could touch them, but not
through the
Force, not in the conventional sense. He was told that Wurth Skidder had had a
similar experience with a Yuuzhan Vong yammosk, the creatures that coordinated
the actions of Yuuzhan Vong warcraft. Yammosks bonded telepathically with
their daughter ships and with the crews of its fleet. It then protected them as
it would its own offspring, directing their battles to minimize loss. Skidder
had apparently achieved some sort of metalinkage between the Force and yammosk
telepathy, at least according to his surviving companions.
Were these
lambents yammosk relatives? Uunu was doing something to them; they changed as
she stroked them, became more distant to Anakin. Because she was bonding them
to herself? Could Anakin bond with one? Maybe if he did, he would find out what
their function was. Were they what they looked like and felt like? They
couldn't be exactly, of course, because they were alive, but still!
He hadn't
realized how much hope he had lost until he started to get some of it back.
He slept in a
dormitory for slaves, a low-roofed, creeping building with four sleeping areas
carpeted in a spongy, mosslike growth. A total of eighteen slaves occupied the
building, sleeping as thick as Stintarils. It was nearly impossible to sleep
without being in contact with someone.
To Anakin's
relief, they weren't all Peace Brigade. In fact, Anakin gathered that while
most of the Brigaders in the system had indeed been captured, most of those had
been sacrificed to the Yuuzhan Vong gods. The slaves he shared his quarters
with were from various points along the route of conquest and seemed to
represent members of some sort of slave core population, one that the malcontents
and firebrands had been largely eliminated from. None of them had the old style
of slave implants like those Anakin had seen on Dantooine.
"They use
those mostly for the ones they send into
battle," a
Twi'lek named Poy told him, when he asked about it. "The thing is, if they
fit you with the stuff, it takes a lot out of you. Makes you dumb. The shapers
don't want dumb slaves that keep forgetting directions. The warriors just need
bodies to absorb blasterfire, so it doesn't really matter there." His
lekku twitched pensively. " But act up, or act stupid, and they'll fit
you with it and send you to the front."
The most
comforting thing about the slaves was that Anakin could feel them in the Force,
but other than that, he didn't see much hope for help in them, and indeed,
enormous potential for betrayal if they had any hint of who or what he might
be. He gave it out that he had been captured on Duro and suggested to the more
inquisitive that they didn't need to know the details.
Uunu collected
him for the second morning, while it was still dark. He'd slept sporadically,
trying to locate Tahiri in the Force. She was still withdrawn, difficult to find,
but he was pretty sure he knew which damutek she was in.
He was a little
groggy as he fell into step with the Shamed One.
"Here,"
she said a bit gruffly, holding out something in her hand.
"What?"
"Just watch,
infidel."
A wisp of
phosphorescence appeared in her palm and quickly sharpened into a substantial
light. As it fleshed out, Anakin could see that it was a lambent crystal, like
the ones he had been harvesting the day before.
It grew brighter
until it was almost hard to look at, then faded away.
"You control
the brightness with your mind," Anakin guessed.
She nodded.
"Yes. We use these as portable light sources. They can also be configured
with photosensitive biots to
form the controls
of various superorganisms, especially of the spacegoing sort." She closed
her hand on the gem-like organism. "Come."
"It's still
alive, though, right?" Anakin asked, as they continued toward the fields.
"Yes, of
course."
"What does
it eat?"
"A lambent's
substance is mostly silicon and metal fixed from the soil. They transpire when
gas is available, but most of their sustenance comes from the bioelectrical
fields of the life around them." She stopped, staring at him. "What
is that expression on your face?"
Anakin realized
suddenly that he was grinning from ear to ear.
"Nothing,"
he said. "It's just amazing, I suppose."
"As are all
gifts of the gods," Uunu replied. Anakin thought he still heard suspicion
in her voice.
They worked for
six hours without stopping, but Anakin had his rhythm now. He told Uunu he'd
been on a freighter crew, and described Coruscant and Corellia. She was mostly
disgusted by this, since it was impossible to talk about such high-tech worlds
without multiple mentions of abominations. He changed the subject to lost Ithor
and the moon of Endor, which were less touchy subjects.
After six hours
of work, they took a short break for water and to suck a pasty pap from
something Anakin knew was an organism but preferred to think of as a warm,
distended bag.
"It's
difficult to imagine all of those worlds, each as big or bigger than this
one," Uunu said between sips. "I grew up on one of the poorest
worldships. There was little room. We lived very close together. Here, there is
nothing but space."
"There are
plenty of uninhabited worlds," Anakin agreed. "The New Republic would
have been happy to make room for you."
Uunu gave him the
puzzled expression he had come to expect in their conversations. "Why
should Yuuzhan Vong beg for what the gods have ordained we may have? Why should
we tolerate abominations in the galaxy Yun-Yuuzhan has decreed shall be the end
of our wanderings?"
"How do you
know the gods have decreed this, Uunu?" Anakin asked, trying to keep the
edge from his voice.
Her lips
tightened. "Your mouth will be the death of you, Bail Lars. I have come to
understand you are ignorant rather than stupid, but others will not be so
forgiving."
"I just want
to understand. From what I can tell, the Yuuzhan Vong spent centuries if not
millennia in space. Why now, why our galaxy? How did the gods make their will
known?"
A slight frown
creased Uunu's face, but she did not berate him again. "The signs were
many," she said. "The worldships began to die, and there was much
unrest. Caste fought caste and domain fought domain. It was a time of testing,
and many thought the gods had abandoned us. Then Lord Shimrra had a vision of a
new home, of a galaxy corrupted by heresy, of a cleansing. The priests first
saw his vision was true, then the shapers, then the warriors. The time of
testing gave way to the time of conquest." She looked up at him.
"That is all. It is how it must be. Ask no more about it, for there is
nothing else to say. The people of this galaxy will accept the will of the
gods, or they will die."
Anakin nodded.
"And the Shamed Ones? You didn't mention them. How do they fit into
this?"
Her gaze wandered
away again. "We have our own prophecies. In this new galaxy, Yun-Shuno has
promised us redemption."
"In what
form?"
She did not
answer but instead looked off at the horizon. "Look how far it
goes," she said. "On and on."
Anakin thought
the conversation was over, but after a long pause Uunu suddenly caught his gaze
and held it. Her voice dropped almost below the range of his hearing.
"Bail
Lars," she said. "Are you Jeedai?"
CHAPTER
TWEIXITY-FIVE
"What?"
Anakin sputtered around the yellowish paste he was already having trouble
swallowing.
"Are you Jeedai?"
Uunu repeated. "The question is simple."
" But what
makes you ask it?" Anakin said. "If I were Jedi, would I be a
captive?"
"The shapers
have one captive Jeedai. Rumor has it others are on this moon. And
you—no one seems to remember you being brought here. As well, you do not act
like a slave, somehow. You seem too unbent." She eyed him speculatively.
"Rumor also says that Jeedai sometimes allow themselves to be
captured."
"Well, I
didn't allow myself to be captured," Anakin said. He figured that wasn't a
lie, since he hadn't been captured at all.
He wouldn't be
captured now, either. He was alone with Uunu, and she was no warrior. He
readied himself, trying to keep his breathing normal. He didn't want to hurt
Uunu. She'd treated him like more of a person than she had to. That wasn't
much, but he couldn't discount it.
Then he noticed
something about the set of her eyes. "You wanted me to be Jedi,
didn't you? I've disappointed you."
Uunu sighed and
touched her gaze back to the distance. "If you were Jeedai, you
would have attacked me by now," she said.
"You
believed that and you still asked me anyway? Why would you take such a
risk?"
"There is no
risk. Warriors are hidden near here. I voiced my fears to them." Her
expression crumpled into chagrin.
The hairs on
Anakin's neck prickled up. Where were the watchers? He couldn't see anyone.
"Would turning in a Jedi have earned you out of the Shamed Ones?"
"Not in and
of itself," she said a little wistfully. "Only the gods can change my
condition. But I should like to meet one of these Jeedai. And the
discovery of a Jeedai might give Yun-Shuno much leverage to intercede
for me."
"You've
mentioned her before. She's your superior?"
"She's a
goddess, infidel. The goddess of the Shamed Ones. The only one who can make me
a true Yuuzhan Vong."
"Oh."
"Return to
your work."
They started
again, she stroking the blossoms bald and he cutting out the lambents.
"How does
one become Shamed?" Anakin asked.
"Another
impolite question," Uunu said, but her tone was light, belying the
chiding. "Some of us are born so. Others are cursed for misdeeds or
sins."
"I've heard
that some Shamed Ones do not think they deserve their status," Anakin said
as casually as possible.
She barked a
harsh laugh. "Deserve? What is deserve? We merely are." She looked
back at him, her expression suddenly knowing. "Ah. You speak of Vua
Rapuung, the one who brought you to the prefect of clearing fields."
"That might
be his name. I'm not sure. But he muttered some things. Not to me—he hardly
seemed to know I was there."
"He is
insane, Vua Rapuung," Uunu said. "Once he was a great warrior. Now he
is nothing. He cannot bear it, so he invents lies. Perhaps he even believes
them."
"Lies?"
"He claims a
shaper infected him with something to produce the marks of Shame, from
spite."
"Why?
"Anakin asked.
"Because she
loved him," Uunu said, "and he spurned her."
"Love?"
Somehow it had never occurred to Anakin that Yuuzhan Vong fell in love.
"Yes. But
his story is impossible."
"How
so?"
"More
ignorance! Because the gods who govern such things—the Lovers Yun-Txiin and
Yun-Q'aah—would never weave passions between a warrior and a shaper.
Yun-Yuuzhan eternally punishes the twin gods for their own transgressions; they
would never dare his wrath again. It is not possible, and so Rapuung's ravings
are those of insanity. He is merely cursed, like the rest of us. Of late he has
become even more erratic. I think the intendants will destroy him soon, if they
have not already."
"Destroy
him?"
"Shamed Ones
must show usefulness and humility. We do the work no true caste Yuuzhan Vong
may dirty their hands with. If we do not do these things, we are not worth
feeding." Her head came up. "You have concern for Vua Rapuung?"
"I have
concern for all living beings," Anakin said.
"And now you
sound like a Jeedai again," she said.
How do you know
so much about the Jedi philosophy? Anakin wondered.
Where would a Shamed One get such information? Why would she be interested?
"Tell
me," Uunu went on. "Would a Jeedai be concerned about the
fate of a Shamed One? As concerned as he would be for a person of high
caste?"
"Yes. I have
known Jedi. They protect all life."
"Not Yuuzhan
Vong. Jeedai kill Yuuzhan Vong."
"Only when
they must," Anakin replied. "Jedi do not like to kill."
"They are
not warriors, then?"
"Not
exactly, not from what I know. They are protectors."
"Protectors.
And they protect everyone?"
"Everyone
they can."
She chuckled
again, a bit uneasily. "An amusing lie. The sort of lie that gives hope to
those who do not deserve it. A destructive lie. Some Shamed Ones even—"
She broke off again, this time angrily. "How is it you make me talk
so, infidel? Work, and do not speak. Ask me no more questions."
That night Anakin
crept from the slave quarters. It was no great task. For most slaves, there was
no escape from the camp itself. If they wanted to waste the precious hours of
sleep they were allotted, the Yuuzhan Vong didn't prevent it.
Reaching the
fields was more difficult, but Anakin had plenty of experience with stealth. In
a few moments, by the light of the orange gas giant, he knelt in the lambent
field. The plants lisped softly, like a nighttime breeze through dark treetops.
Beyond the perimeter of the camp, across the river, he faintly felt the life of
the jungle. Somewhere inside of it, in a bed of aches and misery, he knew
Tahiri's fading touch.
He found the last
of the harvested lambents and knelt beside the first of the next day's harvest,
staring for a long moment at the faintly illuminated stalk. Then, hardly daring
to breathe, he reached for the swollen blossom and began to stroke exactly as
he had seen Uunu do hundreds of times.
The petals were
as soft as silk, rubbing easily from his fingers, and Anakin felt a faint
touch, like an electrical shock traveling up his arm. It was neither pleasant
nor
unpleasant, but
more like the first taste of a food so exotic his tongue had no baseline for
judging it.
As he stroked,
the feeling deepened, and finally he felt not just his fingers rubbing the
flower, but also the blossom being rubbed. He was the lambent,
for a moment, and not only felt it wakening but felt himself awakened.
He continued
until the small hum in his head was louder, more obvious than any impulse from
the other plants, until the pod was smooth, then he blinked and carefully
searched around him for movement. Here, in the camp, he was nearly blind and
deaf. He couldn't even use the jungle moon's native life to sense what danger
might be coming. If he couldn't see it and hear it, it wasn't there.
But his eyes
found no shadows creeping, his ears registered no faint susurrus of motion,
and so, producing his spurred thumb, he cut into the plant and stripped away
the husk until he had the gem inside. He gripped it tight in his fingers, and
almost without him asking it, it flared into gentle radiance.
"Yes!
"he hissed.
Willing it dark,
he clenched his fist tighter around it in a gesture of triumph.
Then it was back
across the fields and through the houses. They were not silent at night; he
passed the shrine of Yun-Shuno and heard moaning within. Whispers drifted from
other doorways, and here and there someone paced in the darkness, restless.
Anakin kept going
until he reached the edge of the star-shaped compound where he had exited the
living boat. He slipped within.
The pool shone
with a gentle phosphorescence that did not reach far below the surface. Anakin
felt with the Force, hoping desperately his lightsaber was still there, where
he had placed it days before.
The water was
murky. He could sense it in the Force, but as if through a cloud. The crawlfish
and their aquatic
cousins were
sensible, too, but somehow diffuse. It took longer than it should have for him
to feel the play of life and current and energy in the heart of the shaper damutek.
But at last he had it in his mind, wavering like a mirage, but there. The
current had carried his lightsaber to fetch at the edge of the compound,
against a barrier that kept the fish in. He exerted his will, and his lightsaber
shifted, moved, broke the surface, and came to rest in his hand.
"Who's
there?" a voice asked, from the shadows around the pool. Anakin stepped
back quickly, heart running toward lightspeed, and withdrew into the darkness
in the far corner of the compound.
"Your
pardon," he rasped, grateful for the tizowyrm in his ear. He tried to make
his voice sound as much like a Yuuzhan Vong's as possible. "I am no one, a
Shamed One."
The figure in the
darkness shifted, and he could suddenly see more of her silhouette. Something
was strange about her head. It wriggled like a nest of snakes, like nothing he
had yet seen among the Yuuzhan Vong.
"This is the
compound of the shapers," the woman's voice said. "You have no
business here, Shamed One."
"I beg
pardon, great one," Anakin said. "I wished only—I had hoped the
waters of the succession pool would inspire me to beseech Yun-Shuno
persuasively."
The silence
stretched. "I should report you, you know. Only those Shamed Ones with
passage pheromone are allowed here. I—" He heard a little gasp of pain.
"Is anything
the matter, great one?"
"No,"
she replied in a strained voice. "It is only my suffering. I came here to
contemplate it. Go, Shamed One. I would not interrupt my reverie over you. Go,
leave me in peace, and count yourself fortunate."
"Thank you,
great shaper. As you will."
And with that, he
withdrew. Sweat was coursing down
his brow, and his
limbs trembled slightly, but triumph was a supernova inside of him. He had what
he needed, now.
The supernova
cooled a little as he left the damutek and padded back into the village of the
Shamed Ones. He needed more than the lambent and the lightsaber. He needed
time, and solitude, and even the lenient Uunu wasn't likely to give him that.
But he also couldn't wait for Vua Rapuung any longer. Uunu was suspicious of
him. Hul Rapuung had voiced a similar suspicion, that very first day.
And Vua Rapuung
might be dead.
So he needed to hide
somewhere. Where?
Puzzling over
that, he ran headlong into someone. A Yuuzhan Vong cursed, and a strong hand
knotted in his hair. Startled, Anakin dropped both his lightsaber and the
lambent, which flared into sudden light.
In the
illumination, a mutilated face stared down at him.
"Vua
Rapuung!" he gasped.
"Yes,"
the other growled. "Quiet that lambent."
" Let go of
me, then."
The Yuuzhan Vong
did so, and Anakin dropped to one knee, retrieving both items. Be still, he
thought at the lambent, picturing it dark.
The light paled
and vanished.
"What are
you doing with that?" Rapuung snarled.
"Never mind.
I'm glad to see you. I've heard—"
"They tried
to kill me," Rapuung said shortly. "We must act now. Tonight, or
never."
"We
can't!" Anakin said. "There's something I still have to do."
"Impossible."
"No, listen.
You said one reason you wanted me was because of my lightsaber, right?"
"It would
help us a great deal," Rapuung growled reluctantly. "Without it I am
not certain how we will circumvent the portals and safeguards." He cocked
his head. " You lied to me? You have the weapon?"
"It doesn't
work. But I can fix it. With the lambent I can fix it."
"Do so,
then, and hurry."
"Even if I
hurry, it could take a day or two."
"Again,
impossible. We cannot hide for two days here, and if we go beyond the
perimeter, we will never come back in."
"I need two
days," Anakin said stubbornly.
"Tomorrow
they will realize I am alive," Rapuung said. "Unless you have a Jeedai
sorcery to make us invisible..."
"No,"
Anakin said, "but—listen. The temple that was here, the one built of
stone. How was it destroyed?"
"What? A
damutek was landed on it. Its substance was dissolved and used to nourish the
coral."
"But did
they fill in the caverns below it?"
"Caverns?"
"Yes,"
Anakin said excitedly. "If they just flattened the temple with one of
these damuteks, the caverns underneath might still be there. Didn't you say
the damuteks drive down roots, or something—for water and minerals?"
Rapuung swore.
"Of course," he said. "If there are indeed caverns of size
below, and if the gods are with us— but of course they are. I am Vua
Rapuung."
He said this last
as if repeating a mantra, and Anakin felt renewed apprehension, remembering
Uunu's opinion of Rapuung. If there had indeed been an official attempt on his
life, he might have gone from being a solenoid short of a transformer to a
fused mess of circuits.
But did it
matter? Mad or not, Rapuung was the closest thing to an ally Anakin had. Right
now, he would take what he could get.
Rapuung kept
talking, almost to himself it seemed. "They will think we have run into
the jungle again. She will search for us there, never in the very roots of her
stronghold. Never below her very feet. But we will need gnullith
breathers."
"You can get
those, right?" Anakin asked.
"I can get
them. But this is a risk," Rapuung warned him. "If we are noticed
entering the roots, we will be sealed there to die very long, very ignoble
deaths."
"More
ignoble than dying a Shamed One?" Anakin shot back. "Besides, it
never occurred to me you were worried by risk."
He couldn't see
Rapuung's face, but he could imagine the glare there.
"A good
thing you never thought that," Rapuung replied. "A very good thing.
As I said. Wait here."
And he was gone,
leaving only his putrid scent and the shadow of his anger. Anakin was once
again alone.
CHAPTER
TWENTY-SIX
"Adept Nen
Yim?"
Nen Yim searched
the darkened laboratory grotto for the sound of her name and found it coming
from a young male with the forehead marks of Domain Qel—one of the smaller
minor shaper domains. He lacked a shaper's hands, which placed him below her in
rank.
"You have my
name, Initiate," she said, letting a bit of irritation show. "And my
attention." Her head throbbed and occasionally spiked with the pain of the
Vaa-tumor thriving in it, but she embraced the growing discomfort. It would not
interfere with her work, or this conversation.
The male's
headdress was knotted in respect, but something about his face remained
annoyingly bold, if not challenging.
"My name is
Tsun," he said. "I have been assigned by Master Mezhan Kwaad to aid
you today in our glorious work."
Nen Yim braided
tendrils in skepticism. "The master said nothing of assistants," she
noted. "She was to meet me here herself."
Again, Tsun trod
the outskirts of perniciousness in the studied ease of his answer. "Mezhan
Kwaad sent me, Adept, to explain that she will meditate today rather than
labor. Her Vaa-tumor is to be removed next cycle, and she wishes these last
periods to contemplate her pain."
"I see. Your
message is delivered then. But how am I to recognize her authority in it?"
Tsun's eyes
flashed with a certain mischievous light. "I must say," he purred,
"I am honored. I have much wished to meet you, Adept Nen Yim."
That had a
strange effect. She felt a slight warmth creep up her neck. Was this another
side effect of her Vaa-tumor? She commanded her headdress to remain quiescent.
"Oh?" she replied.
"Yes. I was
once a companion to a friend of yours. Yakun."
This time she had
to clench her tendrils to keep her emotions hidden. This was suddenly a very
dangerous and painful nestling of history and words to be a part of.
"Yakun?"
she said, as if just remembering that there was such a name. "He was a
Domain Kwaad initiate in Baanu Kor?"
Tsun nodded.
"Yes. He introduced me to you once, when you tended the mernip breeding
pools together."
"That was
before his heresy," Nen Yim said.
"Yes,"
Tsun agreed. "Before they took him."
"We shall
not speak of him, then, shall we?" Nen Yim replied. "For he is a
heretic and not to be spoken of. I will forgive this mention of him.
Once."
Tsun genuflected.
"I knew him well, Adept Nen Yim, in the days after your reassignment. He
spoke of you often. He often wished to hear from you, especially near the
end."
She kept her
tongue and tentacles as still as unliving stone, but she remembered. Remembered
hearing the news of Yakun's accusation and sacrifice. She remembered private,
forbidden moments with him before, and her vain prayers to Yun-Txiin and
Yun-Q'aah to protect him.
How she had tried
not to think of him at all.
Perhaps Tsun
understood her posture, or her headdress betrayed her, for through the sudden
renewal of pain behind her eyes, she saw he knew.
"I do not
mean to sadden you," he said. "It is only that Master Mezhan Kwaad
asked me to tell you I knew him, that we were confidants."
The flash of
agony released as suddenly as it had come. Mezhan Kwaad did send him, Nen
Yim thought, her growing panic taking a step back. This is her message I am
to trust him. Yakun was a heretic. My master is a heretic. So is Tsun.
"Initiate
Tsun," she said firmly. "I said we should not speak of that person. I
mean it. Now let me show you our work."
The Jeedai's eyes
had lost much of their focus; she no longer glared like a predatory beast.
Instead she stared for long hours at nothing, a look of puzzlement on her face.
"She seems
stunned," Tsun noticed.
Nen Yim signaled
the vivarium to become opaque to sound. "She can hear us, and she knows
the tongue of the gods. Even in that state she might remember anything we say.
Or nothing."
"She is
being drugged?"
"Not
precisely. We are altering her memories."
"Ah,"
Tsun said knowingly. "The protocol of Qah."
"No,"
Nen Yim corrected, "not exactly. That protocol was ineffective on her
human brain."
"How can
that be?"
"It is a
simple biotic protocol in which clumps of memory neurons are introduced into a
Yuuzhan Vong brain. The Jeedai's brain is too different."
"And yet you
are modifying her memory."
"A bit at a
time. Soon we will be able to do so much more efficiently."
"You have
prayed for a new protocol?" Tsun asked slyly.
"No,"
Nen Yim replied. "Our approach has followed two axes. We have mapped and
remapped her nervous
system. We have
identified her memory networks and are using the provoker spineray to
discourage their use."
"You mean
her old memories trigger pain?"
"Yes.
Accessing her long-term memory extracts a pain sacrifice. The more connected
memories she tries to bring to conscious thought, the greater her
suffering."
"Why not
simply wipe clean the centers of memory and begin again?"
"Because she
retains the knowledge of her Jeedai powers. A day will come—after we've
shaped her— when we'll want her to remember how to use them."
Tsun studied the
human. "I see you have scarred her forehead with the Domain Kwaad
sign."
"We will do
more, in time. We will alter her face, especially that strange nose of hers.
But that is superficial. Attend."
Nen Yim squatted
near the vivarium membrane, opened it again to sound, and spoke to the
Jeedai. "What is your name?" she asked.
The Jeedai didn't
react. With a sigh, Nen Yim stimulated a minor pain center and cortical nerve
with the provoker spineray.
What would have
once made the young Jeedai shriek in agony only cycles before now merely
made her flutter her eyes and frown.
"Yes,
Adept?" the Jeedai said, as if waking reluctantly from a dream.
"What is
your name?" Nen Yim asked.
"My
name?"
"Yes."
" It
is—" She frowned, then suddenly her eyes bulged and she gripped her head.
"My name is—" Her teeth clenched and her face went white. Then, as if
in sudden remembrance, the Jeedai's face cleared.
"My name is
Riina Kwaad," she said.
"Very good,
Riina," Nen Yim said. "You have learned. And today you will learn
more."
"I see
now," Tsun said. "You trellis her thoughts. Unwanted responses bring
pain. Desired ones do not."
"No,"
Nen Yim replied. "That name came from an implanted memory."
"But you
just said that the protocol of Qah was ineffective."
"Yes. But we
can build a kind of Qah cell using her own, human brain cells."
A look of sheer
delight crossed the initiate's face. "So it is true," he
whispered. "Here, you pursue our dream, the superprotocol—the methods of
finding new knowledge without asking the gods."
Nen Yim felt
infected by his joy, but she drew her tentacles into a mild admonishment.
"Here, in these chambers of the master, such things may be spoken in
security," she cautioned. "But outside of this room, have a
care."
"Yes, of
course. I know what happens to heretics as well as you. But what am I to do?
Command me, Adept Nen Yim. Make me a part of this!"
He was very like
Yakun, Nen Yim reflected. How had she not seen it immediately, the passion in
his eyes? It was almost as if her lover had been reborn.
Keep to the task
at hand, she counseled herself. "The modified
memory cells are weak," she told Tsun. "Most are rejected within a
matter of hours and have to be reimplanted. My task is to understand why; it is
not a biochemical matter, as I see it—difficult to explain, and perhaps
connected to her Jeedai powers. Your task, Initiate Tsun, is to grow
new memories for her. We are in the process of transferring a complete set of
false memories developed in the Qah protocol to a human-cell equivalent. We
can then bud them as many times as we wish. When I have found a way to
condition her to accept implanted memories permanently, we will then have a
complete set to transfer. Meanwhile, we modify the cells, try them out, and
see how long they last. We might stumble
on a biological
solution in the process, or at the very least learn more about how her memory
works."
"I hear and
obey," Tsun said eagerly. "But since there is no protocol to follow
..."
"I will
demonstrate. The trials were rigorous and required much testing—"
"Testing,"
Tsun breathed. "A word I never thought to hear spoken aloud in this
context."
"Are you
listening, Initiate, or will you comment on my every word?" Nen Yim
remonstrated, trying to keep her voice stern.
"Apologies,
Adept," he said. "I am all attention."
"Good. I was
saying, Initiate, that developing the process was difficult, but the
resulting protocol is simple, and as easy to follow as any of the god-given
ones. If you come here, I will describe it to you."
He genuflected
and followed her eagerly, but did not interrupt her again except with necessary
questions.
Riina watched the
two Yuuzhan Vong go about their work in confusion. Who were they? Why was she
here?
Discontinuity. She came to, trembling, her thoughts drifting in angry swarms,
unwilling to associate with one another. She remembered the female asking her
name, and answering "Riina." That hadn't hurt.
But somehow it
was wrong.
There were things
she could see from the corner of her eye she could never see looking straight
on. Her real name was like that, lurking just out of sight. When she tried to
stare straight at it, it bit her with hot needle teeth.
That was true of
a lot of things. The face that kept appearing in the dark of her mind, the
voice that sometimes rang in her head, the memory that kept trying to surface
of how she had gotten here—all were shifting trails in the sand, all led to
agony.
But she couldn't
give up. She wasn't supposed to be here.
Or was she? Brief
flashes of color and sound came, now, of a world turned inside out, with no sky
but only land that curved up to meet itself. A creche-mother with a sloped
forehead and nearly noseless face. The prickly sweet scent of fuming omipal
during the ritual of appellation. The spicy, slightly rotten taste of von'u, a
rare treat given her by her naming-father.
Riina they called her. Riina Kwaad.
She felt as if
she were drifting down a stream of soothing water, surrounded by comforting
voices. She rubbed her forehead and felt the marks of her domain, and even the
raw pain of them felt good, in its own way.
Tahiri!
The voice again.
Memories of her past splintered like crystal and cut into her brain. Other
images flashed, names. One name.
Anakin.
The stream became
a river, raging, sucking her under, and Anakin was in it with her. She held to
the image, though paroxysms shook her body.
This was real.
This happened! We were little, at the academy, we were following dreams that
drew us together—
She screamed,
leapt, and slammed into the barrier that separated her from the Yuuzhan Vong.
She reached out in the Force to try to choke them, but they weren't there,
somehow. There was nothing real behind their startled faces.
"My name is
Tahiri!" she screamed at them. "I am Jedi! Tahiri!"
Then a tidal wave
of dazzling anguish crawled up every single nerve, centipedes with legs of
fire, and she lost consciousness.
"What did it
say?" Tsun asked.
"That was
Basic, the language of the infidels," Nen Yim told him.
"Should she
be able to access that?"
"No. She
still resists. We found that she somehow reroutes to nerve clusters we have
not mined. However, the provoker spineray follows the reroutes and stimulates
them, as well. In time, she will have no way into or out of those memories save
through the embrace of pain. By that time it will not matter. She will be
infidel no longer, and will welcome the challenge."
"Thank you
for explaining," he said.
Nen Yim
acknowledged him with a twist of her headdress, returning to her work.
CHAPTER
TWENTY-SEVEN
The damutek root
was a hollow tube, and when Anakin and Vua Rapuung entered it, it was almost a
meter in diameter. Close, but not claustrophobic.
As soon as it
sensed their presence, it constricted, hugging the contours of their bodies
with insistent strength. Anakin had to straighten his arms in front of him and
drag himself downward with the strength of his fingers.
He felt as if he
was suffocating. He couldn't go backwards, not with Vua Rapuung behind him. To
make matters worse, he was moving against a gentle but unrelenting current.
When the pressure against him grew too great he would curl his body into a
fetal position, something that took almost every bit of strength he had. When
he released and straightened his body, it took several seconds for the root
walls to contract and conform to his body again. It felt like trying to crawl
up the esophagus of a snake intent on swallowing. The only problem with that
analogy was that if he were doing that, he would be assured of light at the end
of the mucilaginous tunnel. Here he was crawling toward darkness, maybe
nothingness. What if the root ended in a sealed aquifer? How long would the
breather shoved down his windpipe continue to work? Until he starved, probably.
If he ever got
off Yavin 4, he promised himself, he would visit his uncle's homeworld,
Tatooine, or some other similarly desiccated place. He had had more than
enough of water
and other fluids on this trip to last him decades.
Fighting a
nattering little panic, Anakin continued dragging himself forward. Minutes
piled into hours.
He thought of
sunlight, wind, infinite space.
He thought of
Tahiri. Was he wrong to try to rebuild his lightsaber? Should he have gone on
charging after her without it? The strong, early contacts in the Force had
faded to occasional brushes, most powerfully when she was in agony. Anakin had
the clear impression that Tahiri was actually avoiding contact, shoving him
away.
Despite this, an
image of her prison had assembled itself in his mind—a small chamber divided
from a larger one by a thin but unbreakable membrane. Her jailers were Yuuzhan
Vong like the one he had seen by the succession pool, the one with the
tentacled headdress. Several other cells like the one she was in were visible,
but these were empty and dark, presumably waiting for more young Jedi captives.
The other thing
he was certain of was that Tahiri was in a great deal of confusion. Not only
did she not respond to his touch, she sometimes didn't even recognize it.
If he thought he
could save her without his lightsaber. ..
But he couldn't.
Even the insanely reckless Vua Rapuung thought so, or they would never be
squeezing themselves down a kilometer of small intestine.
Tahiri could hang
in there for another two days. She had to. And to save her, he could crawl
through anything.
Muscles
trembling, even when he freshened them with the Force, he moved on.
When he finally
emerged into a space large enough that he could float free and touch nothing,
he silently celebrated it by stretching, bending, kicking his arms, and waving
his feet. It was the most delicious feeling he could
imagine at that
moment. For perhaps a minute he thought of nothing but this simple jubilation,
but then the darkness lurking in his mind reminded him he would have to crawl
right back up the Sith-spawned thing if this cavern didn't go anywhere. He took
out his lambent crystal and willed it to life.
Rapuung appeared,
floating facing him, looking like a reptilian water monster. Beyond him Anakin
saw the tube opening extruding from a stone surface that bent to envelop them
in a cavern of indeterminate size. Anakin found gravity's direction and
started following the surface up, trailing one hand on it. At the same time he
stretched out with the Force, sensing water drumming slowly through stone,
searching for the sounding boards, the hollow places where air held court.
Anakin thought
he'd been happy to leave the tube. Pulling himself onto damp stone, yanking the
gnullith from his mouth, was infinitely better. He sat there, gasping and wet,
as Vua Rapuung climbed out of the water behind him.
"I hope this
was worth it," Rapuung growled.
"It will
be."
"Heal your
weapon so we can leave this skulking pit."
"I'll start
in a moment," Anakin said. "But first, Vua Rapuung, tell me
something. Do you really believe that the marks of your shame were inflicted
upon you by a shaper? That she did this to you for rejecting her love?"
"Who have
you been talking to?"
"The other
Shamed Ones talk. They saw me with you."
Rapuung's face
contorted as if he had swallowed the foulest thing in the world, but his head
chopped affirmatively.
"Our love
was forbidden. We both knew it. For a time neither of us cared. We believed
that Yun-Txiin and Yun-Q'aah had taken pity on us, dared the wrath of Yun-
Yuuzhan, and
given us a special dispensation. Such things have happened before, no matter
what ignorant things you may have heard." His lip curled. "It did not
happen with us. We were wrong."
"And you
broke it off."
"Yes. Love
is a madness. When my sanity began to return, I knew that I could not violate
the will of the gods. I told her so."
"And she
didn't like that."
Rapuung snorted.
"She blasphemed. She said there were no gods, that belief in them
was superstition, that we are free to do whatever we dare so long as we are
strong." His eyes turned away from Anakin. "Despite her heresy, I
would never have told anyone her words. She did not believe that. She feared I
would denounce her, or that one day our forbidden trysting would come to the
attention of her superiors. She is ambitious, Mezhan Kwaad. She is spiteful.
She made me appear Shamed because she knew no one would credit my words then,
that anything I said would be taken as the ravings of a lunatic."
"Why didn't
she just kill you?" Anakin asked. "Give you some poison or fatal
disease?"
"She is more
cruel than that," Rapuung snarled. "She would never give me the
release of death when she could debase me instead."
Rapuung's eyes
focused on the lambent. "What else did the other Shamed Ones say? They
called me insane, yes?"
"Yes, as a
matter of fact."
"I am
not."
Anakin measured
his words out carefully. "I don't care if you are," he said. "I
don't care about your revenge any more than you care about Tahiri. But I need
to know how far you will go. You say you're reconciled to me using my
lightsaber."
"I have said
so."
"I'm going
to rebuild it, as I told you. What I didn't mention is that I'm going to
rebuild it using this." He held up the lambent.
The Yuuzhan
Vong's eyes widened. "You would graft a living servant to your
machine?"
"A
lightsaber isn't exactly a machine."
"It isn't
alive."
"In a way it
is," Anakin said.
"In a way
dung is the same as food, at the molecular level, perhaps. Speak plainly."
"To do that,
I have to tell you about the Force, and you have to listen."
"The Force
is what you Jeedai kill with," Rapuung said.
"It's much
mere than that."
"Why do you
wish to explain this to me? "
"Because
when I use my lightsaber, I don't want any surprises from you like I got when I
lit the fire. I want to have this out here and now."
"Very well.
Explain your heresy to me."
"You've seen
me use the Force. You have to admit it is real."
"I've seen
things. They may have been tricks. Talk."
"The Force
is generated by life. It binds all things together. It's in everything—the
water, the stone, the trees in the forest. I am a Jedi Knight. We're born with
an aptitude for the Force, an ability to sense it, to control it—to guard its
balance."
"Balance?"
Anakin hesitated.
How to explain sight to a blind man? "The Force is light and life, but it
is also darkness. Both are necessary, but they have to be kept balanced. In
harmony."
"Putting
aside the stupidity of that whole idea," Rapuung said, "you're
telling me you Jeedai Knights keep this 'balance'? How? By rescuing your
comrades? By killing Yuuzhan Vong? Does fighting my people bring
balance in this
Force? How can it, when you admit we do not exist in it? You can move a
rock, but you cannot move me."
"That's
sometimes true," Anakin admitted.
"Very well.
If your superstition demands you seek to balance this mysterious power, why are
the Yuuzhan Vong your concern? Why bother with us at all?"
" Because
you've invaded our galaxy, killed our people, stolen our worlds. You don't
expect us to fight back?"
"I expect
warriors to fight, to embrace pain and death, to sing the song of slaughter
with bloody lips. That is what Yuuzhan Vong do, and we do it not to bring balance,
but truth. What you describe makes no sense. Tell me—are the Yuuzhan
Vong part of this 'dark side' you speak of?"
Anakin looked at
him frankly. "I think so."
"Does your
magical Force tell you this?"
"No.
Because—"
" Because we
do not exist in it. It is not a part of us or we a part of it. So again, how do
you judge us a part of your dark side?"
"By your
actions," Anakin said.
"Actions? We
kill in battle. You kill in battle. We kill in stealth. You kill in stealth.
You fight for your people. I fight for mine."
"It's our
galaxy!"
" The gods
have given it to us. They have commanded we bring you the truth. This Force of
yours is for lesser beings, those who do not know the gods."
"I do not
accept that," Anakin said.
"And yet you
would have me accept something I cannot see or smell? Something you merely tell
me exists? Do you believe in the gods?"
Anakin hesitated,
then tried again. "You've seen me use the Force."
"I've seen
you do amazing things. I haven't seen you
do anything that
we Yuuzhan Vong could not accomplish. Our dovin basals can move planets. Our
yammosks and even the lowly lambent you hold there can speak mind to mind. I
admit what I see—that you have powers I do not have. I need not believe your
superstitions as to where these powers come from."
"Then
don't," Anakin said hotly.
"And what
does all of this have to do with building your abominable weapon?"
"A
lightsaber is more than just an ordinary weapon. Each Jedi builds his or her
own. The pieces are bound together by the Force and by the Jedi's will and
make something greater than the sum of its parts. It becomes a thing alive in
the Force."
"It is made
of inanimate parts. It cannot be alive."
"All living
things are made of inanimate parts, if you look small enough," Anakin pointed
out. "Nothing is really inanimate. As I said, the Force is in everything.
There will be something of me in my lightsaber, and something of this lambent
in me."
Vua Rapuung
nodded thoughtfully. " I begin to see the roots of your foul heresy, now.
You make use of abominations because you somehow think them alive?"
Anakin stood
abruptly. "I've explained what I'm going to do. Will you oppose me? Are
you going to snap when I start fighting your people with my lightsaber?"
Vua Rapuung
glared at him in the dim light of the lambent. Anakin could hear his teeth
clicking together.
"The gods
led me to you," he said at last. "Not Yun-Shuno, that many-eyed
mother of snivelers, but Yun-Yuuzhan himself. He told me in a vision that the Jeedai
infidel with his blade of light would lead me to my revenge and
vindication. That is why I followed you down here, when my instincts screamed
against it. It is why I did not kill you when you used the first abomination.
Everything you say sounds to me as a lie. The reasons
you give for me
to accept your weapon make no sense. But Yun-Yuuzhan has spoken to me."
"Then you
accept what I told you about the Force?"
"Of course
not. As I said before, I can admit that what my senses tell me is true without
believing your delirious justification of it. Your weapon may be acceptable to
the gods; your heresy is not. Build your blade."
With that,
Rapuung stalked off into the darkness.
"And you say
I don't make any sense," Anakin sighed.
Disappointment
edged at Anakin, but he fought it back.
He could feel the
lambent, but not in the Force, not the way he could feel everything else about
his weapon. Everything was in place, fitted, ready to work. But what he had
told Rapuung was the truth; the real moment a lightsaber became a Jedi's weapon
was when the first amperes of power trickled through it, when each piece became
a part of the other and a part of the Jedi building it.
But the lambent
was resisting that. Well, not resisting actually, but not going along with the
whole scheme, either.
And time was
passing, each moment bringing Tahiri closer to something terrible.
Concentrate, he thought. There is no try.
But there was
failure, especially here. Master Yoda's words, his entire philosophy, required
the presence of the Force in everything.
But the Force
wasn't in the Yuuzhan Vong. It wasn't in their biotech. They could be fought
only indirectly, with things that could be sensed in the Force.
Something slapped
him, then, something that had been cocking its hand back for a long time.
Master Yoda was
wrong.
The Jedi were
wrong, and Vua Rapuung was right. If the Jedi stood for nothing but seeking
balance in the Force, then he did have no business fighting the Yuuzhan
Vong. Oh, he
could rescue Tahiri; after all, preventing her from becoming a dark Jedi was at
the core of the philosophy. But were actions—However bad or evil they
seemed—were the actions of the Yuuzhan Vong in and of themselves worth opposing
if they had no effect on the Force?
To be sure, the
aliens were killing people, which always disturbed the Force. But did it
unbalance it? The Yuuzhan Vong weren't gathering dark energy about themselves.
If anyone ran the risk of doing that, it was Jedi like Kyp and maybe even
himself. Seen like that, fighting the Yuuzhan Vong was more likely to unbalance
the Force than any action they themselves might take.
Sure, that all
made sense. It almost sounded like something Jacen or Uncle Luke would say. But
that was all predicated on the certainty that the Force was in everything.
And it wasn't.
And while the facts of the matter were staring them all in the face, no Jedi
had had the guts to confront the new reality. Instead they were acting like
spoiled children, complaining that the Yuuzhan Vong didn't play fair, weren't
following those black-and-white rules. So Kyp went out to shoot them, to try to
make the problem go away by killing it. Jacen huddled away in indecision.
Maybe he was right.
No. It wasn't
right for the Yuuzhan Vong to kill whole planets. It wasn't right for them to
enslave people. Those actions were evil, they were wrong, and they had to be
fought. If the Force did not draw that line and set great dark-side alarms
wailing, then maybe Anakin didn't serve the Force. Or to put it more precisely,
he served something more fundamental than the Force, something of which the
Force was a manifestation, an emanation—a tool. Not Rapuung's gods, or any god,
but some fundamental truth built into the universe at a subatomic level. In
his galaxy, the Force was the servant of that truth. Wherever the Yuuzhan Vong
were from, some other mani-
festation must
prevail. But light remained light, and dark, dark. And whatever had happened to
the Yuuzhan Vong, they had turned to the dark side long ago. If the Empire of
Palpatine had prevailed and traveled to another galaxy on an errand of
conquest, a galaxy where the Force was not known, what evidence would the
people there have of the light side of the Force? Could they know that the
Empire was an aberration of what ought to be? No. Similarly, Anakin didn't
know—couldn't know—what manifestation of the light the Yuuzhan Vong had left behind
them. But they had left it behind.
Maybe this was
even the result of a whole people turning entirely to the dark side. Maybe the
Force simply rejected them, or they it.
That didn't make
them all evil, any more than everyone who served the Empire was evil. But it
made them worth opposing. Without anger or hatred, yes. But they had to be
stopped, and Anakin Solo would never turn his eyes from that.
With a sudden
surge of confidence, he reached for the parts of his lightsaber in the Force
and then pressed deeper.
So he had to work
indirectly with the Yuuzhan Vong and their things. Fine. But behind the seeming
disunity, there must be unity.
And in a flash of
epiphany he had it. The link between the rest of his lightsaber and the lambent
was Anakin Solo. It was in him the changes had to happen.
Power surged and
crackled, and the cavern echoed with a snap-hiss, and somewhere Vua
Rapuung snarled.
Anakin opened his
eyes to the purple glow of his lightsaber and felt a grin slash his face in
half.
"I am Jedi
again," he said quietly.
Perhaps a new
kind of Jedi altogether.
"Two cycles
have come and gone," Vua Rapuung growled, a few moments later. His
features were hollow
in the violet
glow. "Your abominable weapon works, it seems. Are we done with skulking?
May we at last embrace our foes?"
" You embrace
them," Anakin said. "I'm going to knock them down. Your shapers want
Jedi? One is coming to them."
PART THREE CONQUEST
CHAPTER
TWENTY-EIGHT
Mezhan Kwaad
curled her headdress in recognition at Nen Yim as she entered the laboratory.
"Detail your
progress, Adept," the master said. Her tone was curt and her tendrils
suggested irritation.
"We made
good progress in your absence, Master," Nen Yim said cautiously. "I
think with only minor genetic adjustments, the memory implants will be permanent.
She resists them less than she did when last you were here."
"Yes,"
Mezhan Kwaad replied, anger twitching her tendrils. "Valuable days,
missed." She turned to Nen Yim. " But at least you were here, my
adept, and competent to carry on."
Nen Yim watched
Mezhan Kwaad cross to the vivarium. The Jeedai still had a blank look
most of the time, but now and then Nen Yim thought she saw something working
behind those alien green eyes. Something more Yuuzhan Vong than human.
"Can you
tell me your name?" Mezhan Kwaad asked the Jeedai.
Only a slight
hesitation, this time. "Riina," the Jeedai said. "My name
is Riina."
"Very good,
Riina. Did Nen Yim explain what has been done to you?"
"A
little."
"Tell me
what you remember."
"The
infidels captured me as a child, at the rim of their
galaxy. They made
me look like one of them and gave me false memories with their Jeedai powers."
"This seems
right to you?"
"Not always.
Sometimes I think I am—" She gasped and clenched her hands. "—someone
else."
"The infidel
conditioning was excellent. Before we rescued you, they tried to wipe your mind
clean. There was much damage."
"I feel
that," the Jeedai answered.
"There is
something I need to know," Mezhan Kwaad replied. "You were born with
certain powers. You were taught lies about these powers, but we are attending
to that. What I fear, Riina, is that your injuries may have crippled those
powers."
"I cannot
even think of them," the Jeedai said. Small droplets of water
formed in the corners of her eyes and ran down her face.
"I'm going
to help you with that," the master said. She gestured to make the vivarium
opaque to sound and spoke to Nen Yim. "Quiet the provoker spineray."
Nen Yim started.
"Master, that might not be wise. She still has moments when she asserts
her real identity. We have closed most of those neural paths, but if we remove
the promise of pain—"
"The new
memories are in place for now, yes? They seem to be working quite well. They
will keep her in check. This will not take long."
"This will
confuse her," Nen Yim argued. "It might set us back."
"Who is
master here, Adept?" Mezhan Kwaad asked brusquely. "Are you seriously
questioning my expertise?"
Nen Yim quickly
genuflected. "I am pitiable, Master. Of course I shall do as you say. I
merely wished to voice my concerns."
"They are
noted. Now, silence the spineray."
Nen Yim did so,
and Mezhan Kwaad once again made the membrane permeable to sound. She produced
a small
stone from her
oozhith's pouch and placed it on the chamber floor.
"Once you
could lift a stone like this with your will," she told the Jeedai. "I
wish to see you do so now."
"I will have
to call upon false memories," the Jeedai moaned. "Painful
ones."
"We embrace
pain," Mezhan Kwaad said. "Your resistance to it is a human weakness
implanted in you. Do as I say."
"Yes,
Master," the Jeedai replied. She fixed her gaze on the stone and
closed her eyes. She winced, but then her face smoothed, and the stone lifted
from the floor as if grasped in an invisible hand.
Mezhan Kwaad
barked a brief, victorious laugh. "Nen Yim," she commanded, "map
the brain areas showing the most activity."
"Yes,
Master."
"Riina, you
may lower the stone, now."
Obediently, the
stone sank back to the floor.
"It didn't
hurt," the Jeedai said. "I thought it would hurt."
"You see?
Your cure is progressing well. Soon you will remember everything about your
life as a Yuuzhan Vong."
" I wish . .
." The Jeedai trailed off wistfully.
"What?"
"I feel like
I'm two halves of two different people, glued together," she said. "I
wish I were whole again."
"You will
be," Mezhan Kwaad answered. "Before you know it, you will be. Now, if
you could lift the stone again, please."
"Clearly
these abilities aren't located in a single brain center any more than they are
generated by an organ," Mezhan Kwaad said later, as they looked over the
results of their experimentation.
"Her Jeedai
powers are distributed in the neural net somehow, nonlocalized. The
commands come from this
lobe in the front
of her brain, obviously, which is where most of her coherent thought occurs, as
well. And yet there is also considerable activity in the hindbrain."
"Perhaps her
control emanates from modified muscular systems," Nen Yim suggested.
"I see no
evidence that this young female has been modified in any way, and the infidels
have shown only the most rudimentary knowledge of biology."
"I meant
modified by selection from generation to generation."
"Selective
breeding? Interesting. We know from our infidel sources that this 'Force' runs
more strongly in some families than others, and that Jeedai often mate with
Jeedai." Her tentacles knotted in frustration. "We need more Jeedai,
a larger sample. The incompetence of warriors—" She suddenly tremored
and reached her eight-fingered hand to her head. "It is time. I must have
the Vaa-tumor removed. Yet another despicable delay."
Nen Yim gave her
master a puzzled look. "I thought that's where you've been, having the
Vaa-tumor removed."
Mezhan Kwaad's
eyes went to slits. "What? Why did you think that?"
" You were
gone for two cycles, Master."
"Indeed,
engaged in meaningless political exercises with Master Yal Phaath. He called
via villip for a formal convocation of masters on the matter of delegating responsibilities
on the new worldship. I was forced into a ritual seclusion, and at a quite inconvenient
time."
"But the
assistant you sent said nothing of that. He did say you were having your
Vaa-tumor removed."
That had a
remarkable effect on Mezhan Kwaad. Her tendrils fell limp, and her tone went
colder than frozen nitrogen. "What assistant?"
"Tsun."
"I know no
one by that name," Mezhan Kwaad said.
"But he told
me you sent him."
"And that I
was having my Vaa-tumor removed?"
"Yes. But he
knew things about me. About what we do here."
Mezhan Kwaad
folded down to a sitting mat and rubbed her head.
"No,"
she sighed. "He guessed that we were engaged in heresy, and you confirmed
it. The convocation was a ruse to keep me busy. Yal Phaath now has his
evidence, thanks to you."
"No!"
"Oh, I'm
afraid so," a voice from the doorway boomed. Nen Yim spun to see Commander
Tsaak Vootuh standing in the doorway, an escort of his personal guard just
behind him.
Mezhan Kwaad drew
herself to her full height.
"This is a
shaper damutek. You do not have my permission to enter it."
"I do not
need it," the commander replied. "I have the authority of Master Yal
Phaath. I'm also afraid I must take both of you captive and search your
chambers for evidence."
"Evidence of
what? Accuse us!" Mezhan Kwaad snapped. "Do not insult us with
captivity without challenging!"
"The
accusation is heresy, of course," Tsaak Vootuh replied. "An
accusation readily born out by the evidence, I feel certain."
CHAPTER
TWENTY-NINE
Going back up the
root was much easier than coming down it; the current was with them. It was not
one micron more pleasant.
They emerged in
the succession pool under orange Yavin light.
On the way up,
Anakin had noticed an interesting thing.
Vua Rapuung
existed for him now.
Not in the Force,
not with the clarity that the Force offered, but he was there, a shadow of
fury cast from the lambent to Anakin's mind.
That wasn't all.
He also felt the confused, staticky hum of the hundreds of Yuuzhan Vong around
him. The noise cut in and out, like a bad comm transmission, but it was
undeniably there.
It wasn't the
Force, but it was something, and he could see their works with new eyes. His
gaze was drawn to details in the living structures around him he hadn't
noticed—or cared to notice—before.
With Rapuung,
Anakin slipped into the shadows.
" Your
Jeedai is still in this damutek?" Rapuung asked.
Anakin
concentrated. Tahiri was there, but every day she became. .. fuzzier, harder to
pinpoint. Now he barely heard her at all.
"She hasn't
moved," Anakin replied. "She's that way." He pointed.
Rapuung grimaced.
"That's not the core laboratories of the shaping compound."
"It's where
I feel her."
Rapuung rubbed
his flat nose. "It makes sense. It's where her quarters are, her
personal chambers. If she keeps the work on the Jeedai close to her, and
hopes it will go unseen, she would do it there."
"Why would
she want that?" Anakin asked.
"I don't
know. I don't understand the way of shapers. And yet she was always secretive
in what she did. She was always nervous." His voice softened slightly.
"Always doing things she shouldn't."
"Like having
an affair with you."
Rapuung's
nostrils contracted until they were nearly closed, but he chopped his head
once. "Yes. Speak no more of it. Come, infidel."
"Lead on. I
know the direction, but not the way."
Without another
word, Rapuung padded off. An opening in the wall parted for him.
The shaper
compound was an eight-armed star with the pool in the center. The corridor they
entered took them up one of the arms. Within, the compound was illuminated by
phosphorescence punctuated by the occasional lambent that sparked to life when
Rapuung came near. A faint smell of seaweed and lizard permeated the corridors,
which were at turns quite regular and wildly asymmetric. The pool was not the
crosswalks of the place; a torus of connecting corridors joined the rays of the
star and served that purpose.
Anakin tensed as
they met their first Yuuzhan Vong. A cluster of them stood together, discussing
something he couldn't quite catch. When they saw Rapuung and Anakin they
stopped and stared, but didn't say anything.
"This is
easier than I thought it would be," Anakin said, after they were past the
group.
Rapuung grunted.
"I would have killed them if I
thought it would
help, but they sent the signal the instant they saw us."
"What are
you talking about?"
"A Shamed
One and a slave in a shaper compound? Unlikely."
" But they
didn't—"
"Scream?
Run? Shapers they may be, but they are Yuuzhan Vong. If we came to kill them,
they would be dead. They know that."
"So what do
we expect now?"
But Rapuung
didn't have to answer. Ahead of them, the walls, floor, and ceiling of the
corridor suddenly met one another.
"Whoops,"
Anakin managed. A quick look behind him showed the same thing.
"We have
seconds," Rapuung said. "Do not inhale."
Anakin nodded and
ignited his lightsaber. The fierce purple light highlighted the mist emerging
from the corridor walls. Anakin approached the obstruction and cut into it
with broad strokes.
Vonduun crab
armor it wasn't. After the first cut, the stuff actually flinched away from his
blade. In moments he had carved a hole large enough to step through.
Beyond, the
corridor continued another four meters and ended in another dilation. This
section was already full of mist.
Anakin cut
through that, too, but his lungs were starting to hurt now, and black spots
danced before his eyes, so rather than attacking the inevitable barrier that
had closed beyond the second one, he cut through the wall to his right.
That spilled the
pair into a large chamber where two startled Yuuzhan Vong looked up from
examining something that resembled a twined bundle of black vines as big
around as Anakin's thigh. He couldn't tell if it was animal or vegetable, and
he didn't care.
"Which way
now?" Anakin asked.
Rapuung stabbed a
finger at the two shapers. "One of you. Take me to the personal
laboratories of Master Mezhan Kwaad."
The shorter of
the two frowned. "You're a Shamed One."
Rapuung reached
him in two strides and struck him high in the chest, lifting the shaper from
his feet and slamming him into the wall. He slumped to the floor, blood
spilling from his lips.
"You,"
Rapuung said to the other. "Lead us to Mezhan Kwaad."
The second shaper
looked at his unconscious companion.
"Come with
me," he said.
"Can they
fill this chamber with gas?" Anakin asked Rapuung.
"Of course.
However, now that we've exited the corridor they think we're in they'll have
to consult with the damutek brain to find us. That will take time. By then, the
warriors will be here."
"I was
wondering why there weren't any guards."
"This is a
shaper place. Warriors must be invited here, and then only in times of duress.
Normally there is no need for guards. It's been centuries since anyone invaded
a shaper damutek. Who would wish to but an infidel?"
"Vua
Rapuung, apparently," Anakin replied.
The shaper took
them through a quick series of turns and then into a long, straight corridor
that ended in one of the membranes that normally served as doors.
"Through
there," their captive said, "is the master's personal chambers. But
the threshold will not open itself to any of us."
"That is why
I have a Jeedai with me," Rapuung told him, as Anakin thumbed the
blade on and cut through the door. In doing so he nearly bisected the warrior
just on the other side. The Yuuzhan Vong blinked at him in astonishment, then
jerked his amphistaff to an attack position.
Rapuung charged
past Anakin, lunged beneath the warrior's not-quite-ready guard, and struck
him under the chin with the deteriorating talon on his elbow. The implant
jammed in the being's mandible and tore out. Rapuung hardly seemed to notice,
turning his attention instead to the roomful of warriors beyond.
Anakin leapt in
behind him and turned aside an amphistaff slashing toward Rapuung with the
blade of his lightsaber. Rapuung's attacker, recognizing the new danger,
twisted the amphistaff and let it go limp. Then he whipped it underhand toward
Anakin's throat. Anakin did a quick circular parry, wrapping the limp staff
around his blade, and did a jumping front kick. The Yuuzhan Vong blocked that
with his free hand, but some of the blow's force got through. Anakin cut his
blade, dropped in at close quarters, jammed the blade emitter under the
warrior's armpit, and flicked it back on.
The warrior
jerked and fell away, exhaling a cloud of steam.
Anakin sensed a
blow from behind, and without thinking he ducked, did a behind-the-back block,
and felt the sharp rap of an amphistaff. He dropped, swept his unseen
attacker's feet, and tumbled away from yet a third attacker.
Only when he was
back in the clear, preparing to meet the two, did he realize what had happened.
He had sensed the Yuuzhan Vong behind him. Not as clearly as he might in the
Force, but it had been good enough to save his life.
They came at him
with a certain caution, which gave Anakin time to notice that Vua Rapuung had
downed another warrior and was busily engaged with three more. That seemed to
complete the count of warriors in the chamber, though others might run in from
the large opening at the other end of the room.
One problem at a
time.
One of the
Yuuzhan Vong slashed at Anakin's left leg,
while another did
a whip-over toward his right shoulder. He leapt over the low attack and sliced
his blade down the semirigid side of the high one. His blade hit the Yuuzhan
Vong's fingers, and two of them came off. From there Anakin lunged toward his
second foe's eye. The fellow jerked his head back and yanked his amphistaff up
to parry. Anakin disengaged, avoiding the parry, and finished his blow right
where a human sternum would be. The vonduun crab armor scorched but did not
split, but the blow was strong. The Yuuzhan Vong was already off balance from
avoiding the thrust to his eye, and now he sprawled heavily to the ground.
In those two or
three seconds, Anakin's other opponent whipped the amphistaff in such a way
that it coiled around Anakin's head and blade, the latter of which he had just
drawn to an inner guard at his shoulder. Only turning the blade off kept him
from being cut by his own weapon, but then there was nothing to prevent the
amphistaff from closing around his neck like a garrote. Anakin reached
reflexively for his throat, dropping his weapon. With a cry, the Yuuzhan Vong
warrior turned his back, clearly intending to heave Anakin in a hard shoulder
throw and snap his neck in the process. Anakin went with the throw and came
down face-to-face with the warrior, his neck still intact.
Of course, he
couldn't draw the tiniest sip of air. Almost contemptuously, the warrior
lifted him from the floor, both hands still gripping the ends of the
amphistaff.
The Yuuzhan Vong
didn't see the lightsaber lift from the floor behind him, but he did notice
when the purple blade appeared in his neck. He dropped Anakin, then.
Unfortunately,
the amphistaff continued with the business of choking Anakin, and his second
foe had found his feet. Anakin managed to get his blade in hand in time to
block a dozen blows from the warrior's staff, before he felt his lights going
out. His blood screamed for air and his legs felt like they were made of wood.
He fell away from
the attack, dropped like a rag doll, and in the minute pause when his enemy
thought he had really collapsed, he turned the fall into a roll that took him
past the Yuuzhan Vong, where he cut both legs behind the knee.
Then Anakin saw
space.
"How long
was I out?" Anakin asked Vua Rapuung. The Yuuzhan Vong dropped the
amphistaff that had been coiled around Anakin's neck.
"Only
heartbeats."
Anakin pushed
himself up. "Are there more warriors?"
" None
capable of fighting, not in this chamber. There may be more nearby."
Anakin gingerly
massaged his neck. "I thought you said there wouldn't be warriors in
here."
"I was
wrong. But they must be here for some purpose."
"Maybe they
knew we were coming."
"Perhaps. I
do not think so. These are the commander's personal troops."
"Wonderful.
We'd better hurry this up, then."
"Our guide
fled, but we need him no longer. We must be near now."
Anakin looked
around at the fallen warriors. "Not that you seem to need it," he
said, "but why not take one of these amphistaffs?"
"I have
sworn an oath to the gods," Rapuung said. "Until I am redeemed before
my people, I will not lift the weapon of a warrior."
"Oh. That
makes sense." Anakin took a few steps and windmilled his arms, making sure
everything worked.
"I don't
like the warriors being here," Rapuung said.
" I'm not
fond of it myself."
"That's not
what I meant. If they are here without the permission of the shapers, it could
mean they've come to arrest a shaper or to take something from them."
"Can they do
that?"
Vua Rapuung
rasped a laugh. "You know too little of our ways, infidel, and too little
about Mezhan Kwaad."
"But
what—" Anakin began, but then he got it. "Tahiri!"
"Come,"
Vua Rapuung said. "There is still time."
"This is the
place," Anakin said. "This is where they had her." His gaze
searched wildly about the room. It didn't resemble a laboratory so much as a
vivisectorium, each surface covered with internal organs—except some of these
pulsed and mewled the way severed body parts didn't. Usually. A quarter of the
chamber was walled off by a transparent membrane. "She was in there,"
he clarified.
"Of
course."
"Where would
they have gone?"
" I don't
see any other way out," Rapuung replied.
"Well,
then—" But as before, he sensed something at his back. Another section of
the wall had just gone transparent and permeable. Yuuzhan Vong warriors were
pouring through it. Behind them Anakin could make out the yellow of Tahiri's hair.
"
Tahiri!" he shouted, and threw himself at the wave of enemies.
CHAPTER THIRTY
Vua Rapuung
howled. Anakin fought in grim silence. Their initial charges carried them into
the midst of the warriors, but unlike the group they had just bested, these
weren't scattered around a room, unprepared for a fight. Anakin and his
companion were soon forced back toward the first vivarium by the six warriors
who had engaged them. The other six—one of whom was vastly more scarred than
the rest, probably a leader—led Tahiri and what appeared to be two female
shapers back out the door Anakin and Rapuung had entered through.
"No!"
Anakin exploded. He tried to leap over the warriors blocking his way, but one
snagged his ankle with the amphistaff and used the momentum of his leap to slam
him into the floor. Anakin cushioned the fall with the Force, but his enemy was
still between him and the door, and his foot was still caught. That is, until
Rapuung hit the fellow on the back of the head so hard that teeth flew out.
Rapuung stood over Anakin, and for a moment, they weren't under attack. The
warriors merely stood there, watching the Shamed One and Anakin warily.
"Vua
Rapuung," one of them snarled finally. "What are you doing here with
this infidel? You should be in the Shamed One's village, pursuing your
redemption."
"I have
nothing to be redeemed for," Rapuung said. "I have been wronged. You
all know it."
"We know
your claims."
"You, Tolok
Naap. You fought beside me only a few tens of cycles ago. You believe me cursed
by the gods?"
The warrior he
had addressed flared his nostrils, but did not reply. The one who had spoken
before, however, lowered his voice. "Whatever you were, whether you are
cursed or not, you have clearly gone mad. You fight with an infidel against
your own kind."
"I seek my
vengeance," Rapuung said. "Mezhan Kwaad. Where is she going?"
"The shaper
master has been taken up for her trials. The accusation is heresy."
"They're
taking her outsystem?"
"I do not
know."
"I cannot
let her be taken, not until she admits she has wronged me. Any who stand in the
way of that will leave this life on wings of blood."
"We will
stop you," Tolok Naap said. "But we will fight you as the warrior you
once were." He threw Rapuung his amphistaff. "Take up a weapon. Do
not make us kill a bare-handed man."
"Thus far I
have triumphed without weapons," Rapuung said. "If the gods hated
me, would this be so?"
" You have
this Jeedai as your amphistaff," one of them sneered. "Lay him
aside, and we will lay down our weapons. Then we shall see how the gods love
you."
Rapuung turned a
glaring eye on Anakin. "Stand away, Jeedai."
"Rapuung, I
have no time for games. Tahiri—"
" Is with
the object of my vengeance. If we lose the one, we lose the other. I will make
it swift."
Anakin stared at
Rapuung, then nodded curtly. He stepped back and switched off the weapon.
Eighty seconds
later, stepping over the corpses, Anakin glanced sidewise at Rapuung.
"What was it
you needed me for?" he asked. "I'm forgetting."
They jogged down
the corridor, gazes cutting right and left, alert for ambush from side
corridors.
"When we
have Mezhan Kwaad," Rapuung said, "you must keep death from my back
until I have forced her to speak. That is why I need you."
"I can do
that."
"Swear it.
Swear it by this Force you worship. Keep death from my back until she
speaks—for no less a time and no longer."
"I swear
it," Anakin replied. "If we ever get that close, that is. How long
before reinforcements arrive?"
"Not
long."
"Well. Then
we're going about this all wrong. We're just going to run into whatever ambush
they have planned."
"And we will
walk through them."
"Neither of
us is made of neutronium," Anakin observed.
"I will hide
no more."
"Hiding
isn't what I had in mind," Anakin said. "Just a little change in
tactics."
"Explain."
For answer,
Anakin raised his lightsaber and sliced a hole in the low ceiling. "Do you
need a boost up?" he asked.
Moments later,
from the roof of the star-shaped compound, Anakin and Vua Rapuung watched
warriors station themselves at the ground-level exits and entrances. Yavin was
half-set, and it was darker now than it had been when they emerged from the
succession pool, but Anakin knew the sun would be up soon.
"They will
find our escape route quickly," Rapuung said.
"I know. I
don't need long." Once again, he reached out through the Force, searching
for Tahiri. She was there, but her presence was still fitful, hard to pinpoint.
Tahiri. Hear me.
I must find you.
The response was
rejection.
Tahiri. You know
me. You're my best friend. Please.
This time he
caught a faint hesitation and then something like a step in his direction. He
saw a brief vision of coralskippers and larger Yuuzhan Vong ships he had no
name for.
"Sithspawn!"
he exclaimed. "They're going to board a ship."
Rapuung growled,
deep in his throat. "No, they are not" he said. "This
way."
They leapt down
to the outside of the compound between the rays, far from any entrances, and
slipped past the most lightly guarded exit, apparently without being noticed.
Another hundred meters brought them to the ship compound.
Like its cousin,
this damutek was a sprawling star with entrances and exits at the tips of the
rays. Unlike it, its succession pool was covered, surfaced with something alien
to provide parking space for Yuuzhan Vong ships. Tahiri and the group of
warriors with her were walking up the ramp—or tongue, or whatever it was—of one
of the larger ships. Perhaps fifty other Yuuzhan Vong went about various tasks
in the compound. Most looked like Shamed Ones, though a few intendants were
also at hand. Stifling a shout, Anakin threw himself into a run, Rapuung a
silent shadow beside him.
When they were
yet twenty meters from the ship, a cry went up. Three warriors guarding the
ramp dropped to their knees and hurled thud bugs. Time slowed for Anakin as he
ignited his blade and brought it up to deflect them.
Three snapped
against the bright blade and arced off on divergent tangents as embers. None of
them hit Anakin, but Rapuung grunted.
He didn't slow,
however. They hit the three guards like a thunder front and sprang up the
landing ramp into another hail of thud bugs.
This time Anakin
was not as fortunate. One of the things went through his thigh, and he dropped
to one knee, blocking two more that would have opened his chest in unpleasant
places. Rapuung yowled, twisted, and hit the ramp with a damp, meaty thud.
Anakin struggled
to rise.
"Stop,
Jeedai," a cold voice said.
It was the
commander. He stood next to Tahiri, with an amphistaff curled around her neck.
His remaining three warriors gathered in front of him.
"Tahiri!"
Anakin said.
"That isn't
my name," Tahiri told him. "I am Riina Kwaad."
"You're
Tahiri, my best friend," Anakin said. "Whatever they've done to you,
I know you remember me."
"You may be
a part of the infidel lies implanted in her," one of the female
shapers—the older one—said. "But you are no more than that."
"Enough,"
the commander snapped. "This is to no purpose. You, Jeedai. If you
have come to rescue this one, you have failed. I will kill her where she stands
if you continue to struggle."
"Is this the
vaunted courage of the Yuuzhan Vong?" Anakin asked. "Hiding behind a
hostage?"
"You
misunderstand. I know who you are. You are Anakin Solo, brother to Jacen Solo,
he who is so much desired by Warmaster Tsavong Lah. I wish to have your
surrender. I wish to have you alive. If I do not get my wish—if you take
another step in attack—then the female will die. After that, I will cripple you
if I can. Since the latter approach might lead to your accidental death, I
prefer the former."
"I'll go in
her place," Anakin said. "Of my own will. But you have to release
her."
"How
ridiculous," the commander said. "I will do nothing of the kind. Your
decision will decide whether she lives or dies, nothing more. She is
ours."
"Jeedai,"
Vua Rapuung croaked, rising shakily to his
feet. "Remember your oath to me." Anakin saw with dismay that Rapuung
had one hand stuffed into a gaping hole in his belly.
What could he do?
The commander would kill Tahiri. He was sure of that, and in his present
condition he would never be able to stop it. But if he surrendered, he betrayed
Vua Rapuung.
But Rapuung was
probably dying. How would regaining his honor now do anyone any good?
Anakin put his
hand on Rapuung's shoulder. "I remember my oath," he said.
"Which one is she?"
"The female
with the eight-fingered hand."
Anakin looked
back up at the commander. "All right, this one thing, then, if you want me
alive. It will cost you nothing."
"I doubt
that. Speak."
"Compel the
shaper named Mezhan Kwaad to speak the truth."
"About
what?"
"The
questions Vua Rapuung will put to her."
"I see no
'Vua Rapuung,' " the commander said stiffly. "Only a Shamed One who
does not know his place."
"It is not I
who am shamed," Rapuung said. "Do as the infidel says, and know the
truth."
"There is no
sense in listening to any demented lies from this one," Mezhan Kwaad said.
"He fights by the side of a Jeedai infidel. What more need be said?"
Behind them, the
square was gradually filling with warriors and onlookers. A shout came from
below.
"Do you fear
the truth, Mezhan Kwaad? If he is mad, then compelling you to speak will do you
no harm."
Anakin looked
over his shoulder and saw the warrior who had stopped them the first day—Hul
Rapuung, Vua's brother.
A general murmur
of approval went around with that.
"How many of
you fought with him?" Hul continued.
"Who ever
questioned the courage of Vua Rapuung? Who ever doubted the gods loved
him?"
"Mezhan
Kwaad is correct, however," the commander said dryly. "He is
self-evidently pronounced mad by his behavior." He glanced at the shaper.
"However, having found one treachery in Mezhan Kwaad—the treachery of
heresy—I see no reason to doubt she is capable of others." He turned to
the shaper master. "Master Mezhan Kwaad, I compel you to answer
truthfully whatever questions the Shamed One once known in Domain Rapuung puts
to you. Your truthfulness will not rest on your honor, but on the truthhearer I
procured for your questioning in the other matter."
"I will not
submit to any such indignity," Mezhan Kwaad replied.
"You do not
have the right to refuse, and your domain will pay the full price if you
attempt to. Answer his questions and let us end this."
Mezhan Kwaad's
eyes glittered curiously, and she lifted her chin. She bared her teeth
contemptuously at Vua Rapuung.
"Ask your
questions, Shamed One."
"I have but
one," Vua Rapuung said. "Mezhan Kwaad. Did you intentionally rob me
of my implants, ruin my scars, give me the appearance of being Shamed? Did you
do these things to me, or did the gods?"
Mezhan Kwaad
stared at him with an unreadable expression, then lifted her chin even higher.
"There are
no gods," she said. "This miserable thing you are is what / made of
you."
The crowd erupted
in frenzy.
Mezhan Kwaad
spread her eight fingers, as if waving. Faster than the eyes could catch,
those fingers elongated, spearing out. Before the commander could even blink,
one went through his eye and out the back of his skull. The warriors around all
dropped without a sound, similarly murdered. Anakin lurched forward, but a
flick
of the shaper's
wrist, and one of the finger-spears pierced his forearm and wrapped around it.
Torment contracted every muscle in Anakin's body, and his lightsaber went
clattering down the landing ramp. Vua Rapuung, a blur of motion, fell from a
similar wound in the leg. His face flopped next to Anakin's, eyes fluttering
open and shut, a confused expression on his face. His lips were wet with blood.
"Jeedai...,"
he croaked, but his words drowned in a fit of
hacking.
Anakin's pain
lessened, but he found he could move little more than his eyes. He could see
Mezhan Kwaad held something in her other hand that resembled some sort of nut.
"This is huun,"
Mezhan Kwaad shouted to the crowd. "It releases a nerve toxin sufficient
to kill each and every one of you. I am immune to its effects. Your deaths will
be useless; they will not serve the Yuuzhan Vong. Commander Vootuh and these
others are the real traitors. I am Mezhan Kwaad, and I answer only to Supreme
Overlord Shimrra. When he hears of these incidents, he will set things right.
In the meantime, I will take this ship, to belter defend myself. I do not wish
to harm my fellow Yuuzhan Vong. I will do so only if I must."
The crowd, led by
Hul Rapuung, had started up the ramp. Now they stopped.
Mezhan Kwaad
turned to her assistant. "Nen Yim. Drag those two on board." She
motioned toward Anakin and the fading Vua Rapuung.
The younger
shaper hesitated, then started toward Anakin. She stopped when she saw Anakin's
lightsaber floating up from behind him.
Mezhan Kwaad saw
it, too. She sent a jolt of pain coursing through Anakin's body that scrambled
his thoughts into random impulses.
But the
lightsaber continued on. Mezhan Kwaad redoubled her torture of Anakin.
Tahiri plucked
the blade from the air and ignited it with a snap-hiss. Mezhan Kwaad's
expression froze halfway between puzzlement and the sudden, fatal understanding
that it hadn't been Anakin levitating the weapon at all.
Then Tahiri
decapitated her.
Tahiri stood for
a moment, looking at what she had done, and smiled. Like heat lightning,
Anakin's vision struck back into him, the older Tahiri, the dark Force around
her, her pitiless, glacial laughter.
"Tahiri!"
he managed.
She looked at
him, then, and took a hesitant step toward him, then another. She let the point
of the blade drop so it was almost stroking his cheek.
"My
friend," she said, her voice low and weird. "My best friend. You left
me." Her eyes were wrong. They were the same color they had always been,
but they had once been warm, full of laughter. Now they were chlorine ice.
"I've been
trying to find you," Anakin said. "This whole time..."
"You aren't
real," Tahiri said. "None of this is. You are a lie."
He held her gaze
and saw the bleakness there, the confusion. He could sense her turmoil.
"It's not a lie, Tahiri. You are my best friend. I love you."
The blade stroked
off a lock of his hair, but he didn't flinch.
"I love
you," he repeated, the seeds of his vision beginning to take root.
Tahiri closed her
eyes, and when she opened them again, they became the green eyes he knew—or
almost. "Anakin? Are you really—?" She looked around, as if noticing
the crowd for the first time. "Well, this doesn't look good," she
observed.
Anakin saw what
she meant. With Mezhan Kwaad down, the warriors in the crowd had come to the
fore-
front. Armed to
the teeth, they stood watching the strange spectacle only meters away.
They wouldn't
just watch for long.
"We have to
get out of here," Anakin said.
"And this is
your plan?" Tahiri asked, in something like her old voice.
"Hey, I'm
doing my best. I'll hold 'em off and you run into the ship."
"No. I don't
care about dying, Anakin. Not after what they did to me. Let's just take as
many of them with us as we can." She lifted the lightsaber. Her eyes were
cooling again.
"Can I have
that back?" Anakin asked softly.
She looked as if
she would say no, but then shrugged and handed it to him. "Sure. It's your
blade. I lost mine."
Anakin took the
weapon, stood shakily, and faced the gathered warriors.
CHAPTER
THIRTY-DIME
Hul Rapuung
raised his amphistaff to guard. "Jeedai, you have proven yourself a
great warrior. It will be my honor to kill you."
"No," a
voice from behind Anakin grated.
Impossibly, Vua
Rapuung rose to his feet. He took an amphistaff from one of the dead guards.
"No. While I live, none of you shall fight the Jeedai."
"Vua
Rapuung," his brother said, "we all heard what Mezhan Kwaad said. You
are Shamed no longer."
"I was never
Shamed. But now you know it is a warrior you face."
"Vua
Rapuung, no," Anakin said. "This is over for you."
Rapuung turned to
him. "I will die soon," he said. "I am able to give you only a
small chance. Take it. Now." He turned back to the crowd.
"A salute to
the Jeedail" he shouted. "A salute of blood!"
With that he
leapt at the front rank of warriors, amphistaff spinning. His first blow
struck his brother, knocking him to the ground unconscious, but still alive.
The others he attacked with much more lethal precision.
"Anakin?
"Tahiri asked.
"Into the
ship," he shouted. If he could get her safe, maybe he could come back for
Rapuung.
No. His first
duty was to Tahiri. If he tried to help Rapuung, they would all die.
"Can you fly
it?" Tahiri asked.
"We'll worry
about that once we figure out how to get the boarding ramp up."
They ducked
inside the hatch and started searching frantically for some sort of control.
"What are we
looking for?" Tahiri asked.
"A knob, a
smooth place—a cluster of nerves. I don't know."
"I don't see
anything like that! This is hopeless!" Tahiri said.
Anakin ran his
hands over the spongy interior of the ship. Tahiri was right. If they couldn't
even get the ramp up, what chance did he have of flying the stupid thing?
Next to none,
probably, but he had to try. He couldn't have come this far just to fail.
He saw Vua
Rapuung die. Already surrounded by a pile of corpses, his feet were trapped,
forcing him to fight without footwork. An amphistaff struck Rapuung a downward
blow in the neck and came out the small of his back. He dropped his own
amphistaff down like a blaster bolt and crushed the skull of the one who had
wounded him before collapsing. Then the other warriors were on him, amphistaffs
slashing, surging past him up the ramp.
"Sithspawn,"
Anakin snarled, planting himself in the doorway, lightsaber blazing, determined
to go out at least as well as Rapuung had.
"Oh!" Tahiri
exclaimed. "Tsii dau poonsi."
The tizowyrm
translated it as the mouth, cause to close.
The ramp sucked
in, out from under the feet of the charging warriors, and the hatch shut.
"You have to
know how to talk to it, I guess," Tahiri said. She'd tried to say it
lightly, but it was almost a parody of her old self. She knew it, too. Tears
brimmed in her eyes. "They put things in my head, Anakin. I don't know
what's real anymore."
He reached for
her shoulder. "I'm real. And I'm going to get you out of this. Believe
me."
She folded into
him, suddenly, and his arms went around her without him even telling them to.
She felt warm, and small, and good against him.
Then his wounded
leg refused to support him any longer.
They cut part of
Tahiri's garment to make a tourniquet. The living fabric worked even better
than anticipated, because after the shock of being severed, it contracted, perhaps
dying. Anakin wished he had some of Rapuung's healing swatches. Maybe they
could find some on the ship.
They found the
controls just as the craft rocked to a tremendous blast.
"Boy, that
didn't take long," Anakin said. "I wonder why they didn't just open
the hatch."
"I sealed
it," Tahiri said "It won't listen to anyone outside."
"How do you
know?"
"I just do.
I mean, I'm sure they have someone who can open it, but not before we
get off the ground."
"Assuming we
can get off the ground," Anakin said, looking at the controls and fighting
a feeling of helplessness. He recognized a villip and an acceleration couch,
and that was all. A wide array of not-quite-geometrical shapes extruded from
the "console," along with a variety of patches of differing color and
texture. Nothing about any of them spoke to him. There seemed to be no writing
or numerals either, no gauges or readouts. The walls of the room were opaque,
as well. He couldn't even see what the Yuuzhan Vong outside were doing, though
it was obvious they had dragged up some sort of big gun or explosives.
The ship rocked
again, and several of the patches emitted a dull phosphorescence, which
probably indicated damage to something-or-other.
"Okay,"
Anakin said. "Maybe I can't fly anything."
Tahiri lifted a
sort of loose bag from the acceleration couch. A thin creeper attached it to
the console.
"Put this on
your head," she suggested.
"That's
right!" Anakin said, remembering. "Uncle Luke tried one of those on.
It's some sort of direct brain interface." He looked at the thing
dubiously, then tried it on. Immediately he heard a distant voice, murmuring
something he couldn't understand.
"The
tyzowyrm isn't translating," he said. "I guess it's being bypassed by
the hood."
He tried a few
mental commands, with no result.
"This could
be bad," he muttered. "It must be like the lambent. Without
attunement, our brains won't interface directly with Vong technology."
"Yuuzhan
Vong," Tahiri corrected absently.
"Right.
Maybe it's just the language barrier. Maybe .. . Tahiri, you try it."
"Me? I'm no
pilot."
" I know.
Try it anyway."
Tahiri shrugged
and placed the sack over her head.
It squirmed and
shrank to fit.
"Oh!"she
said. "Wait."
The walls became
transparent as another concussion set the ship quivering. Anakin could now see
what was causing this; another ship, also grounded, was firing on them with one
of its plasma weapons. The Yuuzhan Vong had cleared out a safe lane for the
shots. Anakin reflected that they probably hoped to break through the hull—
skin?—without seriously damaging the ship.
"Okay,"
Tahiri murmured, her fingers caressing the various nerve nodes. "Let's see
what—yow!"
The ship jumped
off the ground like a fleek eel from a hot pan. Anakin gasped and then whooped,
slapping Tahiri on the back.
"We'll do
this yet!" he shouted. "Let's burn out of here."
"Which
way?"
"Any way!
Just go!"
"You're the
captain," she said. The damutek suddenly blurred away beneath them.
"Not
bad," Anakin said. "Now, if you can figure out how the weapons
work—"
Tahiri shrieked
suddenly, clawing off the headgear.
"What's
wrong?" Anakin asked.
"It's in my
head! Telling me to turn back! In another second it would have had me!"
"This isn't
good," Anakin said, watching the ground rush up. It seemed to him he had
seen altogether too much of that lately. Gravity was highly overrated.
By the time they
found the hatch and crawled out, Anakin could hear the drone of another Yuuzhan
Vong ship approaching.
"Tahiri,"
he said, "run for it. I'll just slow you down with this leg."
"No,"
Tahiri said simply.
"Please. I
came all this way to rescue you. It can't have been for nothing."
Tahiri brushed
his cheek with her hand. "It wasn't for nothing," she said.
"You know
what I mean."
"I know we
used to be in everything together. I know if this is the end, there's nobody I
would rather be standing with. I know that we can still make them sorry they
ever tried to mess with the two of us." She took his hand.
Anakin gripped it
back. "Okay," he conceded. "Together."
It didn't take
the ship long to find them; they hadn't made it more than a kilometer beyond
the river. This was no speeder analog, either, but something more
corvette-sized.
Tahiri touched
Anakin in the Force, tentatively, and for the first time he really felt what
they had done to her—the pain and confusion, the sickening nightmare
sense of
unreality. He poured his sympathy and strength back into her, and the bond
strengthened. And as she gripped his fingers tighter, as he finally surrendered
the last of his barriers against her—against them—the Force blew through
him like a hurricane.
Tahiri laughed.
It was not a child's laugh.
Together you are
stronger than the sum of your parts, Ikrit had said.
Together.
They wrenched a
thousand-year-old Massassi tree out of the ground and launched it straight up.
By the time it struck the Yuuzhan Vong ship it was traveling as fast as a
speeder. It smacked into the dovin basal and splintered, twisting the ship
half-around. Another tree jerked out of the ground, and another. The ship
listed, firing gobs of molten plasma into the trees, not understanding exactly
what was happening. One of the trees rammed into the cannon structure, and
flame burst out all along one side of the ship.
In theory, a Jedi
could use the Force effortlessly, without tiring. In practice, it seldom went
that way.
Anakin and Tahiri
had gone beyond their limits, and now their strength was ebbing.
The ship wobbled
and molten fire dripped from its ruined weapon, but it was still there, and there
were plenty more where it came from.
Still, Anakin
gripped Tahiri's hand. "Together," he said.
The air above
them shrieked and strobed, and sharp lines of red light carved into the Yuuzhan
Vong ship as if it were a root vegetable. A too-bright-to-watch ball of flame
followed close after, striking the craft in its already bleeding wound, and
then the Yuuzhan Vong ship was a corpse hurtling to the ground. Anakin looked
up, mouth open.
Another ship was
descending, a ship made of metal and ceramic, not living coral.
It was Remis
Vehn's battered transport, and it was the most beautiful thing Anakin had ever
seen.
It dropped on
repulsorlifts, and the hatch swung open.
Qorl stuck his
head out. "What are you waiting for?" the old man shouted. "Come
aboard."
CHAPTER
THIRTY-TWO
Talon Karrde
followed the pinpoint on the long-range scanner with a raptor gaze.
Still, he was
fully aware when Kam Solusar came silently up behind him.
"What is
it?" the Jedi asked.
" Long-range
sensors tell us some sort of transport just broke the atmosphere of Yavin
Four," Karrde told him.
"Only
moments ago, I felt an incredible surge in the Force," Solusar said.
"I'm sure Anakin was involved, and I think Tahiri, as well."
"Can you
feel them now? Are they on that transport?"
" I think they
must be," Solusar replied.
Karrde shook his
head. "Not good enough. If I commit that deeply into Yuuzhan Vong
territory, there is every chance not a single ship in my fleet will come back
out. I need to know. What if it's just a Peace Brigader or two who've
been hiding on the far side of Yavin?"
"It's
Anakin," Solusar replied.
Karrde let his
shoulders relax. "Well. That's better. As long as you sound certain,"
he said. "Fine."
He turned to his
crew. "This looks like what we've been waiting for, people. Our mission
has changed. Up until now we've just been surviving, picking off strays. From
what I gather, the Yuuzhan Vong have been using us for target practice and to
thin the stupid from their gene pool.
"They'll
behave differently when we push to intercept the ship out there. They'll
probably hit us with everything they've got, and we'll be in a position to get
hit. We can forget backup from the New Republic; we're on our own. If there are
any doubts about this course of action, I need to hear them now."
Silence, as he
swept his gaze around the bridge and the screens depicting the captains of his
other ships.
"When have
we ever not been with you, Captain?" Shada asked from the Idiot's
Array.
A chorus of
cheers punctuated Shada's remark.
Karrde's chest
tightened with pride. "All right, people," he said. "Let's go to
work."
A series of
bleeps and whistles greeted Anakin as he came aboard the transport.
"Hey,
Fiver," he said. "I'm glad to see you, too."
"Get back to
work, you lazy little droid," Vehn snapped over his shoulder from the
pilot's seat. "And you, hotshot, pick a cannon. Let's see if we can shake
this crud."
"I'd feel
better at the controls," Anakin said, watching Yavin 4 dwindle to
starboard.
"After what
you did to her last time?" Vehn said. "No, thanks. No vapin' thanks
at all."
"Your
ship," Anakin said.
"Ramming
right it is."
Anakin looked
over the pilot's shoulder at the screen. "Nice lead," he remarked.
"Yeah. Those
Vong ships take longer to pull out of an atmosphere. Out here they're gaining,
though."
"What's the
plan?"
"Fly real
fast until we get away."
"That's
it?"
"Hey, I'm
improvising. You gonna complain about me saving your butt?"
"No,"
Anakin said, "I was thinking about thanking you. Now I'm not so
sure."
"Stop it.
You'll make me cry. If you have a plan, let me hear it."
Anakin looked at
the starfield. He was weak, very weak, but he thought he felt something.
"Give me
long-range sensors," Anakin said.
"Sorry, no
can do. We were working on those when the creepy twins back there told me they
'felt' you needed help. We cut the repairs short and hot-jetted it."
"Sannah,
Valin," Anakin said, gesturing them forward. "Concentrate. Do you
feel something out there?"
"Sure,"
Valin said, after a minute. "Kam Solusar is out there, somewhere."
"Yes,"
Sannah said. "I feel him, too."
"I'm too
weak to be sure, and so is Tahiri. Tell Vehn where."
Valin studied the
space around him for a moment, then pointed at around ninety degrees to
starboard. "There."
"
'There'?" Vehn asked. "That's supposed to be a direction?"
"Do we have
hyperdrive?" Anakin asked.
"No."
"Then I
suggest you set course where Valin tells you. Otherwise, we're going to end up
as star food."
"It's better
than being captured again," Tahiri said.
"Well,
fine," Vehn said. "The little creeps have been right so far,
today."
Anakin started to
take the copilot's seat, but Vehn placed his hand in it. "That's
Qorl's," he said.
"I'll give
it up," Qorl said. "Every Solo I've ever known was a better pilot
than me."
"Don't be
silly," Anakin said. "Even if that were true, you're in better shape
than I am to fly. Sorry to presume. You two seem to make a good team."
The two men
glanced at each other.
"Qorl gave
me a certain . .. perspective on things," Vehn said.
"With my
boot, more often than not," the old man said. But he was smiling, too.
"Well,"
Anakin said awkwardly. "Thank you both. You came through for Tahiri and me
when you could have just run."
"Are you
kidding? And have the little creeps back there slag my brain?" Vehn said.
"Anyway,"
Qorl reminded them, "we're not out of this yet. Twice I've been shot down
on Yavin Four. My luck's not so good when it comes to getting out of this
system."
"True,"
Anakin said, "but we're a lot nearer than we were."
"Speaking of
which, we're gonna have words with some Vong in about half an hour," Vehn
said.
"They're
catching up that fast?"
"No. These
are already out here."
"I'll take
the turret gun," Anakin said.
"Right. Give
'em an argument at least," Vehn said.
"The
transport has been engaged by Yuuzhan Vong, sir," H'sishi reported.
"They've taken a few hits, but they're still coming, right for us."
"How
soon?" Karrde asked.
" If we plot
a straight course, less than twenty minutes. But if we do that, we'll be perfect
targets for the blockade that's forming up down there."
"Yes, but if
we go around, we'll never reach them before that destroyer analog. Dankin,
plot it straight in, and have the Idiot's Array, the Demise, and
the Etherway escort us."
"Sir,
they're hardly our best-armed ships."
"But they're
the only ones who can keep up with us, aren't they? Keep her steady."
"Very good,
sir. We'll be in their range in ten minutes. Unless they have something we
don't know about, which seems to be almost a given with the Vong."
Anakin watched
the third coralskipper spin off to port. He hadn't destroyed it—his first two
shots had been sucked in by the gravitic anomalies its dovin basal projected
and the third had only tapped it—but the smaller craft didn't have the speed to
stay with the transport. They were more than nuisances, but not much more at
this point.
It was the
destroyer analog coming in from above starboard that bothered him, that and
the fact that they couldn't see much beyond it. For all they knew, there could
be an entire fleet between him and Talon Karrde. If Karrde was there at all. He
tried once again to reach out for Kam Solusar's familiar presence and thought,
briefly, that he had found it. But Kam might be light-years in that direction—or
it might be wishful thinking. He couldn't be sure.
What was sure
was that very soon the destroyer was going to catch them. He hoped Vehn had a
few tricks up his sleeve.
"Direct hit
on the Idiot's Array, sir," H'sishi reported.
"Shada, are
you there?" Karrde asked, over the comm.
"Still here,
boss. They tickled us, but we can still keep up."
"One more
hit like that and you're ions," Karrde disagreed. "Peel off. You've
done enough."
"Sorry,
boss. Can't hear you. Something wrong with my comm unit. Hang tight, we'll get
you there."
The power on the Wild
Karrde suddenly dimmed and reasserted itself, and a distant vibration
shivered the hull. The two ships still running escort weren't keeping everything
off of them; the Demise had flamed out in the first exchange, probably
with all hands.
Good people. He
would mourn them later, when he had time.
He saw the Idiot's
Array take her final hit, right
through the
engines. Plumes of plasma streamed from her, and atomic devils danced in the
ruined aft section.
"Get out of
there, Shada!" he shouted into the comm.
No answer came.
"The Idiot's
Array is still keeping pace with that destroyer, sir," H'sishi
reported. "I don't understand it. Her engines are gone, and their reactor
is building to critical."
Karrde blinked.
"Shada!" he snarled. Then he snapped at Dankin. "Alter course
two degrees to starboard and brace."
"What's she
doing, sir?"
"She's got a
tractor lock on them. She must have diverted all of her power to that.
Everything."
An instant later
the Idiot's Array vanished in a sphere of pure white light, taking most
of the Yuuzhan Vong destroyer with it.
"Shada,"
Karrde murmured again, feeling very tired. He'd lost more friends than enemies
through the years. He'd faced death himself enough times that he had no illusions;
one day the game would go against him and he would die. But somehow, of all the
people he knew, he'd imagined that Shada would outlive him.
"One
destroyer down," he gritted, "and one to go."
"We've just
lost the Etherway, sir," H'sishi said.
"Destroyed?"
"No. Her
power grid is down."
"Then it's
just us."
"Yes."
"Against all
that."
"Unless you
want to wait for everyone else, sir, I—sir, behind us!"
Karrde saw the
ship appear on the screen; sheer conditioning kept his heart from jumping up
into his throat.
The ship that had
appeared, almost on top of them, was an Imperial Star Destroyer.
A red Imperial
Star Destroyer.
"Message,
sir," Dankin said.
"Put it
on."
A bearded human
face appeared. "Well, Karrde," he growled. "I suppose I'll be
pulling you out of this mess, as well. I hope you have something appropriate to
compensate me with."
"Booster
Terrik!"
"None
other."
"I'm sure I
can dig something out of my warehouses."
"Never mind
that. Where's my grandson?"
"We think he's
on the transport that big Yuuzhan Vong ship's about to swallow."
"That's all
I wanted to know. See you on the other side, Karrde."
"The other
side of what?"
"The nebula
I'm about to make."
The screen went
dark.
"All right,
everyone," Karrde said. "We've got a new game here. Let's play it
well."
Anakin kept the
turbolaser pumping steadily, causing plumes of molten yorik coral to spew from
the destroyer analog. It didn't seem to notice, even at extreme close range,
which was where they were—a few tens of meters from its surface.
He had to admit
Vehn wasn't doing a bad job of flying—dropping in close to avoid the big guns,
playing an elaborate spiral dance around the ship's axis, dodging out from the
gravitic embrace of the dovin basal. If they cleared the big ship by much,
their luck would change. One good hit by one of those big plasma cannons would
be the end of them.
"Heads up,
back there," Vehn's voice crackled. "They're launching
coralskippers."
Anakin saw. The
Yuuzhan Vong didn't localize their fighters in bays, but kept them attached all
over the outside of the ship. Anakin had nailed a few of the inactive ones
already. Now they were detaching in swarms.
"You'll have
to keep them off, Solo," Vehn said, his voice tinged with desperation.
"If I try to outrun 'em, we'll be sitting pretty for the destroyer."
"Understood,"
Anakin replied. He didn't have time to talk after that; everything in him
focused on the weaving, organic forms of the enemy. He couldn't begin to count
them.
They came, and he
shot them. He fell into a one-two-three rhythm—first shot to draw out a
gravitic anomaly, second shot just outside its event horizon. It would move to
intercept, and he would fire even wider on the other side. Sometimes it managed
to swallow all three shots, but often the coherent light blazed just far enough
outside the singularity to merely bend around it. Once he got the timing
right, he could land that crooked third shot where he wanted it.
But he couldn't
shoot them all. The transport bucked and complained as molten plasma did its
damage. Ignoring the tremors, Anakin fought on in grim silence.
Vehn, too, kept
his silence—the occasional curse aside. They were all beyond talking now.
An enemy shot got
through Anakin's barrage, glancing from the turret cockpit, leaving a molten
streak on the transparisteel. Anakin traced after the offender, but it was
gone. He whirled back to take one of three crisscrossing his field of vision
and hit it solidly. It spun, then straightened.
Toward him. With
quiet calm Anakin fired at it, watching it come closer. A singularity gulped
his first shot, and the second bent wide. The third beam hit dead center. The
skip flared out of existence, but the debris came on, smacking into the
cockpit in a hundred meteoric shards.
Hairline fractures
spidered everywhere.
One more hit, and
I'm breathing vacuum, Anakin thought.
But he certainly
couldn't leave the turret. He checked to make certain the lock behind him was
sealed, closed
off from the rest
of the ship. There was no need to take everyone with him.
He took out two
more skips, but then three dropped into a wedge headed straight for him. He
took a deep, calming breath and began firing, but he knew he wasn't going to
get them all.
In fact, he had
fired only two shots before the damaged laser overheated and went into
temporary shutdown. Anakin watched impassively as the skips approached. He
reached out in the Force, hoping to find debris to throw at them.
He wondered what
it was going to feel like when his blood started boiling.
He felt them in
the Force at the same time the coralskippers vanished in a searing white haze,
and two X-wings whipped around the expanding cloud of gas and molten coral. His
comm crackled.
"Need a
hand, little brother?"
"Jaina!"
"This is
some mess you've gotten us into, Anakin," a masculine voice replied.
"Jacen!
Where . . . how..."
"Explanations
later," Jaina said. "Who's flying that crate?"
"That's
me," Vehn cut in.
"Get out of
there, fast," Jaina said. "We'll keep these pups off you. Corran
Horn's out here, too. I almost pity the Vong."
"But if I
clear..."
"Believe
me," Jaina said, "you'll want to be clear."
Anakin breathed a
sigh of relief as the turbolaser came back on-line. "I've got the back
door," he told his siblings. "You just clear a path. Vehn, better do
what they want."
"Whatever
you say," Vehn said sarcastically. And then he just gasped. Anakin didn't
see why until they were on
the other side of
the Errant Venture. By that time, the Yuuzhan Vong ship was blazing
like a newborn star.
Anakin stared
through the transparisteel and grinned wide enough to swallow a crescent moon.
Karrde wasn't
grinning, a standard day later, when the Yuuzhan Vong ships finally packed it
in and jumped to hyperspace. He was watching the drifting ruins of ships,
Yuuzhan Vong and otherwise, and grimly tallying his losses.
Yes, he was
getting too old for this nonsense.
"Captain.
Message for you, sir," H'sishi said.
He considered
ignoring it, but at this point—so soon after the battle—it could be something
critical.
"Put it on,
H'sishi," he said.
A few seconds
later a lean, middle-aged face appeared.
"Corran
Horn," Karrde said. "It's good to see you. I assume you were on your
father-in-law's Star Destroyer?"
"When Jacen
and Jaina found us, yes. I was one of the X-wings out there. I. . ." His
face contorted very briefly, then returned to a neutral expression.
"Karrde, I want to thank you for saving my son and the other children. I
know what it cost you."
No, you don't,
Karrde thought. "You're welcome," he told Horn. "When I make
promises, I do my best to keep them."
"We're alike
in that," Horn replied. "And I also pay my debts. I owe you a big
one."
Karrde received
the sentiment with a nod of his head. "I'm glad your son is well. Is there
anything else I can do for you? I'm sorry to be short, but I'm not much in the
mood for conversation right now."
"I'll let
you go in a second. This doesn't even come close to squaring us up, but I do
have something for you."
"What's
that?"
"Someone, I
should say." Horn moved aside and was replaced by Shada D'ukal's wry
features.
"Shada!"
"Come on,
Karrde," Shada said. "You didn't think I was stupid enough to stay
on a flaming ship, did you? Once I got the lock, we went for the escape
pods. Horn ran across us in his X-wing, doing a slow spiral toward the gas
giant." She squinted at the screen. "Hey, boss, what's wrong with
your eye?"
"The air
unit has been blowing dust in from somewhere," Karrde said, blinking away
the suspicious moisture. "Get your tail back over here, so we can discuss
how long it will take you to pay me back for the Idiot's Array."
Shada rolled her
eyes. "See you soon, boss."
Then, despite his
losses, Talon Karrde did allow himself a small, quiet smile. Why not? They'd
won.
EPILOGUE
"We never
thought we'd find Booster," Jaina confessed, around a mouthful of food.
"I was ready to hijack the Jade Shadow and fly straight to Yavin.
When Booster doesn't want to be found, he can really disappear."
"What was he
doing?" Anakin asked.
"Running
weapons to the Hutt underground, actually," Jaina replied. "I just
asked myself where Booster would go if he wanted to help the war effort and
still turn a profit without feeling bad about it."
"You're
kidding."
"It didn't
hurt that Corran was with him," Jacen said. "We got hints of him in
the Force."
"Still."
"Jacen's
being modest," Jaina said. "He spent a lot of time in deep
meditation, trying to find Corran. It was no accident."
"That's
pretty impressive," Anakin allowed.
"Thank you,
Anakin," Jacen said, as if surprised. His brow wrinkled in such a way that
made him look briefly very much like their father. "Are you okay,
Anakin?"
Anakin nodded.
"Yes, actually. I mean, my leg still hurts, even with the bacta patch, but
otherwise, I think I'm fine. In fact, better than fine."
"What do you
mean?" Jacen asked, perhaps a little suspiciously.
Anakin chewed
thoughtfully for a moment. "Up until
now," he
said, "I had no way to think of the Yuuzhan Vong except as enemies."
"They are
enemies," Jaina said.
"Yes,"
Anakin replied. "So was the Empire. But Palpatine aside, it must have
been possible for Mom and Dad and Uncle Luke to at least conceive of the people
they were fighting as possible friends. In fact, that's how Uncle Luke
destroyed the Emperor, right? He was able to imagine Darth Vader as his father,
as a friend. The Yuuzhan Vong—well, to be frank, I didn't even want to
conceive of them that way."
"They don't
make it easy," Jaina said. "Look what happened to Elegos when he
tried to understand them."
"So you
think you succeeded where Elegos failed?" Jacen asked.
"Do I
understand them? No, not completely. But I have a deeper understanding than I
did. I can think of them as people now, and that makes a difference."
Jacen nodded.
"You're right, of course. Does that mean you've decided not to fight them
anymore? Are you going to work for peace?"
Anakin blinked.
"Are you kidding? We have to fight them, Jacen. / have to fight
them. I just know more about how to do it now."
Jacen's frown was
fully developed now. "Are you sure that's the right lesson to take away
from all this?" he asked.
"No offense,
Jacen, but I think I'll leave off worrying about what lesson I might have
learned if I had been someone else. Because frankly, if I had been someone
else, I don't think I would have survived to learn any lesson."
"Tell
Booster we're going to have to evacuate the ship," Jaina said. "The
way Anakin's head is expanding, it'll split through the hull in no time."
"Believe it
or not," Anakin replied, "I don't say what I just said with pride.
I'm just stating a fact."
"Pride is
pretty sneaky," Jacen warned. "It disguises itself pretty well. I
hope you'll have a long talk with Uncle Luke at some point. Unless you don't
think even he has anything to teach you."
"Don't put
words in my mouth, Jacen," Anakin said.
"And don't
you forget who pulled your butt out of the fire there at the end," Jaina
replied.
Anakin let a grin
creep across his face. "But that's what I meant, don't you see? When I
said that no one but me could have survived what I did. Because no one else in
the galaxy has you two for his brother and sister."
He picked up his
tray, trying not to laugh at their gaping mouths.
"Now, if
you'll excuse me," he said, "I have someone I need to go see."
Anakin found
Tahiri's stateroom door open a crack. Through it he saw her lying on her bed,
bare feet propped up on the wall. Her gaze was fastened on the transparisteel
window and the distant spray of the core beyond.
Anakin rapped the
door frame. "Hi," he said.
"Hi. Come in
if you want."
"Okay."
He took a seat on the edge of the bed.
"You didn't
show up for dinner," he said. "I thought I would bring you
some." He placed a food container on the bed. "Corran made it. Seems
he's been doing a lot of cooking these days."
"Thanks,"
Tahiri said. She turned her head and for the first time met his gaze.
"What
happened to it?" she asked. "The shaper base?"
"You sure
you want to hear about it? Every time someone brings up the subject—"
"I wasn't
ready to talk about it then. Now I am."
"Okay. Well,
Booster pretty much slagged it. Karrde and his people evacuated the slaves.
We're going to drop them off someplace soon. Of course, the Yuuzhan Vong
can come back, I
guess, since we left the system pretty much without defenses, but there's
nothing we can do about that."
"No,"
Tahiri said. "There isn't. I guess that's the end of the academy.
"Of course
it isn't. The academy was never a place. It's a thing, an idea. We're
just taking it on jets. Booster's going to let the academy kids stay on the Errant
Venture. He'll make random jumps around the galaxy until it's safe to
settle the kids down someplace."
"Safe?"
Tahiri hissed. "How can it ever be safe? How can anything ever
be—" Her words seemed to clot up in her throat, and she turned back to the
view of space.
"Tahiri, I
know how you feel," Anakin said.
She closed her
eyes, and two small tears squeezed from the corners. "If anyone does, I
guess you do," she said after a moment.
"What they
did to you was horrible, I know, and—"
"What they
did to me? Anakin, I cut Mezhan Kwaad's head oft."
"You had
to."
"I wanted
to. I liked it. I loved it."
"She
tortured you. She tried to destroy everything you are. You can't be blamed for
a moment of anger."
"I think she
did destroy everything I am," Tahiri said. "When I killed her,
it was the end of me."
"No,"
Anakin said, "that's not true. And I should know, shouldn't I? The best of
you is still there, Tahiri." He reached his hand out. It hung there in
space for a long time before she reached back, taking it without looking.
"It was all
my fault," she said. "Master Ikrit died because of me. Karrde's
people died because of me."
"Now this
I'm pretty good at," Anakin said. "Blaming myself for things. I
can really teach you to do that right. In fact, if we think really hard about
it, I bet we can find some way to blame you for the Yuuzhan Vong finding this
galaxy in the first place." He cocked his
head. "No—I
think / want the blame for that. We can blame Palpatine on you, though. How's
that?"
Tahiri frowned at
him. "When did you start talking so much?" she asked.
"I don't
know. When did you start coughing up one word at a time as if three or four
were going to break your mouth?"
The corners of
her lips twitched up, not quite forming a smile. "Just shut up, will you?
I liked you better the other way."
"Me,
too."
They watched the
stars in silence for a while.
"Where will
you go now?" Tahiri asked, when the silence was too thin. "Back out
to fight the Yuuzhan Vong?"
"Eventually."
"I want to
go with you."
"That's why
I said eventually. I'm staying on here for a while. Until you've healed.
Until I've healed. Then if you still want to go, we go. Together."
She didn't say
anything, but for the first time since they'd left Yavin, he felt something
like hope in her.
"Adept Nen
Yim. Step forth."
Nen Yim
genuflected and then stood before the warmaster, Tsavong Lah.
"First I
want your account of the fall of the shaper compound. After that I have other
questions."
"Yes,
Warmaster. At your command."
"My command
is given. Speak."
"Of the
space battle I know nothing, Warmaster. Many of our ships died on the ground or
struggling through the atmosphere. Then the damuteks were attacked from above,
and damaged beyond healing."
"So much is
obvious. Go on."
"Then the
bombardment ceased, and the infidels commenced landing. We did not understand
why, at first. A
more thorough
bombardment would have killed us all with no risk to the infidels. As it was,
some of them were slain by our surviving warriors."
"You do not
know these infidels as well as you might, Shaper. Their attachment to their own
kind leads them into pointless maneuvers."
"Agreed,
Warmaster. In retrospect, it is clear that their intent was to recover the
slaves."
"And where
were you during this?"
" I hid
among the Shamed Ones, Warmaster. I thought they would take true castes
captive."
"A cowardly
thing to do, Shaper."
"I beg your
indulgence, Warmaster, but I had more than selfish reasons for doing so."
"Explain
them. Be brief."
"My master,
Mezhan Kwaad, was slain by the Jeedai we were shaping."
"You did not
shape the Jeedai well, I think."
"On the
contrary, Warmaster, given a few more cycles, she would have been ours. If not
for the interference of the other Jeedai."
"Yes,"
the warmaster snarled. "The other. Solo. Another Solo." He paced
violently away from her, then turned back. "Master Yal Phaath disagrees
with you, Adept. He claims that your master conspired in heresy, and that any
results you obtained were stained by ungodliness."
"Master Yal
Phaath is a respected shaper. So was Mezhan Kwaad. She was never able to
answer these charges, and I may not speak for her. But I tell you this, Warmaster.
What we learned from the Jeedai was valuable. It has worth to the
Yuuzhan Vong. The records in the damutek were destroyed, and my master is
dead. Only I remain to remember. That is why I secreted myself among the
Shamed Ones, to protect that information."
"You did so
for no reason. The infidels took no captives."
"No,
Warmaster. But I could not know that at the time."
"Agreed.
They are a strange breed. They keep no slaves and make no sacrifices. They do
not appreciate captives. They do not make war to obtain them. They consider
them burdens or currency for the return of their own worthless kind. An ugly
and godless motley of species."
"If I may
ask your opinion, Warmaster—why then did they not slay us once they had what
they wanted? Corpses are no burden."
"They are
weak. They do not understand life and death." He waved the whole issue
aside with the back of his hand, then returned his stare to Nen Yim.
"This was
badly bungled by shapers and warriors alike," he said. "If Tsaak
Vootuh were not dead, I would kill him myself. And I should have you
sacrificed."
"If death is
my lot, Warmaster, if that is what the gods desire, I embrace it. But I
repeat—what we learned of the Jeedai here ought not to perish with me.
Give me at least a chance to record what I know in a worldship qahsa."
The warmaster's
cruel eyes did not waver. "You will have that chance. It has been given
you. Do not squander it as your master did here."
"And if more
Jeedai are captured? Will our work shaping them resume?"
"Your domain
has failed. They will not be given a second chance with the Jeedai. Domain
Phaath will continue the work on the Jeedai problem."
Then it will
never be solved, Nen Yim thought to herself. She did not dare
say this to the warmaster, of course. "And Domain Kwaad?" she asked
instead.
"The
worldships are failing. They must be maintained."
Nen Yim nodded
solemnly, but in her belly she was sick. Back to the worldships, to closed
skies and rotting maw luur, to masters so mired in the old ways they would let
the Yuuzhan Vong perish rather than contemplate change.
So be it. But in
her heart, Nen Yim still considered Mezhan Kwaad her master. Nen Yim would
continue the work they had begun, somehow. It was too important. And if Nen Yim
must die for this, she must. The glorious heresy would live on.
"I submit to
your will, Warmaster," Nen Yim lied.
"One other
thing before you go," Tsavong Lah said. "You spent some time among
the Shamed Ones before the reoccupation force arrived. Have you heard of a new
heresy amongst them, one concerning the Jeedai?"
"I have,
Warmaster."
"Explain it
to me."
"There is a
certain admiration for them, Warmaster. Many feel that Vua Rapuung was redeemed
from Shamed status by the Jeedai Solo. Many feel their own redemption
lies not in prayer to Yun-Shuno, but in the Jeedai."
"Can you
name any who espouse this heresy?"
"A few,
Warmaster."
"Name them.
This heresy will die on this moon. If every Shamed One here must perish in
glorious sacrifice, it will end here."
Nen Yim nodded
affirmation, but in her bones she knew the truth.
Repression was
the favored food of heresy.