The Black Fleet Crisis: Tyrant's Test by By: Michael P. Kube-McDowell BANTAM BOOKS NEW YORK TORONTO LONDON SYDNEY AUCKLAND Dedication For the stalwart crew, Russ Galen Tom Dupree Sue Rostoni Lynn Bailey And the bold captain, George Lucas Acknowledgments Writing "The Black Fleet Crisis" has been either the most grueling fun or the most enjoyable marathon of my writing career. Either way, the last seventeen months have been amazingly full--a new home, two new babies (Amanda and Gavin), and more than three hundred thousand new words of fiction. Though I was on my own in the many long hours I spent with my old friend Qwerty, I couldn't have had those hours, or done nearly as much with them, without the help of a grand conspiracy of allies. First among them are my immediate family, Gwen Zak and my son Matt, and my de facto extended family, Rod Zak and Arlyn Wilson. With unflagging grace and good humor, they pitched in wherever they were needed, doing whatever had to be done to keep the home fires burning and the dragons at bay. The seasoned professionals of this conspiracy were SCG superagent Russ Galen, Bantam editor Tom Du-pree, BDD Audio producer Lynn Bailey, and Lucasfilm's Sue Rostoni. Working their mysterious ways through such arcane media as the fax, the telephone, and E-mail, they skillfully managed the more far-reaching elem of the master plan. Then there were the many sympathizers, who, though not formally part of my cell nevertheless fered their knowledge or services to further our cause. Prominent on that long list are DanWallace, Craig ert Carey, Timothy O'Brien, R. Lee Brown, Mic Armstrong, Jim Macdonald, Daniel Dworkin, Ev. Cainto, and Mike Stackpole. Meanwhile, John Vester, Dave Phillips, and nifer Hrynik took the point on a fiendishly clever' information campaign. Though security concerns limit my freedom to name names, I also want to acknowledge the aid and comfort I drew from the volunteer flyspeckers in CompuServe's SF Media Two forum (GO SFMEDTWO) Genie's SF Roundtable Three (SFRT3), and from the cals of RASSM. I offer my most earnest salute to the chief archi of the Rebellion, George Lucas, without whose inspiration none of us would be here. Finally, I want to thank the true believers of cause--Star Wars fans around the globe--for coming along on this journey. Your boundless enthusiasm and vocal support have meant a great deal to me. --Michael Paul McDowell: August 31, 1996 Okemos, Michigan Dramatis Personae On Coruscant, capital of the New Republic: Princess Leia Organa Solo, President of the Senate an- Chief of State of the New Republic Alole and Tarrick, aides to Leia Admiral Hiram Drayson, chief of Alpha Blue General Carlist Rieekan, head of New Republic Intelligence Brigadier Collomus, operations senior staff for NRI First Administrator Nanaod Engh, administrative director of the New Republic Mokka Falanthas, minister of state Senator Behn-Kihl-Nahm, chairman of the Defense Council and friend and mentor to Leia Senator Rattagagech of Elom, chairman of the Science and Technology Council Senator Doman Beruss of Illodia, chairman of the Ministry Council Senator Borsk Fey'lya of Kothlis, chairman of the Justice Council Senator Tig Peramis of Walalla Belezaboth Ourn, extraordinary consul of t] Paqwepori With the Fifth Battle Group of the New Republic Defense Fleet, in Farlax Sector: General Etahn A'baht, Fleet commander Colonel Corgan, staff tactical officer Colonel Mauit'ta, staff intelligence officer Captain Morano, commander of the flagship Intrepid Plat Mallar, sole survivor of the Yevethan raid on Polneye Aboard the Teljkon Vagabond: General Lando Calrissian, Fleet liaison to the expedition Lobot, chief administrator of Cloud City, on vacation See-Threepio, protocol droid Artoo-Detoo, astromech droid Aboard the yacht Lady Luck, in pursuit of the Vagabond: Colonel Pakkpekatt, expedition commander Republic Intelligence Captain Bijo Hammax, foray commander Pleck and Taisden, NRI technical agents Aboard the Obroan Institute research vessel P Rift, at Maltha Obex: Dr. Joto Eckels, senior archaeologist On N'zoth, spawnworld of the Yevetha, in Kc Cluster, Farlax Sector: Nil Spaar, viceroy of the Yevethan Protectorate Eri Palle, aide to Nil Spaar Dar Bille, proctor of the Yevethan flagship Tal Fraan, proctor cogent to the viceroy General Han Solo, a prisoner Aboard the skiff Mud Sloth, en route to J't'p'tan, in the Koornacht Cluster, Farlax Sector Luke Skywalker, a Jedi Master Akanah, an adept of the White Current On Kashyyyk, homeWorld of the Wookiees: Chewbacca, participating in coming-of-age ceremonies for his son Lumpawarrump Tyrant's T est (Chapter 1 Three levels down from Rwookrrorro and eighteen kilometers northeast along the Rryatt Trail, the Well of the Dead appeared as a solid green wall ahead of Chewbacca and his son Lumpawarrump. This deep in the wroshyr jungle of Kashyyyk, the tangled web of trunks and branches was ordinarily almost barren. So little light penetrated the dense canopies overhead that any leaves that sprouted quickly withered. Only the gray bridal-veil sucker and the pad-dle-leafed mock shyr, both parasites, and the ubiquitous kshyy vines decorated the runs and paths. But neither the bridal-veil nor the mock shyr was abundant enough to block those runs and force the Wookiees to the underside of the web of branches. They--and the creatures that made their homes at that level--could move freely over the top of the tangled maze. Despite the dim light, sightlines of up to five hundred meters were the norm, with the trunks of the wroshyr trees themselves providing the only cover. It was the Shadow Forest, the realm of the nimble rkkrrkkrl, or trap-spinner, and the slow-moving rroshm, which helped keep the paths clear by grazing on bridal-veil. tongued needlebugs, whose sucking proboscides could pierce the tough wroshyr bark and draw on the juices within. The most dangerous inhabitants were the elusive kkekkrrg rro, the five-limbed Shadow Keepers, which preferred to roam the underside and even more strongly preferred the taste of meat. The Shadow Keepers would not attack an adult Wookiee, but long history, now mostly forgotten, had made the kkekkrrg rro the personification of the skulking unseen enemy, and it was the rare Wookiee who would not reach for his weapon on seeing one. All this and more Chewbacca had shown and explained to his son as they journeyed down from the hunting ground of the Twilight Gardens, a level above. The whole time, memories had swirled around him on the stagnant air. Some were memories of his own journey of ascendance in the company of his father, Attitch-itcuk, of the tests that had earned him the right to wear his baldric, to carry a weapon in city, to choose and confirm his name. Two hundred years, and the forest is still the same--only I am the father now, not the son .... Chewbacca also vividly remembered the foolish expedition he and Salporin had made to the Shadow Forest in advance of their coming-of-age. Unarmed but for a single ryyyk blade Salporin had pilfered from his eldest brother, Chewbacca and his friend had left the nursery ring and descended into realms forbidden to the children they still were. They had thought to prepare themselves for the unknown, but managed only to scare themselves with it. Their courage had faded with the failing light, and by the time they reached Shadow Forest, all it took was a skittish trap-spinner to send them fleeing back to the safety of the familiar. And what we thought we saw filled our nightmares until our tests of ascension finally came--poor Salporin! I only had to wait six days. If Attitchitcuk knew--then or later--what they had done, he had never let on. Chewbacca looked at his son appraisingly. He doubted that there were any secret journeys concealed behind those nervous eyes. Years ago, a very young Lumpawarrump had gone alone into the forest near Rwookrrorro in search of wasaka berries and gotten himself lost--a misadventure that had grown much in the retelling, until it became a family fable populated by every monster of the dark depths of both jungle and imagination. But the scare had been real even if the danger had not, and since then his son had been content to stay close to the nursery ring and the home tree. And Mallatobuck and Attitchitcuk had been content to allow it, to let him be different. Neither, it seemed, had pushed him to take part in the toughen-ing--the unstructured rough-and-tumble play of the nursery ring, where young Wookiees learned their fearlessly headlong fighting style. When Chewbacca had greeted his son with a fierce growling rush, Lumpawar-rump had turned from it, yielding as though he were already wounded. It had been a difficult moment for everyone. But in the aftermath, Chewbacca realized that he was seeing part of the price his son had paid for his absence. In honoring a life debt to Han Solo, Chewbacca had left his son to be raised by mother and grandfather. He could not fault their love or their care, but something had been missing--something to spark the rrakktorr, the defiant fire, the eager strength that was a Wookiee's heart. Lumpawarrump did not even have a friend like Salporin to test himself against in daily clinches and slap-fights. The calendar said that it was time. Lumpawarrump had sprung up to adult height. But he had only begun to fill out that tall frame, and it was clear that he did not yet. feel the power of his size. It was also not difficult to see that Lumpawarrump was in awe of his famous father, and paralyzingly anxious for his approval. Beyond that, Chewbacca was still trying to take his measure. His son had talent in his hands. Though he had dragged out the task through nine days, Lumpawarrump had done a skillful job constructing his bow-caster--its weaknesses were the kind that only experience would teach him to correct. And he had shown a steady hand in downing a kroyies with it, the first of the hunting tests. But the second test, trapping and killing a big-eyed scuttle grazer on level three, had taken even longer and not gone as well. And the test waiting ahead, inside the Well of the Dead, promised to ask more of Lumpy than he was ready to face. [Explain to me what we see,] he said to his son. [It is a wound in the forest, where something fell from the sky long ago. It is the bottom of the great pit of Anarrad, which we see from the high lookouts of Rwookrrorro.] [Why did Kashyyyk not heal the wound?] [I do not know, Father.] [Because she needed a home for the katarn. The light falls to the depths and calls forth the young vitality of the wroshyr. The green leaves shelter the daubirds and sustain the sprites and mallakins. The daubirds invite the netcasters, and the mallakins call the grove harriers. And the katarn, the old prince of the forest, comes to the feast.] [If Kashyyyk has given the katarn this place, why must we hunt them?] [It is our pact with them, from long ago.] "I do not understand.] [Once they hunted us, and the richness of the high forest was theirs for a thousand generations. But their hunting did not destroy us. Nothing of this world is to be squandered, my son. The katarn gave the Wookiee its strength and courage, and allowed the Wookiee to find the rrakktorr. Now we hunt them to repay the gift. Someday it will be their turn again.] The fleet carrier Venture loomed ahead of Plat Mallar like a rugged gray island in an endless, empty sea. Snub fighters of the interceptor screen orbited it like hunting birds on the wing. "Looks awfully good to me," said Ferry Four. "It's a mirage," said Ferry Six. "They're going to have our heads for losing the commodore." "Cut the chatter and clean up the formation," said Lieutenant Bos, the ferry flight leader. "Venture flight operations, this is Bravo Flight leader. Requesting landing vectors on the ball. I have ten birds ready to roost." Under ordinary circumstances, the air boss would have handed the squadron over to the landing officer of the active landing bay, who in turn would have activated the landing alignment system's four tracking lasers to guide the fighters in. But all of Venture's landing bays appeared to be locked up tight. "Hold at two thousand meters and stand by, ferry leader." "What's going on, Venture?" "I have no further information for you at this time. Hold at two thousand meters and stand by." "Understood. Bravo Flight, it looks like they're not quite ready for us. We're going to parallel the carrier at two thousand meters, single file, landing spacing, until they wave us in." "Is it just me, or are there guns pointed at us?" Ferry Nine whispered over combat two, the addressable ship-to-ship frequency. "I'm looking right down the quads of an AS battery." Lifting his eyes from the controls, Plat Mallar studied the flank of the fleet carrier through the recon optics. It did, indeed, seem to him that quite a number of the gun batteries were trained on the ferry flight. "It might not be about us," Plat whispered back. "We don't know what's been happening out here." "Venture flight ops to Bravo Flight leader. Advise all fighters to shut down engines and thrusters. Recovery will be by tractor." "Copy," Lieutenant Bos said. "Bravo Flight, you heard the man--turn 'em into rocks." "Lieutenant, this is Ferry Five--even station-keeping thrusters?" "Ferry Five, they're going to reel us in on a line. Don't you know what'll happen if you've got the 'keepers running when the tractor beam grabs on?" "Yes, sir. Sorry, sir. I just don't understand--why are they doing this, Lieutenant? Why won't they let us land our ships ourselves?" "Ours not to reason why," Bos said. "Just do as they ask." "I know why," said Ferry Eight grimly. "They're not sure who's out here in 'em. For all they know, the Yevetha yanked us out during the ambush and put raiders in these cockpits. Think about it." "Bravo Flight leader, beginning recovery operations now," Venture advised. "Request you observe comm silence until further notice." "Affirmative, Venture. Bravo Flight, observe comm silence, effective immediately." Lieutenant Bos's recon-X was the first to be pulled out of line and towed inside Venture's aftmost landing bay on the invisible line of a tractor beam. Plat Mallar could not see what happened after that he did not have a good angle on the bay, and the outer doors closed again quickly after Bos's ship disappeared inside. Five minutes later the process was repeated with Lieutenant Grannell and Ferry Two, taken aboard amidships. Nearly an hour passed before it was Plat Mallar's turn--a long, lonely hour of anxious silence. They will never forgive us [or what we let happen, Plat thought as his ship began to move. They will never trust us again. The lights in the landing bay were blazing at the levels used for maintenance work and foreign-object scans. After living for nearly two days under combat-cockpit lighting, Plat Mallar was blinded. Before his eyes adjusted, he heard the honk of the rescue alarm and the hiss of the hydraulics as the cockpit canopy began to rise around him. "Come on down out of there," a commanding voice barked sharply as a boarding ladder clanged against the side of the recon-X. Squinting against the glare, Plat started to rise, but was hauled back by his unseen umbilicals. He fumbled with the releases, then felt his way over the side and onto the ladder, assisted by a hand that guided his booted foot to the top rung. By the time he reached the bottom of the ladder, he could see well enough to identify the six helmeted and body-armored troops that surrounded the recon-X. Their blaster rifles remained pointed at him as he stepped down off the ladder and backed away from the ship. The two security officers who were actually within reach, however, appeared to be unarmed. "Second Lieutenant Plat Mallar reporting. What's going on?" Mallar asked, still trying to blink away the last of the dazzle spots. "Just stand right there while we take a look at your ID disc," said the nearer of the two officers. Mallar fished the silver circle out of its special shoulder pocket and held it out to the man who'd spoken. The major dropped the disc into a portable scanner and studied the display. "What race are you?" "Grannan." "That's a new one on me," said the major, handing the disc back to Mallar. "Isn't Granna an Imperial world?" "I don't know what its current status is, sir," said Mallar. "I was born on Polneyeand I was never much interested in politics." "Is that so?" The major dismissed four of the troopers with a flick of his fingers. At the same time, the other two shouldered their weapons and moved behind Mallar, one hovering over each shoulder. "Report on ship status." It was then that Mallar noticed another pilot standing by, a flight helmet tucked under one arm. Behind him a tech crew waited with an instrument sled. "Engine three gets close to the redline running up to rated thrust. Other than that, I didn't notice anything." "Any combat damage?" "Uh--we were hit by an Interdictor, and then we took a heavy ion salvo, maybe two, I don't really know. Everything went out for almost five minutes." "Any operational gremlins or glitches afterward?" "No, all the systems seemed to come back all right once the integrator was stabilized. It should all be in the flight logs." "Very well," said the major. "Second Lieutenant Plat Mallar, I formally accept delivery of recon-X KE-four-oh-four-oh-nine, pending technical inspection, and release you from your responsibility for this vessel. Sergeant, escort this pilot to DD-eighteen and remain with him until the debriefing officer arrives." "Can I recharge my purifiers first?" Mallar asked, tapping the rectangular casing on his chest. The major frowned. "I don't know what that's about, son. I just know if I were you, I wouldn't be asking even for small favors right now." Chewbacca and Lumpawarrump stood together at the boundary of the Well of the Dead, where the Rryatt Trail turned away toward Kkkellerr. "It is time,] Chewbacca said. [Tell me what you have learned. Tell me the things you must know to hunt the katarn.] Lumpawarrump looked nervously at the green thicket. [Never show him your back, for the katarn will stalk you. Never flee, for the katarn will overtake you. Never hasten your hunt, for the katarn will vanish before your eyes.] [Then how are you to conquer your adversary?] [You must be patient, and you must be brave,] Lumpawarrump said, sounding not at all brave. [The katarn will allow you to follow it until it has taken your measure, and then it will turn and charge.] [And then?] [And then you must stand your ground until the katarn's breath is in your face and the scent of its glands is in your nostrils. Your hand must be steady, and you must take it in the center of the chest with your first shot, because your second will find only empty air.] [You have listened well, and remembered everything I have told you. Now we will see how much of it you have truly learned.] Lumpawarrump unslung the bowcaster from his shoulder and rubbed the newly polished metal of the stock with his paw. [I will try to make you proud.] [There is one more thing you must remember: Mind the light. Do not let night find you in the Well of the Dead. The katarn still owns the shadows and the darkness, and even the Wookiee must respect that.] [How many katarn have you hunted, Father?] [I have pursued the old prince five times,] Chewbacca said. [Once he escaped me. Three times he fell: And once he gave me this warning that I had been inattentive.] Taking his son by the wrist, Chewbacca made him touch the long double scar ridge hidden by the thick fur on the left side of Chewbacca's chest. [Be attentive, my son.] Lumpawarrump stared for a moment, then pulled his hand back and began to load the bowcaster. Chewbacca stopped him. [Why? Am I to go in unarmed?] [Wait until the moment. If you hunt katarn with your weapon drawn and ready, you will find it too easy to fire the quick shot, the long shot, the startled shot. And then you have given over the advantage. You will never see the old prince that takes you.] Those words shattered the last of Lumpawar-rump's pretense. [Father--I am afraid.] [Be afraid. But go forward, all the same.] Lumpawarrump stared, then slowly shouldered the weapon. [Yes, Father.] Turning, his paws found a seam in the green growth and parted it noiselessly. After a moment's hesitation, Lumpawarrump eased himself lightly through the opening and vanished from sight. Chewbacca waited on the trail for a count of two hundred, then followed his son into the Well of the Dead. The man who entered compartment DD18 wore a dark green uniform with markings wholly unlike those of Venture's crew or the troops aboard her. "My name is Colonel Trenn Gant, New Republic Intelligence," he said as Plat Mallar jumped to his feet. "Sit." Mallar complied. "You must be here to ask me about the attack on the commodore's shuttle." "No," said Gant. "Actually, we have a pretty good idea of what happened there." The colonel circled the table and Mallar once before sitting down and Placing an interview recorder between them. "When did you first learn the nature of the mission?" "The nature of the mission? You mean the ferry duty, or that we would be escorting Tampion?" When Gant showed no sign that he was going to answer, Mallar went on. "I was called to the training commander's office at oh-nine-fifty the day before yesterday, and I was told I had been assigned to a recon-X ferry flight." "And that was the first you knew of that assignment?" "Yes--well, no. Admiral Ackbar told me the day before, when we were at the simulator, that there was a chance they might need pilots for a ferry mission. But I didn't know anything else until Captain Logirth called me in. I got the details at the mission briefing, the same as everyone else." "What details were those?" "It was a mission briefing," Mallar said, puzzled that Gant would need an explanation. "Ship assignments--the jump vector--the formation we'd be us-ing-the mission schedule--the lift order--the fact that we would be escorting Tampion, and that some of us would be returning in the shuttle." "Is that all?" "Well--there were some technical details on comm configuration and so forth, yes." "When did you learn that Commodore Solo would be aboard the shuttle?" "Not until we were in our ships, ready to lift. Lieutenant Bos recognized the commodore as he was boarding. Before that, all we were told was that the shuttle would be carrying command staff." Gant nodded. "How much time elapsed between the mission briefing and the cockpit call?" "Four hours." "I need for you to account for your whereabouts during that four hours. Don't leave anything out." "I went right to the simulators and spent two hours doing lifts and formation work. On the way back to the lockers, I stopped for about ten minutes at the Memory Wall, looking at names. I took a five-minute scrubdown, then I crawled into a sleep tube and spent the rest of the time trying to--sleep, that is." "Who'd you talk to?" "I hardly talked to anyone. Lieutenant Frekka, my simulator controller. I said a few words to Rags--Lieu-tenant Ragsall, who flew as Ferry Seven in our group--in pilot country." "What did you say?" "I asked him how many of us he thought the Fifth would keep," said Mallar. "And what did he say to that?" "He said that in combat, you don't usually lose the mount and get the rider back--that the chances were that with a new fleet they'd need almost as many pilots as they needed fighters." "Who else did you talk to?" Mallar shook his head. "The crew chief for my recon-X, the flight leader--that's all I can remember. Major, I was nervous, and when I'm nervous, I don't start a lot of conversations." "What were you nervous about?" "About making a mistake. About making people regret giving me a chance." "Did you talk to anyone off the base?" "I never left the base." "What about your comlink?" "No." "Are you sure? Shall we look at the comm log?" "I didn't talk to anyone--wait, I tried to call Admiral Ackbar. But he wasn't available." "Admiral Ackbar again," Gant said. "Do you have a special relationship of some kind with him?" "He was my primary flight instructor. And he's my friend." "You managed to make friends in high places pretty quickly, didn't you?" "I don't know what you're trying to say. When I woke up in the hospital, Admiral Ackbar was there. Our friendship's been at his initiative--I wouldn't have known who he was to seek him out. I didn't know who he was until much later." "If it's at his initiative, why did you call him?" "Because I'd just gotten good news, and I didn't have anyone else to share it with who'd understand." Mallar leaned forward, spreading his hands flat on the tabletop. "Look, Major--I know we screwed up, and I know I'm going to be sent back. But every one of us would rather have died than show up here without the commodore." "Really," said Gant. "My information is that not a single member of your squadron fired a shot." "We couldn't," Mallar said, coming to his feet with enough angry threat in his posture to bring the guard a step forward. "It was just like Polneye all over again. They were waiting for us. We were out of it before we knew what was happening. I was hit at least three times in the first five seconds, and I don't think I got the worst of it. But I was pumping my triggers right up to the moment when the last Yevethan ship jumped out--hoping for a green light and a miracle." Gant's hand shot out and caught Mallar's right wrist, forcing him to turn that hand upward. The movement revealed purple-black bruises across the palm pad and a bloody, scabrous blister covering the last third of the thumb. Cocking an eyebrow as he released his grip, Major Gant sat back and crossed his arms over his chest. "Yes. They were waiting for you--at an intercept point ninety-one light-years outside Koornacht Cluster. They didn't just take a wild shot in the dark. They knew exactly who and what they were aiming at. And that's my problem, pilot. That's my problem with this whole affair." Mallar relaxed into his chair. "I don't know how the Yevetha found out enough to be there waiting for us. If I had any ideas, I'd have told you when you walked in here, instead of making you sift through the sand. The only thing I know is, it had to come from someone who knew about it before I did--before the pilots did. Tell me if I'm wrong, but I don't think an Interdictor could cross ninety-one light-years in four hours--not on its best day." "You are correct," Gant said, reaching out and collecting the recorder. Then he slid Mallar's ID disc across the table to him. "Sergeant, take Second Lieutenant Mallar to pilot country and show him how to find the 'fresher and berth forty-D. Mallar, you're restricted to pilot country, comm privileges suspended, until someone cuts new orders for you." "Yes, sir." Mallar slipped the disc into its pocket as he stood. "Thank you, sir." "I've done you no favors, Mallar. I'm looking for a traitor. I haven't found him yet." "Yes, sir," Mallar said, nodding and letting the soldier lead the way toward the hatch. Gant stood and turned as Mallar passed him. "One other thing." Mallar stopped short, his heart suddenly pounding. "What, Major?" "Why do you think the Yevetha left you and the others alive?" "Sir--at first I thought it was so we could carry the message back, as witnesses." "And now?" "Now I think they did it to humiliate us." "Explain." "Major, if we'd died out there, or been taken hostage, that would have made us important, too. What they did told us that we aren't even important enough to kill. It's like they understood just how to make us feel small. Futility, Major--that's the message they wanted us to bring back. They showed us they can go where they want to and do what they want to, and there's nothing we can do about it." "Don't you believe that for a minute, son," Major Gant said firmly. "This isn't over--it's just beginning. We're not going to roll over and surrender to this kind of blackmail. We'll get in our whacks." "Then I hope someone will get in a few for me," Mallar said, tight-lipped. "Because I think I missed my only chance." Half a dozen wroshyr leaves moved where there was no breath of air to move them, lifting the width of a hand and then falling again. The movement betrayed Lumpawarrump's position some forty meters east of Chewbacca. His son was not stalking anything. He was not even moving through the Well of the Dead in search of his prey. To Chewbacca's dismay and disappointment, Lumpawarrump had gone perhaps a hundred timid paces into the thicket, then found himself a hiding place, his back against a wroshyr stump and his body concealed by the heavy, hanging young shoots he gathered around him. At intervals, Lumpawarrump would peer out from his improvised blind and scan the forest for a few moments as though expecting a katarn to saunter past in full view. Then, seeing nothing, he would retreat back into the false security of his wishful invisibility. But Chewbacca had had no trouble spotting his son, and neither would any of the Well's predators. And the stump Lumpawarrump was depending on for protection created an enormous blind spot from which a katarn could approach and strike without warning. Chewbacca knew that his son was in far more danger than he realized, and yet Chewbacca was honor-bound not to intervene except to stop a killing blow. All he could do was watch and wait, his bowcaster at the ready, trying not to become so distracted that he made himself a ready target. To help keep himself alert, Chewbacca kept himself moving. He moved in an irregular arc that had Lumpawarrump's hiding place as its anchor--never drawing too close, never wandering too far away, and never compromising the shot he was constantly visualizing. Four times Chewbacca saw the wroshyr leaves move, and four times he froze. Lumpawarrump never saw him. Chewbacca could tell himself that, even caught in the open, motionless, face averted, a long-furred Wookiee could be taken for another of the stalks and mounds of parasitic jaddyyk moss that dotted the floor of the Well. But even a novice hunter using the simplest blink technique should have noticed that one of the jaddyyk stalks kept changing position. It was a sign of just how terrified Lumpawarrump was, cowering behind his green curtain--which was in turn another hard disappointment for his father. But although Lumpawarrump had taken no notice, before long Chewbacca new that something else had. It moved only when Chewbacca moved, and yet somehow managed to draw ever closer. It stayed low in the thick overgrowth and melted into the shadows. When Chewbacca turned to face it, he saw nothing. When he moved toward it, he soon sensed it behind him once more. With the air in the Well heavy and still, Chewbacca could catch no scent of what was stalking him until it had drawn uncomfortably close. He sniffed the air sharply and breathed a quiet growl. Eight meters away, another Wookiee rose silently from the wroshyr leaves. It was Freyrr, one of Chewbacca's many second cousins, and the lightest-footed stalker in the family. After a silent exchange scripted in glances and toothy grimaces, Chewbacca and Freyrr came together back-to-back and lowered themselves into the foliage. There the conversation continued in growls so quiet that they could be taken for the groaning of branches. [Where is Lumpawarrump?] asked Freyrr. [Gone to cover,] Chewbacca said, tipping his head toward his son's hiding place. [Why are you here? Why do you intrude on my son's hrrtayyk?] [Mallatobuck sent me to find you. There is news that could not wait on your return.] [What 'news?"" [It would be better if you left the Well first.] [My son cannot leave until his test is over.] [I will stay with him, cousin. Shoran waits for you on the Rryatt Trail, and will tell you all as you return to Rwookrrorro.] Chewbacca's body went rigid with barely contained fury. [You think to take this duty from me? How can you breathe such shame? Even when the mate of Jiprirr was burned by flame beetles and fell from the Gathering Trail, even when the mate of Grayyshk was confined with yellow-blood malaise and died, they were not recalled from the hrrtayyk.] Freyrr reached back and took a restraining grip on both of Chewbacca's hands. [Mind your voice, cousin.] The answering growl Chewbacca offered under his breath was all the more menacing for the ease With which he broke Freyrr's grip. [If I do not hear in the next moment what brings you to me, every webweaver, gundark, and katarn within three levels of the Well will hear my voice in the moment after that. Now, what is wrong? Is it Mallatobuck?] Freyrr sighed his surrender. [No---it is the one to whom you owe your life debt. Han Solo has been taken by the enemies of Princess Leia. He is a prisoner of the Yevetha, somewhere in Koornacht Cluster. The Princess has asked you to come back to Coruscant.] Only a mouthful of his own forearm kept Chewbacca's howl of distress from escaping his lips. [You understand now,] Freyrr went on. [You have a duty that goes beyond your duty here. Go. Shoran awaits. He will tell you the rest. I will watch over your son and see him through to the end of his tests. Mallatobuck will see that he understands.] The decision that loomed before Chewbacca was distasteful, but it was not difficult. [The hrrtayyk can wait until I return,] Chewbacca said, rising to his feet and abandoning his concealment. Freyrr rose with him. [Chewbacca, I beg you--if your son returns to Rwookrrorro without being able to announce his new name, without being able to wear the baldric Malla has made for him--] [Better that than for him to return over your shoulder, cousin.] Freyrr showed a mouthful of teeth. [Do you question my rrakktorr?] [No, cousin. I question his.] Chewbacca called across the Well to Lumpawarrump in a stentorian growl that startled a gathering of scur and rousted a fat-bodied charkarr to flight. Farther away, Chewbacca saw the shiver of leaves that marked a katarn turning away from a hunt. When Lumpawarrump was slow to appear, Chewbacca repeated the call. [Come to me, first-child. You will sleep this night in the home tree. My honor brother is in peril, and I must go to him.] Chapter 2 Wincing, Han opened a puffy, purple eye crusted jaw with blood and forced the room to come into focus. "Barth," he said. The flight engineer was sitting with his back against the opposite wall, curled up in a ball with his knees drawn up toward his chest and his arms wrapped around them. His face was downturned, his chin against his collarbone, as though he were sleeping---or hiding. "Barth," Han said again, more distinctly. This time his cellmate stirred, raising his head and turning his face toward Han. "Commodore," he said in a surprised tone, and scrambled across the rough floor to Han's side. "I don't know how long it's been since they brought you in--hours, at least." "What's been happening?" "Nothing, sir. You've been out the whole time. I wasn't sure you were ever going to wake up. Sir, don't take this wrong, but I hope you don't feel as bad as you look." Han let the flight engineer help him up to a sitting position. "This isn't so bad. I've been beat up by experts. The Yevetha are strictly amateurs." Han straight ened a leg, grimaced, and leaned back against the wall. "On the other hand, they're amateurs with stamina." "What do they want with us?" "They didn't say," Han said. He worked his jaw from side to side experimentally, then sniffed and wrinkled his nose. "Tell me the truth, Barth--is that smell me?" A faintly embarrassed look crossed Barth's face. "It's all of us, I'm afraid. There's no refresher, or anything resembling one, and no water. I, uh, just picked a corner. But at least it helps mask the smell coming off the captain. And there's something growing on him now--it's covered most of his skin. I can't stand to look at him." "Don't, then," Han said, looking past the lieutenant at the corpse of Captain Sreas. His face and hands were shadowed by a fine gray down. "Fungal spores, probably. It's a dry world--you can tell from the air, and the Yevetha's skin. A human corpse probably looks like a water hole to the stuff that lives in a place like this." "I don't Want to think about it," Barth said. "Don't, then," said Han As he straightened his other leg, pain made him squeeze his eyes shut and grunt. "On the whole, I think I'd rather be beaten up by an expert. Has anyone looked in on us?" "Not since they brought you in." Barth hesitated, then added, "Commodore, what do you give for our chances?" "More than I'd give you for our privacy right now," Han said. Barth twisted his head around, scanning the nearly featureless walls of their prison. The cell had a slitted air Vent in the center of the ceiling, a slitted drain in the center of the floor, harsh lights flush in the ceiling corners, and a half-height door armored in riveted plate. "Do you think they're watching us--listening?" "I would be. Doko prek anuda ten?" he asked, hoping Barth knew smuggler cant. "I'm sorry, I don't understand." Han switched to Illodian sibilant. "Stacch iscb stralsi." "Sorry, Commodore. I can get by in Bothan, handle a bit of Corporate Sector Contract Standard, and rattle off all nine water curses in Calamari, if that will help. But that's the limit of my linguistic talents." He ducked his head apologetically. "The Fleet Academy dropped its three-language requirement the year I entered." "Never mind," Han said. "I doubt any of those would stump the Yevetha for long. Let's just assume we have an audience and they're getting most of the jokes. Have they given you any food?" "No, nothing." Han nodded thoughtfully. "Well, if that doesn't change, you'll be able to figure out our chances by yourself. Let's take inventory." The pockets of what remained of the two men's flight suits yielded a flexible comb, the Imperial thousand-credit "Victory Tax" coin Barth carried as a worry-stone, an expired meal card from the Fleet headquarters mess, a pilot's pop-up collapsible cup, and one two-tablet dose of an antiallergen that was on the pre-flight restricted list. The inventory of jewelry was even shorter--two Fleet service pins with sealed-back attachment mounts, and a fine titanium ankle chain. "I've seen bigger arsenals," Han said, and nodded toward the corpse. "We'd better see what he has." Barth blanched. "Couldn't we skip that?" "They didn't bother to strip him. Maybe they didn't bother to search him, either." The blaster bolt that had killed Captain Sreas had scooped out a third of his upper chest, leaving behind a cauterized concavity into which the burned edges of the hole in his blouse were fused. The hollow was half filled by the gray down enthusiastically growing on the cadaver. Gritting his teeth, Han rummaged the pockets and keepaway flaps of the captain's flight suit. He handed his discoveries to Barth, who hung back and tried not to watch. "How long did you serve with him?" Han asked. "Four months--nineteen jumps all together." "Your first assignment?" "Second. I spent a year with the Third Fleet as a drag pilot on a tender." Han pulled a Fleet ID from the shoulder pocket and passed it back. "What kind of man was he?" "All officer," said Barth. "Demanding, but fair. Not much of a talker--I know he had kids, but I don't know their names." "I know the kind," Han said, then touched his tongue to a comlink power pack. "Dead," he muttered, handing it back. "Did he ever surprise you?" "He collected glass animals," said Barth. "I wouldn't have expected that. And once he showed me the holo of his wife he always carried with him. It must have been twenty years old. She was sitting on a black-sand beach somewhere wearing nothing but a smile. 'That's the most beautiful woman on this or the next thousand worlds,' he told me. 'I'll never figure out why she fell in love with a dullard like me."" "And was she?" Barth took a moment to consider. "In a way. I guess I'd have to say any man would say so if that smile of hers was aimed at him. I'm still hoping to find someone who looks at me that way." Han nodded as he gently rolled the corpse onto its back. Then he sat back on his heels. "Well, I can't say that Captain Sreas's worldly possessions are going to have much to say about the outcome," he said. "But hold on to that hope, Lieutenant. You'll see Coruscant again." By then Barth had retreated from the corpse to the opposite wall. "I don't think so," he said. "I think we're going to die here, too." Han grimaced as he stood, but erased the pain from his face before he turned toward the young officer. "Lieutenant, our captors went to a lot of trouble to grab us. They're not about to discard us now. And the folks at home aren't going to just write us off. One way or another, our people are going to get us out of here. Until then, we have an obligation to be as difficult and unco-operative as we can manage. You can't let them make you afraid. That just gives them what they want--a way to control you." "But isn't that what we are--a way for the Yevetha to control the President?" Han shook his head firmly. "If I thought for a moment that Leia would compromise herself, that she'd compromise the Fleet or the New Republic because of us being prisoners here, I'd find a way to die now, before it could happen." "Then explain this--if you're right, why should the Yevetha keep us alive once they find out we're not worth anything as bargaining chips?" "Slatha essacb secbel." "I'm sorry, I don't--" Han hadn't expected Barth to understand--the reintroduction of Illodian was meant as a reminder. Han pointed at the air vent over his head to underline the reminder, and a light went on in Barth's haunted eyes. "If your ship Was suddenly infested with pests," Han said, "and the first thing the captain did was order you to capture two of them in a jar, would you describe that as taking hostages?" Pursing his lips, Barth swallowed hard, then shook his head. "All right, then. From here on out, try to remember where we are, what Our purpose is--and that we have an audience, and what their purpose is. We had to have this conversation, but I only want to have it once. And some other conversations are going to have to wait for another time and place." "I know a little nightspot in Imperial City," Barth said. "Good food, sometimes a slava dancer worth overtipping. We'll save 'em for there." An affable, approving grin creased Han's face. "Done. I'll buy the first round." The Beruss clan estate in Imperial City was almost large enough to be a city in its own right. Within Ex-moor's walls were two parks, one forest, one meadow; a small lake stocked with game fish from Illodia and plied by graceful wind-driven boats; and twenty-one structures, including the hundred-meter-tall Illodia Tower with its external spiral staircase. Located more than three hundred kilometers southwest of the Palace, the estate was a testament to the long tenure of the Beruss clan on Coruscant. A Beruss had represented Illodia in the Senate for almost as long as there had been a Senate. Doman's first father, first and second uncles, sixth grandfather, and ninth great-grand-mother were just part of the long line connecting Ex-moor with Coruscant history. Illodia had no royal house, no hereditary rulers, but its oligarchy of five clans had proved longer-lived than many blood dynasties. And the Beruss had survived the various plots, crises, and political tides of Illodia in large part by being content to make Coruscant their home. Exmoor was likewise a monument to the onetime grandeur of Illodian ambitions. Taxes on Illodia's twenty colonies had paid for the construction, and the skilled hands of colony artisans had decorated and filled the houses named after their worlds. Even the Size and spacing of the structures echoed the map of Illodian territories, and each colony house had once borne a brilliant planetary emblem which could be seen only from the lookout lounge at the top of Illodia Tower. The emblems were gone now, the colony houses largely vacant, the colonies themselves only a memory. When the Emperor had annexed Illodia Sector, he had ordered the colonies "liberated" from the oligarchy's "tyranny"--and then levied assessments on the former colonies that were more than double the taxes imposed by Illodia. But the old glories were preserved in the approach and facade of the tower itself. The walks were swept and lined with smartly trimmed, bright-leaved plants. The metal and stone gleamed as it had when Bail Or-gana had brought his young daughter to play in the meadow park with the clan's many children while he and the senator spoke of adult things. And the seventy rooms inside were still a curious mixture of museum and clan commune, with the eleven adults and nearly twenty children who made up Doman's circle sharing and occasionally overwhelming those spaces. Doman received Leia in a room she had never before been privileged to enter--the clan counsel room on the top level of the tower, where the bonded adults met to discuss and decide family issues. Eleven identical chairs, each bearing the Beruss emblem in silver and blue, were arranged facing each other in a circle. An augmented skylight lit the circle warmly from the center. Doman's welcoming smile was equally warm. "Little Princess," he said, standing as though he expected her to come to him with a hug and a cheek kiss, as in the old days. "Is there any further news?" "No," Leia said, entering the circle but coming no farther. "There's been no word from the Yevetha. The viceroy has ignored my messages." "Perhaps this was not the Yevetha's doing?" "We now have the flight recorders from several of the recon-X escorts. There's no mistaking the Yevethan thrustship. And Nylykerka has identified the Interdictor they used as the Imperator, a ship that was delegated to Black Sword Command. There's really no question about it--this is Nil Spaar's work." "I see," Doman said, nodding. "In any event, I'm glad you came to see me before the Council sits. It's better that these matters be settled privately." "I had to come see you," said Leia, settling into a chair a third of the way around the circle from Doman. trayed---abandoned by someone I thought was my friend, my father's friend." "Clan Beruss is and always will be the friend of House Organa," said Doman. "That will not change in my lifetime, or yours." "Then withdraw the summons." Doman gestured in the air. "I will gladly do so--on your promise that you will not carry the war to N'zoth to rescue a loved one or avenge a casualty. Can you give me that promise?" "Are you asking me to give Han up? I can't believe that you could call yourself my friend and ask me to do that." With an easy grace, Doman lowered himself back into his chair. "Two other men suffered the same fate as Han--be it capture or death. Do you care as much for their return as you do for his?" "What an absurd question," Leia snapped. "Han is my husband, the father of my children. I'm sorry for the others, and I want them all safely returned. But I won't sit here and pretend that they mean as much to me as Han does." "You need not pretend here," Doman said. "But can you sit in the office of the President of the Senate of the New Republic and pretend so convincingly that nothing you do shatters the illusion? Because unless you're ready to give all three lives equal weight--whether much or none--I do not believe you should sit in that office." "You don't understand how it is for us," Leia said. "Look at this room--you may have your favorites, but no one spouse is everything to you, the way Han is to me." "That has always seemed to me a weakness of the way you choose to live," Doman said. "We can argue that another day," Leia said. "The point is that you can't understand what it would mean to me to lose him." Shaking his head, Doman settled back into his chair. "Leia, I've watched your kind for nearly a hun dred years now, and I've seen the lengths to which passion drives you. A man in love will move mountains to protect the woman who owns his heart. A woman in love will sacrifice all else for the man she has chosen. To us, it seems a grand folly--but I do understand, Leia, or I would not be afraid of your passion for Han." "Afraid?" "Afraid that you would sacrifice what does not belong to you--the peace We've struggled toward. The lives of the thousands who would fight at your order, and the millions they might kill. Even the future of the New Republic itself. None of this is beyond human passion, Leia. You know that as well as I." "Do you think that nothing matters more to me than Han? Do you think I'm that out of control?" "Dear child, I cannot sit by and trust to reason when reason loses so many battles to passion," Doman said. "Give me the promise I've asked you for, and I will withdraw the summons. I know you'll honor your word." "You want me to limit my options before I even know why the Yevetha did this," Leia said with the heat of indignation. "You can't ask that of me. It's not time yet to decide how to respond." "And when do you think that time will come?" "I haven't even had a chance to go over all the possibilities--Rieekan won't have a report to me for another few hours, and I don't expect to hear any more from A'baht until tonight, after the investigators report from the site of the ambush. Drayson's asked me for thirty hours, and Fleet Intelligence isn't making me any promises at all." "When do you expect to receive Minister Falanthas's report?" Leia shot Doman a puzzled look. "What?" "Don't you intend to involve the minister of state? Or are only military options under consideration?" "Haven't the Yevetha already set the ground rules? Aren't Han, Captain Sreas, and Lieutenant Barth prisoners of war?" "If they are not already casualties of it--which I pray they are not," said Doman. "But I also pray you remember that every conflict need not be fought to the death, and total war need not follow every outbreak of hostilities." "So we give them what they want?" "In the long history of war, far more prisoners have had their freedom bought or bartered than won with arms and noble resolve. There is no shame in compromise." Doman spread his hands wide to embrace the circle of chairs. "This room--this family--is predicated on that idea." "You lost your colonies and your freedom to Palpatine because of that idea." "For a time," Doman said. "But here I am, free. Where is Palpatine? Do not let the heat of the moment limit your options." Leia slumped back in her chair and gazed up at the skylight. "I won't," she said finally. "But I can't let you limit them, either, Doman." "Leia--" "We don't know why the Yevetha have done this--to punish me for Doornik Three-nineteen, or in preparation for something still to come." She sat forward, as if about to stand. "But whatever the reason, they'll be watching our response. Don't you think the worst possible sign we could give them is one that says the New Republic has no confidence in its elected leader? Don't you think Nil Spaar will be delighted to see the Senate distracted by infighting?" "There need not be any infighting," said Doman Beruss. "Step aside until this is over. Let one of us carry the weight. You won't be shut out, I promise you." "I can't do that." Leia stood and closed half the distance between her and the senator. "Please--on our friendship, on my father's memory--I ask you one last time, Doman, to withdraw the summons. Leave me free to do what needs to be done. Don't make me fight a war on the home front, too." "I'm sorry, little Princess," Doman said. "There's too much at stake. I have a duty." "And so do I," Leia said, her eyes clouded with a mixture of anger and regret. "I'll be leaving now, Senator. I have a lot to attend to before the Council session." "I hope you'll reconsider your position," Doman said, rising from his chair. "I have no wish to embarrass you." Leia shook her head. "You'll only embarrass yourself, Senator--not least in the eyes of a little girl who once looked on you as family, and Exmoor as a second home." In the time Chewbacca had been on Kashyyyk, the Millennium Falcon had become Rwookrrorro's leading attraction. Its arrival had been a signal event, and its presence on Landing Platform Thyss brought an ongoing stream of visitors from Karryntora, Northaykk, and even the distant Thikkiiana Peninsula. They came despite the fact that all there was for visitors to do was look at the outside of the ship and have a holo taken of themselves standing beside it. Chewbacca had left the ship in the care of his cousin Dryanta and his cousin Jowdrrl. They had nearly begged him for the honor, and they had taken the responsibility to heart. For Dryanta, a pilot, and Jowdrrl, a ship systems engineer, leaving their homes to live aboard her was an almost unmeasurable privilege. They had kept the Falcon sealed to everyone but themselves and arranged for the platform to be watched around the clock. During the morning and afternoon open-platform periods, either Dryanta or Jowdrrl-and often both--stood watch to see that no one came within arm's reach of the hull. But there were no visitors on the platform when Chewbacca, Freyrr, Shoran, and a disconsolate Lumpawarrump approached it. Mallatobuck had chased the crowd away without apology and set Dry anta and Jowdrrl to work preparing the Falcon for space. [Lumpy, I need you to go to the home tree,] Mallatobuck said after she greeted the party. [Kriyystak has been preparing a food bundle for your father's ship. See if it's ready, and bring it when it is. Quickly, now.] He accepted the chore without protest and hurried off. [You chose to bring him back rather than leave him with Freyrr,] Malla said, turning to Chewbacca. [It falls on me, not on him. But he was not ready,] said Chewbacca. [Perhaps he will be more ready the next time. Has there been any further news?] [The grids are silent. The misfortune that has befallen our friend is not yet public knowledge. Ralr-racheen has sent a message to the Princess on your behalf, but there has been no reply.] [And the ship?] [Jowdrrl will know best,] Malla said, turning and leading the way onto the landing platform. She called out to the ship's custodians, and both came running at her voice. [Chewbacca, ten thousand apologies. The ship is not quite ready for you,] said Jowdrrl. [I have twenty minutes of work left in the upper gun turret.] [Explain.] [I meant it as my gift to Han Solo, in gratitude for your life. I expected to be finished before you returned--" Chewbacca bared his teeth. [What gift?] [Cousin, I studied the ship closely while it was in our care. I saw certain weaknesses, and Dryanta helped me devise improvements--" Chewbacca's grimace grew into a snarl. [Are you telling me that the Falcon is not ready because you have been tinkering with it while I was gone, and it is still in pieces?] [No, cousin, no. Dryanta and I worked all night to finish what we had planned. I need only to test the new systems. If I return to my work now, I will be done by the time you have loaded and received clearance.] Dispatching her with a growl, Chewbacca turned angrily to Malla. [Did you know of this?] [Do not turn your fears for Han into fury at your family,] Malla said reprovingly, her snarl matching the intensity of his. [You did not even stop to consider the value of Jowdrrl's gift before rejecting it.] [She should not have presumed to change anything,] Chewbacca grumbled. [She is your closest cousin, and all too like you,] Malla said. [How long will it take you to reach Corus-cant?] [I am not going to Coruscant. I can do nothing for Han from there,] Chewbacca said. [He is in Koornacht Cluster, so I must go there.] [But the Princess asked you to come to Coruscant. Go, listen to her message, it's saved for you on the Falcon.] [If she then asks me to go to Koornacht, I will have lost hours that Han may not have to spare. And if she does not ask me to go there, I must do so anyway, or betray my honor. So I will go there directly.] [And what will you do there?] [Whatever is necessary,] he said. [I must go see what Jowdrrl has done. Will you bring me my blaster from the home tree?] [I will gather what you will need,] Malla said. [Be forgiving of Jowdrrl. She follows the dictates of her honor conscience, just as you do.] Growling to himself, Chewbacca turned and climbed the Millennium Falcon's boarding ramp with long strides. Malla turned to Freyrr and Shoran. [Come,] she said. [I must speak with you, and there is not much time.] Grudgingly, Chewbacca was forced to admit that Jowdrrl's modifications to the ship were not only perceptive, but long overdue. One of the much despised idiosyncrasies of the Corellian YT-1300 stock freighter was the severely restricted field of view from the cockpit. Though the flight crew enjoyed an unobstructed field of view forward and to starboard, visibility aft and to port was virtually nonexistent. That, plus the extreme offset of the cockpit, made maneuvering or landing a YT-1300 in tight spaces a challenge. Most examples of that model sported five-axis laser-ranging pods as add-ons on the blind side, just forward of the loading port--often installed at the insistence of spooked-pilots after a close call with a docking bay wall or another ship. But out of some combination of stubbornness and ego, Han had refused to let Chewbacca install a ranging pod. "Do you look at your feet when you walk? A real pilot feels where his ship is," Han had insisted. "I don't want anyone looking at the Falcon and thinking we need that kind of training-school crutch. Give me a meter of clearance and I'll fly this thing anywhere. Do you think Lando could have made that run into the Death Star at Endor if he'd depended on ranging pods?" But the Falcon's enormous blind spot was an even more serious issue in flight than during landings. That fact was the genesis of the maneuver known to pilots as the Corellian carousel--putting the ship into a slow left-hand roll when making an approach in traffic or maneuvering under fire. Han's addition of a single high-mounted sensor dish to the Falcon only accentuated the need to use the carousel routinely, since the dish had an even larger blind spot than the pilot. Jowdrrl had never flown aboard the Falcon, and Chewbacca had never complained about its peculiarities in front of her. But she summed up the problem with one clear, simple truth Chewbacca had not yet managed to impress on his son: [A Wookiee hunter who stands beside a tree hides half the forest from his eyes.] Jowdrrl's solution was a simple if not obvious one. Everywhere there was an existing viewport the port and starboard loading hatches, the dorsal and ventral gun turrets--Jowdrrl had covered it with a custom-fitted optical transducer panel. The output from all four of the nearly transparent sensors was routed to flatscreen displays in the cockpit, giving the pilot the benefit of the familiar views from those four locations. Together, the new sensors eliminated most of the ship's blind spot, leaving only a small area directly aft--an area that was already well scanned by the sensor dish. In explaining what she had done, Jowdrrl changed from Shyriiwook to the Thykarann dialect, which was much richer in technical vocabulary. she told Chewbacca. Chewbacca grunted grudging approval. [I did not have enough time to work on the other problem,] she said, switching back to Shyriiwook, her tone apologetic. [Which problem is that?] [That a Wookiee hunter does not have enough hands to climb and aim at the same time.] Again, her words showed a surprising awareness of the Falcon's operational realities--in this case, the fact that it was almost invariably undercrewed. The Corel-lian YT-1300 was officially rated as a four-place freighter for in-system work and an eight-place--four stations, four berths--for interstellar flights. The cargomaster was expendable, but none of the other three stations was. Even with the cockpit remotes for the gun turrets, it was impossible for two people to simultaneously fly and fight the Falcon effectively. The Falcon had survived most of its gun battles by fighting just long enough and just well enough to make a break. "The more mouths at the table, the poorer the feast,] Chewbacca said. [And the silent hunt is best undertaken by a party of two. Still, sometimes four hands are not enough.] Jowdrrl changed dialect again. chewbacca said. said Jowdrrl. She thumbed one of the eight cables used in the cockpit aiming system. The system Chewbacca had created involved eight motorized cable spools, turning the turret into a mechanical puppet controlled by a joystick in the cockpit. she said. [I do not have time to talk about what might be done,] Chewbacca said. [But I see from what you have done that I have not given you enough credit for your skill. You have grown while I have been away.] [Thank you, cousin.] Jowdrrl closed her tool kit and turned to face him. [I hope that that means you will accept me as your partner on the journey you are about to begin.] [Do not talk foolish talk.] [I know by what Malla has said that you will face an enemy as fearsome as the webweaver, and more vi cious than the gundark. You should not go alone, and you need not go alone.] [No,] Chewbacca snarled curtly, turning and clambering down the access ladder to the main deck. [We are family--the life debt to Han Solo does not stop with you,] said Jowdrrl, following closely behind. [And you do not have enough hands. What can you do alone to help him?] Chewbacca had reached the cockpit by then and slipped into the pilot's seat. Turning on the ion coil preheaters, he began running through the Falcon's streamlined preflight procedures. [You have three minutes to collect your belongings from the crew quarters and leave the ship.] [Aren't you going to talk to Malla before you lift?] Jowdrrl said, gesturing sideways. Chewbacca glanced in the direction of Jowdrrl's gesture. He saw Malla, Shoran, and Dryanta standing together on the landing platform, looking up at the cockpit. Dryanta and Shoran were wearing hunting bandoliers instead of baldrics, and a pair of tough-shelled tree bags were lying on the ground at their feet. With a fiercely impatient growl, Chewbacca clambered out of the pilot's seat and half ran to the boarding ramp. [What is this?] he demanded over the rising whine of the Falcon's idlers. [The rest of your crew,] said Malla. Shoran grinned brightly and drew himself up to attention. [The First Wookiee Expeditionary Force, reporting for duty.] [Malla told us that you're going straight to Koor-nacht,] said Dryanta. [We can't let you go alone, We're here to help.] Chewbacca looked to his wife. [You can't ask them to risk their lives on my debt.] [I did not have to ask them,] said Mallatobuck. [I only had to tell them why you are going and what you face.] [It was our idea,] Shoran said, reaching down and shouldering his well-stuffed bag. [And you can't deny us this hunt without risking betrayal of your debt--if you go alone and fail, you will have no honor.] Behind Chewbacca, the hiss of injectors and the clicking of compressors told him that Jowdrrl was continuing the Falcon's preflight without his assistance. [I never wanted any of my family to have to fight again,] said Chewbacca. [I am honor-bound. If I must, I will give my life for my friend. But I will not give yours.] [My life is not yours to offer,] said Dryanta. [It is mine. And I pledge it to you, my cousin, and to your friend.] [You cannot refuse us without shaming us, cousin,] added Shoran. [Jowdrrl, too.] [Go, then, and get aboard,] he said, shooting an annoyed look at his wife. They hastened toward the ship, leaving Chewbacca alone with his Malla. [Your cleverness could cost our family their lives.] [Or save yours,] Malla said. [I am at peace with my choice.] Chewbacca seized her in a firm embrace, and they growled with fierce affection into each other's shoulder fur. Then the high whistle of the thrust vents called him toward the ship, telling him that it was ready to lift. But a new voice called him back. [Father--] Chewbacca turned and saw Lumpawarrump standing in the wooden arch of the landing platform entryway. He was wearing his bowcaster and carrying the freshly camouflaged tree bag he had taken on his aborted journey of ascendance. [We will finish your tests when I return,] Chewbacca called. Lumpawarrump drew closer with tentative steps. [Take me with you. You have already broken with tradition once. I ask you to do so again.] Malla cried out a protest, but Chewbacca silenced her with a warning gesture as he crossed the platform to where his son stood. "Why?] Chewbacca demanded. [Why do you ask this?] [I will be neither child nor adult until you return--I do not belong in the nursery ring or in the council ring,] said Lumpawarrump. [Are you afraid I will not return?] [Yes.] [Then are you not afraid that you will not return?] [I am more afraid to fail than to die,] Lumpawar-rump said. [Much is expected from the son of Chewbacca--he cannot be a coward.] [You need not fear that now. By offering yourself, you have shown your mettle.] [That is not what they will see. They will say that it was only words, that I knew you would not take me, that I knew Malla would forbid it,] said Lumpawar-rump. [They will see that even you did not have faith in me--that Jowdrrl and Shoran and Dryanta were good enough for you, but I was not.] Chewbacca shook his head. [It is not a matter of faith. I have a full crew. What skills do you bring to this hunt?] [Everything of you that is in me, and everything that you can teach me,] Lumpawarrump said. [Father, please--I have accepted your long absences, the duties that take you away from us. But I must have a chance to prove my worth to you. I want my baldric and my new name. Give me a chance to earn them beside you, and know that you are proud of me.] Chewbacca cast a sideways glance at Mallatobuck, who was watching anxiously but keeping her distance. He doubted she could have heard much of the conversation over the noise from the Falcon. [Go,] Chewbacca said, seizing Lumpawarrump by the arm and sending him toward the ship with a push. Malla raised a sharp wail of protest, but Chewbacca moved quickly to block her from reaching their son. [You can't take him--he's not ready,] Malla insisted. [If I let you tell him that, if I tell him that, it will destroy him,] said Chewbacca. [That is why I must take him. Now step back and let him see a mother's fierce pride, not her fear.] Her eyes sad but resigned, Malla cuffed him across the face, and he returned the kiss with equal tenderness and affection. Then he turned and bounded up the boarding ramp while Malla retreated into the growing crowd drawn to the platform by the sound of the Falcon's engines. Moments later, the ship lifted and wheeled toward the sky. Vagabond The Teljkon vagabond had finally ceased Shuddering and groaning around its prisoners. With the starship once again hurtling through hyperspace, at last there was silence. "Attagirl," Lando said, patting the wall of the chamber in which he and the others floated. "It'll take a lot more than one rusty old escort frigate to run you down." "But Master Lando, this is terrible, simply terrible," said Threepio, his damaged arm jerking spastically as he gestured animatedly. "That ship could have rescued us, and now we've run away from it. We may even have destroyed it." "I hope we did," Lando said. "Trust me on this--any rescue offered by an Imperial warlord in the Core is going to be no rescue worth having. There's probably still a price on my head, maybe on you two droids, too. War hero or war criminal it's all a matter of your point of view. Chances are we'd find ourselves traded around until we were in the hands of whoever was willing to pay the most for the pleasure of killing us." "I see what you mean, sir." Artoo-Detoo burbled a terse comment. "I'm quite sure he's not interested in your linguistic pretensions, Artoo," Threepio said haughtily. "And neither am I." The droid's tone suddenly changed to a melodramatic melancholy. "Killed or deactivated or disintegrated to atoms, it's all the same to me. Oblivion, the final cessation of awareness--" Then annoyance suddenly took over Threepio's voice. "Not that it means anything to a random jumble of circuits such as yourself," he added, clanging a golden fist against Artoo's dome. "If you want to do something useful, you might see about fixing those sensors Master Lando placed on the hull. Why you let them be damaged just when we needed them most, I'll never understand." Artoo's shrill reply needed no translation, even for Lando. "There's no need to be rude," Threepio sniffed. "If you two keep wasting your power cells on bickering, you'll visit oblivion a lot faster than you were planning on," Lando said, drifting between them. "Artoo, is there any hope for the limpet?" "I can answer that," said Lobot, who had suddenly busied himself with collecting the parts of his contact suit and climbing back into them. "Just before it ceased transmitting, the sensors measured a monopolar ion density of more than twenty thousand Rahm units. It is a near Certainty that the limpet is damaged beyond repair." "Twenty thousand? Better than I thought. I'd have given you odds that it wouldn't take more than twelve," Lando said. "Well, no matter." "The primary component of all spectral sensors is Favervil dielectric ribbon," Lobot said. "Dielectric ribbon begins to debond under ion bombardment at a density of fifteen thousand Rahms." "Is that so," Lando said. "Master Lando, why didn't the vagabond's shields stop the ion barrage?" Threepio asked. "Now, that's an interesting question," said Lando. "The answer might be because there are no shields--no ray shields, anyway." "No shields?" Threepio echoed. "Isn't that un-usual-and dangerous?" "It's unusual--" Lando began. Lobot interrupted with another encyclopedic answer. "Since the inception of spacecraft licensing under the Registry Office, noncombatant vessels have been required to carry ray shielding generators of at least grade two strength, to protect the crew and passengers from cosmic radiation and stellar flares. More than ninety-six percent of alien ship types in the Registrar's Catalog are known to carry both ray and particle shielding in some form." Lando looked curiously at his old partner. Before he could give voice to his thoughts, however, Threepio filled the silence with a burst of indignant words. "Master Lando, this is intolerable. I am certain that Master Luke did not intend for us to be marooned on a vessel with no ray shielding. No wonder my circuits are so sluggish and Artoo has been so peevish. This could have the most serious consequences for us. We simply must leave this vessel now." "That's it," Lando said, snapping his fingers. "That's the reason there's no ray shielding outside. There are no droids, no computers, no electronic devices of any kind on the hull--just organic machines, with organic sensors, and organic repair mechanisms. Different rules. We didn't know because that's the first time we've actually seen the vagabond under fire. Boldheart only fired across her bow. Pakkpekatt's task force never fired on her at all. What do You think, Lobot?" "The issues for biological systems exposed to radiation are rate of damage versus the efficiency of repair, and heat absorption per unit of area versus heat dispersal per unit of area," Lobot said in a flat voice. "The i ntegumentary system of some organisms can provide effective protection for internal structures against charged-particle radiation, and significant protection against the J and C ranges of photonic radiation." Lando was staring with open concern. "Lobot, what is wrong with you?" "Was there an error in my summation?" "I'm not talking about your summation--I'm talking about you," Lando said. "Don't take this wrong, old pal, but your conversational style's regressed back to Early Mechanical. You've started nattering like an overeager knowhot. But I can't find you anymore--just a wall of data." Lobot plucked a drifting glove out of midair, avoiding Lando's eyes. "It is possible that I am retreating to the certain and the familiar as a means of reassurance, or in an attempt to enhance my sense of control over my circumstances." "What kind of answer is that? You sound like a droid running a self-diagnostic," Lando said. "I get the feeling that if your links were up, you wouldn't be talking at all. Come on, partner--what's cracking your glue?" After a few moments, Lobot stopped fussing with his suit. "I confess I am having difficulty maintaining a positive outlook," he said, his eyes still downcast. "Perhaps you could share with me some of the reasons for your apparent optimism." "Didn't you feel her wheel around before we jumped into hyperspace? We escaped from the Prakith, and we're headed back to where we do have friends. And we now have all the air we need to hang on until they find us," Lando said. "What's more, we're moving through the ship more or less at will, and we've figured out how to operate Qella mechanisms. On top of all that, we're being treated like visitors, not hunted like intruders. Things could be a lot worse." "Things are worse. We're headed for an unknown point within an enormous volume of space in a ship that routinely manages to escape detection for years at a time," said Lobot. "We have no food and limited water, and the droids and the suits are both running low on power. None of the mechanisms we can operate allow us to either control the ship or communicate with it. We're being guided through public spaces and kept out of private spaces--if we're going to get control of the ship, we need to be treated like the owners, not visitors." "I admit we haven't yet found the doors marked RESTRICTEDAUTHORIZED PERSONNEL ONLY," said Lando. "But we can't be more than two or three compartments away from the bow, according to the map Artoo's been keeping. I say we gather up the gear and keep looking for the control center." "There is no reason to believe that the control nexus is located in the bow," said Lobot. Lando peered at Lobot questioningly. "I thought it was you who pointed us in this direction." "On general probabilities derived from known designs," said Lobot. "But this vessel was not derived from known designs. It was not engineered by starship-wrights working within an established design paradigm. It is unique. And we will never unravel all its secrets, because we are Unable to think as the Qella thought," "One secret at a time will be enough to keep me happy," said Lando. "Why are you so sure the bridge isn't forward?" "Look at the map. The-compartments we've entered over the last few days have gradually been defining a space in the center of the ship to which we have no access." "Then we have to keep going, don't we?" Lando said. "The link between the two zones--the hatch that says Staff OR STaFF ONLY, the key to the executive refresher, the turbolift to the penthouse--could be in the next compartment, or the one after that." "Or it could be so well hidden that we will never find it. There may not even be a link between the two." "If we have to, we can make one," Lando said, flashing a quick grin. "But right now, it looks like we have a bet to settle. What do you have that's worth anything?" "Pardon me?" "If I'm right and you're wrong, I want something out of it," said Lando. "Nothing like a little wager to keep things interesting when the life-or-death stuff gets old. So what are you willing to risk on your opinion that says we die here like trapped rats?" Lobot stared blankly at Lando. Then his normally expressionless face began to shudder and twitch. His mouth worked, his eyes blinked. Finally he unleashed a stiff, unpracticed bleat that quickly melted down to a stuttering titter. "You're crazy, Lando," he said. "I've been meaning to tell you that for years." "A first time for everything," Lando said, still startled by a sound he had never before heard--Lobot's laughter. "But you didn't answer my question. Are you in or out?" Lobot grabbed a drifting boot and threw it across to Lando. "I know you too well to take a wager against you," he said. "Let's go find that control nexus." "Pardon me, Master Lando--" Lando was exploring the inner face of a new compartment with his hands while Lobot did the same on the outer face. "What is it, Threepio?" "There is something that is puzzling me," Threepio said. "Artoo insists that if this ship has no ray shields, there would be no interference with a realspace tracking signal." "That's right." "Artoo also insists that even if there were ray shields, they would not interfere with a hypercomm tracking signal." "That's also right." "Then can you explain why we have not been sending out a tracking signal each time the ship returns to realspace?" "Sure. Because we don't have a rescue beacon," Lando said. "I see," said Threepio. "If it isn't too much trouble, Master Lando, could you explain how exactly the armada is to locate us?" "They weren't ever supposed to lose us," Lando said. "Hammax's foray team had orders to go in hard and fast---disable the vagabond before it could clear or break down the interdiction field." "I see. But you persuaded Colonel Pakkpekatt to let us try to go in gently and slowly." Lando shrugged. "Something like that." Lobot raised an eyebrow at the evasion. "But was no thought given to contingency plans, in the event that the outcome was not as desired?" Threepio persisted. "Surely the possibility of the vagabond escaping came up in your strategy sessions with Colonel Pakkpekatt." "Of course it did," Lando said. "But a rescue beacon might attract the attention of outsiders. They're designed that way, after all--all frequencies, all receivers. Remember, this was a New Republic Intelligence operation. Getting control of the vagabond was only part of the goal--doing it quietly was the rest. Even Hammax's team didn't have a beacon--just short-range comm units." "I see--you were forbidden to add a beacon to our equipment." "No," said Lando. "That was my decision. I figured if we had one, we might use it. I elected to remove the temptation." "I'm certain I don't understand, Master Lando." "Well--you don't have all the pieces of the puzzle," Lando said. "Let's just say that my orders and Pakkpekatt's orders don't quite coincide. We didn't have his permission to board this ship, and I didn't intend to hand her over to him--at least not right away." "Why not?" "Because she would have disappeared into a black hangar somewhere and never been seen again whole," said Lando. "The NRI has hundreds of people who do nothing but take apart captured alien weapons looking for ideas to steal. The man who sent me out here--call him the Admiral--had a notion that this ship might be something more than that, might be something other than a weapon--and might deserve a better fate. And, as he usually is, he seems to have been right." "I see," said Threepio. Artoo chirped briefly, prompting Threepio to add, "But there seems to have been some deficiencies in his plan." Lando shook his head. "The only thing that's gone wrong with the plan is that I promised him we'd be able to get control of this ship, and we haven't succeeded in doing that yet." "Master Lando, Artoo would like to know if we have any way of signaling the armada." "Not at light-year distances, no. But remember, I don't exactly want to be rescued by Pakkpekatt." "Then how do you intend to signal the man who sent you out here?" Lando pursed his lips. "There's a blind-band hypercomm transmitter on Lady Luck, very black stuff I have no idea how it works. But the Admiral can use it to track the ship's movements, locate her anywhere within the transmitter's range--which is a secret, but I was told it was a very large number." "But Lady Luck is no longer attached to the vagabond," Threepio said. "We saw it cut away from the airlock. Lady Luck may even have been destroyed. What use is the transmitter to us? No one has any hint of a clue of an idea where we are. Lobot was right--we're doomed, doomed to oblivion--" "Would you plug that leak, now?" Lando demanded, his tone dripping annoyance. "I swear before an honest dealer, you must be the most tiresome droid ever built." "Oh! How very rude " "There you go again," Lando said. Digging a bare hand into one of the pouch-pockets of his contact suit, he pulled out a silver cylinder as thick as his thumb and as long as his palm. "Look," he said. Lando flipped the cylinder end over end in midair, then snatched it up cleanly and tucked it safely away. "They'll be able to find us when they need to." "Why? What are you talking about? What's that thing you're throwing around?" "The beckon call for Lady Luck," Lobot said. "Did you know about this?" "Of course." Threepio cocked his head. "Is that a transmitter? Can we call for help?" "It transmits the signal that activates the yacht's slave circuits--across hyperspace, too, now, thanks to the Admiral," said Lando. "The slave circuits then bring the ship to me." "Pardon me, Master Lando, but have you had that device in your possession all this time?" "That's a stupid question, Threepio--even for a protocol droid." "I see no reason to respond to simple interrogatives with abuse--" "Let me save you the trouble of asking any more 'simple interrogatives,'" Lando said. "Yes, I've had it all along, and I haven't used it. The reason I haven't used it is that we don't have control of the vagabond. If I call Lady Luck to wherever we stop next, one of two things will happen, neither of which helps us. Either the yacht'll spook the vagabond into running, or the yacht'll provoke the vagabond into firing. And if Lady Luck is put out of commission, we're going to be in real trouble. Is that clear?" "Perfectly clear, Master Lando." "Good," said Lando. "Then I'm going to get back to what I was doing, and you're going to avoid distracting me. Because we can't go home until We do what we came out here to do, and I'm too tired and hungry to have any patience with a fussy droid. I'd rather blast you into components than listen to you for one more minute. Is that clear?" "As clear as the morning air on Kolos Moon." Threepio tapped Artoo on the dome with his good hand. "Come, Artoo. I believe we're in the way here." The bow compartment of the vagabond was at least five times more voluminous than any other that Lando's party had previously discovered. The chamber took the shape of a fat disc standing on edge, with the inner face convex, the outer face five meters away and concave. Counting the one they had entered through, there were eight portals evenly spaced around the rim of the disc. Each of the new portals seemed to be the gateway to another long series of compartments. "All star routes lead to Imperial City," Lando said. "I don't know if this is the control nexus, but it's something different, that's for sure. And it's pretty clear the Qella didn't want you to miss coming here." While the droids hovered near the center of the compartment, Lando and Lobot began the now familiar drill of searching its surfaces by hand for contact triggers. But for all the surface area of the compartment, it was unusually unreactive. Lobot found no triggers on the outer face, and Lando only a single trigger on the inner. That contact brought a pattern of curving, evenly spaced projections curling out from the entire inner face of the chamber. Each blunt-ended L-shaped hook was as thick as Threepio's wrist and as long as Lando's forearm, and the pattern invited the eye to see trapezoids, pinched rectangles, and overlapping wavy-sided triangles. "What do you think, Lobot? A bridge control panel, Qella-style? They sure say 'grab here' to me," Lando said, hovering near the droids. Lobot, drifting just over the inner face, reached out and seized hold of one of the projections. There was no response within the chamber and no detectable response from the ship. "If these are controllers, perhaps they only operate in combination. It would be useful if we knew what the body plan and limb span of the Qella species was," said Lobot, turning toward Lando. "Of course, the size of this chamber would readily allow for more than one operator." Lando jetted forward. "Isn't this what kids do when you let them sit in the cockpit for the first time---start pushing buttons at random?" He reached for the nearest projection with his left hand, then drew it back. "Artoo, can you spot any writing anywhere on this wall--like what you saw in the airlock when we boarded?" The droid's silver dome swiveled back and forth for a few seconds. Then Artoo emitted a short squeak that needed no translation. "Just our luck," said Lando. "We're dealing with a species that never invented the sign." By then, Lobot was moving across the chamber face by using the projections as handholds. "I don't think these are control devices, Lando," he said. "Or if they are, the controls are locked out. I've touched fourteen different pairs now, and nothing is happening. Even if something was going on elsewhere in the ship, there should be some confirmation here." "Maybe we're all wrong about this chamber." "I am more and more convinced by the moment," said Lobot. "I can barely reach from one grip to the next---even if the Qella are larger than we are, it seems inconvenient to scatter controls over such a large area." "Maybe this is where they hung prisoners, or maidens, or honored sacrifices, like figureheads on the bow." "I think that unlikely." With a grin and the faintest puff of thruster gas, Lando began a slow rotation, until he was floating upside down in relation to the others. "You know, Lobot, they look even more like handholds this way--hand-holds and footrests. I wonder--" He craned his neck back until he could see the outer face of the chamber. "Artoo, how many of the rectangular patterns are there?" A moment later, Threepio relayed the answer. "Artoo informs me that there are twenty-seven." "Are there any extra projections that aren't part of those twenty-seven?" Threepio consulted with Artoo, then reported, "There are none, Master Lando." "What are you thinking, Lando?" asked Lobot. Grabbing a projection with his left hand, Lando used that leverage to turn himself so his back was to the inner face, allowing him to reach out and grasp the next projection with his right. His legs were twenty centimeters too short for him to reach the bottom corners of the rectangle. "I'm thinking 'seating capacity, twenty-seven." Though Wookiees and Elomin would be more comfortable than I am." "A theater?" Lobot asked, turning himself around as Lando had. "Maybe. And maybe the show won't begin until the audience is seated. Artoo, Threepio--get on over here and find a place to grab on." Artoo towed Threepio to the inner face and waited until the protocol droid had grasped a projection with his working hand. Then the little astromech droid took up position beside his counterpart, using a grappling claw to seize hold. Moments afterward, the chamber was plunged into absolute darkness. "Lights, Artoo," Lobot said quickly. "No," said Lando. "Wait. It's their show." Shortly, all four curious spectators could see a brightening glow opposite them--a glow that seemed much farther away than the outer face of the chamber. As the glow continued to increase, it sharpened and separated into several distinct bright masses. Then, in the span of a few heartbeats, everything before them snapped into vivid, brilliantly lit focus. Those same hearts skipped a beat at the sight. Human senses insisted that they were no longer inside the vagabond. They were suspended in darkness, looking out upon a beautiful ruddy brown planet painted with sparkling blue oceans and cloaked in a partial veil of lacy white clouds. A brilliant but pale yellow star illumi nated the planet's face, which was sculpted by the wandering lines of black mountains and dark green stains spreading outward from the rivercourses. Two moons--the smaller one dusty gray, the larger a startling red--crept along their invisible orbits. Lando found himself feeling awe, vertigo, and that peculiar panting breathlessness that those who have tasted the cold bite of space are prone to. "Homeworld," he whispered to himself. "The centerpiece exhibit. As though they knew they would never see it again." "Lando, I feel like I'm spacewalking," said Lobot, also in a whisper. "At least, I think this is what spacewalking would feel like. Is it real?" "No. It's not quite right--it's more real than reality," Lando said. "But you'd have to have been there yourself to know that the proportions are wrong, that everything's too big and too close together, that the planet's too bright relative to the star, time is compressed, and so on. None of which matters. In every way that matters, it's flawless." Lobot turned his head toward the droids without taking his eyes off the panorama. "Artoo, what do your sensors tell you about what's before us?" Even Attoo's long answer seemed respectfully muted. "Artoo says that the outer face of the chamber is still in place," said Threepio, "but it now has an optical index of absorption below one hundredth of one percent." "That's as close to perfect transmissivity as any material I know of," Lobot said. "Do you mean it's not a holo?" Lando asked. "Master Lando, Artoo says that the star is forty-four meters away. The planet is seventeen meters away." "It's an orrery," Lobot said. "An enormous shadow-box orrery of the Qella system. I'm very curious about the mechanism--" Lando was nodding his agreement with Lobot's conclusion, then interrupted him. "That's enough. I don't want to hear any more chatter right now." "Why? What is wrong?" "Nothing," Lando said, drawing and releasing a deep breath. "I may never see another piece of art this beautiful again. I just want to enjoy it for a while before we go on." The refrigerated cask being loaded into the cargo box of Drayson's landspeeder at the Obroan Institute's Newport landing bay had made the fastest possible journey from Maltha Obex to Coruscant. Even so, Drayson wore his impatience openly on his face as he watched the stevedores maneuver the large coffin-shaped object. "Excuse me?" someone said at Drayson's elbow. He turned to find a white-haired, sun-bronzed face peering curiously at him. "Yes?" "Are you Harkin Dyson? The cargomaster said that the owner was here for the pickup." "Yes," Drayson said, turning away from the loading. "And you are--" "Joto Eckels," said the stranger. "I was in charge of the excavation. I just had to see if it was you. I wanted to thank you myself." "For what, Dr. Eckels?" "If you hadn't picked up the contract, our trip to Makha Obex would have been canceled. We might not have been able to recover Kroddok and Josala's bodies for years." He gestured over his shoulder at Meridian's shuttle. "And I want to thank you for agreeing to let me bring them back with me on this run--that was a great kindness to their families." "Anyone would have done the same," Drayson said. "We might like to think so, sir, but it's not so. I know that's not why you picked up the contract, but I want you to know how much that opportunity meant to all of us who knew the team. And I want to assure you again that none of this delayed delivery of your material." Eckels nodded toward the cask, now secured in the cargo box. "I know it didn't," said Drayson, flashing a reassuring smile. "Thank you for your good offices, Dr. Eckels. Meridian will return you to Maltha Obex at your convenience--I've already given Captain Wagg his instructions. And please relay my thanks to the rest of your team." "I will," said Eckels. "And, by the way--based on what I saw before I left, I expect they'll have quite a bit more material recovered and cataloged by the time I rejoin them. There are twelve good, hardworking folks down there, living out of cold camps and logging long days on the digs. You can expect us to return with more than enough to allow us to authenticate those possible Qella artifacts." "Very good," said Drayson, taking a sidestep toward the cargo speeder. Eckels moved with 'him. "I was wondering if it might be possible to get a look at those artifacts, a holo at the very least, before I head back to Maltha Obex." "Sorry, I don't think that would be possible," Drayson said, smiling politely and trying again to turn away. "I understand the need for discretion. I just want to point out that it could be very helpful in setting priorities for our remaining time there," Eckels said. "After all, twenty-five days is hardly enough to make a beginning on an entire planet. I can remember expeditions where we spent three months in general survey and site selection before we moved our first pebble." "Doctor, I understand--and I won't hold you responsible for the handicaps I imposed on you," Drayson said. "Above all else, I'm a realist. I'm quite certain the results will be in line with my expectations." Drayson moved toward the cargo speeder's door as though to leave, but Eckels moved more quickly and blocked his way. "There's something else I need to speak with you about." This time Drayson allowed a flash of irritation to cross his face. "What is it?" "The, uh, material I brought you--" Eckels lowered his voice. "It's clear from the way we found the remains, and the artifacts found with them, that these creatures were sentient." "Which is as I expected. Did you expect otherwise?" "Sir, it complicates matters, that's all. If there were survivors, the material would belong to them, of course," Eckels said. "In the absence of survivors, though, the rules and protocols of the Office of Sentient Species apply--material remains must be preserved as found, artifacts may be reconstructed but not restored, and so forth. I'm sure that a collector of your stature is familiar with those requirements--" "Passingly familiar," Drayson said. "Well, then, this shouldn't be an issue--for my own conscience's sake, I simply wanted to get your reassurance that the material will be treated with respect, Eckels said. "There are no known survivors at present, but that can change. Look at the Fraii Wys, reappearing nine thousand years after history recorded their supposed extinction. And the last thing any of us want is a situation where survivors appear and find that their ancestors are hanging as decorations in the parlor." "Is it your purpose to insult me, Dr. Eckels? If so, let me advise you that you're very close to succeeding." "Please, no, not at all. You must understand, the Institute is very reluctant to let material remains leave our control, and even when we do, we always insist on a right of first examination--" "Which you've had," Drayson said. "I trust that you took advantage of the travel time to conduct that examination and make whatever holos and scans you ordinarily would." "Yes. Yes, we did." "Very well, then," said Drayson, showing a quick smile. "If it helps, Doctor, let me reassure you that I'm acutely aware of the value of the contents of that cask-and I do not refer only to how much I will have paid for you to retrieve it. It will be handled with all possible care. After all, a man spends that kind of money to acquire a treasure, not to squander and destroy one. And the parlor walls are quite full already." "Yes, of course," said Eckels, bobbing his head. "My apologies if I offended you." "No offense taken," said Drayson. "Now, if you'll excuse me . . . It was a twenty-minute flight north from Newport to the nearest Alpha Blue Technical Services Section, located in the same district where several high-profile senators had their official residences. The unremarkable buildings housing Section 41 were not on the tour routes, however. The small signs bearing the generic and easily forgotten business name INTERMATIC, R.C. accounted for the traffic in and out of the site's two private hangers. Even before Draysoh's speeder had stopped moving, Section 41 staffers were moving toward it with a repulsorlift cargo dolly in tow behind them. As he emerged from behind the controls, he was greeted with smart salutes. "Admiral." "At ease, Tomas." Drayson moved to the back of the speeder and helped loosen the tie-downs and guide the dolly under the cask. "Is Dr. Eicroth ready?" "Lab five," the colonel said. "She's been standing by for the last hour." "Let's go, then." Dr. Joi Eicroth greeted Drayson with a professional smile that gave no hint of a relationship that had covered friend, lover, and fellow survivor over a span of thirteen years. But as soon as the cask was safely in place beside the large examination plate, Drayson chased the junior officers away and added a quick kiss to his greeting. "Scandalous, Admiral. I'm on dutY." "Yes, you are. Let's get it open," he said. "First things first," she said, pulling a cord that brought two full-body isolation suits descending from the ceiling on their umbilicals. "I have to change into something more comfortable." It took her the better part of five minutes to don her iso suit, and then the better part of five more to help him into his and seal the lab. But it took almost no time at all to switch off the cask's stabilization system, break the seal, remove the lid, and vacuum away the inert, space-filling foamite that concealed the contents. Then they stood at opposite ends of the cask, silently looking down at a creature that had died more than a century ago and been buried by its friends on the moving ice of Maltha Obex. Its oval, smooth-skinned body was nearly as wide as the cask. Its slender, double-jointed limbs would not have fit inside it if they had not been neatly folded so that its clumsy-looking three-fingered hands covered its face, and its legs made a neat square-and-X below its body. "It's no wonder," Eicroth said shaking her head. "What?" She moved to the side of the cask. "These limbs must be five or six meters long altogether--and with a cross section not more than six centimeters. A perfectly dreadful adaptation for cold. It's amazing that this one lived long enough to die where it did." Drayson nodded. "I want the genetic material extracted and sequenced immediately. The general dissection can wait until that's done." "Understood," she said. "Help me move it up on the plate." CChapter 3 General A'baht." · "Yes?" "The gig from the Yakez is coming alongside. You asked to be notified." "Thank you, Lieutenant," Etahn A'baht said with out looking up. "See that Commodore Carson is escorted to the flag briefing room immediately." "Yes, sir." It was the first of five such vessels expected to rendezvous with the fleet carrier Intrepid that morning, and Farley Carson was the first of the task force commanders to be piped aboard for the command briefing. The Star Destroyer Yakez was the flagship of the Fourth Fleet's Task Force Apex, and Carson was A'baht's sole friend among the arriving flag officers. By President Organa Solo's order, the Fifth Fleet had been reinforced by elements drawn from three other New Republic fleets. With the arrival of Task Force Gemstone, all the disparate elements had finally gathered in deep space outside Koornacht Cluster, and the business of forging them into a single command could begin. That burden was to have fallen on Han Solo, but the Yevethan ambush carried out against the ferry flight and the commodore's shuttle had left the combined fleet without its appointed leader. So far, no replacement had been announced, leaving the chain of command as it had been, with A'baht as senior commander of the forces in Farlax Sector. But Fleet Command had involved itself in the operational details to a degree that sharply limited A'baht's command autonomy, and the selection of a new commodore seemed inevitable. In the meantime, though, there was work to do. "General A'baht," said a new voice. A'baht looked up to see Carson standing in the hatchway wearing a half grin. "Stony," A'baht said, rising from his desk. "I thought I told my aide to deliver you to the briefing room." "The landing bay officer said the next gig was ten minutes behind me," said Carson, closing the hatch behind him and easing himself into a chair. "I thought I'd take the opportunity to say hello." Puffing out a breath, A'baht settled back into his chair and thumbed his comlink. "Lieutenant, inform me when the others arrive." "Yes, sir." Switching off the unit and setting it on his desk, A'baht sat back and let himself smile. "It's good to see you, Stony." "And you, Etahn. I hear things have been a little rough." "I'm glad to have you here," said A'baht. "This is a very green fleet." "I doubt that your training methods have softened with the years," said Carson. "They'll be all right." "A leavening of experienced crews and battle-tested ships among them will make them better," said A'baht. "We've trained them hard, but training is not the same as fighting. They got their first taste of that at Doornik Three-nineteen." "A bitter taste, from what reached us," said Carson. "How did the new ships perform for you?" "They held up well. The losses we took weren't design-related. A couple of captains learned what not to do next time." A'baht paused, then added gravely, "A couple of crews bought me very expensive lessons that I will probably not have the opportunity to apply." "You don't think you're going to see home before this is over, do you?" "No--they won't make any changes now. But when the new commodore arrives, I'll be reduced to a supernumerary--in fact if not in name," said A'baht. "Already I'm little more than a mouthpiece for Fleet Command." "It's that way sometimes," said Carson, his grin widening. "No one wearing this uniform enjoys the latitude of a general in the Domean navy." A'baht flashed a brief, knowing smile. "Or enjoys the responsibility. If I had had that from the start--" "It's not the way Coruscant does things--no matter who's holding the reins, there are always reins," said Carson. "Are you certain they're going to send someone?" "I think the only thing that's stopped them from sending Ackbar or Nantz to take command is the fear that they, too, might become hostages," said A'baht. "I seem not to have many boosters at headquarters." "I told you--you should have let them make you an admiral," said Carson. "I'd bet half your trouble with the command staff comes from clinging to your old rank. Headquarters is full of newborn traditionalists, and they can't get it out Of their heads that a general should have dirty boots or wings. These lofty quarters"--he raised his hands to take in the utilitarian suite--"are for admirals." "So you are saying that they offered me the choice of retaining my Dornean navy rank as a false courtesy," said A'baht. "Oh, I'm sure whoever signed off on the consolidation plan was sincere," said Carson. "Generals are C-one, admirals are C-one--so it's the grade that matters, not the rank, right? But old prejudices die slowly--to say nothing of old rivalries." "Foolishness," A'baht said disgustedly. "To judge a man by his title--" At that point, the hatch opened and Lieutenant Zratha poked his head in. "Admiral Tolokus and Commodore Martaft are in the briefing room, sir. The others are on their way up." "Thank you. We'll be along presently," said A'baht, standing. "Well, Stony, time to don my tarnished title." Carson was on his feet by then and saluted smartly--to A'baht's surprise. "Sir, if I may say so, I can see no tarnish from here--and neither will the others." He moved a step closer and dropped his voice. "This isn't Imperial City. We know who you are, General--we know that you belong. Just lead the way. You won't need to wonder about whether we're following. They asked me to tell you that, sir." A'baht showed a quick, tight smile. "Thank you, Stony," he said. "Now let's go roll up our sleeves." A'baht allowed Carson to go on ahead while he stopped to collect his briefing officers from the staff bullpen. Without consciously intending it, that gave him the opportunity to make an entrance, sweeping into the room with two colonels following in his wake. The five who were waiting there four commodores and an admiral, from left to right a woman, three men, and a Norak Tull--rose smartly from their seats and saluted. "At ease," A'baht said, moving toward the center seat. "Let me introduce Colonel Corgan, my staff tactical officer, and Colonel Mauit'ta, my staff intelligence officer. They will have reports for you later in this session." The two officers took chairs flanking A'baht. The general wasted no time on introductions or other social niceties. "As you already know, you and your task forces have been sent here to reinforce the Fifth Fleet in the effort to contain the Yevetha," he said. "We are no longer here as a symbol, or a warning, or a show of strength, like some sort of War Day parade. Our mission objectives are threat assessment and containment, and they could grow beyond that at any time. "We will operate as a single operational unit at double fleet strength, with all ten task forces reporting directly to me through my command staff. Each of your units will retain its current organization, call signs, and command frequencies at the battle group, squadron, and division levels. "The one exception to that concerns your intelligence assets. All prowlers and ferrets are to be attached to the newly authorized Sixteenth Tactical Recon Group, and will be reporting directly to Colonel Mauit'ta, effective immediately. He will provide you with further details concerning basing and the transfer procedure. Fleetwide tactical reports will come from Colonel Corgan's office. You'll be expected to continue to provide your own local early-warning and fleet defense patrols, using your recon wings and pickets. "We've taken casualties and can expect to take 'more, but I will not stand for any commander under me becoming blithe about that fact. We should be prepared to accept every loss by enemy action that is necessary to the success of our mission here--but I will not accept a single casualty due to inattentiveness, incompetence, carelessness, inefficiency, or preventable failures of ships and munitions. Our enemy is smart, strong, and determined, and we're on his turf. I'm asking for the highest possible level of combat readiness at every level of your respective commands. "While we're on the subject of losses--Colonel Corgan?" Corgan nodded. "Fleetwide, we are twenty-six combat pilots and eleven support pilots short of our authorized strength," he said. "Those numbers reflect net losses from the Doornik Three-nineteen engagement and the coordinated recon of the Cluster interior. "Between reserves and resupply from Coruscant, we have rides available--just no riders. One of the down sides of being a new combat division scratch-built to specs is that we had very few experienced pilots banked in nonflying posts, and most of those carry ranks that ordinarily would exclude them from front-line combat units. "When you return to your commands, please examine your crew and staff rosters with an eye toward locating a minimum of six and a maximum of eight pilots whom you could make available by transfer. We are particularly hurting for experienced recon pilots." Commodore Poqua leaned forward and rested her folded arms on the table. "Between the expansion to five fleets and the number of Rebellion veterans returning to civilian life, none of us is in a much better position than you are," she said. "I know that up until two years ago, Task Force Gemstone typically had forty or more names in the bank. Now those bank pilots are scattered on forty worlds, making babies and tending gardens and flying commercial shuttles--if they're flying at all." "We're aware of the effect the drawdown has had throughout the Fleet," said A'baht. "But the need to balance our assets remains. Please submit your transfer lists by fourteen hundred-today." He looked to his right. "Colonel Mauit'ta--the Yevethan force assessments." Mauit'ta slid a datacard across the table to each of the task force commanders in turn. Commodore Grekk 9, the Norak Tull, inserted the card into the input stage on his armored thorax, and Poqua produced a datapad from an inside pocket. The others let their copies remain on the table as finger toys. "Those datacards contain our complete and most current knowledge about the Yevethan fleet," said Mauit'ta. "That includes recognition holos, sensor profiles, an order of battle and ship inventory, last and best sightings, and preliminary specifications for the hyperspace-capable thrustship design now code-named Fat Man. "The data we are providing to you is incomplete and in some respects speculative. For example, the order of battle is based primarily on astrographic deployment, since we have no direct information about the combat organization of the Yevethan fleet. But as the General has already noted, one of our jobs right now is to fill in the blanks. We're particularly eager for a chance to make a kill on a Fat Man--right now we don't even have a good sense of what that will take. "I'll let you review the force assessments in detail with your command staffs, and limit myself to a summary overview. Based on a complete analysis of our contacts with the Yevetha, we are currently estimating their fleet strength at no fewer than ninety-three capital ships, of which at least twenty-nine are Imperial-design vessels and the balance are Fat Men. "There are at least nineteen occupied and defended worlds, and there may be twenty--Doornik Two-oh-seven hasn't been reconned yet. Eight are defended by a mixed fleet, and we're considering that an indicator that the Yevetha consider those principal targets. Five are League members, and three are former colonies. The other eleven targets are defended by Fat Men only. "It is possible that the Yevetha have additional vessels cached elsewhere--we hope to start reducing that uncertainty by expanding our surveys of the Cluster. But the biggest question marks" Grekk 9 interrupted the briefing at that point. "The Imperial shipyards. Where are the shipyards?" "Yes, Commodore--you anticipate me. We don't know where they are or what's hiding in them. The probability is that the Yevetha have three operational Imperial shipyards, all of which may be continuing to produce copies of the Imperial ships in their inventory. Four instances of duplicate Star Destroyer ID profiles were recorded during the recon penetration." Carson spoke up. "Either they're trying to throw us off, or they're duplicating systems without understanding them." "We have an intelligence source that suggests the latter may be the case," said Mauit'ta. "In any event, locating the shipyards is our number-one intelligence priority. And when located, the shipyards will be designated as primary targets." "What about the Fat Men?" asked Martafl. "Where are they being built? Given the numbers, we may need to worry more about them." "The thrustships appear to be built in surface yards, possibly on N'zoth only," said Mauit'ta. "We've located two such yards, and those are designated priority point targets." "How do you intend to locate the Imperial yards?" asked Grekk 9. A'baht interrupted at that point. "All of these issues can be addressed at a later time," he said. "The point to impress on your crews is that the Yevetha cannot be taken lightly. Considering only their confirmed assets, they have more than sufficient strength to overwhelm a single task force. "For that reason, I have ordered that the minimum division for the coming deployment will be two task forces. Token and Bellbright will be paired under Admiral Tolokus. Apex and Summer will combine under Commodore Carson. Gemstone will join Copperleaf, the flag task force, under Commodore Mirx. Are there any questions on that point?" There were none, Joint task force operations were part of both the training and operational routine, and A'baht had left the natural and familiar pairings in place. But the order itself underlined how seriously A'baht viewed the Yevetha threat. The commodores of the Fleet's task forces were not accustomed to thinking of their commands as vulnerable. The typical composition of a twenty-one-vessel task force included a Star Destroyer or fleet carrier as flagship, two heavy cruisers and two assault carriers, four escort frigates, and five gunships--a fast, flexible, and formidable aggregation of firepower. "What is our coming deployment?" asked Admiral Tolokus. "I'm taking the fleet into the boundary systems of the Cluster," said A'baht, turning his solemn and unblinking gaze toward the admiral. "The big parade is over. We're going to make it as hard as we can for the Yevetha to keep track of us, while making it easier for us to keep track of them. "That includes recon surveys in force, filling the Cluster with as many sensor buoys and probots as we can get, scattering ghost repeaters behind in systems we visit, and sending a squadron to Doornik Eleven-forty-two to look for a shipyard there," he said. "We don't currently have the authority to initiate action against the Yevetha, but we're fully authorized to use all available force if they show up and try to interfere with our operations. "In short, we're going to stretch the principles of free navigation and legitimate self-defense as far as they'll go," said A'baht. "If our presence persuades the Yevetha to seek a diplomatic solution, that'll be fine with us. But if they insist on war, we have to make certain we're ready to make them regret their choice." A'baht swept his gaze across the faces opposite him at the briefing table. "That's what I expect from you, and from the ships, officers, and crews under your command. Be prepared to fight when there is no other option--and be prepared to win, because there is no other option." Luke awoke in Mud Sloth's sleeper with an unaccustomed warmth beside him and an unaccustomed memory hovering close to his thoughts. He stirred, and Akanah melded her body against his again, skin touching skin and coaxing slumbering senses to awaken. He did not know how to talk about what had passed between them, or what might come of it, but she did not ask that of him. She allowed him to stay in the restful comfort of the circle of their mutual embrace, making no demands, expecting no explanations. He returned that courtesy in kind. It had been much the same the night before. Loneliness, grief, compassion, and a previously undiscovered hunger for a touch that felt like acceptance had brought them to the brink. But by silent mutual consent, something had been held back. Neither of them had asked for or offered their deepest intimacies. And, unpressured, each had allowed the other to enjoy the novelty of not being alone. They lay together in the sleeper, awake, aware that the other was awake, and aware that the other was aware. But for a long time, neither of them spoke. Luke barely trusted the privacy of his own thoughts, and didn't dare open himself to reach out for hers. "Your turn," she murmured at last." What?" "To talk about your father." For some reason Luke did not fully understand, the familiar inner wall of resistance did not snap into place. "I don't talk about my father," he said, but it was a rote refusal, without conviction. Even though she must have heard the opening, she did not try to cajole him into a reversal or probe for the exceptions. "I understand," she said, showing a sympathetic smile. Then she turned onto her back, looking up into the holographic galaxy. "It was hard for me." That small physical retreat was enough to draw Luke out. "It's not as though there's much I could say, anyway," he said, rolling onto his side and propping his head on one hand. "Almost everything I know, everyone seems to know--and almost everything I'd like to know, no one seems to know. I don't remember my father, or my mother, or my sister. I don't remember ever living anywhere but Tatooine." Akanah nodded understandingly. "Did you ever wonder whether those memories might have been blocked?" "Blocked? Why?" "To protect you. Or to protect Leia and Nashira. Young children don't know when they're saying too much or asking the wrong question." Luke shook his head. "I've deep-probed Leia for unremembered memories of our mother. If there was a block there, I'm sure I'd be able to see it." "Unless your own block prevented you from recognizing it," she suggested. "Whoever did this might have anticipated that you would have the gifts of the Jedi." "Ben could have seen that," Luke said uncertainly. "Or Yoda." "If you wanted, I could--" "But what possible danger could those memories be to me now?" Luke asked, trampling her offer before she could make it. "No, I think there's a simpler explanation. I think we were just too young. Leia's memories may not even be real. They might be something she invented to fill that empty space you spoke of, so long ago that she can't remember doing it. An imagined memory looks just like a real one." "And their comfort value is usually very high," Akanah said. "Luke, when did you become aware of the empty spaces?" "I don't know. Much later than Leia did, anyway. Kids say things--you start realizing your family is different." Luke frowned, his eyes focusing somewhere far beyond the bunk. "My uncle and aunt said almost nothing about my father, and even less about my mother." "Maybe that was to protect you, too." "Maybe," Luke said. "But I always felt that my uncle disapproved of them, and resented getting stuck with the obligation of raising me. Not my aunt--I think she always wanted children. I don't know why they didn't have any of their own." "It sounds like she only got her way when it was what he wanted, too." "I guess that's more true than not," Luke said after a moment's reflection. "But she never complained where I could hear it, or let you know that they'd had a fight and that she'd lost." "Self-sacrificing," said Akanah. "For the good of the family, for the peace of the household--" "Owen was a hard man," Luke said. "Hardworking, hard to talk to, hard to know, hard to move. When I picture him, he always looks annoyed." "I'm all too familiar with the type," said Akanah. "Your aunt probably didn't dare cross him too often, or too openly." "She took my side sometimes. But mostly I think she tried to keep us from colliding head-on--especially the last couple of years." "Was she happy?" "I used to think so." "But--" "I think she deserved better than the way she lived--the way she died." Luke shook his head. "It's been harder to forgive my father for what he did to them than for almost anything else." "Harder to forgive, or harder to understand?" Luke answered with a weary smile. "I wish it were harder to understand. But I know how tempting it is to simply bend someone to your will, or break them and push them aside. All of the whims and wishes and wants that we carry around inside--I have the power to fulfill mine. So I find I have to be careful about what I let myself want." "How do you do that?" "I have Yoda's example--he led a very simple life, and Wanted for very little. My father walked a different road. I try to let him be an example to me, too," said Luke. "The impulse to take control--to impose your will on the universe--has to be resisted. Even with the best of intentions, it leads to tyranny--into Darth Vader reborn." "Control is a transitory illusion," said Akanah. "The universe bends us to its purposes--we do not bend it to ours." "That may be so," said Luke. "But in the moment of trying, people suffer horribly and die needlessly. That's why the Jedi exist, Akanah--why we carry weapons and follow a path of power. It's not out of any lust for fighting, or for our own benefit. The Jedi exist to neutralize the power and the will of those who would be tyrants." "Is that what you were taught, or what you've taught your apprentices?" "Both. It was one of the First Principles of the Chu'unthor academy, and I made it one of the First Principles at the Yavin praexeum." "And what binds the Jedi to that end?" "Because it's necessary," said Luke. "There's a moral imperative--the one who can act, must act." "It would be easier to trust you with the responsibility you seek if so many Jedi hadn't strayed from your high ethic," Akanah said. "Jedi training doesn't seem to prepare a candidate well for the temptations of the dark side. You have lost students, just as your mentors did." "Yes," said Luke. "I almost lost myself." "Is it always to be so? Are the temptations beyond resisting?" "I don't have an answer for that," Luke said, shaking his head. "Is it how Jedi are chosen, how we are taught--a flaw in the candidates, or a flaw in the disciplines-" "Perhaps there is no flaw," said Akanah. "Perhaps some piece is still missing--something you have not yet rediscovered." "Perhaps. Or perhaps it will always be a struggle. The dark side is seductive--and very powerful." He hesitated. "I fought Vader with all I had, and still barely escaped with my life. Han saved me at Yavin, Lando saved me at Bespin, and Ariakin saved me on the Emperor's Death Star. I never defeated my father. The deepest cut I ever gave him was in refusing to join him." Luke lay back on the sleeper and looked up at the stars. "I think the next deepest was when I forgave him." The viceroy's personal aide, Eri Palle, ushered Proctor Dar Bille into the blood garden where Tal Fraan and Nil Spaar were already waiting. Dar Bille offered his neck to his old friend, then accepted Tal Fraan's offer to him. "Darama," said Dar Bille, "I hear it proclaimed that your breedery gloriously affirms your vigor." "Fifteen nestings, all full and ripening," said Nil Spaar. "The scent of it is intoxicating. I had to have my tenders neutered in order that they remember their work." "Your blood has always been strong, Nil Spaar, going back to when Kei Chose you--but it has never been stronger than it is now." "I would rather have truth than flattery from my old friends," said Nil Spaar. "Those who can remember the glory of our uprising are already too few in number. What news of my flagship?" "Pride of Yevetha is fully ready," said Dar Bille. "The holding chambers for the hostages have been completed, and the hostages are being loaded this very day. What is the prospect for more fighting? Has Jip Toorr reported from Preza ?" "He has," said Nil Spaar. "His report is the reason I called for you. The vermin have not bared their necks or withdrawn. She who claims honor in her own name still defies us. In the last three days, the vermin fleet grew by at least eighty vessels. It has now dispersed into the boundary regions of the All, and our vessels there have lost contact with many of these intruders." "I am greatly surprised that they value the lives of their own species less than they valued the lives of the other vermin at Preza," said Dar Bille. "Perhaps we do not hold whom we think we hold. Could Tig Peramis have deceived you, in league with the Princess?" "No," said Nil Spaar. "Han Solo is Leia's mate and consort, and these are relations of great meaning to the vermin." "Perhaps she does not realize that we hold him," said Tal Fraan. "Perhaps she does not realize that her actions place him at risk. Uncertainty has not made her cautious. Perhaps it is time to show them our hostages." Nil Spaar made a gesture that said the suggestion was premature. "Tell me what you have learned studying the prisoners." "They are uncomfortable with blood, even their own weak blood," said Tal Fraan. "The aversion is strong enough to be a distraction, even in challenging moments. Beyond that, they have provided confirmation of suspicions I already held." "Indulge me and voice them." "They form alliances as child to parent--one world claiming the protection of a thousand," Tal Fraan said. "They are divided, but they do not see it. They live in the long shadow of their own disharmony, and do not know to seek the light." "Is that their greatest weakness?" That was a more dangerous question, and Tal Fraan hesitated before answering. "No," he said. "Their greatest weakness is that they are impure. The strong do not slay the weak, and the weak do not yield their place to the strong. The pale vermin think of self first and kinship last." "And you find the evidence of this where?" "It is why eight thousand Imperial slaves still serve us, and why these two prisoners remain in our hands. They fear death more than betrayal," said Tal Fraan. "Any of the Pure would sacrifice himself before letting the warmth of his breath make him a traitor." "Dar Bille," Nil Spaar said. "Do you agree with my young proctor's appraisal? Are the guildsmen and tenders who serve on my flagship as eager to give themselves up as Tal Fraan declares?" "It is true of many," said Dar Bille. "But if your young proctor could speak with the late viceroy Kiv Truun, he would know it has never been true of all." The answer elicited a grunt and grimace of amused delight from the viceroy. "Mark well, Tal Fraan, how the truth is usually a good deal less certain than a willed belief," said Nil Spaar. "Now, tell me--what is the greatest strength of the vermin?" "It is as with all lesser species," said Tal Fraan, who had anticipated the question. "Their strength is in their numbers. They overwhelm their worlds with their unclean fecundity. You saw yourself how their spawnworld is overrun with their soft, squirming bodies. If they acted in concert, as one kinhold, they could overwhelm us." "But they do not," said Dar Bille. "No," said Tal Fraan. "Their great weakness undermines their great strength." "We will see that they do not learn how to be one kinhold," said Nil Spaar. "You succeeded most splendidly in that while on Coruscant," said Dar Bille. "But they seem less confused now--and they have not retreated. How shall we answer them?" Tal Fraan knew that it was the viceroy's question to answer, and he held his tongue. But Nil Spaar turned his way and smiled. "What advice would you offer, Proctor? How shall I make this Leia show me her neck?" "It is time we showed her our hostages," said Tal Fraan evenly. "And since the pale vermin are uncomfortable with blood, we should find a way to remind them-that we are not." The meeting of the Ruling Council in the matter of Doman Beruss's petition against Princess Leia Organa Solo was delayed two days, then another, then another. No reason was given for any of the postponements. Leia was notified of them by secure messenger--Beruss did not contact her and made no attempt to see her. She suspected that the members of the Council were still divided about how to proceed now that she had rebuffed Doman Beruss's private overtures. Behn-Kihl-Nahm did come to see her on the third day. But his report was gloomy and his advice unusually terse. "I cannot count on enough votes to protect you if you refuse to step aside," he said. "But if you accede gracefully, Doman has promised to support me as interim President. Come to the Council and say that your duties are too taxing in this difficult time, that you must be with your family. Ask that I stand in for you until this crisis is past." "I didn't ask for such help when my children were kidnapped," said Leia frostily. "How will that look?" "None of this need ever be made public," said Behn-Kihl-Nahm. "Leia, Borsk Fey'lya has been trying to put together four votes for himself. If you appear unreasonable, Rattagagech will turn his support' to Fey'lya, who is saying all the right things--and that will give Fey'lya his four votes. You must understand how fragile your position has become." "There will be no vote at all unless I accept Doman's judgment that I'm unfit to be President," said Leia. "There's no need to select a caretaker if I haven't stepped aside." "Princess, that option is gone," the chairman said sternly. "All you will accomplish by being stubborn is to force the Ruling Council to report the petition of no confidence to the Senate. And no one can control or predict what will follow. If we are to deal with the Yevetha, there must be stability and continuity." "Then go back and tell Doman Beruss to put an end to this distraction, Bennie," Leia said. "Because the easiest way to have stability and continuity is for me to stay where I am." The next morning, Leia received a visit from the tall, slender Rattagagech. He brought with him a balance table and a compartmented canister of colored hemispherical weights--the tools of Elomic physical calculus. "I have come to analyze with you the logic of your circumstances," said Rattagagech. "It will give you an opportunity to quantify the objective elements in conflict." "Please don't trouble yourself, Chairman," said Leia. "It is no trouble--it is a welcome opportunity," said Rattagagech, setting the transparent table on its floating pylon. "I find the old art elegant and the practice of it soothing--it makes me feel very young in the presence of minds that are very old and wise." He sat down before the table, now balanced on its pylon. "Chairman, I thank you for your concern," said Leia, stopping him from opening the canister. "But you can't help me." Rattagagech looked up at her in surprise. Her words verged on an insult to his intellect. "President Solo--Princess Leia--physical calculus is the foundation of logical analysis, and logical analysis is the foundation of Elom civilization. This art raised us from what we were to what we are." "I respect what the Elomin have accomplished," said Leia. "But physical calculus would have told us rebellion against the Empire was futile. And logical analysis will always sacrifice one life for many, or a few for several, and leave you thinking you've done something noble." "I must call your attention to the work of Noto-ganarech, who has demonstrated that a properly weighted table tilts to support of the Rebel Alliance--" "When you already know the outcome." She shook her head. "I can't let the tilt of the table decide my course. I just don't believe that everything that matters can be quantified for the calculus." With his indignation undisguised, Rattagagech gathered his tools and left. Leia had one last visitor from the ranks of the Ruling Council before the day was out. Dall Thara Dru--the senator from Raxxa, chairman of the Senate Commerce Council, and the only female among the seven--had had nothing to say at the last meeting. Behn-Kihl-Nahm's head counts included Dru as a supporter, but that made Leia even more unsure about what to expect from her. "Thank you so much for making time for me," said Dall Thara Dru as she glided into Leia's office. "This terrible business--I can't imagine! Your life must be completely upside down." "I appreciate your sympathy--" "This petition against you is the worst kind of foolishness I can think of. I just came from Chairman Beruss's office, and I'm afraid I found him quite immovable-stubbornly attached to the notion that you are the problem. As if it were your fault that there are dead planets all across Koornacht Cluster!" "I'm grateful for your support--" "Still and all, I'm afraid that Doman has influenced enough minds to give you a great deal of trouble when the Council meets on the petition. So I've been asking myself, what can be done? How do we reassure the others that you have matters well in hand? And then I realized that the answer is the question no one seems to be asking!" "Which is--" "Where is Luke Skywalker?" said Dall Thara Du. "Where are the Jedi Knights?" "I'm sorry, Senator Dru," said Leia. "I don't understand." "Why, Skywalker singlehandedly defeated the Emperor. Surely he can handle these Yevetha without any trouble. And if he needs help, he's raised an entire army--at New Republic expense, mind you!--of wizards like himself. Well, no wonder Beruss objects to sending our sons to Koornacht. Why do we have to fight this war? Where are our Knights?" "The Jedi are not the New Republic's army, Senator Dru--or its mercenaries, or its secret weapon," Leia said evenly. "If you're suggesting that I come to the Council and say, in effect, 'Don't worry, my brother will take care of this for me'--" "Oh, of course," Dru said breezily. "I know that you can't tell the chairmen exactly what you have planned. Just let them know that the Jedi are standing with you-that's not too much to say, is it? We're trying to shore up their confidence, after all. And who better to inspire confidence than Luke Skywalker?" "That is too much to say," Leia said. Her tone was frosty, her words blunt. "Chairman Dru, I haven't asked for the help of the Jedi. And neither have they offered it. There are no secret plans to conceal. The New Republic can and will fight its own battles--as will I. And if you're someone who supported my nomination thinking it was a package deal--'Hey, we get Luke Skywalker for free' I'm sorry to say that you were mistaken." There were no more postponements. The next morning, Leia stood in the well of the Council chamber, facing Doman Beruss. "President Leia Organa Solo, have you read the petition of no confidence offered against you?" "I have, Chairman." Her voice was steady and strong. "Do you understand the charges contained therein?" "I do, Chairman." "Do you understand the particulars offered in support of the charge?" "I do, Chairman." "Do you wish to offer a response to the petition?" Leia glanced at Behn-Kihl-Nahm, seated to Beruss's right, before answering. "Chairman, I contest the petition in its entirety. I'm shocked and dismayed that it was ever offered." Behn-Kihl-Nahm slumped back in his chair, weariness causing his features to gray. "It's not only a personal insult, it's a political mistake," Leia continued. "I have to wonder if the chairman has started taking his counsel from Nil Spaar--because he's the only one who stands to benefit from our infighting." "There need be no infighting," said Krall Praget. "It's clearly better for all if this matter is resolved quickly and quietly." "Then ask him to withdraw the petition," Leia said, pointing at Beruss. "This started with him, not with me. It's his fear that's the real issue here." Beruss said quietly, "The chairman regretfully advises the Council that he cannot in conscience withdraw the petition." Leia turned her gaze on him. "I don't know why or how Chairman Beruss became infected with the creep ing timidity that seems to be on the rise here. But if his worry is that Princess Leia will lead the New Republic into a war to rescue her husband, I suggest he's worrying over the wrong question. And I hope the rest of the Council is about to set him straight." "Why?" asked Borsk Fey'lya. "How many friends do you think you have in this room? Do you think that there's one of us--even your dear Bennie--who hasn't had doubts about your fitness in recent months? Fire and idealism may be fine qualities for the leader of a revolution, but the leader of a great republic needs to be several degrees cooler and a good deal more canny." "Point of order, Chairman Beruss--" said Behn-Kihl-Nahm. But Beruss, his eyes darkened by disapproval, was already moving to intervene. "The remarks of Chairman Praget and Chairman Fey'lya are out of order and will be removed from the record. The floor belongs to the President for the purposes of her response to the petition." "I've said all I have to say," Leia said. Behn-Kihl-Nahm glanced at something lying out of sight on the surface in front of Beruss. "Chairman, point of precedence--" "Go ahead." "I would like to offer a compromise that I hope may satisfy the concerns of all parties," said Behn-Kihl-Nahm, his eyes warning Leia, You must help yourself now. "If the President will consent to announce that she is taking a brief personal leave, the Council will name Chairman Rattagagech to serve as caretaker until she returns." It was a judgment call whether Rattagagech or Fey'lya looked more startled. "We will give the President time to consider this proposal," Beruss said. "The debate is suspended. The vote on the petition is tabled until we meet in three days." He rang the crystal, ending the session, before a startled Fey'lya could speak a word. Chapter 4 Colonel Bowman Gavin carried the formal title of director of flight personnel, Fifth Fleet Combat Command. But to the more than three thousand pilots and weapons officers of the nearly two hundred squadrons based on the fleet's carriers and Star Destroyers, Gavin was simply fleet air boss. The fleet air boss had the final say over every "cheeks on the cushions" decision--flight assignments, ratings, transfers, reprimands, and promotions, from the greenest backseater to the squadron leaders and combat wing commanders. His office was off the hot corridor in Intrepid's flag country, fifteen strides from General A'baht at one end and eight strides from the combat operations center at the other. Despite his high station, Colonel Gavin was a familiar sight on the flight decks and in the hangar bays of the fleet. Approachable and matter-of-fact, he was by his own admission more comfortable with his feet up in pilot country than he was behind his own desk or at A'baht's briefing table. Gavin disliked working from reports alone, and would not promote or pass judgment on a pilot or a junior officer until he had made a personal, firsthand assessment. The pilots in turn claimed Gavin as one of their own, and trusted him to give them a fair hearing. They knew that he knew what it was like to sit in the cockpit of a twisting fighter, guns hot and an enemy thundering in from behind. Though Gavin usually chose to wear only the "new sun" campaign bar he had earned as a B-wing pilot at the Battle of Endor, his service history entitled him to wear most of the combat decorations the Alliance and the New Republic had created and conferred. Administrative chaos had arrived along with the five task forces drawn from the other fleets. Gavin had had to suspend his schedule of informal visits and keep his appointments to a minimum just to keep up with the briefings and reports. It was the closest he had ever come to closing his door to the world since being promoted to flag rank, five years ago. It didn't take many days for the air in his office to thin to half an atmosphere and the bulkheads of his office to close in to the dimensions of a cell in the brig. But by the time Gavin rebelled and began to plot a temporary escape, the Fifth Fleet had re-formed into double-strength task forces and scattered into the fringes of Koornacht Cluster, taking most of the new arrivals out of ready reach. But Task Force Gemstone, now attached to the flag task force, offered twenty-two possible destinations for Gavin's getaway. Since a visit to Commodore Poqua's command ship, the carrier Starpoint, would only entangle him in more command-level formalities, Gavin skimmed down the list and chose another vessel. "Roust my pilot and prep my gig," he said, calling down to Intrepid's No. 1 flight deck. "I'm going to pay a visit to Floren." "Acknowledged, Colonel. We'll notify flight control." With the fleet on level one alert, even Colonel Gavin was obliged to don combat flight garb when leaving Intrepid in a smaller craft. Apart from the time lost climbing into and out of the five-piece high-flexibility pressure suit, Gavin didn't object to the requirementand the typically spirited and ribald ready-room chatter usually made that time pass quickly enough. But at midrotation, the ready room was deserted, and Gavin had to struggle with the waist ring without benefit of a helping hand. It was not until Gavin was in the middle of the helmet-on pressure test that another pilot joined him there--a young alien wearing a purifier pack on his chest and the red emblem of a provisional flight officer on his Collar. Instead of going to one of the lockers, the pilot walked to within two meters of Gavin and stopped, as though waiting for him. When the test rig chimed its approval, Gavin broke the neck seal and removed his helmet. "Are you looking for someone, son?" Gavin asked, noting the absence of aFifth Fleet insignia on the pilot's uniform. The officer saluted belatedly, as though it were an unpracticed reflex. "Are you Colonel Gavin, sir?" "Guilty as charged. And you are--" "Plat Mallar, sir. Sir--they told me that you make all the decisions about pilot assignments." "They?" "The crew of the gig. And the crew chief told me where I might find you. I'm one of the ferry pilots from Coruscant." "The escort flight for Tampion," Gavin said, nodding. "I know that you were all cleared by Intelligence, but I'm a little surprised to hear anyone's talking to you. Did you ever think they might not be doing you a favor, telling you to come see me?" "Colonel, you make all the decisions about flight assignments, don't you?" "Yes." "Then who else could I see?" Gavin nodded thoughtfully. "What is this about, then?" "It's about my orders, sir. There are five of us being sent back to Coruscant on the fleet shuttle, as space is available. We were brought over from Venture this morning to wait." "That's right. What's the problem?" "Sir, I don't want to be sent back. I can't be. I want to stay and be part of this fight. You have to let me do something." "No, I don't," said Gavin, tucking his helmet under his right arm. "But I'll give you a chance to convince me that I ought to. Mind you, though, I signed off on your orders. To be blunt, we do need pilots, but no one wanted you or the others. None of you is experienced enough for the squadron leaders who've shorthanded to take a chance on you." "If it makes any difference to you, I have another hundred and ninety hours in a TIE interceptor that don't show up on my service record." "In a TIE?" Gavin raised an eyebrow questioningly. "Give me your ID disc." The young pilot complied, and Gavin studied the data in a portable reader. When he was finished, he looked up and fixed Mallar with a quizzical look. "Who are you?" he demanded. "I can't figure out what you're doing out here in the first place. You have more hours in sims and fewer hours in a cockpit than anyone I've ever seen in a combat zone." "I've worked as hard as I can, Colonel, so I could have a chance. I spent every minute my check pilot could spare me flying. I spent every other minute I could training in the simulator. I'll work just as hard here, if you don't send me back." "Your check pilot, yes," said Gavin, handing the ID disc back. "He seems to have run you through primary training in about a third of the usual time, even though he graded you not much better than passing. What's the missing piece of this picture, Mallar?" The question seemed to crush Mallar. "I suppose I should have let the admiral put it all in my file, like he wanted to," he said dolefully. "He even wanted to give me a confirmed kill." "A kill? For what?" "For the Yevethan fighter I shot down over Polneye, the day the Yevetha destroyed it--the day they killed my family," Mallar said, and shook his head. "I didn't want any special treatment--I wanted to be good enough on my own. Just good enough to do something to help. But I'm not--or you wouldn't be trying to send me back. So all I can do now is beg you, Colonel---don't send me back." "Offer me an alternative," Gavin said quietly. "It doesn't matter," Mallar said. "Find something I can do to help. Anything. Find some way that my being here makes it easier for you to hand the Yevetha the same kind of hurt they handed me. That's all I ask. Because what they did to us was wrong. Just let me be a little part of teaching them that lesson. That's the only thing that matters to me now. I'm the only one left I have to speak for all of them." Gavin studied him as he spoke, and for a long time after. "Draw a flight suit," he said finally. "Meet me at my gig in ten minutes. We'll talk more on the way to Floren." "Yes, sir. But the shuttle's supposed to leave within the hour--" "I know," said Gavin, patting Mallar on the shoulder as he moved past him. "I'm afraid you may miss it." Inbound to Utharis, Mud Slotb came out of hyperspace crippled by a data bus power surge that left the port navigation sensors and the navcom unable to talk to each other. The surge had come at the worst possible time, during the cascade in which the hyperdrive systems shut down and the realspace systems reinitialize. "This is why you should never buy a bargain starship," Luke grumbled as he climbed back out of the service access compartment belowdecks. "What do you mean?" asked Akanah. "Just that Verpine cut every corner they could building this thing," Luke said, sliding the access panel back into place. "The power bus can't handle all the systems, so the cascade processor has to juggle them, turning this one off before turning that one on. But for that to work right, the buffer circuits--" He saw her eyes glazing over and stopped. "Anyway, it means we're going to be delayed at Utharis." "How long?" "Until it's fixed," Luke said. He secured the last of the access panel hold-downs and looked up at her. "If there's a wrench jockey at Taldaak Station who knows this model better than I do, maybe only a day or two." "Two days! You said we were going to stop only long enough to top off the consumables and reset the counters." Luke shrugged. "I'm not any happier about it than you are," he said. "But better this happened now, in-bound to a full-service port, than somewhere in the middle of Farlax." "I can't bear the thought of any more delay, this close to the end--this close to the Circle." "I know," Luke said. "But this ship won't go into hyperspace again until she's gone into a service bay." He flashed a wry smile. "At least you'll have plenty of time to pick out that souvenir hat I promised you." Utharis was in the grip of war fever. Even though Koornacht Cluster was more than two hundred light-years away, Utharis had a border world's heightened sensitivity to matters of interplanetary politics. It was impossible to go anywhere in Taldaak without hearing about the clouds of war gathering over Farlax Sector, and the talk had prompted a quiet but noticeable exodus through Taldaak Station and the planet's other major ports. The exodus had not yet spread beyond the most affluent, mobile, and well-connected segments of Utharian society, but it had energized conversations everywhere, and intruded on the smooth working of the planet's economic machine. "Sure, we can take care of you, Stonn," said the Tyrant's Test ·83 yard manager of Starway Services. "But it'll be three days before we can even look at it." "Three days! Never mind---rent me a service bay," Luke said, nodding toward a sign offering that option. "Sure," said the manager. "Let me check the schedule." His fingers danced over his datapad. "Yes, I should have one available in five or six days." "Come on, dear--let's go," said Akanah, tugging at Luke's arm. "Someone in this city must know how to treat visitors properly." "Suit yourself. But you're not going to do any better anywhere else," said the manager. "And why is that?" Luke asked. "I had one crew chief and three mechs decide this would be a good time to take a family vacation. Most of the other shops are even more shorthanded," the manager said. "And I had twenty-eight of my regulars call to schedule early annuals or work they'd been putting off. If I weren't keeping a bay open for transients and referrals, you'd be waiting a week." "Li, dear, I've read about this sort of scam in Port of Call," Akanah said. "The yards take kickbacks from the hoteliers for keeping travelers stranded." Catching the sudden glower in the manager's eyes, Luke patted Akanah's hand patronizingly. "Now, darling, let's not insult the man just because our plans have been upset," Luke said. "Why are you so busy?" he asked the yard manager. "Because of the war, of course," the manager said. Akanah's gaze narrowed. "War? What are you talking about?" "Don't you ever link to the grids? The New Republic and the Duskhan League have been growling and feinting at each other for months." Akanah turned to Luke. "Did you know about this?" "I heard something of it on Talos," said Luke. "I didn't want to worry you. It was only rumor then. I guess it's become something more, if people are running the other way." "You can see Koornacht Cluster in the night sky from here, you know," said the manager. "The idea that a thousand warships are poised to clash somewhere over their heads makes people nervous." "A thousand warships?" Akanah asked in an awed whisper. "That's what they're saying." The manager shrugged. "Some of them, anyway. You hear a lot of different stories. So--what are you gonna do?" "We'll leave our ship with you," said Luke, pushing the registration pad across the counter. "But can you tell me how long it might take after you get to it? Do you have a local source for parts?" "For a Verpine Adventurer?" the manager asked, glancing down at the pad. "Oh, sure. We've got four of them in our scrapyard alone. Call us in three days." The manager's casual acceptance of war on his doorstep deepened the chill of fear that had come over Akanah on hearing the news. It's too soon--he's not ready for this, she thought wildly as she followed Luke out of the depot. I'm taking him exactly where I don't want him to goright into the heart of temptation. He's still trying to direct the Current. He's not ready to watch others fight without raising a hand of his own-"We can't stay here," she said in a worried whisper when they were outside. "It doesn't feel safe. I don't know what it is, but this place is shadowed." "I don't see a lot of alternatives," Luke said, leading them back toward the northbound slidewalk. "You need to be able to tell the hyperdrive which way to jump, and Mud Sloth can't do that right now." "I understand that," she said, clinging to his arm. "But we could be here a week or more. Isn't there something else we can do? Can't you buy the parts from him and fix it yourself?" "Didn't you hear him in there? We're headed into a war zone," said Luke, stopping short. "For all we know about what's happening, J't'p'tan could be one of the battlegrounds. Don't you think it'd be a good thing to be able to count on our hyperdrive?" She tried desperately to find a fear that would move him. "If we linger here too long, we can count on more Imperial agents finding us. We can't let that happen. We can't let them follow us." "Even the New Republic can't find us, thanks to your tricks," said Luke. "Look, all we have to do is find a quiet place to stay and play tourist for a few days. Besides, I want to learn more about what's ahead of us--and it may take a while to sort the facts from the rumors." "Does it matter what's ahead?" she asked. "Would you even consider turning back now? Your mother--my mother--they're almost within reach." "Not with Mud Sloth on crutches, they aren't," said Luke. "Then we have to get a different ship." Luke snorted. "How?" She looked at him in earnest surprise. "Don't you think that with our combined talents we can take almost any ship we want from here?" "Don't even think about it," Luke said tersely. He scanned about to see if anyone could have heard her, then grabbed her elbow and practically dragged her away from the service center's entrance and onto the slidewalk. "Yes, we probably could," he said in a sharp whisper as the moving surface whisked them along. "But not without attracting unwanted attention. Do you really want a Utharian patrol boat following us to J't'p'tan? Do you want every ship under New Republic registry alerted to watch for us?" "I can hide us." "We're already hidden. All we have to do is wait. You've gotten this close by biding your time until the right time. This is the wrong time to give in to impatience." "This is the wrong time to delay," said Akanah, still casting about for emotional leverage. "Luke, the darker the clouds, the more important it is for us to move quickly." "The war's already started," Luke said grimly. "The Yevetha attacked more than a dozen worlds not long after we left Coruscant. We can't arrive before the storm--we can only hope it leaves J't'p'tan untouched." "Luke, it's not that the Circle is in danger," Akanah pressed. "The danger is that we'll lose touch with them. It's impossible to work when the Current is in chaos. And it's intensely uncomfortable to remain connected when the Current is carrying so much pain. I'm not afraid for them--the Circle is strong. I'm afraid they may already have left J't'p'tan. And any sign they leave for me could be destroyed as easily as Norika's house in Griann was." "I can ask for another tracking report on Star Morning, find out where it went after Vulvarch. That should tell us something about the Circle's plans." "And what will we chase them in, Mud Sloth? You were right, Luke. We can't count on our ship. We should have something faster, more reliable--and we may need room for more than the two of us. Please--we have to leave here now." "I'm not going to help you steal a starship, Akanah." Even before he spoke, she realized she had made a mistake. They shared a goal, but he still observed limits on the means he would allow himself to employ in pursuing it. She had committed everything to this quest, while he had a life to return to if it ended in failure. And she had forgotten that difference between them in a moment of selfish anxiety. "You're right-oh, you're right. I don't know what I was thinking. It's just so hard being this close after so long," she said, hastily troweling over the crack in her facade. "If we don't find them--" "We'll find them," Luke said. "I want to believe that with all my heart, and at the same time I'm afraid to, because I don't know if I can · bear another disappointment," she said. The tears that glittered in the corners of her eyes were real. "Forgive me. It isn't that I thought you a thief--" "I know," he said. "It's forgotten." She smiled gratefully at him and let him draw her into the curl of his arm. "If we must stay here, then at least let's get away from Taldaak," she urged, ending a brief silence. "Let's find some private place safely away from all these eyes. I'll use the time to teach you more of our disciplines." "First things first," Luke said. "I want to go back to the ship and put out some queries, then see what I can learn here. I want to find out everything I can about what we might find in the Koornacht Cluster--about what our people are up against." That was the last thing Akanah wanted. Of all the impulses capable of moving Luke's hand toward his lightsaber, she feared the power of his loyalty to his sister most. In frustration, she pulled away from him, moving to the opposite edge of the slidewalk. "What?" he asked in surprise. "What is it?" Akanah sensed his confusion and uncertainty and targeted her words there. "I'm just wondering if maybe we've gone as far as we can together," she said. "Maybe it was a mistake to make you part of this. If you don't have the commitment or the trust--" "Akanah " "I have to think about what to do now," she said, and stepped neatly off the slidewalk. Luke whirled about but did not follow, letting the slidewalk carry him on toward the port. Their gazes locked together for a moment, then she turned away. Eyes now closed, she studied the Current's flow through and around him, reading its eddies and meanders. There was exasperation there, but a new and still raw worry as well. Good, she thought. Wonder about me. Worry that I'll steal a ship on my own and leave you behind. Then perhaps you won't worry so much about other people's wars or think about joining them. Your place is with me, Luke Skywalker--I still have lessons to teach you. Han had lost track of time. There was no day-and-night cycle in the brightly lit Yevethan prison cell, no regular meals to mark out intervals. Han dozed, exercised, paced, played endless games of hop-stone solitaire on the dusty floor, dozed. His mouth was parched, and his head and empty stomach were possessed by constant aches too sharp now to simply ignore. In the beginning Barth had joined him in what Han had dubbed the planetary championship of two-handed hop-stone, but both of them were too short-tempered for competitive games now. They had exhausted their repertoires of bawdy jokes, with Barth emerging the uncontested winner for both variety and delivery. In revenge, Han had taught Barth all eighty-six verses of a song that their brains kept singing long after their voices were stilled. Of late Han had taken to talking to the ceiling, to their unseen jailers. He had peppered his monologues with increasingly savage insults, hoping to provoke a response, any response, that would lead to the cell door opening, that might give them a chance to do something about their circumstances. When he ran out of words, he mentally rehearsed scenarios for overpowering any number of guards up to five. But all he accomplished was to make both Barth and himself tired of the sound of his voice. By the time the cell door opened, they were so weak from hunger and dehydration that they could barely stand. One of the three Yevethan guards threw Han a pair of loose-fitting white pants and gestured at Han's uniform. "You will wear what we have given you," he ordered, and tossed another pair of the pajamalike pants to Barth. Stripping without modesty, they both complied without argument. When the task was finished, the guards prodded them toward the corridor. There was a Yevethan guard in front of Han, leading the way, and another behind him, with Barth following and the third guard bringing up the rear. It was one of the geometries Han had rehearsed--take out the guard in the middle together, high-low, then turn back-to-back and take on the others--but he weighed the odds against his curiosity about where they were being taken and decided to wait. But the pants they had been given had been sized for a Yevethan frame--the waist was too low and the · legs 'a handspan too long. Before he had gone half a dozen strides down the corridor, Barth tripped himself on the trailing fabric and went sprawling. Hearing the noise behind him, Han had only an instant to react. He spun, hands forming into fists, and received a rock-hard Yevethan forearm across his throat for his trouble. Gasping and choking, he fell backward. It was a hard landing, even without the benefit of the first guard stomping his head back against the floor. "Submit or die," the guard growled. The sudden pain, and the adrenaline that came with it, had energized Han's body to the point that he was ready to fight the Yevethan who was pinning him down. Then he heard Barth groan in pain, then call out in a raspy, shaky voice, "Don't--don't--it was me, Han, my fault--I fell, that's all, stupid clumsy feet--" With a will, Han opened his fists and spread his hands wide in surrender. "It's all right, Lieutenant. We'll let 'em off this time, okay?" The guard looming over Han stepped back. Moving slowly, Han clambered back to his feet. A few meters down the corridor, Barth was doing the same. "You okay?" "I'm--what are they going to do? Where are they taking us?" "It's going to be all right," Han said, tugging his pants up at the waist. "Hey, how about this fine Yevethan tailoring?" Jerking his head to the left, the guard growled, "Enough. Darama waits. Walk." The prisoners were taken to a large Chamber with a high domed ceiling decorated with scarlet accents. They were made to sit at either end of a long bench facing a low platform and a large window beyond. Han squinted at the bright light, but savored the warm, fresh breeze entering the chamber with it. There was one oddity: Lieutenant Barth's wrists were bound to a bar running the length of the bench, low behind their hips. But Han's were not. Before he could puzzle that out, Viceroy Nil Spaar entered the chamber. "Darama," Han repeated under his breath. Nil Spaar was leading an entourage of four. One carried a folding stool, which he set up facing the prisoners' bench. A second carried a tall stand topped by a silver sphere, which he placed a meter to the right of the stool and slightly forward. Those two left when they had shed their burdens. The two that remained took up positions behind Nil Spaar as he settled on the stool. Han studied their faces, trying to divine what burdens they had carried into the room. Advisor? Muscle? Toady? What does a Yevetha look like. when it's nervous? Or do they even get nervous? "General Solo," said Nil Spaar, ignoring Barth with both his words and his gaze. "You appear to be the only one who can save thousands more of your kind from dying in shame. I am here to give you that opportunity." "I don't know what you're talking about." "You were on your way to take command of the Fifth Fleet when you were captured. You were carrying Princess Leia's orders for the invasion of Yevethan territory." Han waited, mute. "Defiance of the sovereignty of the viceroy of the Protectorate makes your life forfeit," Nil Spaar continued. "I have spared you in the hope that you will join me in an act of mercy." Han cocked his head. "Explain." "Princess Leia has recklessly sent more ships to threaten us--" "Good for her." "--and issued foolish ultimatums. She does not understand us. Perhaps when you do, you can open her eyes." "Go on." "Our claim to these stars is natural and ancient. Our eyes have owned them since the beginning of our days. They are alive in our legends. They call to us in our dreams. We draw our strength from the All. The purity of the All inspires us to perfection. "Our claim to these stars is not a shallow thing of greed, or politics, or ambition. It is not a claim we would ever surrender. We are not like the weaklings you are accustomed to, calculating when to pursue an advantage and when to retreat, believing only in the expediencies of the moment. "Leia's threats do not move us. We will never give up that which is ours, or share it with those who are not born of the All. If your forces do not withdraw, there will be war--terrible, bloody, unending. We will never yield, General Solo---and none of your soldiers will enjoy my mercy as you have. The fighting will go on until the last of you has been killed or driven out. Do you understand that, General?" "I think so." "I hope you do," said Nil Spaar. "I have studied your histories. You have never faced an adversary like us. Your wars are decided by the death of a tenth of a population, a third of an army. Then the defeated surrender their honor and the victors surrender their advantage. This is called being civilized. The Yevetha are not civilized, General. It would be a mistake to deal with us as though we were." "Thanks for the advice," Han said. "So what do you want from me?" "Prevent your mate from making that mistake," said Nil Spaar. "Persuade her to recall her fleet. Promise us on the blood of your own children that what is ours now will be ours forever, You will preserve the blood of thousands--and your own as well." "You'll let us go?" Barth asked, an eager hopefulness coloring his words. The viceroy did not look away from Han. "You are more useful to me as a witness than as a martyr, General," Nil Spaar said, rising from his stool. "Come--look." The viceroy led Han to the window, then stepped aside to allow Han an unimpeded view. Squinting, Han looked out on a tumble of buildings and, beyond, a great field of giant silver spheres--Aramadia-class thrustships. It was a stunning, numbing sight. The star-ships were parked so closely together that it was difficult to count them, even though Nil Spaar allowed him to linger at the window. "What you see is the product of the Nazfar Metal-works Guild," said Nil Spaar softly. "There is such a guild on every world of the Twelve, General. Do you understand? You cannot prevail against us. But you can preserve your children's blood, if you choose to." Shaking his head, Han turned away from the window. "Why? Why even make the offer, unless you think we might win?" "Because you would become our obsession, for as many years as it took to destroy you," the viceroy said. "And there are better uses for blood and the labor of our young. I have paid you the compliment of believing the same is true for your kind." The roar of undampered pulsejets drew Han's attention to a thrustship climbing skyward. from the far edge of the array. Torn by conflicting impulses and struggling to focus his thoughts, Han stalled by making his way slowly back to the bench. "What did you see? What's out there?" Barth asked. "A fleet of new warships," Han said. "At least a hundred of them." "Well, there's only one choice, then, isn't there? He's right--stopping the war would be an act of mercy. Now that you know what we'd be up against, you have to stop it." Han's gaze jumped from Barth to Nil Spaar. "Only if I'm willing to forget the blood that's already been spilled," he said. "You didn't see the intelligence reports I saw, Lieutenant--colonies scoured off the face of planets, entire populations exterminated as though they were no more than kitchen pests--" "Han, please think about this. Do you want the next planet to be Coruscant or Corellia?" Barth pleaded. Han kept his gaze fixed on Nil Spaar, who was listening impassively. "Do you know that they recorded it all, without even the decency to look away or feel shame? As though they were proud of it--of how efficiently they could murder millions." He shook his head slowly. "No. You can't compromise with an evil as cold as theirs, Lieutenant--not even to spare the lives of our mother's children." Still Nil Spaar said nothing. But Barth was nearly frantic with fear. "Please, do what he asks. Think of all the casualties, the ships burning--Han, they're going to kill us! ..... "Would you rather live as a coward?" Han demanded. "It'll be a tragedy for even one more good pilot to die fighting them. But it'd be something far worse if we turned our backs and walked away--if no one stood up for the millions who are already dead. And I'll be damned if I'll be part of it." His eyes burned into the viceroy's. "You can burn to blazes. I won't help you." Nil Spaar nodded agreeably and spoke a word in Yevethan. Two guards appeared at the doorway and bound Han to the bar just as Barth had been. Please, do something--tell him you've changed your mind--" "Get a grip on yourself, Lieutenant," Han said grimly. "He doesn't deserve to enjoy this." The viceroy moved closer, his fighting crests becoming engorged until they seemed to be two crimson slashes from temple to ear. "You vermin wish to teach me a lesson," said Nil Spaar. "I will offer you one in return. You think you have accepted the price in blood for your choice; We will see if that is so." With a slash of his right claw, Nil Spaar ripped open Barth's bare torso from hip to shoulder, shattering ribs, pulling soft organs from their cavities. Barth's scream, a horrible, inhuman sound of immeasurable agony, was cut short when his lungs were rent by the claw and collapsed with a grisly wheeze. For too long a moment, the sight held Han transfixed, every detail burning into his memory. Then his stomach heaved, and he turned away, choking on a bitter taste. "Perhaps you understand us a little better now," Nil Spaar said, stepping back and absently sucking the blood from his claw. With an effort, Han found his voice. "You bastard." "Your opinion of me is of no consequence, and never has been," the viceroy said, and looked to one of his aides. "When you are finished here, have him moved to my ship." "Yes, darama," said the aide. Then he and the others knelt deferentially, almost reverently, as Viceroy Nil Spaar left the chamber. Han raised his head and forced himself to look at Barth. The white pants were sodden crimson drapes hanging from the flight engineer's legs. The pool of blood and other bodily fluids below him had grown to the point where it was threatening to engulf Han's feet. Something in the spill of organs on Barth's lap was still twitching or pulsing. I'm sorry, Barth, he thought, working to conceal his anguish as carefully as his fury, determined not to parade either before his audience. I was wrong about us seeing Coruscant again. I didn't know. I didn't know until now what a monster he is. By chance, it fell to Behn-Kihl-Nahm to chair the session at which the vote on Leia was finally taken. He concealed his reluctance behind a well-practiced mask of businesslike duty. "President Leia Organa Solo, you are called before the Ruling Council of the Senate of the New Republic to answer to a petition of no confidence offered by Chairman Doman Beruss," Behn-Kihl-Nahm said. Leia stood in the well before the V-shaped table with her fingers laced before her. "I come before you to hear the challenge and respond, as specified in the Common Charter." The chairman nodded. "The foundation for the petition is given as follows: that your ability to discharge your duties as President of this body is and will continue to be compromised by an irreducible conflict with your interests as wife of General Han Solo, who is presently a prisoner of the Duskhan League, with which we stand on the brink of conflict. Do you have any questions about this charge?" "No," she said calmly. "Do you wish to dispute the facts as laid out in section two of the petition?" "I do not," she said, standing even straighter. Do you wish to make a statement in rebuttal of the argument offered in section three?" "Only that the petitioner has said far more about his fears than he has about my conduct," Leia said with a quick but pointed glance sideways at Beruss. "For whatever reason, Chairman Beruss has prejudged and in doing so, he's become the principal disruption to the work of the President's office. I trust that this Council will recognize that fact and put an end to the disruption by rejecting this petition." "Very well," said Behn-Kihl-Nahm. "Before I call for the vote, the petitioner has asked me to once again offer you an alternative. He is willing to withdraw the petition if you will agree to take a leave of absence until the crisis in Farlax Sector has been resolved and General Solo's return has been secured." "Not interested," said Leia. Beruss stirred. "The terms could be worked out so as to leave you with full authority in other areas." "No, they couldn't," Leia said bluntly. "You can't sit there and start rewriting the Charter to separate President from Commander in Chief from Chief of State. And I wouldn't go along with it if you could." Quietly defiant, she turned back to where BehnKihl-Nahm sat. "Chairman, this body wasn't created to provide an opportunity to blackmail the President behind Closed doors. If you think this petition has merit--if you think I'm unfit to do the job I was elected to do--then send the petition on to the Senate. No more delays. Call for the vote." "Very well," said Behn-Kihl-Nahm. "As the petitioner, Senator Beruss's vote is counted in support. Senator Rattagagech?" "I support the petition." "Senator Fey'lya?" "I share Senator Beruss's concerns and offer him my support." "Senator Praget?" "Affirmative." Praget's vote sealed the outcome, but Leia stood tall and impassive until the last member of the Council had weighed in. The final tally was five to two against her. "The petition will be reported to the Senate at its next general session," said Behn-Kihl-Nahm, barely holding a rush of angry words in check. "This meeting is adjourned." When he rang the crystal, he did so with enough force that it cracked--a crack substantial enough to mute its voice but not severe enough to shatter it. Behn-Kihl-Nahm did not believe in omens, but he handled the crystal carefully as he removed it from the dais and made certain that no One else saw. Ambush "Captain! The intruder's soliton wave has vanished!" Captain Voba Dokrett struck Gorath's navigator a mighty blow across the back. "Emergency stop! Take us back to realspace! Smartly now--it's your first daughter's life if the enemy isn't under our guns when we exit." Dokrett spun away from the navigator's station and hunted down the gunnery master with his eyes. "Instruct the blaster batteries to target the intruder fore and aft for weapons, then hole her amidships." "Sir, shouldn't we disable the intruder first?" "Bloodprice's ion batteries were ineffective. Dogot went by the book and died. Give the order." "Yes, sir," said the gunnery master. "All fire stations, attend. Numbers one and three forward,-acquire tracking and target bow section. Numbers four and six forward, target aft section. Numbers two and five, rig for hull cutting and stand by." The gunnery master was barely finished barking the orders when the crossover alarm began to sound and Gorath began to shudder and hum. "A prize share to every officer if we take the intruder intact!" Dokrett cried. "For the glory of Prakith and in service to our beloved governor, Foga Brill, I commit this vessel to the fight before us!" All around Gorath's bridge, display screens came alive as the cruiser plunged back into the sea of electromagnetic energies that was the sublight universe. "Captain, there is no sign of Tobay," called the sensor master. "If they did not observe the target's soliton change, they will have jumped on ours and overshot the entry." "How sad for her crew, to lose their prize shares at the ninth hour," Dokrett said. "Range to target!" "Eight thousand meters." Grinning broadly, Dokrett clapped his hands on the navigator's shoulders. "Ha! It seems you are a good father after all," he exclaimed. "Should we wait for Tobay, Captain?" "No!" he barked. "Fire!" The gunnery master leaned toward his station. "Numbers one and three forward, fire! Numbers four and six forward, fire!" Almost at once and nearly as one, four of the cruiser's eight primary batteries sent fierce pulses of energy lancing toward the great vessel ahead. There was no fire, nor any explosions, but Dokrett's telescopic scanner showed plumes of debris scattering from black-edged-slashes across both ends of the intruder's hull. "Enough!" Dokret cried. "To the heart of her, now!" Moments after the gunnery master relayed the orders, the four active batteries fell silent, and the two batteries standing by opened fire The ferocious haft of blaster bolts from their muzzles battered a single spot amidships on the giant vessel until another black-edged hole opened there. Then the focus of the blaster bolts spread into a circle, chewing at the edges of the opening until it was twenty meters across. "Cease fire!" Dokrett shouted. "That should be enough to keep them busy. Gunnery master, enable all batteries for counterfire. Navigation master, bring us up alongside. Boarding parties, to your breaching pods! The prize is nearly ours." There was no response from the target as Gorath closed on it, moving to within a hundred meters of the opening amidships. At that distance, the great bulk of the vessel--more than five times the length and three times the diameter of the Prakith light cruiser--filled every viewscreen and gunner's port. "Captain!" called the sensor master. "Something odd--at this distance, with a ship that size the reading from the magnetic anomaly detector should be nearly off the scale. But by the reading I'm getting, I would have said nothing larger than a pinnace was out there." Dokrett nodded. "Look at the way she burned," he said. "Look at the way she's built. That's not durasteel or matrix armor. Whatever it is, we've never seen its kind before. What do you show for power generation?" The sensor master waved his hands, frowning in puzzlement. "Field strength is negligible." "Very well," said Dokrett, much pleased by the answer. "Open the ports. Away all pods." In the moment between the opening of the ports and the launching of the first breaching pod, something shot out from the intruder and slammed into the hull of Gorath with such force that it knocked Dokrett to his knees. Alarms began to sound all over the bridge as the impact of a second projectile again made the cruiser shake from bow to stern. "Fire! Fire!" Dokrett screamed as he dragged himself to his feet. A few scattered batteries were already engaged, though their efforts seemed undirected. "Gunnery master! Destroy those launchers!" "We're trying. But the angle--we can't bring the mains to bear from here--" Movement on the starboard viewer caught Dokrett's eye, and he glimpsed the third projectile as it leaped across the gap between the two ships--it seemed to be ball-shaped, trailing a thick cable extending back to the intruder. Gorath groaned under the impact. "What's happening?" Dokrett demanded. "I want to see what's happening." "I have something," the sensor master shouted. One pod had cleared its stowage bay, and the relay from its: viewers showed that all three projectiles had buried themselves in the cruiser's hull. Gorath was now anchored to the vagabond by three slender, undulating tethers at bow, stern, and amidships. "Navigation!" Dokrett called, wheeling around. "Break us free! Thrusters full! Stand by, main engines!" At that moment, two more projectiles erupted from two different points along the hull of the intruder. These were slender and spiked, and they drove themselves deep into Gorath's hull. There was fear in Dokrett's eyes as he started across the deck toward the navigation master. "Full ahead, now!" he screamed. But before the captain had covered half the distance to his beleaguered underling, every bridge station exploded in a shower of sparks. Every metal structure of the ship suddenly became part of the path for an enormously powerful electrical current coursing through the tethers from the alien vessel. The current leaped across isolation blocks and vaporized insulators, vaulted across the open air and skipped over the face of the bulkheads, coursed up the legs of crew members and grounded through their faces and hands. In little more than a second, most of the cruiser's systems were slag. Just as quickly, most of the crew was dead, and those not yet dead were dying--of massive burns, paralyzed hearts, and scrambled neural systems. On the bridge, the gunnery master and his chair were fused into a single carbonized sculpture. Captain Dokrett was immolated by a lightning spike that used him as a shortcut from a fire-control vent head above his head to the decking under his feet. By the time the attacking current ceased, small fires were burning in a hundred places throughout the ship, providing the only relief to the darkness that had abruptly fallen inside Gorath's spaces. But when those fires had consumed the available oxygen, the smoke-filled ship became as black, still, and silent as a mausoleum. The extent of the destruction was not as obvious from the outside. The commander of Pod 5 and his squad of assault troops saw flickering discharges through the Open bay doors and scattered viewports, assessed the crushed hull plates at the impact points, noted the gun turrets going cold, spotted the darkening of the outer hull from spot fires within, marked the unbroken static on the command channels. Still, the ship seemed largely intact. Then the tethers joining the ships suddenly patted close to the intruder's hull, and the pod commander faced a quick and irreversible choice between following his last orders and returning to the cruiser. Loyalty weighed more heavily on him than obedience. As the enormous vessel began to move off, he turned the pod toward Gorath. There was one voice raised in protest, but the commander silenced the dissenter with a sharp look. "The enemy vessel is badly wounded," he said with a savage satisfaction. "See how slowly it moves. Tobay is nearby. We will help our brothers on Gorath, and then together we will hunt that demon down and destroy it." When the vagabond returned to realspace after the Prakith encounter, the rumbling entry growl seemed to Lando to have edged closer to a howl. He signaled to the others for silence and then listened attentively to the sounds the vessel was making. "'Is there a problem?" Threepio asked at last. "I don't know," Lando said. "Get me the database on bioengineered structures and I'll look it up. I don't know if this ship's even susceptible to the kind of fatigue that kills metal ships. Maybe that's why the Qella built her this way--so she could go on forever, indestructible and self-repairing." "That seems like a reasonable inference," Threepio said. "Except the mechanisms that do the repairs are just as susceptible to failure, so you need mechanisms that repair the repair mechanisms, and so on. Is everything working as designed? I have no idea." "Perhaps it was damaged in the attack," said Lobot. "That could account for the altered spectrum of the entry growl." "How would I know?" exclaimed Lando. "I don't even know something as elementary as what makes her go, what energy source we're tapping when we touch a trigger point. It takes fusion generators to drive a hyperspace engine for a capital vessel---everyone knows that, right? But the radmeter says there are no fusion generators aboard." Lando shook his head. "I'm half ready to throw my hands up and just say it's magic." "We should learn something in the next few moments," Lobot said. "The last time the vessel jumped to escape capture, it changed course and jumped out less than fifteen minutes later. If the ship is under the direction of rule-based logic, as I believe it is, it should do so again." "Of course, we were goosing her with a cutting blaster at the time," Lando said wryly. "Wait--quiet." Straining at first to do so, both men could pick out a buzzing whine that seemed to come from a point several compartments away. As the ship began to shudder rhythmically around them, the sound swiftly grew louder, drowning out the normal background noises of the vessel and acquiring a destructive-sounding rasp. "What is that?" Lobot asked, the worry in his tone a reflection of the worry on Lando's face. "It sounds like--" "It sounds like we're under fire again," Lando said grimly. "Could it be Colonel Pakkpekatt's armada?" "Not a chance in a billion," Lando said. "Someone must have followed us out from Prakith. Lobot, seal up your suit, fast." "What about your missing glove?" "Someone has to operate the portals," Lando said. "That means bare skin. If we lose pressure, I'll make another sample-bag mitten. But I need you functional in case I don't have time or it won't hold. Hurry!" By the time Lobot had snapped his helmet in place, the chamber's even glow was flickering. As Lando retrieved an unused sample bag from the depleted equipment sled, the chamber illumination failed entirely. So had Threepio's courage. He had been clinging to the equipment sled while Artoo scanned and cataloged the displays from the center of the chamber, and now his frantic kicking had started the sled tumbling in slow motion. "Artoo! Artoo, come here this instant. Oh, this is ghastly--my circuits and gears can't bear any more. Master Lando, you simply must do something. Surely now you will signal Lady Luck." "Forget it," Lando said, jetting toward the chamber's forward portal, through which they'd entered a short time before. "What I'm going to do is find out what that noise is all about." But when he pressed his hand against the portal's trigger, nothing happened. He repeated the motion, then turned toward Lobot. "Did you see a one-way sign?" Tight-lipped, Lobot shook his head. It was the same at the other end of the chamber. "We're locked in," Lando announced. "What does that mean?" Threepio fretted. "You can use your blaster, can't you?" "Not without knowing if there's atmosphere on the other side, I can't," said Lando. "This is the limit," Threepio declared. "Master Lando, I insist that you bring your yacht here immediately-" Before the droid could complete his demand, before Lando could voice the rejection that was forming on his tongue, the chamber was filled with a near-deafening wail that was the malignant cousin of the sound they had heard earlier. But the source was much closer this time--no more than one or two bulkheads away. "Hear the sizzle?" Lando shouted, drifting back from the portal. "That's the sound a blaster bolt makes when it hits a body, burning the fat and making the water boil--but a million times worse than I ever heard before. Someone's slicing this ship to pieces." By then, Lando had drawn close enough to the tumbling sled for Threepio to release his grip on it and lunge clumsily toward Lando's nearest leg. "What the--Threepio, what are you doing?" Lando demanded, twisting around to see what had struck him. Then a new sound made Lando forget about Threepio It was the muted roar of an explosive decom-pression--a big rupture, and close by, close enough to make the chamber walls around them ripple visibly in the beams from Artoo's floodlamps. "Sweet cold starlight--" Lando breathed, slowly shaking his head. "She's in trouble now. We're all in trouble." "There is no reason to be fearful," Threepio said brightly. "We are safe now." "Shut up, Threepio. You don't know what you're talking about." "Please don't worry, Master Lando. No one needs to worry. I have taken care of everything," Threepio declared proudly. "What?" Looking down, Lando saw Threepio drifting away into the darkness with Lady Luck's beckon call clutched tightly in the hand of his working arm. Lando grabbed at the pouch where the transmitter had been, as though unable. to believe what the droid had done. "Do you know what you've done?" Lando said, his tone low and menacing. "Why, of course. I have signaled Lady Luck to come and rescue us." "No," Lando said, barely restraining his fury. "You've condemned us. There's something out there big enough and powerful enough to take on the vagabond and survive. How long do you think Lady Luck will last after she shows up? You've called a crewless ship into a combat zone. She's got no way to defend herself. How did you expect her to get past whatever's out there tearing pieces out of the hull?" "Oh," said Threepio. "I see." "Lando--" "Leave me alone, Lobot," Lando said, his tone underlining the warning. "I'm going to take this pile of cheap cybernetic junk apart. I'm going to burn his arms and legs into little pieces so that I'll have something to throw at the boarding party. Say, how would you like his backplate to use as a shield?" "Lando, listen," Lobot insisted. "The firing has stopped." Lando swung his head around. "So it has. But we're not moving. I don't think she's gonna move again." He looked back at Threepio. "Neither are you." "Artoo--Artoo, where are you? Master Lando has gone mad. You must protect me. I don't deserve to die." "Almost nobody does," Lando said, pulling out the cutting blaster. "But we die anyway. Be philosophical." "Lando, wait," said Lobot. "We know this ship. We have the advantage over anyone coming aboard. Whateve} brings them here can as easily take us back." "Sure--as prisoners," said Lando. "I've visited enough prisons, thank you. I don't intend to be captured." "All right, then," Lobot said. "Let's think about how to fight them and win. Let's use our advantage. Forget Threepio. What he did is a distraction, and raging over it is a waste of time." With a growl, Lando twisted and pointed the cutting blaster at the forward entry portal. Its beam lit the chamber briefly and harshly, leaving a meter-wide hole that did not close. "She's really hurting," Lando said, shaking his head. "All right--Lobot, Artoo, let's go. We have to move quickly." He pointed toward Threepio. "Golden Boy stays here." "Lando---" Lobot began. "He'll just slow us down." "Lando--" "But if we leave him here, maybe he'll slow them down. A diversion. Who knows--maybe they won't even blow him to bits," said Lando. "Come on." "Where are we going?" "Chamber twenty-one." Lando jetted toward the hole he had blasted, and the others followed him through. So did Threepio's plaintive voice. "You can't abandon me here in the dark--Artoo--please--" Artoo whimpered sympathetically, but he did not turn back. Nearly five light-years Rimside from the pulsar 2GS-91E20, the powerful external worklights on the under curve of Lady Luck's bow stabbed out into the ebony void toward the target Colonel Pakkpekatt was tracking. "It's too small by half," said Colonel Hammax, looking up from the displays and out through the viewports, straining to pick out what the NRI deep-contact list called Anomaly 2249. "Or it is now only half what it was. We will continue," said Pakkpekatt, bobbing his head. Hammax glanced back down. "Target is now sixty-one thousand meters dead ahead." "Tell me, Colonel--how is it that a personal yacht has a sensor system that appears to have resolution comparable to a front-line intelligence picket and better range--far superior to that on a cruiser like Glorious?" "Shorter procurement cycle," Hammax said. "He buys what he needs, without having to get the permission of anyone who sits in an office far from the consequences of saying no." "And what is his need?" Hammax shrugged. "Considering that this ship mounts only a single low-grade laser cannon, sensors like that might help keep you out of a lot of trouble." "That does not answer my question," Pakkpekatt said. "Who is this Lando Calrissian? This bridge belongs to a meticulous professional, someone who insists on the best tools and on knowing how to use them. The storage holds belong to a mercenary or a brigand, a man who respects no rule but expediency. The personal quarters belong to a sybarite, a self-indulgent hedonist who surrounds himself with soft pleasures. Which one is Calrissian?" "I didn't know the baron before he came aboard Glorious," Hammax said. "But by reputation, Colonel, he's all three." "They could not abide each other," Pakkpekatt stated firmly. "Such a man would never be content in any of his pursuits. He would always be drawn else-where--the hedonist to purpose, the brigand to security, the perfectionist to impulsiveness, and on. You understand?" "Humans are contradictory creatures," said Hammax. "Forty thousand meters." "That I know, Colonel--but can you tell me why they think it a strength?" Pakkpekatt asked. "I think that's the first of the contradictions," Hammax said with a grin. "You are no help to me," the Hortek said, annoyed. "Go and wake the others. It is time." Before Lady Luck had closed another five thousand meters on the unknown object tagged by NRI trackers as Anomaly 2249, all four members of the team were at their stations. On the bridge, Pakkpekatt was handling the piloting duties, Taisden was monitoring the sensor matrix, and Hammax was controlling the laser cannon by means of a lightweight targeting headset. Aft on the enclosed observation deck, Pleck tended the bank of NRI-issue tracking and holo imagers he and Taisden had installed. It was becoming a familiar drill, but Pakkpekatt did not allow them to become casual about it. The first five anomalies they had investigated had included a burned-out Modern starfreighter, an abandoned bulk-cargo barge apparently holed by a collision, and a sizable section of an ancient deep-space antenna--all harmless. But they had also found a fully operational Kuat Ranger running with a blacked-out telesponder, which fled at their approach, and a live Ilthani space mine, which Hammax detonated With a precise burst from the yacht's laser cannon. At three thousand meters, it became clear that Anomaly 2249 was not the Teljkon vagabond or any part of it. The work floods illuminated a metal mesh cylinder some sixty meters long, capped by solid metal spheres fifteen meters across and studded with circular metal fittings. It was slowly turning end over end, rotating around a slightly eccentric center of gravity. "What in blazes is that?" Hammax asked. "Space-ship? Probe? I don't recognize the configuration." "Nor do I," said Pakkpekatt. "But I know what it is not." He dragged a datapad toward him and consulted the report provided to him by the keepers of NRI's network of stationary blackball-tracking buoys. "Anomaly ten-thirty-three, near Carconth, is the next highest probability candidate." "Colonel?" "Yes, Agent Pleck?" "Could we give this one a few more minutes--get in to maybe five hundred meters and do a flyaround? I'd like to be able to resolve all the hull detail for the analysts, and there may be markings on the far side." "I am not interested in performing any extra services for the Analysis Section," Pakkpekatt said curtly, turning Lady Luck away from the mystery object and onto a heading for Carconth. "Let them clear their anomalies themselves. Colonel Hammax, retract the cannon pod. Agent Pleck, lock down your imagers. Hy perspace in one minute. This will be a nine-hour jump, so we'll make the watch change now." Apart from the ugly smell it left hanging in the air, Lando had no qualms about burning a path through the chain of chambers for himself and the others. If the ship survived what was almost certainly more serious damage elsewhere, closing the wounds Lando was making would be no problem--and if the ship was already doomed, the wounds he was making were irrelevant. But Lobot quickly became uncomfortable watching Lando do it. After only four chambers and four black-edged burnholes, Lobot caught Lando and stayed his hand before he could make the fifth. "Can't we at least try each portal before we destroy it?" he pleaded. "Do you have some reason to think the vagabond is recovering?" Lando asked, pulling his arm free and pointing the blaster ahead. Lobot cringed as the beam burned a hole into the next chamber. "I don't know what's happening," he said. "I do know that we are leaving a trail that will be no challenge to follow, a fact which makes our flight futile. The boarding parties will simply find us in the last chamber." A new sound reached them as Lando stopped and looked back. It was a series of wet-sounding percussive reports, akin to the sound of a stone falling into soft mud. "Fluids blowing under pressure," Lando said, craning his neck. "I heard a bad fuel slug pop once, sounded a lot like that." He looked back at Lobot. "Yeah, you're right. We won't be hard to follow. But the darkness helps us, and we don't have to be conveniently waiting for them at the end of the line." "Is that your whole plan?" Lobot demanded. "Do you think Threepio will have them coming after us so recklessly that we can surprise an entire boarding party with hand tools?" "My plan is to postpone the confrontation," Lando said. "That's all I have going right now. I'm only thinking about putting some distance between us and whoever's coming in back there." "Then what about making more than one hole? Make them make a decision. Get them to split up." "I'd gladly burn some more holes to make it harder for them to follow us, but I don't know what I'd be cutting into," said Lando. "And I sure don't want to increase the odds of burning through into vacuum." "The topography of the ship does not make any chamber face coterminous with the hull," said Lobot. "When you placed the sensor limpetre" "We don't know what spaces have been breached by the attack," Lando said. "I could even hit vacuum going straight ahead through the portals. I'm telling you--" Just then the shoulder joint of Lobot's contact suit bumped gently against the face of the chamber. Moments later, Lando, too, drifted into a solid barrier. "Ship's moving again," Lando said. "Just barely moving." "Changing direction, too." "Under way, or under tow?" "No telling from here," Lando said. "But more likely under way--there hasn't been enough time to sweep the ship, and it'd be risky to take her under tow until that was finished. Come on." Lando jetted toward the opening he had made, grabbed the edge, and pulled himself through. What he saw as he pointed his lights and his blaster at the opposite end of the chamber startled him to speechlessness. The portal was already irising open. As Lando began to retreat he swiped at his suit controls with his gloved hand, killing the lights. Behind him, Lobot took the cue and did the same. But even after Artoo obeyed the instruction Lobot placed in his language register, the chamber remained faintly lit by the glow from a narrow ring encircling each of its open portals--all six of them. "Lando--" "I see, I see," Lando said. "Lando, those are the STAFF ONLY doors you were talking about. What's going on?" "I'm not sure." He jetted diagonally to the nearest of the four previously unknown portals for chamber 229 and stole a peek through it. "What can you see?" "More of the same, only different," Lando said heading for the portal to chamber 228. "Check the one behind us." Both the chamber ahead and the one they had just left were also now showing multiple portals lit by glow-rings. Some of the new portals opened to tiny dead-end chambers, others to narrow cylindrical passageways, still others to the vast interspace Lando had discovered when planting the sensor limpet, "Any ideas?" Lando asked Lobot. "Possibly. Rule-based logic must be strictly prioritized, following a conditional decision tree," said Lobot. "The first thing the ship did was to seal all portals, giving the highest priority to containing the damage--a reasonable response to an attack, especially if there was a hull breach. Then, after an inventory of the damage, the next highest priority was given to restoring freedom of movement, perhaps to facilitate repairs." "Or escape," said Lando. "Are you saying you think this means the attack is over?" "It doesn't matter," said Lobot. "The ship has thrown all the doors open. We may never have another chance like this." He pointed at the portal below them, leading to the interior. "The heart of the ship is that way." "Maybe--and for all you know, it's at the other end of a ten-kilometer maze. And if she's on the verge of breaking up, what then?" Lando demanded. "What else can we do?" "I have to see how bad the damage is. Give me your left glove." "Why?" "Because you won't need it where you're going, and I do need it where I'm going--out to the hull and forward to find out how much damage there is." "That's pointless. Either it can repair itself or it cannot," said Lobot. "We have to look for the control nexus." "You can do what you like. I need to know where things stand." "The ship knows," Lobot insisted. "When you figure out how to talk to her, let me know. Until then, we're both wasting time. The glove, please." Lobot hesitated, then unlocked the retaining ring and twisted the glove sharply clockwise. He sent it spinning across the chamber toward Lando with more force than necessary. "Thanks," Lando said, catching it cleanly with his bare hand. "I'll bring it back." "Is every gambler always sure that the next draw's a winner?" Lobot asked. "If you make it back, you can look for me in here." He jerked a bare thumb in the direction of the portal behind him. "I'll do that," Lando said, jetting toward a portal on the opposite side of the chamber. "If you want to help me out, you might try blazing your path with the paint stick. The ship might be too busy with other things just now to get around to wiping the marks." "I will consider it," Lobot said. As soon as Lando disappeared through the opening with a wave, Lobot turned to Artoo-Detoo. "Go get Threepio and bring him here." Artoo released the equipment grid and dove toward the portal, chirping his relief and approval. "Don't spare the propellant," Lobot called after him. Alone, he removed his right glove and his helmet, clipping both to the equipment grid. Bending his neck forward, he reached up with his bare hands and lightly caressed the edges of the Hamarin interface band, his fingertips playing briefly over the attachment release at the back of his head. The interface had never come off in thirty-four years, not for maintenance upgrades, nor for sleep, nor for vanity. It did more than connect Lobot with a universe of interlinked data resources and control interfaces. The band had become a secondary link between the halves of his own brain, supplementing the corpus callosum so as to allow him to process the tremendous flood of data that pressed in on his awareness. His fingers knew it as part of the familiar and ordinary contours of his head. His mind no longer recognized a boundary between biology and technology; his integrated consciousness bridged both. Even so, this time, his fingers were exploring the interface as an object apart--and he was wondering what it would be like not to find it there, either with his hands or with his thoughts. Outside chamber 228, as elsewhere, the inner face of the vagabond's interspace--the open area between what Lando thought of as the ship proper and the outer hull--was covered with hexagonal cells containing sculpted Qella faces. It seemed to Lando that the entire ship must be tiled with them. As he jetted past the unbroken and unending bas-relief, Lando wondered how many faces there were, and whether each was unique. When he contemplated the numbers, it became almost unthinkable that it was a portrait gallery, that each represented an actual individual-long dead, in all likelihood, and perhaps remembered nowhere else but here. There must be hundreds of thousands--perhaps millions. I'll have to ask Lobot or Artoo to calculate it, Lando thought. Who could have made them all? Just gathering and organizing them into this collage would have been a monumental task. How were they made? Are they like the rest of this ship, almost alive? The Qella watched with impassive eyes as he passed, more sanguine about Lando's presence than he-was about theirs. And why are they here? All that work, and who would see them? The discovery of access portals to the interspace did not alter Lando's impression of the interspace as a private place. They gaze outward as if the outer hull weren't there, as if they're held in trance by something they see lying beyond, as if they all share the same thought. Was it infinity? Eternity? Mortality? Soon after entering the interspace, Lando discovered that the inner hull and outer hull were connected by slender stringers. Crisscrossing and arrayed in a continuous row, they stitched the two hulls together with an open pattern of diamonds and triangles, like a series of X's. The smallest openings were large enough for Lando to pass through easily. Lando suspected that the stringers encircled the entire inner hull, like the spokes of a velocipede wheel--a single structure serving as strut, spacer, and shock mount. As he continued forward, Lando encountered a second ring of stringers and learned they had another function. For this row was a solid barrier, with membranes closing the spaces between the strands, sealing off the next section of interspace. The obstacle drove Lando back inside the ship at chamber 207. Forward from that point, the portals leading to the interspace were still illuminated by glow-rings but sealed tight. Although none of them would open to Lando's touch, the center of those he tried to open transformed into a hexagon of the same transparent material they had seen in the auditorium. In chamber after chamber, the viewports allowed him to glimpse the reason the portals would not open--a gaping slash in the outer hull that started at chamber 202 and continued forward nearly to the bow. When Lando peered out into the interspace, he saw stars. Even though the giant transparency was opaque, the best view of the damage was from the auditorium. Looking through a previously unknown portal, Lando could see that the attacker had come close to shearing the bow off the vagabond. The burn patterns were familiar and distinctive--the damage was the result of the pulsed output produced by a capital ship's batteries. This is what we heard, Lando thought, keying the suit's comlink. "Lobot, are you there?" "Listening." "I'm in the auditorium," Lando said. "There's a big hole along the starboard side, and everything forward of here is a wreck. The last few pulses punched all the way through her, opening up a smaller hole in the far side. The whole section is sealed--I can't get any closer to the damage without cutting my own door, which I don't need or want to do." "Is there any indication that the breach is being repaired?" "It's hard to tell," Lando said. "There's so much hull missing, and I can't get enough light on the closest edges. I'll probably have to wait here a while to know." "Is there any sign anyone has come aboard?" "No sign I can see. It's pretty clear they were going after the weapon nodes," Lando said. "Which means they must have seen her fight before, most likely at Prakith." "Can you see anything of the vessel or vessels that attacked us?" "Not a hint. From the angle of incidence, I'd say they were well aft of us when this started. Lobot--the orrery is gone." "No!" Lobot protested. "Gone or inactive?" "Gone. Destroyed. The whole shadow-box chamber would have been filled with bolt scatter after the initial burn-through. Everything that wasn't swept out in the decompression's been vaporized." "Perhaps it will regenerate." "From what? There's nothing out there. No, it looks as if you and I are going to be the last to have seen it." "That is dismaying," said Lobot. "No telling from where I am, but I'd guess there are a few thousand fewer portraits in the gallery, too. Probably came close to losing this chamber." "How long do you plan to stay and observe?" Lando glanced at his chronometer. "I'll give it twenty minutes. If I can't see some activity by then, I'll start back. How are you doing? Any sign of trouble there? Where are you now--still in two-twenty-eight?" "I am fine," said Lobot. "But I do not know how to tell you where I am. I would already be lost if not for Artoo's holomap." "You've gone into the inner passages?" "Maybe I should come back now," said Lando. "I've seen most of what I need to. Did you blaze your route?" "I would rather you did not," Lobot said. "The silence is surprisingly agreeable. I am hearing much more clearly now. That is why I did not blaze my route. That is why I am now going to turn off my comlink." Lando began an angry protest. "Lobot, what's going on--" "You said that I should do what I like. That is what I have decided to do." "Fine, but don't turn off your comlink. What if--" "I will signal you if I want you," Lobot said. "Until then, I will wish you good judgment, and you can wish us good luck." That was the end of the conversation. Lando was unable to raise Lobot on any comm channel, not even with an emergency signal. He's sided with the droids against me, Lando thought, smashing his fist against the face of the chamber in frustration. Which is just more proof that this ship is making all of us nuts. By the time we get out of here--if we ever do--we're all going to need a mindwipe. Turning back toward the portal, Lando pressed the facescreen of his helmet against the transparency and peered into the darkness. The contours of the holes appeared to have changed slightly, as though the holes might be beginning to knit. How far it would go, though, he could not tell. Left untreated, the edges of a cavity wound will heal without regenerating what was destroyed. Switching off his suit lamps, Lando looked out through the blast hole at the star patterns beyond, seeking a familiar pattern, a recognizable star or distinctive spiral nebula. The odds did not favor him. Even after a lifetime roaming the spacelanes, there was far more unknown than known in a galaxy of a hundred billion stars. But if there was any way he could, he needed to touch the familiar, and remind himself what it was he was fighting to live long enough to see again. Lady Luck dropped back into realspace just shy of a light-second from Anomaly 1033 and just more than a light-year from Carconth. At those distances, the anomaly was invisible except to sensors, but the red supergiant star was still a spectacular sight. Five hundred times as large and a hundred thousand times as bright as the sun Coruscant orbited, Carconth commanded the sky like few other stars. At the peak of its fluctuations, it was the second largest and seventh brightest of the known stars. The Astrographic Survey Institute and its predecessors had been maintaining a supernova watch at Carconth for more than six hundred years. The chances were that Anomaly 1033 was something left behind by an alien expedition to Carconth. There had been many such, most unrecorded in Old or New Republic records. But Colonel Pakkpekatt and his volunteers would have no chance to find out, and little opportunity to gawk at the galactic spectacle visible off the yacht's port beam. Within moments of their arrival, Lady Luck's controls went dead under Pakkpekatt's hands. Accelerating as it turned, the yacht veered sharply some sixty degrees to starboard and twenty degrees toward galactic north, pointing its bow in the general direction of Kaa. The displays churned as the autonavigator ran through its calculus and sent the results to the hyperspace motivator. "What's wrong, Colonel?" Bijo Hammax asked. "Something has activated a slave circuit," said Pakkpekatt, lifting his hands from the panel and sitting back in the pilot's flight couch. "The yacht is no longer under my control." "But you're not trying to get control back." The whistle of the yacht's hyperdrive winding up to a jump was now clearly audible to both officers. "That is correct." At that moment, Pleck and Taisden joined them on the flight deck. "Colonel--" Pleck began. Hammax turned his couch toward Pakkpekatt. "Colonel, I don't understand why you're letting us be hijacked." "It is very difficult to defeat a well-designed slave circuit without doing extensive damage to the vessel," said Pakkpekatt. "They would be of little use if they could be easily overridden." "But that doesn't explain--" Taisden shouldered forward past Pleck. "Colonel, I can have the hyperdrive offline in thirty seconds." "I doubt very much if you can, Agent Taisden. I also doubt very much if you have thirty seconds." "Let me try." "No," Pakkpekatt said. "You think she's going to take us to them," Hammax concluded. "The most likely person to have installed the slave circuits is also the most likely person to have activated them," said Pakkpekatt. "We will know in"--he glanced down at the nav display--"six hours if that person was General Calrissian." Seconds later, Lady Luck vaulted forward through a tunnel of stars. "Where are they?, Captain Gegak screamed at the bridge crew of the destroyer Tobay. "Where is the target? Where is Gorath?" "There is no sign of either ship, Captain," the sensor master ventured. "I do not detect Gorath's tran-sponder." "Idiot! Do you think I cannot read a tracking screen?" Gegak bellowed, balling both hands into fists. His rage was indiscriminate and comprehensive, leaving no one on the bridge feeling safe enough to move or speak. "I am betrayed! One of you is in league with Captain Dokrett. Someone has conspired to steal our share of the prize." Gegak stalked behind the officers at their stations. "Who is the thief? Who is the traitor? Is it you, Frega?" He seized the hair tuft of the navigation master and used it to roughly yank his head backward. "Captain, I depend on the sensor master. Not five seconds passed from his call before we left hyperspace-" Sensor Master Nillik rose from his station before Gegak reached it, and retreated before him with hands raised. "I have not betrayed you, Captain. The instruments have betrayed me--" With a snarl, Gegak lunged forward and closed the gap between them to little more than an arm's length. "And who is responsible for the maintenance of your instruments?" "I am, Lord Captain--but, I beg you, hear me--" "I hear only the whining of a traitor." "This ship is old, twice the age of Gorath, and we have had neither the prize money nor the blessings of Foga Brill with which to maintain it. You cannot expect-" Gegak produced a neural whip from inside a fold of his bright tunic and brandished it in front of him. "I can expect that my officers will not repay the favor I do them with excuses." "Captain--please!" Nillik now found himself backed against a bulkhead. "To track a ship through hyperspace is difficult even with the most sensitive installations. I was given no time to cool and retune the soliton antennawI could not hear the target at all. I was barely able to hear Gorath above our own compression wave." "You are only making excuses for your inattentiveness." "No, Captain--it was not my attentiveness that wavered. The signature was so faint that I lost and reacquired it half a dozen times before the final loss of signal. That was the only reason for my delay. I do not know for certain if those ships left hyperspace behind us or continue on somewhere ahead of us." Gegak growled and stabbed the neural whip into Nillik's abdomen. The sensor master screamed and collapsed writhing to the floor. "I should have been informed of your difficulties," the captain said, returning the whip to its pocket. His voice was suddenly tranquil. "You have forgotten the first rule of survival in an autocracy--speak truth to power. I hope the pain will help you learn from your mistake." Then the captain turned his back on the gasping sensor master. "Point the bow toward Prakith. Make flank speed. Call the second master to the sensing station. We will search back to the point where Gorath disappeared from our instruments. And I will hear no more excuses for failure. I have expended all my tolerance on Nillik." Chapter 5 Luke found it difficult not to step off the slidewalk to pursue Akanah and prolong the argument. The thinly veiled threat she had offered as her parting words, suggesting that she might continue on to J't'p'tan without him, might withdraw her promise to lead him to his mother's people, was not without power. But that threat was also nakedly manipulative, and his reflexive resentment allowed him both to see the emotional blackmail and to resist it. It was not that he gave no credence to the threat. Akanah's conduct on Atzerri had made clear that She was perfectly capable of striking out on her own when her interests so dictated. But he had no compromise or concession to offer her. The old, familiar demon of Duty had reentered his consciousness during the conversation with the shipwright, and he could do nothing else until he either answered to his conscience or silenced it. There was no point in seeking a rapprochement with Akanah until Luke knew his own mind--until he knew if he could allow himself to continue the journey. And for that, he needed information. After stopping at the port office to authorize Starway Services to move Mud Slotb to their work bay, Luke returned to the skiff. Locking the entry not only against strangers but against Akanah as well, he settled at the flight console and began making queries. A connection to Utharis GridLink gave him ac-cess-at a refreshingly reasonable price--to both New Republic Prime and Coruscant Global archives, as well as to the back numbers of several smaller newsgrids. But the most complete information Luke found came from two local services, Eye-On-U and Taldaak Today! The Coruscant-based grids were obsessed with Imperial City politics and offered only a cursory--and frequently mis-leading-overview of the military aspects of the crisis. "Access Fleet Watch," Luke said. The newspacket of the Alliance Veterans Victory Association, Fleet Watch was usually current enough and comprehensive enough that many senior staff members at Fleet HQ kept it on their browse lists as a supplement to official sources. "Requested source is temporarily unavailable," the comm pad reported. "Why?" "Access has been voluntarily suspended by the provider. Message available." "Let's hear it." The recording contained a familiar face and voice--that of Brigadier Bren Derlin, NRDF, Ret. Der-lin and Luke had been thrown together on Hoth, where Derlin had been one of the field commanders at the Rebels' base. Derlin was more of a steadying influence than a leader, but he was a good soldier and a quiet but likable man. Luke had not seen him again until war's end, and since then only once, at the ceremonies when more than a hundred Hoth survivors gathered to dedicate a memorial to the many more who had fallen there. Now Derlin was commander of the AVVA, an organization with the status of a retirees' club but the ambition to be something more akin to a militia or the Fleet's ready reserve. The recording began with a spiral of unit insignias surrounding the AVVA logo, and a smart salute from a uniformed Derlin. "Thank you for your inquiry. Due to the current military situation, the AVVA board of governors has placed the membership on a status two alert. For security reasons, access to past and current volumes of Fleet Watch has been restricted to members only. Please join us in supporting the soldiers and pilots who are even now risking their lives to guard our freedom." "How long has that lockout been in effect?" Luke asked the comm pad. "Nine days." "I wonder what happened to bring that on," Luke said, scratching his head. "What else do you have? Show me a list." After another half hour, Luke had satisfied himself that he had all the information he was likely to garner from public news sources. Unfortunately, it was not enough to settle his mind. He was more reluctant to contact Coruscant directly than he had been the last time he needed information. If a contact watch had been set up for his authorization codes, even querying the impersonal, automated sources might throw him into the middle of a conversation he didn't want to have--with Ackbar, or Behn-Kihl-Nahm, or Han, or possibly even Leia herself. For the question gnawing at Luke was not whether Leia wanted his help, but whether she needed it. If his presence might mean the difference between triumph and defeat, then he would go to her--as she had come to him in his darkest moment, aboard the clone Emperor's flagship. Leia had pulled him back from the precipice of the dark power, and joined her power to his to defeat Palpatine. If she had not been willing to sacrifice herself and the child inside her in confronting the reborn Emperor, Luke would never have broken the grip of the dark side--and the history of the intervening years would have been written with the pen of tyranny. He could not have done it alone. But having seen not only the great strength in her heart but also the Jedi power she could summon, Luke was all the more loath to volunteer himself as a rescuer. He knew that Leia had within her extraordinary resources of will and power--resources she had of late become reluctant to draw upon. Luke thought that he was much of the reason, with both his example and his presence creating disincentives. It was important that she find that strength again. It seemed to Luke that Leia had neglected, even abandoned, her own training, and that her training of the children had become unbalanced, with the disciplines of warrior and weapon excised as if they were dispensable. Luke had not spoken of it with her, but from what he had seen, it was almost as though Leia hoped to delay, training the children as Jedi clerics rather than as Jedi Knights--as if the path before her, the path he had followed, promised to take her somewhere she did not want to go. It was her choice to make. Her destiny was no more clear to him than it was to her. But whatever that destiny was, it seemed that she was fighting it rather than following it. And it was certain she would learn nothing from an errant Knight's well-intentioned but unnecessary res-cue--if she would even allow it to happen. Knowing her streak of aristocratic, self-reliant pride, Luke was not at all confident he could count on her to ask for help, even if she needed it--not after the fight they had had the night he left Coruscant. No, those around her, the others who loved her, would urge Luke to return to her side, no matter what the circumstances. And Leia herself would insist that he stay away, no matter what the circumstances. It was essential that Luke make his own assessment of the situation, that the decision be his alone. And it was better that Luke stay out of sight and out of reach until the decision was made. Ackbar, especially, would never understand, Luke thought in passing. He's as devoted to her as a good father to a beloved child--I wonder how clearly she sees it. Still, he needed more information--information that could only come from Coruscant. He began by retrieving his registered hypercomm messages from the master archive maintained by the Communications Office. As a hedge against the vagaries of hyperspace transmission, the archive kept a copy of every registered-recipient message sent out over the New Republic system. Undeliverable messages were held until their intended recipients requested an update--something most people did routinely every time they emerged from hyperspace. But save for those few hours while outbound from Teyr, Luke had been off the system since leaving Yavin 4. The update took nearly twenty minutes to spill into Mud Slotb's comm bank. As always, there were hundreds of blind messages--love letters and propositions, requests for personal favors, questions from amateur and would-be Jedi, the occasional diatribe from an Imperialist stubbornly resisting the idea that his world had changed. Luke almost never looked at any of it. The novelty value of blatant proposals had long ago faded, and the one-two punch of praise and begging had worn thin even faster--it was as uncomfortable as being surrounded by a crowd in which everyone wanted to touch him. The priority queue contained a copy of the message from Streen, which Luke realized he had never viewed and released, and a second message from him time-stamped a day later. But there were no other messages from the twenty or so senders on his priority list--and that was something of a surprise. By and large, he had not announced his hermitage to his friends, so he could only suppose that the word had spread from the few who did know of his self-imposed isolation. "Show me number one," said Luke. Streen's face appeared. "Master Luke," he said, bowing his head slightly. "I received your latest instructions for Artoo and Threepio. But I regret to say that so far, I've been unable to deliver them. Perhaps it slipped your mind that the droids are now with Lando Calris-sian? I'll try to locate them and forward your message to "Lando," Luke said, shaking his head in surprise. "What would the droids be doing with him? Show me number two." Streen's face shifted to the right, and his caftan changed from goldenrod to rus. "Master Luke," he said, bowing his head once more. "I've tried to contact Lando Calrissian by every means available to me, without any success. I not only can't get a message through, I can't find anyone who'll admit to knowing where he or the droids are. It's possible that they're simply in hyperspace somewhere, but I'm guessing that there's more to this, and you probably know more about it than I do. I'm afraid you'd better see to this on your own." The combination of the two messages left Luke mystified, but he did not devote much time or energy to penetrating the mystery. Apparently Lando had absconded with the tWo droids, probably in furtherance of some scheme--any deeper understanding would have to wait. The droids' errand had become moot, in any case. If Luke went on with Akanah, he would have all the answers he needed in just a few days. Luke considered the long list of sources he had tapped the last time, but none seemed promising enough to justify the time and trouble. What he really wanted most was something he had tried for before and been denied--the Fleet Office's daily tactical briefing memorandum. But to get one, he would have to find a military-grade secure-link hypercomm. Or--"Access Fleet Almanac," he said. "Ready." "Reference current location." "Referencing Taldaak Station, Utharis." "Identify the nearest Fleet asset in this sector--training center, repair yard, supply base, whatever." 'This access requires a current level blue authorization code." Luke rattled off his code. "Now give me some good news." The only New Republic Defense Fleet installation on Utharis was a tiny listening post. The listening post consisted of a three-man office in Taldaak, a four-man maintenance crew flying a work skipboat based at the planet's main geosynchronous station, and a pair of complex antenna arrays located in hundred-year solar-polar orbits. The highest-ranking officer on orbit was a senior specialistdirtside, it was a green lieutenant in the first month of a yearlong rotation. The operational continuity of the post came largely from the three civilian employees, all Utharis natives. It was one of those civilians who Luke encountered first when he entered the security foyer of the listening post's small silo-dome, located adjacent to an abandoned Imperial fighter base, now home only to wild jack-a-dale and black-winged touret. Luke had dressed to the Jedi stereotype, black cape and dangling light-saber, and allowed the Li Storm disguise to dissolve as he passed through the concussion hatch. "I am here to see the post commander," Luke said, resting his palm on the scanner. The young woman looked up at him with eyes widened by surprise. Her tattooed forehead and cheeks marked her as a follower of the Duality, a popular and benign Tarrack cult founded on the tWin principles of joy and service. She looked down at the scanner when it beeped at her, then back up to Luke's face wearing a look of awe on her own. "You are him," she said. Luke flashed a small smile as he lifted his hand from the scanner. "But I am not here," he said. "I understand." "Who is the duty officer?" "Tomathy--Senior Specialist Manes. Lieutenant Ekand comes on in two hours. But I can call him in early--" "There's no need," said Luke. "I will speak with Manes. Clear me through, please." "Yes, of course." The secure room of the installation accounted for the rest of the volume of the silo--a floor full of instrument stations, a domed ceiling fifteen meters overhead, and two rings of catwalks spaced between to give access to the transceiver arrays. "I'll be right down," called a voice from above. That was followed by the brisk clatter of shoes descending metal-mesh stairs. While waiting, Luke sized up the installation. The first thing that struck his eye was that the data system used three black-bodied memory droids for storage. That meant that everything of value, staff and secure data, could be removed from the post in a matter of minutes in a six-place speeder or orbital jumper. "My goodness," Manes said, his steps slowing as he reached the main level and saw Luke clearly. "My goodness. This is an honor." As an afterthought, he gathered himself for a salute. "Forgive me, sir--I don't know your proper rank--" "I no longer hold one," said Luke, leaning over one of the data stations. "Oh--I see. Then I'll confess that I've never met a Jedi. Nothing unusual there, I guess--I don't know anyone who has. Is there a proper form of address--" "You can call me Luke." "Of course. Thank you." Manes shook his head. "Forgive me for staring. I'm on my second tour here, and in all that time you're only the second person to come through that door who didn't work here. And to have it be you--" As though suddenly aware of his flustered babbling, Manes cut himself off. "How can I help you, Luke?" "I need a copy of the current tactical briefing memorandum." "Of course. You can use the comm pad at my station"right over here--" "I need you to retrieve it for me," Luke said. "I'm here on a sensitive matter, and I can't have my location revealed." "Got it," said Manes. "No problem. We get the teebeam twice a day. I'll bring the latest one up for you." "I need a copy I can take with me." As he spoke, Luke reached out with the Force and gave the senior specialist a gentle nudge. Manes stared blankly for just a moment. "What am I thinking," he said. "You'll want a copy you can take with you. I'll get a datacard." "Thank you." Less than five minutes later, Li Stonn was climbing into his rented speeder, the datacard securely tucked away. But he did not immediately drive away. Sitting at the controls, Luke reached out into the listening post and found its two occupants excitedly discussing their surprise visitor. The event had given both such inexplicable pleasure that he hated to take those memories away from them, but he had no choice. He had already blocked the machine records of his visit from being written to the logs. Compressing a nerve here, a blood vessel there, Luke brought on a moment of unconscious paralysis, and in that moment swept the memories from their minds. Akanah had not yet returned to the skiff, nor had the 'service depot's tow dolly come to claim it. Taking advantage of the privacy, Luke locked himself inside while he reviewed the information on the datacard. The situation in Koornacht Cluster had escalated to a high level of precariousness. New Republic forces had clashed with a Yevethan fleet at Doornik 319 while trying to enforce a blockade, and dozens of Fleet recon probes had been destroyed on deep penetration mis sions. Five battle groups of an expanded Fifth Fleet had actually moved into the cluster, and smaller units were actively searching for the former Imperial shipyards. So far the Yevetha had not responded to the intrusions, but it seemed inevitable that they would. But the real source of concern for Luke was the first confirmation that J't'p'tan--referred 'to by its catalog name, FAR202019S--had been involved in the fighting. The recon ship sent there had identified a Yevethan thrustship in orbit before being fried; though the probe had completed only thirty-four percent of its ground scan, the destruction of the H'kig commune, estimated at thirteen thousand strong, was listed as "probable." Balancing that bleak prospect, at least in part, was the report from Doornik 319 that the Yevethan warships were carrying hostages taken from the destroyed colonies. If the Fallanassi had not died on J't'p'tan, they were now prisoners of the Yevetha, aboard one of the more than six hundred ships of the Duskhan League fleet--a fleet that could at any moment be hurled against the New Republic forces challenging Nil Spaar's sovereignty. Suddenly Luke's journey to Koornacht seemed joined to Leia's crisis at home, and in a way he had not anticipated. If he had a part to play in what was coming, the flow of the Current pointed to J't'p'tan, not Coruscant. Perhaps everything that had happened was part of a larger tapestry he had not yet been able to glimpse. But even without that understanding, he knew that he had to go on, not turn back. With both his and Akanah's day bags slung over his shoulder, Luke rode the slidewalk back to Starway Services, where the lights and sounds emanating from the covered work bays told him that some of the mech crews were chasing a completion bonus. A few minutes later, depot manager Notha Trome awoke with a start from the nap he was taking on his office floor. "Li Stonn's ship should be given top priority," he said aloud, as though it were a revelation that had come to him in his sleep. A minute later, he repeated that declaration in front of the yard boss. "I want half," is all the yard boss said, taking the berth slip and signaling for the tow dolly. Outside the depot, Luke nodded to himself, satisfied. Then he turned and looked out on the nightscape of Taldaak. It was time to find Akanah. He did not fully understand what her part in these events was, either, but his tumultuous life had taught him to respect what looked like coincidence. For the first time since leaving Coruscant with Akanah, he believed that his destiny and hers were bound together, and that whatever lay ahead on J't'p'tan awaited both of them. Akanah stood on the dockwalk looking up at a sleek curving hull bearing the name Jump for Joy in a flowing royal blue script. It was the best starship in port, at least for Akanah's purposes--a Twomi Skyfire, barely a year old. Six places, the lines of a fighter, and the engines of a racer. If she was going to leave Utharis--if she was going to leave Luke behind--the means to do so was before her. She had already been aboard and assured herself that the pilot assist system was the equal of the luxury appointments. Autolanding, autonavigation, crash and collision-avoidance overrides, voiceassisted preflight--despite an advertising campaign heavy on images of danger and adventure, the Skyfire had been designed to make the occasional pilot comfortable at the controls. More importantly, Jump for Joy should be able to outrun any other ship in port, except perhaps the snub fighters belonging to the Utharis Sector Patrol. That kind of speed could be useful in a war zone. Luke had already totted up Mud Sloth's shortcomings in combat, and they were numerous enough to give Akanah pause. She moved a step to her right and looked down the side of the sprint. A pretty ship, she thought, and sighed. And it would be so easy to take it. But leaving now meant abandoning the greater part of her purpose with her goal in sight but not yet achieved. Luke was open to her now--beginning to understand, beginning to change. More time. All I need now is more time. If she was there when the next test came, she might see the transformation. Luke was that close--aware of the flow of the Current, almost able to read it, nearly ready to join "It's a beauty, isn't it?" a man said, coming up beside her. He was wiping his hands on a cloth, as though he had been doing some work somewhere out of sight. Akanah had felt his presence moments before he spoke, but allowed herself to startle girlishly. "Oh! I didn't see you. Yes, it's beautiful--it looks like it's ready to leap into the air at any moment." Even in the darkness, Akanah could feel the man beaming with pride. "Would you like to see the inside?" Akanah laughed at him silently, realizing his intent. "I don't think so," she said. "I need to be getting home." He leaned toward her conspiratorially. "Have you ever had sex in hyperspace?" This time she could not contain her bubbling laugh of bemusement. "Yes," she said, and melted away into the night. The skids of the fleet launch kissed the plating of the flight deck so gently that Plat Mallar could scarcely feel the vibration under him. "Contact," he said, reaching overhead to the auxiliary control panel. "Grapples on. Systems to standby. Shutting down engines." "All right!" said the check pilot. "That's good enough. Come on out, Mallar, and I'll give you your scores." With a sigh of relief, Mallar released the double harness with a sharp poke of his fingers. Climbing out of the flight couch, he made his way to the egress hatch at the back of the simulator's cabin. He had just flown an imaginary approach and landing to the number two flight deck of the carrier Volant, his tenth exercise of that session and his eighteenth of the day. His flight suit was dripping with perspiration, his shoulders aching, his feet half numb from being confined in flight boots that weren't yet broken in. The launch was the larger of the two boats used for intrafleet travel and had proven the harder for Plat to master. A fleet gig was similar in size to an X-wing or TIE interceptor, and he had had little trouble getting one in and out of the enclosed space of a combat flight deck. But a fleet launch was two and a half times longer and a full meter taller than a gig, and Plat had hit two simulated E-wings and the flight deck roof three times before he made the adjustment. "Like going through adolescence all over again," he had muttered to himself after making the cockpit shake violently for the fourth time. But the last exercise had felt good to him--good enough to allow him to enjoy his break. He paused at the top of the simulator's ladder to remove his helmet, then swung his leg over and slid down the handrails on his heels. The check pilot, Lieutenant Gulley, met him at the bottom. "Well?" "You have a nice touch when you're not putting holes in the bulkheads," Gulley said. "I'm going to qualify you for the gig now. Come back offshift and spend a few more hours working the launch, maybe hitchhike with me or One-Eye on a few runs, and I should be able to qualify you for the launch soon enough." He handed Plat his updated identifier disc. "We're done?" "You're going on duty," he said. "Get yourself down to Blue Deck and report to the flight controller. Your first passenger should be there by the time you check in." A grin spread across Plat's face. "Yes, sir," he said, saluting. "Thank you, sir." Plat jogged through the corridors, helmet tucked under his left arm, until he rounded a corner and brushed against a round-bellied major. "Is there a combat alert, pilot?" Coming to a sudden stumbling stop, Plat whirled and saluted. "No, sir." The dressing-down that followed cost him two minutes but did nothing to dampen his spirits. He showed his ID at the controller's window and collected the enabler key for fleet gig 021, then ran out across the flight deck to where it was berthed. For a long moment, he stood and stared at it unbelievingly. "Is there a problem?" Plat whirled, recognizing the voice. "Colonel Gavin. No problem, sir!" "Then let's get going," Gavin said, moving past Plat and twisting the hatch release. "I'm your passen-ger-and I've got an appointment on board Polaron." With all possible care, Plat ran through the pre-flight checks and eased G-021 forward to the launch area, then out into space. Picking up Polaroh's locator signal, he brought the gig around to the intercept heading and accelerated smoothly to the prescribed velocity. "This what you wanted, son?" Gavin asked, leaning forward in his couch. "Yes, sir. Thank you for the chance." "No gunsights on a fleet gig. Nothing to fire the blood and feed that hunger for revenge." "I know that, sir," said Plat. "But my being here puts a more experienced pilot in a cockpit that does have gunsights and the firing buttons to, go with them. When the time comes, what he does, he'll be doing for me--if you look at it a certain way." Gavin nodded. "That's right. That's just the way to look at it." He settled back against the acceleration cushions, checked the readout on his command comlink, then glanced out the side viewport at Intrepid, rapidly falling away behind them. "Oh, and there's one other thing worth remembering," the colonel said. "You'll get a lot of cockpit time in this duty--more hours in a single duty shift than most pilots log in a week. Before you know it, you just might find yourself turning into one of those more experienced pilots." Plat heard Gavin's grin as he added, "But save the hammer-eights and counterbreaks for the simulator. I don't want to hear that my gig pilots have been practicing combat maneuvers on intership runs." Plat Mallar smiled. "I'll remember, Colonel." Han did not know whether it was a matter of contempt or carelessness, but he was neither blindfolded nor rendered unconscious for the transfer from the dirt-side prison to the brig of Pride of Yevetha. All his captors did was bind his wrists to a bar behind his hips and give him an escort composed of two towering Yevethan nitakka. Then he was walked through a maze of corridors and chambers to a driveway where a three-wheeled, box-bodied transporter awaited. From the open viewports of the transporter, he saw every detail of his surroundings and tried to memorize everything he saw--the route that led from the complex where he had been held to the port, the markings on the face of the gate that closed behind them, the design and function of the other vehicles sharing the road, the architecture and arrangement of the buildings they passed. He also studied the faces and physiques of not only the guards, but the gate proctor, the transporter driver; and any Yevethan pedestrians he could catch a good long look at. With the help of those examples, he made a start at learning to distinguish one Yevetha from another. At the same time, Han's busy mind assessed the effectiveness of his restraints. The similarity to the bench in the audience room prompted Han to wonder if the method had been designed for Yevethan physiol-ogy-it seemed as though the bar would either prevent the murderous dew claw from emerging or render it useless if extended. But the effectiveness of the bar depended on the priSoner being unable to either pass the bar under his feet or to simply slide a wrist out to one end. Yevethan physiology might not allow for either of those motions, b ut Han was confident that human physiology--even his less-than-ideally-limber variant--would. He did not immediately test his theory, but he was buoyed by the thought that he could free his hands at any time and--as a bonus--have the bar to use as a weapon. That happy thought lasted only until they reached the spaceport, where the transport was met by more guards and one of the Yevetha who had been present for Barth's execution. The moment the Yevethan official first saw Han clearly, he barked angry words and cuffed one of the guards sharply across the face. Almost immediately, another guard moved behind Han and wrapped a thick strap around his upper arms, just above the elbows. With it in place, the escape Han had planned was quite impossible. "An understandable but quite dangerous oversight," the Yevetha said to Han in Basic. His diction was excellent, his delivery almost irritatingly smooth. "The guard detail at the palace is not accustomed to handling human prisoners." That same Yevetha led the way across the rough pavement of the spaceport apron to where a delta-type Imperial shuttle waited on its skids. Han was surprised to see that the two Yevetha already seated in the cockpit wore no more clothing than any of the others--no pressure suit, not even a helmet. He filed that fact away as he climbed into the spartan cabin. One guard and the Yevethan official climbed in after him, and Han realized that he was to have a traveling companion. The guard sat beside him on the long portside bench, the official opposite him. "I am Tal Fraan, proctor cogent to the viceroy." "I'm sure your mother's very proud of you," Han said. The hatch was secured from outside, and the idling whine of the engines increased sharply. He noted that the engines sounded tight and smooth--much better than the typical Imperial offerings. Tal Fraan loosed an open-mouth hiss that Han thought might be a laugh. "Tell me, did you enjoy thinking that you might escape?" Han said nothing and directed his gaze out the viewport as the shuttle began to climb. "Do you know that we have no prisons?" Tal Fraan said. "In a city of more than one million, on a planet of nearly seven hundred million, there is not a single Yevethan jail, penitentiary, or stockade. We have no need of such things. There is no equivalent in our language for convict or incarcerate." "I guess that'd be one of the often overlooked advantages of summary execution," said Han; "Keeps the taxes down." "So true," said Tal Fraan, with no apparent awareness of Han's ironic tone. "That you choose to sustain those who harm you was a great puzzlement to me for some time." "It can't have been a complete surprise," said Han. "The place you kept us looked a lot like a prison to me." "Those you call Imperials made up for this lack of experience on our part," Tal Fraan said. "The cell in which you were kept in the grand palace was built by the overlords during the occupation. And the Imperial starships are well equipped in this regard, as you will see." "If this is just a goodwill tour, you could save yourself the trouble," Han said. "I've already visited an Imperial detention center." "Yes, I know," said Tal Fraan. "I have studied your past. I learned a great deal from it. It is how we know how important you are to your people. There are so many stories about you, Han Solo--more than are told of any Yevetha, even the viceroy. I wonder why you permit it." He paused a moment, then continued. "This is also how we knew that Lieutenant Barth was not important. There were no stories of his life and heroics. I was not surprised when you let him die." Han's hot flash of anger overwhelmed any good intentions he had not to be drawn into Tal Fraan's game. "You son of a bitch--you think you understand us, but you haven't the first clue," he snapped. "What you did to Barth makes him important to us--just like what you did to those colonists all over the Cluster made them important to us. We're not like you--we remember our dead. That's why our fleet isn't going away." Other than a twitch of his forebrow ridges, Tal Fraan showed no outward reaction whatever to Han's outburst. "I have an interesting question for you, Han Solo--do you think that your mate would be willing to fire through your body to kill my master?" "Is that what this is about? Is that why I'm being moved?" Han looked out at the swiftly darkening sky enveloping the shuttle, at the rich array of bright stars piercing the curtain. "When you can answer that question yourself, Proctor, then you really will understand us as well as you think you do." "So coy," said Tal Fraan. "Is the answer that distasteful to you?" "All I'm gonna say is this," Han said, relaxing against the back of the bench and turning a quietly murderous gaze on the Yevetha. "When your last morning arrives--and it'll come sooner than you think--I hope the fates give you a moment to realize that everything that's happened, you brought on yourself." "You are kind to show such concern for me," Tal Fraan said, nodding and smiling generously. "We will have to talk again. You have been most helpful." As Han gritted his teeth Tal Fraan peered past him out the viewport at the massive Star Destroyer Pride of Yevetha, which had just come into view. "Such a splendid vessel. The sight of it still inspires my blood," he said with open pride. "You should count yourself honored that the viceroy has allowed you to make it your new home." From the moment Han knew where he was bound, he had been picturing himself alone in one of the tiny isolation cells of a standard Imperial detention block. A Super-class Star Destroyer had six such detention blocks for crew discipline alone, and ten additional high-security blocks for enemy prisoners. But to Han's surprise, his four-guard escort led him to a different part of the ship, and a different sort of prison. Three of the ship's cargo areas had been designed for the secure transport of large numbers of slaves, refugees, or prisoners of war. Located adjacent to the large landing bays used by the SSD's bulk shuttles, each of the holding areas was equipped with minimal facilities--water taps, ventilation, and food dispensers--considered adequate for up to a thousand people. The holding area to which Han was taken, number two, was not even remotely that crowded. At a glance, Han guessed that there were no more than a hundred prisoners huddled along the walls or sprawled on the hard deck. Most took little or no notice of his arrival, but a small group, perhaps twenty strong, formed a large, ragged circle around him as he made his way toward a water tap. More than half a dozen species were represented in the circle, and they looked upon him with a mixture of dull-eyed curiosity and suspicion. "What world are you from?" asked a young woman in a brown fire-scorched caftan. She was either human or Andalese--her tousled hair might have concealed the latter's horn points, and the caftan was shapeless enough to hide the symbiosis grafts. "Coruscant," said Han. "And you?" "I was at the Morath pholikite mine number four, on Elcorth." The others began to crowd closer around him as they recited their own answers. "Taratan, of the Kubaz, nested at Morning Bell--" "I am Brakka Bar.akas, dothmir of New Brigia--" "Bek nar walae Ithak e Gotoma--" "Fogg Alait, assigned to Polneye--" "I am called Noloth by my brothers of the L'at H'kig--" "My home was Kojash. I am known as Jara ba Nylra--" "My stars," said Han, turning slowly, hands raised as though to fend them off. "Are there survivors here from all the colony worlds?" "All our homes were attacked by the silver spheres," said the woman who had spoken first. "Are we the only survivors?" "How much longer will we be here?" asked Noloth. "Do you think we can go home soon?" asked a slender alien who had not spoken before. Han swept his gaze across their faces. "I don't know," he said uncomfortably. "I'm just like you are--I don't know what's going on out there." The days immediately following the presentation to the Senate of a petition of recall against President Leia Organa Solo were full of the kind of moments that made Hiram Drayson despair of leaving the government in the hands of civilians. Moving quickly in the wake of the Ruling Council's vote, both Fleet Intelligence and New Republic Intelligence had intervened to prevent the news of Han's capture by the Yevetha from being released with the petition. Stripped of its supporting argument by the blue and silver SECURE seals, the petition ought--by all rights--to have foundered on arrival. But a Ruling Council had never passed such a judgment against a Senate President before, and novelty alone gave the petition an undeserved gravity. And the threat of prosecution for security violations could do nothing to rein in the rumors and leaks that blossomed to fill the information vacuum. Within twelve hours, Drayson's information filters had picked up an uncensored copy of Beruss's original complaint, an anonymous interview with one of Tampion's escort pilots, and even a holo that purported to show Jedi "commandos" in training for an imminent rescue mission. When Coruscant Prime led its morning packet with a feature titled "Where Is Han Solo?" and the New Republic Newsgrid answered with "Princess Leia's Personal War," Drayson knew that the battle had been lost. "You may as well release everything you have concerning Han," Drayson told Ackbar. "At this point, the official silence, the denials, look like admissions that there is something to hide. Leia should be getting a flood of sympathy over Han's situation--but with Borsk Fey'lya leaking everything he can get his hands on, and Doman Beruss appointing himself the champion of the public's right to 'full disclosure,' her stock is dropping almost by the hour." "I have urged her to that course," said Ackbar. "But she is protecting the children--they still do not know what has happened to their father." "That can't last much longer." "She is determined not to burden them with the truth," said Ackbar, shaking his head. "Leia has told them that Han is on a secret mission for her, that they are not to believe anything they hear anywhere else. And Winter is keeping them away from anyone and anything that might contradict Leia's version." "Children aren't stupid," said Drayson. "Particularly not those children. I expect that they already know quite a bit more than she realizes." "It would not surprise me," said Ackbar. "But until events force her hand, Leia is determined to protect the children from the knowledge that their father is a prisoner of war. And I have personally promised to support that fiction." Disgruntled, Drayson retired to his private office with the ever-growing catalog of message packets, grid dispatches, comlink captures, and electronic graffiti assembled for him by the Maxwell filters that were riding the planet's busy communication channels. Later that afternoon, reports began to come in from his contacts in the palace complex and Fleet headquarters. By that time, Drayson had already made a decision about what was needed to change the tone and tenor of the public and political consciousness. His hastily jotted notes to himself read: Must erase the perception of selfish act--replace with the reality of selfless one. This crisis must have another face. Drayson spent the next hour browsing through the personnel records of the casualties of the engagement at Doornik 319. He marked four of them for further consideration husband-and-wife pilots from the battle cruiser Liberty, a female crew chief who died fighting the hangar fire aboard Venture, and the Hassarian captain of the ill-fated Trenchant. Each story had a powerful emotional hook; But their effectiveness in deflecting the focus from Leia and Han would be undercut by the fact that, coming so late in the crisis, all four deaths could be as easily blamed on Leia's actions as on Nil Spaar's. The tragedy was obvious; that the Yevetha were to blame was less so. So Drayson set the casualty records aside and retrieved his data folders concerning the eight destroyed colonies in Koornacht Cluster, including the stasis probes' documentation of the devastation. Assessing the cold realities of emotional kinship, Drayson knew that the most ready identification would be with the humanoid Brigians, the hard-working Morath miners on Elcorth, and the largely human inhabitants of Polneye. Which, in the end, brought Drayson to the same place his first instincts had said he must go, hours be-fore--to the young Grannan survivor from Polneye, Plat Mailar. It would have been better if Mallar were human, and of Polneye's historical associations were with the Alliance rather than the Empire, but those problems could be dealt with if addressed head on. The only question remaining was which provider was to receive the benefit of Drayson's gift-wrapped leadline scoop. Over the years, he had cultivated mutu ally helpful relationships with understanding producers in news organizations of all sizes, but rarely had the material been this hot or the stakes this high. He needed someone who not only would set the proper tone for the copycats hustling to catch up, but who also had the courage to risk a shutdown order, even the seizure of the studio facilities, to break a big story first, In the end, it came down to an old friend or a young idealist, and Drayson settled on the latter. "Open message to The Life Monitor, blind and secure," he said. "Personal to Cindel Towani. This is your shopping service. I want to alert you to a special offer, limited availability, your signature required .... " The initial release of the sixty-second issue of The Life Monitor reached fewer than a hundred thousand subscribers, and Belezaboth Ourn, extraordinary counsel of the Paqwepori, was not among them. But the lead producer of Capitol Scavenger was, and within an hour a licensed crosslink to Towani's feature had appeared in the rolling CS queue. That brought Plat Mallar's story to the attention of nearly half a million more viewers, including the senior night producer for Sunrise and the Senate correspondent for Roll Call. From there, it was picked up by Coruscant Global and New Republic Primeraboth of which gave as small a nod to Cindel Towani as possible, but ran the audio-video portion of her story uncut. By dawn, Mallar's achingly poignant plea on behalf of the inhabitants of Polneye had reached more than forty million ears on Coruscant and ridden the hypercomm trails to eighty thousand other New Republic worlds. By midday, it had even reached a destitute and dispirited Ourn. Both the flight crew of the wrecked Mother's Valkyrie and his consular staff had long since abandoned him. One by one, they had faced up to the failure and futility of their mission and disappeared, buying cheap passage to Paqwepori on their families' credit or with the proceeds from selling mission supplies and equipment in the no-name market halls. Cathacatin, the licensed breeder-keeper, had been the last to go, slaughtering the few remaining toko birds before he departed rather than see them suffer from neglect. Ourn's continued presence in the diplomatic hostel was strictly a courtesy, for he no longer had either the status or the resources to command a room, much less an entire cottage. First, Mother's Valkyrie was sold for salvage in a lien auction. Then half of the mission's line-of-account was attached by the port authorities as partial payment of the balance of the herthing fees. In the final humiliation, Ourn's appointment was revoked by Ilar Paqwe himself, and the diplomatic account closed. "You would save your parents from further embarrassment by not returning to the Paqwe dominion," Ourn was advised in the termination notice. Since that time, Ourn had clung ever more tightly to the frail reed of hope represented by the Yevethan blind-relay transmitter and the promise from Nil Spaar. If only the viceroy could appease his peers on N'zoth and deliver the thrustship as he had agreed he would--not only could Ourn repair his savaged reputation at home, but he would have a hundred generals and five hundred senators begging him for a chance to study the Yevethan vessel Ourn clung to that hope against all reason, mining the grids and the gossip in the hostel's courtyards for even the smallest tidbits of information, making himself believe that his next dispatch would be the one by which he would earn the Yevetha's confidence, and his reward. But when he saw the stories on Plat Mallar's narrow escape from Polneye and Captain Llotta's death at Morning Bell, that hope finally evaporated. There was no escaping the truth--the pretty silver spheres were also deadly warships, and Nil Spaar would never receive permission to deliver one to Belezaboth Ourn. "If only the peace had held a little longer," he said resignedly in the privacy of his room. "If only the Prin cess had not been so stubborn. She has cost me everything." He picked up the hypercomm black box and turned it over in his hands. "So perhaps I shall ask her for my payment. Perhaps this toy is worth more than the words that have passed through it." There were a hundred things Leia should have been doing, a thousand better uses for her energy than lining a garden path with brilliant white sasalea blossoms, one fragrant ball--the size of Anakin's fist--to a planting. It was work a droid could do, work the residence's groundskeeper would have gladly seen to in the mornng. But none of those other things she might have been doing that evening had half the appeal of burying her hands in the cool, moist soil, crumbling it between her fingers, cradling each sasalea plant gently into its new home. On a day where nothing she had tackled had yielded to her efforts, it was intensely gratifying to take on a task where every element was under her control--spade and earth, stalk and blossom. Her vision, her time, her labor, her triumph, her satisfaction. It was a small triumph, a minor transformation of a tiny landscape, but it was balm for her whole beingm reassurance that she was, at the end of the day, master of her own world. If you don't believe that what you do matters, it's awfully hard to get up in the morning. "Princess--" Leia looked up from her work in surprise at the voice. "Tarrick. What are you doing here?" "There's someone here--back at the gate, actually-who I thought you might want to see. He came to the office early this afternoon sounding like a typical hem-tugger, and we sent him out on the usual off-list runaround. He came back," said Tarrick. "But the second time, he got to the point. We sent him down to see the moles. When Collomus and his people were done talking to him, we all agreed you should hear what he has to say." Leia stood, brushing the dirt from her hands. "Well--you have me curious. Bring him in." The visitor was a Paqwe--a short yellow-green alien with a wide carriage and a sway-backed, waddling gait. He was swathed in tattered reception-hall finery and smelled strongly of bitter saks. "Princess Leia! It is a great honor. I am Belezaboth Ourn, extraordinary counsel of the Paqwepori." Behind him, Tarrick shook his head in a slow, exaggerated fashion. "I am grateful to you for taking the time to see me." "Yes, yes," she said impatiently. "What do you want?" "What I want--no, what I can offer. I think that we can help each other, Princess," he said, taking another step forward. "You are having difficult times with a certain party. It's said there'll be war. I may have some information that could be of use to you." "It's a little late for word games. Be specific--what information?" "Not information, exactly," Ourn said. "More a thing. How you can use it, what you can learn from it--that's for you to discover. But I can put it in your hands and tell you everything I know." "And this thing is--" Ourn produced a small black box from a concealed pocket. "Is a way to send messages to N'zoth--to Nil Spaar. Completely undetectable, untraceable. By what magic, my engineer could not divine. But you have many scientists--they will find out for you." It was Leia's turn to take a step forward. "Where did you get this?" "From the viceroy. His ship destroyed mine, you remember--at East Port, the day he left. He promised me restitution, but it was an empty promise--" "He gave this box to you before he left?" "Well, yes, of course." "And you've been in touch with him since he left?" "Only to remind him of his promise--" Ourn stopped, realizing the contradictions. "We had an understanding-he was unfaithful. I will help you now." "How did you help him? By spying for him?" Ourn swallowed nervously and tried to smile. "Now, Princess--how many secrets does someone like me know? Nothing. Less than nothing. I pretended. I deceived him--" With a single quick stride, Leia closed the distance between them. "You took my husband away from me," she said, and dropped into a Jedi fighting stance. "Princess, surely--" It took only one blow to silence him, one more to bring him to his knees, and one last to send him sprawling, unconscious. Releasing her breath in a satisfied sigh, Leia stood straight and looked to a startled Tar-rick. "Thank you for that," Leia said lightly, flexing her hands in front of her. "I just might be able to sleep a little tonight." Chapter 6 The spotlight of the next morning's staff strategy session was on the two intelligence chiefs, each of whom had been rudely surprised--and professionally embarrassed---by the previous day's events. For Admiral Graf, head of Fleet Intelligence, the problem was explaining how the Mallar recording and the holo stills of the destruction at Polneye had escaped Fleet custody. Graf also had to answer for a second, apparently separate, breach of security involving classified data from the battle at Doornik 319. "There are three authorized copies of the Mallar recording," Graf said. "One here, one in the Fleet system, and one in the hands of the Threat Assessment Office--plus a locked copy in the Fleet archives. We also found two unauthorized copies in private data spaces within the Fleet system and are looking for others." "Does that mean you have two suspects?" Leia asked. "No," said Graf. "The thinking right now is that those look like innocent violations. But we're continuing to backtrace the access logs for all six copies. We've already interviewed everyone who had access to the Palace copy--" "No, you haven't," Leia interrupted. "Excuse me?" "You haven't talked to me," she said. "Well, of course, I presumed that any use you made of this item--" "How do you know I didn't put a copy on my datapad and take it home? How do you know I didn't make a copy and give it away?" Graf frowned, flustered. "That seems a very um likely scenario--" "Did you talk to Mole? Tarrick? No one can work in my office without high-level clearances." "We did not," he admitted. "Your office was exempted from the interview list." "Then let's look outside my office, at the people who just visit. The first administrator?" she asked challengingly. "How about Admiral Ackbar?" "No." Leia looked down the table to where Ackbar sat. "Admiral?" Ackbar placed both hands flat on the table. "It is true that I have taken a special interest in Plat Mallar. I have made no secret of it, except where it might allow Mallar to escape the taint of my favoritism. It is also true, Admiral Graf, that I have in the past urged the President to release the Mallar recording, and I am glad that it has happened, by whatever means." "No one could question--" Graf began. "Wait." The admiral craned his neck until he could meet Leia's gaze. "To answer your unspoken question, yes, I have a copy of the recording, in a secure partition at my home. But I give you my word that neither I nor that copy was the source of the leak. I do not know who was responsible." "I accept your assurances, Admiral," said Leia, turning to Graf. "I don't accept yours. No one is to be exempt from your inquiry." A chastised Graf said quietly, "Understood, Princess." For General Carlist Rieekan, head of New Republic Intelligence, the problem was to assess the damage Ourn had done and prevent a recurrence. The first meant discovering exactly what information he had provided to the Yevetha. The second meant explaining how Ourn had escaped official attention until he turned the black box over and turned himself in. "Not that it's of any great consequence, Princess, but it looks as though you decked the wrong spy," said Rieekan. "Why is that?" "I had seventy people up all night looking into this, and there's no plausible link between Belezaboth Ourn and the interception of Tampion," Rieekan said. "He's a nobody, with no connections--a small-time parasitic little sneak all puffed up with air. He simply didn't have an opportunity to acquire and deliver anything at the level of sensitivity of General Solo's appointment or Tampion's flight plan." "Are you sure about that?" "Very. Ourn fell apart during the night, started telling the truth as fast as he could blubber it out. He doesn't even know that the general is missing." "Then there's another Yevethan spy--more highly placed." "At least one," said Rieekan. "The viceroy's afternoon callers," said Graf. "Senators Marook, Peramis, and Hodidiji." "They are all getting a close look," said Rieekan. "What about the black box?" asked Leia. "Interesting device," said Rieekan. "Not quite entirely black, but close. We took it into the cold room and opened it in the dark, under vacuum. Good thing we did. The power supply is wired with an oxidation fuse, set to go critical if the box is opened. The yield would probably be about equal to a proton grenade. We took holos and closed it up again, very carefully. "Then we put it on a dummy transceiver rig, connected the way Ourn showed us. The dummy rig looks like a real transceiver to the device but has only one ten-millionth of the output power needed to actually open a hypercomm channel--just enough for us to record the signal for analysis. "I just got an update on that before I came in," Rieekan said, looking down at his datapad. "Apparently the box uses a burst-compression algorithm that we haven't quite deciphered yet to hide the signal in the noise. Very efficient." He looked up at Leia. "And distinctively Imperial, according to my senior engineer. Probably hatched right here on Coruscant, back in the days of Section Nineteen and Warthan's wizards." "Can you use what you've learned about this one to find the others?" Leia asked. "Possibly. We should be able to catch any new transmissions. We might get lucky and find some old ones hiding in the archived traffic, now that we know what we're looking for," said Rieekan. "But I'd like to suggest another way we might use what we've learned." "I'm listening." "We have the tools for a small campaign of disinformation," he said. "We have a working black box and a desperately willing turncoat who'll do most anything we ask. What if we just let him keep talking to the Yevetha?" Leia nodded thoughtfully. "Do you have any ideas about what we might want to have him say?" "I have one," Nanaod Engh interjected, drawing attention to his end of the table for the first time. "We don't really know for certain if the Yevetha have General Solo, or--forgive me--if the general is alive. Nil Spaar has ignored every message we've sent him. He hasn't even tried to communicate with us since leaving Coruscant, except through his deeds--Perhaps Ourn can get him to break his silence--" On his return to Pride of Yevetha, Nil Spaar's first concern was to inspect his new breederies. There were three of them, each with forty-eight alcoves. Before the conversion, they had been detention blocks, and they still largely retained that character--the conversion had required surprisingly little renovation. Picking cells at random, Nil Spaar satisfied himself that each was well suited for the hanging and nurturance of a birth-cask. The walls were plain and clean, the plumbing suitable for feeding lines, and the ventilation fully isolated from the systems for the rest of the ship. There were even individual drains in each alcove for the sacrifices and the rite of emergence. The new breederies required a new crop of tenders, eighteen in all. After inspecting the new facilities, Nil Spaar had the tenders called together so that he could assess their fitness. Most were experienced hands who had known many successful nestings, but only a few had been neutered. "Long before all these alcoves have been filled with ripening rnaranas, you will begin to feel the power of the breeding magic," the viceroy warned. "The cry of the ancient imperatives of flesh and joy will become a distraction, then a compulsion. You must become immune to this call, lest you betray your solemn duty as custodians of the future." Nil Spaar gave no thought to giving them the option of withdrawing from his service. Service to the darama was an unequaled honor, and service aboard the grand flagship an unprecedented honor. It was unimaginable that any of the tenders Would refuse those honors merely to preserve their own poor chance of parenthood. The breeding guildmaster of Giat Nor had made the reco'mmendations and arranged for the affected households to receive replacements--that was all the consideration necessary. After that, all that was left was to inspect the marasi who had been brought aboard to help Nil Spaar fill the new breederies. Chosen from the thousands who had offered themselves, the twenty young females waiting in what had once been detention block IF were without exception appealingly supple, pleasingly eager, and understandably anxious. Nil Spaar found the combination energizing, and indulged himself, selecting one of the marasi for a mating on the spot. By the time they were finished, the rnarasi in the adjoining cells were writhing with need in response to the. scents and sounds, and a reinvigorated Nil Spaar took each of them in succession. When the third act was breathlessly complete, he called to the narada-ti, who had discreetly removed herself to a distance at which she could pretend not to have heard the passion-cries. "This one," he said, walking down the corridor, pointing into a cell at one still untouched. "And this one. Bring them to me in my chambers this evening, after the tolotan has been read." "Yes, darama," she said, bowing with respect. "When will the others be brought aboard?" "The next group is expected in twenty days," she said. "Are there nest-quarters free?" "Yes, darama, both here and in block G." "Then accelerate the selection," said the viceroy. "Have the next group received as soon as it can be accomplished." "Yes, darama. Only, your senior tender cautioned that the rnara-nas should be hung at intervals, out of consideration for the timing of the births and the demands on the breedery. Too many too close together--" "That is not your problem," he said. "Fill the nestquarters with your best, and keep them filled." "Yes, darama." Only then did Nil Spaar return to make himself available to Tal Fraan, who had pestered Eri Palle with queries as to the viceroy's schedule and pleas for an early audience. They met in the upper command lounge, a large semicircular compartment high on the forward face of the command tower. The command lounge's double-shielded viewpanes provided a spectacular view of the Star Destroyer's broad eight-kilometer-long spear-point hull. "Is it not invigorating," Nil Spaar said as Tal Fraan was led in, "to see how much power has passed into the hands of the Blessed? Can any doubt that we are the children of the All, the inheritors of the ancient glory?" He turned away from the viewpanes and accepted Tal Fraan's surrender with a touch. "How far shall that glory carry us, my young disciple? How much shall we claim with our ambition?" "We are truly the inheritors, darama," said Tal Fraan. "But even within the boundaries of the All, our claims have been contested. It would seem that ambition alone cannot measure our destiny." "Nowhere is there a ship the equal of this one. Nowhere is there blood as powerful as that of the Pure," said Nil Spaar. "They will all yield to us, in time." "I have come to speak with you of one who still resists," said Tal Fraan. "I have had a new insight into the heart of the pale ones. We must not send them the recording from the viewing hall. It will move them to anger, not to surrender." Nil Spaar flexed his large hands. "Does my memory deceive me, or was it not you who counseled that we must show Leia our hostages?" "I did so in error," Tal Fraan said bluntly. "Only fear will give us the result we 'desire--fear for themselves, for their own safety. Fear for the safety of a hostage can stay a hand, but it will not turn a heart. And when a hostage is harmed, fury replaces fear." "And from where does this insight come?" "From the vermin," said Tal Fraan. "I spoke with him aboard the shuttle. I wished to measure his response to the execution of his companion--whether it had served to make him fearful for his own life. I wished to know if the experience had heightened his sensitivity to our concerns or increased his eagerness to be helpful." "You were disappointed." "I Was alarmed. I am now convinced that if you transmit the recording of the execution, the vermin will never turn away," said Tal Fraan. "My alarm was so great that I ordered that message held until I could speak with you." "So Vor Duull informed me," said Nil Spaar. "Knowing me well, he wondered at your presumption and came to me for confirmation." Tal Fraan's face was painted with dismay. "Have I forfeited your trust, darama?" "That remains to be seen, Proctor." A flicker of relief crossed Tal Fraan's eyes. "Has the message been sent, then?" "No," said Nil Spaar. "But I am not yet convinced it should not be. When there has been a problem of obedience with the Imperial slaves, the public slaughter of a handful has always been sufficient to guarantee the behavior of the rest." "There is little spirit in them after so many years," Tal Fraan said. "They were bred for obedience. These others--the vermin queen, her consort, even the pilots we have faced--seem different. They show a foolish stubbornness and a dangerous independence." "You find them unpredictable, then." "No, darama. I will still risk my own blood on my understanding of them. Showing them the ones we hold will strengthen them, not weaken them. Uncertainty better befriends us." "And yet there is this," said Nil Spaar. "An hour ago Vor Duull brought to me news of a conversation one of his guildsmen had with Belezaboth Ourn." "The Paqwe spy? He has given us nothing of value for many weeks." "Perhaps he has done so now," said Nil Spaar. "The vermin reports that Leia does not believe we hold her consort--that she does not think us capable of such an interception." "But we allowed there to be witnesses!" "Then their witness went unheard or unbelieved," said Nil Spaar. "Ourn said she grieves for him but continues on her course unchecked, even in the face of an effort to unseat her. Surely this confirms that your first counsel was correct. We must show our hostage to the vermin queen. That will surely change her tone." The backs of his hands pressed to his cheeks, Tal Fraan walked the length of the viewpane wall and back before responding. "No, darama. I cannot agree. There is nothing in what he says that promises that knowledge of the truth will deter her aggressions. Han Solo answered me with defiance and threat. Surely her fire is of the same temperature as his. You yourself have noted the uncommon closeness of the bond between them. They have risked all for each other--boldly, surrendering nothing. It is in the material you yourself gave me." Nil Spaar directed his gaze out at the great vessel beneath and before him, noting how the unfiltered light of N'zoth's golden sun made lines and edges gleam like burnished metal. "Then what course do you now counsel to remove the infection from these stars?" he asked at last. "We have not managed to make them fear us," said Tal Fraan. "But there are already shadows they will not enter. And the greatest of these is the fear that the horrors of the past will be repeated. The strength of her challengers feeds on this fear. We can confirm their prophecies. We can help them to destroy her." With more than fifty connected structures and twenty thousand rooms and chambers, the great size and complexity of the Imperial Palace had inspired many stories. It was said that near the end of construction, eight workers were lost for nearly a month when their com-tracker failed. Rumors persisted about a chamber with no doors, sections with a hundred or more rooms that had never been occupied, and the hidden treasure compartment of "the pirate general," Toleph-Sor. There were at least eleven offices and nine other rooms with their own true stories of murder, plus the grisly tale of Frona Zeffla, who died at her desk and went undiscovered for more than a year. Longtime staffers recalled how the children of Palpatine's aides, given free rein to roam at will, played three-day-long games of "Hunter" in the lifts and corridors. Though much of the old palace had been damaged or destroyed by the clone Emperor's Force Storm, what survived or had been rebuilt was still easily large enough to either hide in or get lost in. That was a key reason the first administrator had required everyone above the third rank to carry a comlink and to keep it active. Nearly everyone above the third rank required those who served below them to carry them as well. But Engh's edict did not apply to Leia, whose comlink was typically off as much as it was on. So at the outset of the Yevethan crisis, Alole and Tarrick had conspired with the security teams to make certain that someone with an active comlink was constantly in touch with the President whenever she was in the Palace. Alole had had the duty that afternoon, but in a busy moment, Leia had slipped away unannounced through her office's second exit. The aide did not discover the President's absence until General Rieekan's red-border alert pushed everything else off the comm displays throughout the suite. Her first call was to The Sniffer, who should have been standing by at the only entrance to the executive level. "Are you with the President?" Alole asked. "No, ma'am. She has not left the floor." Next Alole paged Tarrick, who by then had already heard about the alert. "Have you seen the President?" "No. She's not with you?" he asked. "She scampered sometime in the last half hour." "I'll query the spotters," said Tarrick, referring to their private list of nine offices and seven ministry officials it was Leia's habit to visit. "Have you looked in the cave?" "I'm on my way there now." Her feet carried her flying down the back corridor toward the little-used private spaces in the adjacent tower. Mon Mothma had used them as an extension of the President's office, holding private meetings in the small, intimate lounge, taking air and exercise in the sunny garden courtyard. Leia rarely went there-when her office walls closed in on her, the Princess usually preferred to escape the executive level entirely. But that was where Alole found her--dead asleep on the triangular corner bed in the privacy room. Looking down on Leia's peaceful expression, Alole hesitated to wake her. Leia's fatigue had been obvious to everyone that morning, and this was the first time in many days that she had seen Leia's face unmarked by tension and frown lines. Then, sighing, Alole reached out and took hold of the golden-green metal post at the nearest point of the triangle. Shaking it gently, she said Leia's name twice, then stepped back. "Tarrick--she's here," she said quietly into her comlink. "We'll be out in a minute or two. Set up the recording for replay. See if General Rieekan wants to come up." "I'm on it," Tarrick said. "Admiral Ackbar is on his way over from Fleet." The distinctively tinny sound of Tarrick's voice as heard through a comlink seemed to be what finally reached through Leia's fatigue and demanded her attention. She sat up with a wordless cry, unfocused eyes, and balled fists. "It's all right. It's only me, Alole," the aide said, slipping the comlink back into her pocket. "Come--hurry. Nil Spaar is on Channel Eighty-one." Four of the six people at the conference table with Leia were seeing the viceroy's announcement for the second time. Only one of them ventured to try to prepare her for what she would see. "If this is an answer to Ourn's message," said Admiral Graf, "the message is that we've been worrying about the wrong thing. Han Solo is no longer important." "Let me hear it for myself," Leia said, reaching for the controller. The recording began with something they had not seen before--the emblem of the Duskhan League, a double circle of three-pointed stars on a scarlet background. Then Nil Spaar appeared. This time, however, he had company. Standing beside him was a human wearing the black uniform of an Imperial Moff. Graf leaned toward Leia. "Behind them--that's the bridge of a Super-class Star Destroyer." She silenced him with a dismissive wave of her hand. "I address the strong, proud leaders of the vassal worlds of the New Republic," the viceroy began. "I bring you an announcement, and a warning. "As I speak, the enormous battle fleet under the command of Princess Leia continues its reckless invasion of Koornacht Clusterterritory that has belonged to the Yevethan people for more than ten thousand years. "Up until this moment, we have shown great restraint, despite having been attacked in our own home. Against the urging of my military commanders, I have held our own powerful fleet in reserve except where the lives of civilians are in danger. I have done all I can to minimize casualties on both sides. I have given Princess Leia every opportunity to change her course and withdraw her forces. "I am saddened that she has chosen instead to reinforce them. In recent weeks, she has rejected the wisdom of her advisors and secretly dispatched hundreds more warships to threaten the worlds of the Duskhan League. "I am saddened, but not surprised. This woman sabotaged a promising negotiation between my people and the New Republic, because peace did not suit her ambitions. She sat across from me and lied about her intentions--and while she lied, her agents spied on us, looking for weakness, planning a war of conquest. "I know that the good citizens of the New Republic are even now trying to drive this deceiver from your capital. But she has bought many friends on Coruscant, and others have reason to fear her. It will be a bruising fight, though I hope that honor will ultimately prevail." "Here comes the good part," Graf whispered to Ackbar. "But the Yevethan people can no longer await the outcome," said Nil Spaar. "We can no longer risk our future on the hope that Princess Leia will find her conscience and leave us in peace. We must protect ourselves. By refusing our offer of friendship, by threatening our very existence, Leia has forced us to seek friends where we otherwise would not have." Nil Spaar raised a hand in the direction of the man beside him. "We have invited the Empire to return to Koornacht Cluster as allies--" "That's--that's completely unbelievable," Leia sputtered. "They despise the Empire." "--I have come to you to announce that, the Duskhan League and the Grand Imperial Union have concluded a treaty of mutual assistance. Moff Tragg Brathis is commander of the battle fleet now stationed here." The uniformed man nodded, Nil Spaar paused, and the holo tracked to the right until the view forward out the bridge viewports confirmed that the vessel was Super-class. For a few seconds, at least half a dozen other Star Destroyers were visible as well, flying in formation over the limb of a dusty yellow planet. Then Nil Spaar moved in to block the view. "You have seen enough now to understand. If the NewRepublic does not withdraw from our borders--if the President, whoever that might be, does not swiftly acknowledge our just claim to these stars--the combined strength of the League and the Union stands ready. Your actions will determine the course of the future." The display dissolved to a scarlet curtain, with the Duskhan League emblem appearing again before the screen went black. "Is that the end of it?" Leia asked. "That's it." She pressed a button on the controller and threw it down on the table. "Does anyone here think this is real?" "I have ASset Tracking working on the recording," said Graf. "Nylykerka should be able to tell us if we've seen those ships before, during the flash recon." "Will he be able to tell us when they got there and who controls them?" asked Rieekan. "Perhaps this pact is real, and was concluded months ago, in secret." "Why reveal it now?" "Why not? Since we already know about the Imperial ships, he has nothing to lose by telling everyone else. And it's obvious what he hopes to gain." "What do you mean, 'telling everyone else'?" Leia demanded of Rieekan. "Did this go out to the entire system?" Rieekan raised an eyebrow and looked down the table. "Yes," admitted the director of the communications agency. "It appeared in the system in a standard diplomatic packet, with the expected coding. There was no reason for the filters to trap it." "Interesting times are ahead," Ackbar said to himself, shaking his head. Leia looked disgusted. "Can we at least find out this time where it got into the system?" "We're working on it," the other woman said defensively. "There are more than three hundred thousand authorized entry ports for a low-security channel like Eighty-one." "Black box on an enabled hypercomm," said Rieekan. "That's all it would take. It doesn't even have to be on Coruscant." "Excuse me," said Nanaod Engh. Only a few heads turned his way, and he cleared his throat and repeated himself. "Excuse me. This is unimportant. Mere de-tails--trivialities. There is more to this than what happens in this room." Leia spun her chair sharply toward him. "Go on." "We are not the intended audience for the viceroy's message," he said, and gestured expansively with his hands. "They are. That bolt was aimed at the hearts of our citizens." "But it is a fraud," Ackbar insisted. "There is no pact. There is no Moff Brathis, no Grand Union, no Imperial fleet. I am certain of it." "And you may well be right," said Engh. "But that is irrelevant. It doesn't matter if what we saw is the truth or a lie. It doesn't matter what we here believe. General Rieekan, what kind of proof could you offer to refute that image--a black-shirt commander standing with Nil Spaar on an Imperial Star Destroyer?" "Why, there are many ways to attack it. We have experts in--" "No, General. You cannot refute that image with words." He looked to Leia. "It does not matter what species they are; people trust what they see. Words alone will not make them believe they were fooled. Out there, they are turning to each other and saying, 'Well, what do you think we ought to do about this?" Not 'Do you think it's true?" I don't know what they will decide they feel. I only know that it is true, for them the Yevetha have allied with the Empire." Engh rocked back in his chair. "I think the President's image analysts should see this as soon as possible. And I hope you will finally make time to meet with them yourself, Leia. The days ahead will not be shaped by questions and answers, the lore of experts, the reasoned judgment of earnest beings gathered around tables. Cherished belief, powerful emotion, and the image that plays in the mind in the moment before sleep comes--they will write the story of the days ahead." Tholatin was uninhabited save for the smugglers' hideaway known as Esau's Ridge, nestled in a deep lateral erosion cut at the base of a towering rock face. The cut was a thousand meters long and up to a hundred meters deep, with a maximum of six meters' clearance in the berthing area under the cantilevered granite ceiling. A warren of smaller artificial tunnels and chambers extended the complex another two hundred meters into the mountain. It was one of the most private of all the smugglers' sanctuaries, invisible from orbit and well defended against intruders. Even the three landing clearings in the forest that covered the valley floor were concealed, hidden. by retractable military-grade camouflage nets with infrared screens. It was also one of the most exclusive sanctuaries, open only to the elite veterans of the trade, to the well-connected rather than the well-heeled. Or, at least, it once had been. When the Millennium Falcon arrived there, Esau's Ridge was more crowded than Chewbacca could remember ever seeing it. Parking clearances in the landing area were down to half a meter, and the floating berth fees were accordingly high. [Peace did not seem to have hurt the trade,] he growled to the berthing collector as he paid the first day's fee. "When they are not busy fighting wars, governments amuse themselves by forbidding things," said the collector. "There will always be work for us. Welcome back to the Ridge, Chewbacca. By the way, I threw two of the kids out of here to make room for this trash heap you call a ship." Chewbacca paid without complaint the expected bribe for that privilege of seniority. [Is Plothis still here?] "Shot four years ago in a squabble with a customer. Bracha e'Naso took over the business." [What about Formayj and the brokerage?] "Same old place," said the ollector. "Be sure and look up Armatin the Dread while you're here--he retired and bought the slava bar. He'll be glad to see you if you can catch him sober." For their own protection, Chewbacca instructed Lumpawarrump and Jowdrrl to stay inside the ship. With Shoran and Dryanta standing guard, the Falcon was as safe as it could be in a port of thieves--but Esau's Ridge could be as dangerous as the Shadow Forest for the inexperienced. Chewbacca had come there for information and for specialized supplies. The former proved more costly than the latter, and the latter came dear enough. e'Naso treated Chewbacca like a celebrity, then tried to overcharge him by half, as though he were some star-eyed pupling who'd never run a picket line. "It's almost impossible for me to keep these items in stock," e'Naso protested when Chewbacca growled threateningly. "You've seen the berthing line--demand is very high, and replacing my stock will cost me a premium. You want a better price, you get Maniid and the others who run my shipments to take less for their risk." Another customer, an old Kiffu male browsing through the catalog of bootleg holos, overheard the conversation and intervened. "Haggling with a Wookiee," the customer said, shaking his head. "That shows courage, e'Nasoeven Plothis wouldn't have dared it. Have you decided who will inherit the shop?" Chewbacca showed a toothy grimace, all the more ominous for the hint of a smile it contained. e'Naso quickly countered his own best offer, cutting the total by twenty percent. When that did not change Chewbacca's expression, he let the Wookiee name his price. [And you deliver it all to my ship,] he added. "Of course. Of course." Outside, Chewbacca paid the Kiffu his third of the savings. Dealing with Formayj was another matter altogether. The long-lived Yao had not only seen all the tricks, he had gotten in early enough to invent several of them. Besides that, Formayj did not haggle. His memories and his connections, both carefully built up over more than a century of brokering, were his stock in trade. He carefully appraised the worth of each before parting with it. "Koornacht Cluster," Formayj said, nodding. "Maps, inhabitants, hyperspace routes, ship designs, planetary defenses, sensor grids--very rare. Expensive." [I will pay your price.] "Come back two days. Will know more then." So Chewbacca and the others waited, staying close to the Falcon and watching the neighboring ships in the berth line come and go. The arrival of e'Naso's delivery .sled brought a welcome interruption to the waiting, and several hours' work studying, testing, and stowing the gear took the edge off their impatience. But by the next morning, Lumpawarrump was bouncing off the bulkheads as though the Falcon were a cage. [How much longer, Father?] [Long enough for you to take five falls with Jowdrrl in the forward cargo hold.] [She is busy with the dorsal gun turret again.] [She is making herself busy--she will make the time if you ask.] [Could I take some falls with you instead?] [You already know how to lose--and I must go see other brokers and old friends,] Chewbacca said, ruffling his son's fur roughly. [Stay here. Study the ship, practice your skills of defense and attack--you will need them soon enough.] A day of drinking in the slava bar, listening to smugglers' bragging and tall tales, ground Chewbacca's own patience thin. When the third fight of the afternoon broke out, he roared to his feet, seized both adversaries, and flung them into opposite corners--for no reason other than that he needed to release the restless tension building up inside. He returned to Formayj's brokerage the next morning, but the visit claimed little of his day. "Difficult," said Formayj. "Come back two days." Two days later, he said the same thing. On their fifth day in Esau's Ridge, Chewbacca yielded to Lumpawarrump's endless pleading looks and took his son into the sanctuary. The excursion almost ended as quickly as it began, when Lumpawarrump took too close an interest in a parked slaver for the liking of its Trandoshan owner. "Mind your own business!" the owner shouted from atop the ship. An instant later, a blaster bolt singed the flowing fur on Lumpawarrump's right shoulder. "Move along!" Chewbacca seized his son by the scruff and dragged him away toward the tunnels, waving his bowcaster and exchanging threat-growls and insults with the owner as he did so. [Did you not listen to me? Curiosity is not rewarded on Esau's Ridge,] he chided Lumpawarrump when they were alone inside. [Watch, but do not be caught looking; listen, but do not be caught overhearing; ask no questions, and question no lies--that is the code honored here.] Seven days after their arrival, Formayj called Chewbacca to his brokerage. "I show you price first, you decide," he said. [You would not cheat me,] Chewbacca said. [Show me what you have.] The price was almost unspeakably high, but the value was there. A smuggler's annotated copy of a Yevethan navigational map--six years old, but priceless even so. An even older Imperial autopsy report on three Yevethan corpses. A recording of Nil Spaar's address to the Senate. A still of a spherical starship with the entryways and gun emplacements overmarked. And the capper: the data and holo files of a New Republic recon pass over Wakiza, complete with an NRI seal. "So new you can still smell Imperial City on it," said the broker, pointing. "You like?" [You are the best, Formayj.] "Of course. That is why they come here." Smiling, he took Chewbacca's payment, then disarmed the erase-bot and other daemons that would otherwise have been unleashed by a trigger in the brokerage door. "Now, the other matter." Chewbacca was already rising to leave at that point, and rumbled questioningly. "You asked all around the Ridge about Han Solo. Did not ask me, as if I did not know he is a prisoner in Koornacht," said Formayj. "I know where everyone has come from and where everyone is going when they leave. I know why customer wants the information before I sell it to them. At times must even disappoint them because of what I know. You plan a rescue, yes?" Chewbacca growled his assent. "You ask where he must be held. Even though you do not come to me, I inquire on my own." Formayj shook his head. "Discouraging. No one knows. There is no prison. His name is not spoken by any who would know, on Coruscant or N'zoth." He reached up and handed Chewbacca another holo card. "Perhaps this helps you. Free--my cost nothing." He gestured toward the viewer. "Go on--see." It was a recording of Nil Spaar speaking to the members of the New Republic via Channel 81. Time-stamped forty hours ago, it began, "I address the strong, proud leaders of the vassal worlds--" Formayj pressed another object on Chewbacca, this one a datacard. "Old Imperial Star Destroyer shield codes, sensor jam frequencies, defensive fire patterns--these are readily at hand. No demand. Historical value only," he said. "My service charge will cover." Standing, Formayj offered his hand. "Still like Han, old trickster. Smuggler made good. Deliver greetings to him, if you see him." Chewbacca hurried back to the ship and played the recording for the others. [My honor brother is Nil Spaar's prize,] he said, and pointed at the blue-black hull of the great starship visible behind the viceroy. [Wherever this enemy is, Han will be.] Then Chewbacca pointed at the planet beyond. [They are there now.] Twenty minutes later, the Millennium Falcon lifted off from Esau's Ridge. Immediately on making orbit, it turned toward Koornacht Cluster and jumped into hyperspace, continuing its solitary journey to N'zoth. Derelict With Artoo guiding him, Lobot had penetrated deep into a realm the structure and purpose of which he was still struggling to understand. The vagabond's core passages were more akin to the great accumulator conduit in which they had spent their first hours aboard the vessel than they were like the network of chambers in which they had spent the last many days. But the core passages were much narrower than the accumulator conduit. Their cross section was never greater than Lobot's armspan, and often less--especially at the junctions. And there were many junctions. The passages were cross-connected in a complex web that had not yet revealed its pattern. This web promised to link all parts of the vagabond as a transport or communications system might, but nothing was moving through or along the passages save for Lobot and the droids. None of the ready biological metaphors--vascular tubules, alimentary canals, respiratory ducts, neurological pathways--seemed appropriate. Lobot wondered if the lack of activity was a symptom Of the damage the vagabond had sustained or a sign that he still did not understand the nature of the vessel. He had to keep reminding himself that though the ship was the product of bioengineering, it was not an organism. It was a biological machine, which was still an unfamiliar paradigm. Three hundred meters in from chamber 228, the passage had narrowed to the point where Lobot found it necessary to shed his contact suit in order to continue. "Master Lobot, are you certain that you wish to do this?" Threepio asked in a familiarly anxious tone. "Are you confident that the risk is justified? Given our present circumstances, and the alarming frequency with which warships seem to attack this vessel--" "I'm certain," Lobot said. "The deeper we go into the core, the more it feels like an obstacle standing between me and the ship. When my shoulders brushed both sides at the same time, it felt like the ship was inviting me to shed the suit. I can't explain this in acceptable terms, but I think I must do this to find what I am looking for." "I see, sir," said Threepio. "Artoo, are you still monitoring the air in this passage?" "The air is fine, Threepio," Lobot said, patting the droid on the top of his head. "I am fine. I am simply following a hunch." "Oh, dear," Threepio fretted. "What's the matter?" "Very well, Master Lobot--since you asked, I shall tell you," said Threepio. "If you'll pardon my saying so, sir, Master Lando's influence on your habits of thought is becoming manifest at the worst possible time." "What influence would that be?" "Why, his unhealthy psychological dependence on the teleological self-deceptions of a gambler, sir--hunches, lucky streaks, wish fulfillment, feelings of entitlement, and the other trappings of magical thinking," Threepio said. "I have come to regard you as an unusually practical and rational individual--for a human being." "Thank you," Lobot said. "But what makes you think that Lando ever really gambles?" "Sir, I have heard Master Han speak of it many times. I believe that Master Lando even considered himself a professional gambler during one period of his life." "That's true," said Lobot. "And no one hates trusting to chance and fate more than a professional gambler. You've misread Lando all along, Threepio." "Sir, I do not understand." "Think about this, then--maybe it'will help," said Lobot, discarding the last piece of his contact suit. "When a human being--a sentient being--faces a question for which there is no known right answer, a decision for which there's no obvious right choice, he will almost always end up following what feels right. The logician will construct one kind of justification, the magician another, but at the moment of choosing, the two are more alike than they are different." "I see, sir. Thank you. But I do not believe a droid is capable of truly understanding a process that' is so fundamentally subjective." "No?" asked Lobot, raising an eyebrow. "Then tell me, what was going through your circuits when you grabbed that beckon call away from Lando and signaled Lady Luck? Were you doing the logical thing, or what you felt was the right thing?" "I am not entirely certain, sir." "Good," said Lobot approvingly. "I suggest you think on that a while, too. You may find it has something to do with the questions you asked me in chamber twenty-one. Now, let's get going." A few hundred twisting meters further, the passages narrowed still tighter, to the point where Lobot could barely wriggle through, and Artoo could not. "Go back to where we dropped off the grid and my suit and wait for me there," Lobot said. "Artoo, the link I've been using to access your event log and memory registers--can you make it bidirectional, so Lando will know what happened to me if I don't come back? Maybe you could isolate one of my transmit channels." Artoo chirped reassuringly and relayed his assent over the link. "Master Lobot, may I say something before you leave?" "Quickly." "It is possible that there is no command center as you envision it," "I don't have anything 'envisioned."" "I mean to say that rule-based logic can be encoded very compactly. My own language processors contain the equivalent of more than eight times ten to the twelfth decision trees, all within a space of approximately five cubic centimeters." "And the giant dewback lizards of Tatooine have a neural cluster smaller than the brain of a newborn human. Yes, I understand your point," Lobot said, looking back at the droids. "But I am not looking' for the vagabond's bridge, or its brain. I could easily miss those, or fail to recognize them. I am looking for its threshold of awareness, and it will know when I have found it." Lando lingered in the auditorium as long as the question of whether the vagabond could heal its great wounds hung in the balance. In the beginning, a thin band of new material appeared around the edges of each opening in the hull. The smaller opening forward continued to close, just as Lando had seen demonstrated at the airlock. But for a long time, it seemed as though nothing was happening at the larger wound, as if the process had somehow stalled. Before giving up, Lando moved to a portal on the other side of the chamber. From there, the beam from his chest lamp revealed that the entire opening had skinned over with what looked like the same sort of transparent material he was peering through. That discovery held him there, even though it again seemed for the longest time as if nothing was happening. He remembered how when they had first boarded the vagabond, he had been able to see Lady Luck's floodlights through the wall of the airlock. That should have told me something, he thought. Like shining a lantern through your hand. I should have been thinking organic right from the first. But we thought the genetic sequence was just some engineer's idea of a clever little code. His eyes kept expecting the gossamer transparency to be momentarily transformed into solid bulkhead, just as the transparency in the auditorium went from one state to the other in a matter of seconds. But instead, a lattice of opaque material appeared first, echoing the crisscross pattern he had. seen in the stringers in the interspace. Then, finally, each individual section of the lattice began to close over. That was when Lando tried to leave, feeling as though he had witnessed an exhibition of Qella ingenuity more impressive than the. lost orrery. "Lobot, where are you now?" he called over the suit's comlink, to no reply. "The hull breaches are nearly repaired I'm heading back. Lobot?" He switched to the secondary comm channel and repeated the call, with the same result. Returning to the primary channel, he heard a voice he did not expect to hear: "--I would be glad to relay a message to him." "Threepio, what are you doing on Lobot's comlink? What's going on there?" "Pardon me, Master Lando, but Master Lobot left his contact suit in our keeping." "You mean he's gone off by himself? Where is he? Where did he go?" "He said he was seeking the threshold of awareness," said Threepio. "I'm quite sure I don't know what that means." "Where are you, then? Is Artoo with you?" "We are somewhere in the vagabond's inner core," said Threepio. "Artoo says that if you return to chamber two-twenty-nine, he can direct you to us from there," "I'll be there in three minutes." But Lando had crossed through only two chambers when the portal ahead of him closed as he approached it. Turning, he saw the portal behind him had closed at the same time. Neither would respond to his touch. The portals to the interspace and the core were equally recalcitrant. He was sealed in. "Threepio, is anything happening there? All of a sudden, the express lanes out here are closed." The only reply was a burst of white-noise static. Then the ship groaned, deep and long. The chamber shuddered around Lando. "Blast," Lando said, his eyes searching the boundaries of his prison. "They're back." The groaning continued, and the shaking grew worse. The glow-rings around the portals dimmed and disappeared. In the darkness, Lando was thrown against the face of the chamber. She's turning fast this time--the propulsion system, whatever it is, is back online. "Propulsion--stang! No, please, don't try it," Lando implored the ship. "Not after taking hits like those--" The vagabond paid him no mind. Moments later, with the roaring growl and violent shaking at a terrifying peak, the vessel twisted realspace until it opened, then fell through infinity's door. Twenty-seven hours after she had taken custody of the Qella remains, Joi Eicroth hand-delivered a stack of three datacards containing the cadaver's genetic sequences to Admiral Drayson at his home on the north shore of Victory Lake. Drayson's face was haggard and his greeting embrace distracted. "I expected you to transmit the sequences to me in a secure packet." He rubbed his eyes. "I expected it several hours ago, in fact." "That was before we knew how extensive the sequences are. It would have taken me nearly as long to encode and transmit the report as it did to fly down here," she said, moving past him into the grand parlor. "And I wouldn't have gotten to see you again." A tired smile making a bid to reach his lips, Drayson followed her. You're saying that you found something surprising?" "Very," she said. "What species was that creature, Hiram? I would love to know more about its ethology and ecological niche." "I have a small research team looking into that right now," said Drayson. "I hope to be able to share their findings with you soon. What was the surprise? Something about the amount of genetic material?" She settled in a reclining chair facing the parlor's lakeview transparency. "It's that exactly," she said. "This species has three--at least three---different types of cells that contain genetic material. The ordinary so-matic cells have sixty-two chromosomes--" "That's on the high side, isn't it?" asked Drayson, settling on a small padded bench nearby. "Go on." "Yes, it is. But that's the smaller part of the whole," she said. "This species has two other kinds of genetic material as well, in two different structures located in two different parts of their bodies. "I call them code capsules, because they're encapsulated in a solid protein coat. There are billions of these capsules in that carcass. I almost mistook them for a massive parasitic infection--that's why I started looking at them in the first place." "How big are the capsules?" "Big. About the size of the biggest crystals of silicon dioxide out on your beach," she said. "But the same oval shape as the creature's torso. It took me five hours just to figure out how to extract them from their tubules and break through the protein coat without destroying the contents. The contents turned out to be nearly solid genetic material." She gestured at the data-cards. "Your DNA and mine together wouldn't fill one of those. I barely got the creature's genome to fit on three of them." Drayson stared down at the objects in his hand. "This is one copy? I thought you were doing the triplicate thing." "One copy. As near as I could tell, almost five percent of the creature's body weight is genetic material. That's unprecedented." "What does it need with all that?" "That's a good question," she said. "I don't know. I do know that it's far more than information theory says would be necessary to specify and construct an organism of the size and complexity of the one you brought me." "How much more?" She squinted as she thought. "Maybe two hundred times too much." "Which means what?" "I don't know," she said with a shrug. "The context is missing. Maybe when your team reports--" "Speculate, please." Eicroth frowned. "Well, there's a lot of old biological history in our chromosomes, in the form of inactive genes. Maybe this is something similar, but covering a much longer history or a more convoluted evolutionary path." "Any other ideas?" "One kind of weird one," she said, showing a self-effacing smile. "Maybe it's because I started off with the idea that these code capsules were parasites, but I keep wondering what good they are to the organism itself. The protein coat just about ensures that they're inert. I also wonder how they're passed on to offspring. The virus analogy is tempting--likewise for mitochondria." "If you had to guess--" "If I had to guess, I'd say it almost looks like this species carries a giant catalog of spare genetic blueprints around inside itself." "Blueprints for what?" "I don't know. There's a kinship in the genetic se-quencesmsomething recognizable as kin, anyway. Bio-chemically, there'd be a family resemblance." "What about the analogy to the Fw'Sen?" Drayson asked. "Don't they mate only once, before they're sexually mature?" "You mean, could these be retained fertilized eggs? I don't think so. The capsule tubules are completely separate from the somatic-cell reproductive anatomy." She shook her head. "It's very odd, and I don't pretend to understand it." Nodding, Drayson stood. "I have to go do something with this," he said, holding up the datacards. "Will you stay?" Her smile brightened. "If my boss is willing to wait a little longer for the results of the dissection." "I'll have a word with him," Drayson said. "Look, I'll be downstairs for a little while with this--get yourself something to eat if you haven't had a chance." "When's the last time you ate?" He shook his head. "I've had no appetite." Eicroth knew better than to ask the reason. "I'll see if I can find something for two," she said, reaching for his hand and giving it a squeeze. "Come on back up when you can." The instant that Lady Luck left hyperspace, its slave circuits relinquished control. "That isn't supposed to happen," Pakkpekatt said, showing teeth and hissing. His companion on the yacht's flight deck was Bijo Hammax. "What's supposed to happen?" Agent Pleck appeared at the hatchway. "The usual arrangement for a hyperspace beckon call is for the responding ship to ping the signaling unit when it jumps in," he said. "The beckon call sends a local reference signal, and the ship follows it to the location of the transmitter. If the beckon call sends a wave-off instead, the responding ship should jump out again immediately." "And we're just sitting here?" said Hammax. "Maybe we were stood up." "Contact sweep," said Pakkpekatt. "Coming up," Hammax said, turning to the displays at his station. "Something out there." "A more detailed analysis would be considerably more useful," Pakkpekatt said. "Something big," said Hammax. "A lot bigger than we are. Look, this isn't where I work. Pleck, maybe you'd better take the number-two position." Pleck slid into the seat as Hammax vacated it. "Contact is capital, type three," Pleck read off the board. "Too small," said Pakkpekatt. "Range to contact, two thousand meters." "Two thousand--stang, we're right on top of it," Hammax said, whirling toward the viewport. "We ought to be able to see it bare-eyed. They can sure see us." He dug into a storage bin for the laser cannon controller. "Contact is blacked out, cold, and adrift. No tran-sponder," Pleck said, then frowned. "A scatter of little stuff out there, too, same neighborhood. One floater that might be a body." "Nothing that might be the vagabond?" Pleck shook his head. "If she was here, she's gone." "The same is not necessarily true of General Calris-sian," Pakkpekatt said. "We'll go in for a look. Agent Taisden, please stand ready with your recorders." Lady Luck crept toward the wreck of Gorath as though wary of waking the dead. At five hundred meters, Pakkpekatt called for the bow lights, and a great metal corpse suddenly appeared before them. "Strike-class," said Pakkpekatt. "Or used to be," said Hammax. "She's all stove in." "This doesn't match what we saw at Gmar As-kilon," said Pleck, studying the spectral display. "This is not the same weapon the vagabond used against D-Eighty-nine and Kauri. It doesn't match anything in the database." readable, and remained so as he flew Lady Luck around the derelict at a distance of a hundred meters. Before the survey was complete, Hammax removed the targeting headset. "What would you expect to happen if the transmitter got toasted?" he asked, turning to the commander. "If Calrissian and his team were aboard--" "We need confirmation, Colonel Hammax, not speculation." "That's my job," Hammax said, nodding. "I'll go get suited up." Taisden grunted in surprise. "Excuse me--Colonel Pakkpekatt, would you take a look at the comm queue, please?" Pakkpekatt spun his couch back toward the controls. "When did that show up?" "Just now," said Taisden. "Is that your personal comm code, sir?" "No," said Pakkpekatt. "How very interesting." "What?" asked Hammax, leaning forward between the couches with a hand on the back of each. Taisden pointed. "A ready-to-transmit notice for a white-star dispatch, personal to the colonel." "A notice that can be received only by a military-rated secure hypercomm," said Pakkpekatt. "I thought we'd loaded one aboard," said Hammax. "We did," said Taisden. "This didn't come over our gear. Calrissian apparently has a few more surprises tucked away under the service panels of this ship." "There is something else," said Pakkpekatt. "Look at the message size." Hammax squinted. "That's heavy lifting." "It has to be a mistake. We should send back a verify request," said Taisden. "Confirm the originating station, packet size, router. Or request a redirect to our own hypercomm transceiver." "There is a simpler way to satisfy our curiosity," said Pakkpekatt. "I would like the bridge to myself for a few moments. Colonel Hammax, I believe you Were headed aft?" Hammax nodded. "I'll be skinned up in five to ten," he said, turning away and ducking through the hatchway. "I'll check in with Pleck," Taisden said, climbing out of his couch. "Page me on the observation deck." Even though he was alone, Pakkpekatt covered his right hand with his left as he entered his authorization code and switched the viewer to privacy mode as he read the notice. COLONEL PAKKPEKATT ACTIVATION OF FAIR LADY'S P' W' ECK COMPLEMENT RECORDED HERE. SINCERELY HOPE THIS PRESAGES RESTORATION OF PEACEABLE RELATIONS WITH HOST WORLD AND DIPLOMATIC RECOVERY OF EXPEDITION. PENDING DISPATCh1 CONTAINS LETTERS OF INTRODUCTION, RECENTLY ACQUIRED AT GREAT EXPENSE. TRUST THEY WILL OPEN DOORS FOR YOU. It bore an apparently authentic Fleet Intelligence watermark and seal but was unsigned. General Calrissian's friends, Pakkpekatt thought. They should not know that I am in this ship, but they do, and they are still looking after him. He drummed his thumb-claws on his temples as he considered his response. 'Letters of introduction' can only mean the Qella genetic code--assistance that I requested through proper channels, which was denied when the task force was recalled. There was no real choice before him. With a few light touches on the display, Pakkpekatt entered his send authorization and returned a clear-to-transmit message to his unknown benefactor, noting the ship time as he did. At their present distance, the transit lag for a round-trip to Coruscant should be something more than forty minutes. If the reply came back too soon or too late, he would know what meaning to give it. "Colonel Hammax, are you ready?" Pakkpekatt called over the comm system. "Going through my weapons check now, Colonel." "Very well. Agent Taisden, please return to the bridge. Agent Pleck, please assist Colonel Hammax at the airlock. Colonel, during the flyaround, did you identify where you would like to make your entry?" "Those open ports on the far side looked to be as good a place as any," Hammax said. "I'm going to use a ring charge to cut in, and I can put some hull between myself and the blowback." "Very well," Pakkpekatt said, taking the yacht's maneuvering yoke in hand. "I'll notify you when we are in position." Colonel Hammax did not stay aboard the hulk of the cruiser for long. A mere fifteen minutes after he disappeared into the maw of launching port eight, he reappeared at the opening of launching port four. Raising his right hand in a wave, Hammax squeezed the thruster controls with his left and started across the hundred meters separating Gorath and Lady Luck as they drifted together through space. Though Hammax's foray suit had voice, holo, and biomedical comm systems in both open and conductive modes, Pakkpekatt had directed him to observe strict comm silence unless confronted by a threat, and Hammax had done so. So his early return was the object of sudden and intense curiosity. Pleck and Pakkpekatt watched from the flight deck and Taisden from the observation deck as Hammax jetted toward the yacht, knowing only that it was impossible under any conditions to thoroughly search a 450-meter-long warship so quickly. "He looks okay," said Taisden. "Maybe he had some equipment problem. Or maybe he got lucky and found what he was looking for right off." "If Colonel Hammax had found what he was looking for, he would be returning with two body bags," Pakkpekatt said, tracking the spacesuited figure with the laser cannon. "You're going to make him nervous, doing that," Taisden observed. "Good. That will help him understand that I am," said Pakkpekatt. "Go back to the airlock and hold Colonel Hammax there with the overrides until I have satisfied myself." As soon as the outer lock closed, Hammax broke his silence, using his suit's conductive transmitter. "Colonel, she's well gutted. Definitely Prakith, though." Taisden startled at that. "A long way out for a Prakith ship--a long way out. Are you sure?" "I could still read the blazons on bulkheads here and there. Colonel, it's a derelict. Nothing's functional, and there are no signs of life--a lot of bodies, but none of 'em are going to get any more use." "Was there any sign of Calrissian?" "No," said Hammax. "I checked both brigs--there were five bodies between them, none of them human. I also checked the bridge and the maintenance shop--no droids of any kind in either location." "Why did you terminate your search? A Strike- class cruiser has two hundred fifty-eight compartments." "Colonel, with the conditions over there, I wasn't going to find out any more in an hour than I did in fifteen ticks," Hammax said. "I thought the best thing was to come back and leave it up to you whether to commit the time to take it further. If you want all two hundred fifty-eight compartments searched, I'll turn around and get started on it." "Is it your report, then, that Calrissian's party is not aboard the cruiser?" "I can't tell you with absolute certainty that the general wasn't aboard when the balloon went up," said Hammax. "But in my opinion, it'd take a forensic sal vage team the better part of a week to be any more certain. Your call." "Stand by, Colonel Hammax." Pakkpekatt rubbed his temple crests as he checked the comm queue. The "Fleet Intelligence" dispatch was still spooling into Lady Luck's comm buffers, pouring in at 94 percent efficiency of the highest available error-checking transfer rate. But even at that rate, the counters predicted it would take another twenty-three minutes to complete the transfer. "All stations, conference," Pakkpekatt said. "Hammax here." "Taisden here." "Pleck ready." "It is my belief that the most probable scenario to explain our findings is that this vessel was destroyed by the vagabond by means of a weapon not previously seen. The vagabond is likely to have been damaged in the confrontation, prompting Calrissian to recall his yacht. Concur or dispute." "Concur," said Pleck, "I concur," Hammax and Taisden said simultaneously. "Proposition: The degree of damage sustained will dictate the current location of the vagabond. If not seriously damaged, she will have jumped out. If seriously damaged, she will have moved off in realspace, perhaps to make repairs. If mortally damaged, she may still be present as an undetected debris field." Pleck and Hammax agreed. "Or she may have tried to jump out and broken up in the process, in which case there might be very little debris to find," said Taisden. "Yes," said Pakkpekatt. "Disposition: We will remain at this location while we conduct a maximum-aperture deep scan for the vagabond, and until we examine the debris field more closely. Colonel Hammax, stand by for possible debris recovery operations. Agent Taisden, please return to the second seat to supervise the deep scan." As Taisden reached the flight deck Pakkpekatt was turning the bow of Lady Luck away from the cruiser. "You said there was a possible body?" "Let me locate it for you," said Taisden, reconfigur-ing the displays. "Twelve hundred meters, bearing two-one-zero, plus four-four, relative. A lot of smaller stuff between us and it, though." Pakkpekatt responded by reactivating the particle shields so that they could shoulder aside any debris in their path. "Please begin your scan." "That'll scatter the field," Taisden said. "Standard recovery protocol calls for deflectors only, with particle shields at zero." "I know that," said Pakkpekatt. "But this is not a junker, Agent Taisden, and we are not scavengers." He pushed the yoke forward, and Lady Luck eased away from the shattered cruiser. Within a minute, it had entered the cloud of debris. The "body" proved tO be a curious object--a rough-surfaced sphere two meters across, carbon-scorched over one third of its surface and encrusted with a thin layer of fragile, long-crystal ice. Pleck had come forward to the flight deck for a closer look. "Could it be some sort of escape pod?" he asked. "I've heard that spaceliners used to be equipped with something like the ferry bags S-and-R units use--you know, not much more than a soft-sided ball with a rebreather, so you can move people off a disabled ship without having to try to get them into spacesuits." Taisden shook his head. "I'm still on passive sensing only, but the thing looks solid to me. If the colonel will let me strobe it--" "No," said Pakkpekatt. "Colonel, if it's something interesting, let me go out and get it," said Hammax. "At two meters, I should be able to bring it in through the cargo airlock." "No," said Pakkpekatt. "I do not want it inside this ship. But I do want to know what it is made of. If it is not part of the cruiser, it may be part of the vagabond." "You say it's iced over?" asked Hammax. "To a depth of approximately one centimeter," said Taisden, recalibrating his displays for fine detail. "Sounds like draw-frost," said Hammax. "You only get that on biologicals, and only for a little while, until the remains are desiccated or deep-frozen. See, the pressure differential pulls the water in the epidermal layers toward the surface, but it starts freezing on the skin before it can evaporate. The residual body heat can keep things pumping for a while, but eventually the ice evaporates, too, one molecule at a time." "Maybe it is a body, then," said Pleck. "Just not a human one. Colonel?" Pakkpekatt glanced at the counter on the comm display. "Very well, Colonel Hammax. See if you can move it to the fantail observation deck. I believe there are cargo tie-downs there, and we will not have to concern ourselves with turning the cargo deck into a hy-pothermic cooler--" "Hold everything," Taisden said, sitting forward sharply and frowning at the displays. "I have a deep-scan contact alarm. Colonel Pakkpekatt, there's something coming in fast." "You are acquiring Colonel Hammax's bad habits," said Pakkpekatt with a hiss. "What sort of contact?" Taisden shook his head. "She's bow-on to us and still a long way out--nine hundred thousand kilometers," he said. "It'll be a little while, even for this rig." He paused, tapping the console with his fingertips. "On the other hand, if she's related to the late Prakith cruiser behind us, she's probably coming in with her don't-shoot-me lights on." "Combat transponder," Pleck said. "Yes. Scan for it in the high forties--that's pretty common for Imperial-class designs, and I don't think the Prakith are likely candidates for a lot of field modifications." "I've got it--forty-four two, for future reference. Uncoded, but in Prak." Then he grunted. "Looks like General Calrissian went for all the options when he bought this yacht. The system's giving me an on-the-fly translation--ha!" "What?" Despite the seriousness of the moment, Taisden was briefly consumed by a spell of deep, closed-mouth chuckles. "We are heading for a rendezvous with, and I quote verbatim, 'The gallant and eternally vigilant patrol destroyer Tobay of the Grand Imperial Navy of the Constitutional Protectorate of Prakith, in grateful and loyal service to His Glory, the potent and courageous governor for life, Foga Brill."" "And you thought your section commander had unreasonable expectations," Pleck said, clapping Taisden on the shoulder. "Do you think the Prakith navy holds public fawning competitions?" Pakkpekatt parsed the puffery for the one detail that mattered to him. "Patrol destroyer, Imperial Adz- class. Primary armament three class-D quad laser cannon batteries, three class-B dual ion cannon batteries." "Sounds like we definitely don't want to be here when they arrive," said Hammax. "Colonel, do you still want me to go after the floater?" Pakkpekatt looked to Taisden. "How long?" "Not quite six minutes, though she'll have to start knocking her speed down pretty soon. Call it eight." "Not enough time, Colonel Hammax," said Pakkpekatt. "Come back inside. I need you to take over weapons control." "Pardon me, Colonel," Taisden said. "What is it?" "Colonel, this other ship coming in may not be ignorant enough to think that we're the ones who rearranged the furniture on the cruiser, but they're sure as sweat going to be curious about what we know. I strongly recommend we jump out before they get anywhere near here." "Recommendation noted," said Pakkpekatt. "However, inasmuch as we are currently receiving a mission-critical dispatch from Fleet Intelligence, we will not be able to jump out for another"he leaned forward to read the display--"ten minutes." Pleck and Taisden exchanged glances. "Anyone know the top speed of an Adz-class patrol destroyer?" "Point-five-five," said Pakkpekatt. "And this yacht?" "Unknown to me," said Pakkpekatt. "Agent Tais-den, tell me when the contact's velocity changes." "We could hide in the scan shadow of the cruiser," Pleck said. "I intend to," said Pakkpekatt, handling the yoke with a light touch that nudged the yacht sideways to port. "'But I won't be able to do so for long." "They might come in more slowly if they see us," said Taisden. "We only need a couple of minutes." Hammax appeared at the hatchway, finger-combing his helmet-matted hair. "Patrol destroyer carries six fighters," he pointed out. "They can have it both ways--send the fighters in hot after us, and take a nice safe, slow approach to the wreck." "Anyone know what kind of fighters the Prakith have?" Pleck asked, frowning. No one answered him. "Contact is decelerating," said Taisden. "Looks like she's spotted the wreck. Colonel, the wreck's going to eclipse the contact in a few seconds." "Tell me when." "Coming up--damn. Fighter launch, two birds." "Excellent," said Pakkpekatt, pushing the yacht's throttles forward to the limit. The sudden acceleration knocked Hammax back into the companionway and sent Pleck tumbling against the flight deck's rear bulkhead. "I suggest you both find a flight couch and strap in. We may need to discover not only how fast General Calrissian's yacht is, but how agile she is as well." Pleck picked himself up and squeezed past Hammax, heading aft. Hammax came forward and reached for the weapons controller. "You may store that," said Pakkpekatt. "I have retracted the laser cannon. This is a race, not a fight. I will jump us out before I let us be caught--but I am willing to take some risks in order to receive the complete dispatch." "What's in it that's so important?" Hammax asked. "The code that allowed this ship to pass through the vagabond's shields at Gmar Askilon" "But we have that." "--and the code that would have allowed D-89 to follow it in," Pakkpekatt continued. "The next ime the vagabond asks us a question, we should know the answer." "If we ever see her again," Hammax said with a lopsided frown. "We will." "Tobay is hailing us," said Taisden. "I have nothing to say to the Prakith," said Pakkpekatt. "You might be able to get them to give away some information--like whether the vagabond was here." "We do not need confirmation of that," said Pakkpekatt. "And I will not take the risk of giving some information away to them." He glanced down at the display. "General Calrissian has a very fast ship. Range to fighters?" "One hundred thousand meters and opening quickly," Taisden said. "Someone on the Tobay forgot that TIEs have solar-electric ion boost engines. Not much out here for them to eat. They won't catch us. Someone else has figured that out, too---Tobay is accelerating now." "Too late," Hammax said. "Their captain made the wrong choice." "Yes," said Pakkpekatt, his pride teeth gleaming. "He did." "Three more minutes," said Taisden. "I'll set up the jumps if you'll tell me where we're going next. Back to Carconth and Anomaly Ten-thirty-three?" "No. I have been thinking about what happened to us, being brought here by an automated system override," said Pakkpekatt. "I find myself asking what the Qella would have done if, once having launched this vessel, they found reason to recall her." "Sounds like a card you'd want to keep in your hand," said Hammax. "What do you have in mind, Colonel?" "I have in mind for us to go to Maltha Obex, the vagabond's point of origin," said Pakkpekatt. "We will set up a hyperspace beacon there and transmit the sequences we just received." "You mean to call her home," said Hammax. Taisden's face was lit with sudden optimism. "We can use the entire communications grid of the New Republic as a repeater to send out the signal in realspace, on the frequency the vagabond used to interrogate our ships at Gmar Askilon." Pakkpekatt nodded, human fashion. "And then we will wait for her. Who knows? If this yacht is as well named as she is outfitted, perhaps the vagabond will hear our call and come to us. The odds of that can be no longer than the odds of our stumbling on her in the dark--and I am weary of chasing shadows and echoes across the light-years." Lando Calrissian cursed under his breath as he dragged himself through the narrow inner passage toward where Artoo indicated Lobot could be found. The cyborg had stubbornly refused to return to where the droids were waiting, forcing Lando to shed his contact suit and come in after him. But the passages were twisty and claustrophobic, and it was difficult to find enough elbow room and enough purchase on the surface for fingertips and toes to keep him moving. The maze would have been impassable in gravity, at least for a human. "Lobot!" he called ahead. "How about a little help?" "You sound close by," was the faraway-sounding answer. "Just keep coming." "What are you doing in here? Are you stuck and too embarrassed to admit it?" "I am occupied." "Occupied with what?" When he was answered with what seemed a pointed silence, Lando changed the subject. "You know we jumped out." "You didn't by any chance have anything to do with that?" "NO." One more toe-push brought Lando to a point where two passages merged into one. "The jump didn't sound good," he said, pausing there. "Lot of shaking and rattling we haven't heard before." "There was much damage." Lando started again in the direction of the voice. "Yeah, I saw some of it. Are you feeling all right, pal?" "Fine." "Really? I gotta tell you, you sound a little flat." "I am occupied." "That again," said Lando. "Well, if everything's all right, it would have been nice if you'd answered the messages Artoo sent to you for me. You could have saved me what's turning into a long and annoying climb." "Impossible." "What's impossible?" There was a long silence. "Lobot?" "Impossible to reply. The channel was in use." Lobot's voice was at last starting to promise that Lando might see him around one more twisting turn. "If there's some reason why I shouldn't come up there, maybe you could tell me now." "No reason. Come ahead. You are close now." "You said that once before." "I was not listening with my ears." "Of course," said Lando. "I make that mistake all the time." Pausing, he pulled the cutting blaster from the slash pocket of his flight suit and slipped the stay loop over his wrist. "You will not need that," said Lobot. Lando's head jerked up. There was still no sign of Lobot in the passage ahead. "You spying on me, buddy?" Again, Lobot did not answer right away. "We are aware of you." Drawing a deep breath, Lando reached out and pressed his palms against the inside of the passage, resuming his awkward floating crawl with new determination. "You'll have to pardon me for intruding--I thought you were alone in here," he called as he scrambled along. "I hope I can count on you to make the introductions." "Yes. A little farther, Lando." Ahead, the passage turned sharply, hiding what lay beyond. Lando let the blaster come into his hand before going around the bend. Then he wedged himself into the passage, using one foot to press his back against the wall, as he deciphered what he was seeing. The next section of passage had a gentle curve that limited his view to twenty meters or so. But in those twenty meters, no fewer than fifty smaller side passages joined it. The openings were puckered in appearance, and the side passages were dark--the pale light illuminating the main passage seemed to stop where they joined to it. Pulling himself forward cautiously, Lando directed the beam of his hand torch down the first of the side passages. Barely two meters in, the branch was completely blocked by what appeared to be a rounded plug, lighter in color than the enclosing walls. The configuration put Lando in mind of concussion missiles in their launchers, or assault pods in their drop tubes. Spinning in midair, Lando aimed his light into another side passage, and the next, and the next. They were all blocked--no, not blocked, he thought, filled-- in just the same manner by ellipsoidal objects poten tially large enough to enclose and imprison a human being. "Lobot, where are you?" Lando said quietly. "Molo nag aikan nag molo kron aikan sket . . ." The dreamy, disassociated voice came from a side passage another few meters away. Lando pulled himself along one-handed until he reached it, then pointed the beam of his hand torch inside without warning. Lobot was floating inside, his feet toward Lando, his head at the object filling the passage. When the intense light reached Lobot's face, he raised a hand, squeezed his eyes shut, and turned his head away. That was when Lando glimpsed a shocking sight. The right side of Lobot's head was bare--there was only an outline of white skin and a pattern of socket holes where the interface band had been. "Lobot, what's happened?" "--eida kron molo sket aikan sket tupa vol . . ." Drawing himself Closer, Lando grabbed Lobot by the foot and shook him. "Hey, come back to me, pal." Lobot flinched from the touch, jerking his foot away, but ended his recitation. "Talk to me, or I'm going to have to pull you out of there," Lando said. "Maybe I'd better do that anyway--" "No!" The vehemence with which the word was launched was part passion and part fear. At the same time, Lobot's hands slammed outward against the sides of the passage, his fingers digging deep as the substance there yielded to provide him with secure handholds. Only then, with Lobot's arms no longer obscuring his view, did Lando realize what was happening. Half of the interface band was still in place on Lobot's left side. The other half was attached to the curve of the object beyond. A network of fine wires, no longer than the span of Lando's hand, connected the two as a tether. "Starfire--you found a way to talk to the vagabond." A smile crept onto Lobot's face. "Yes." "To the vagabond, or to these things?" Lando gestured with the light. "There is no distinction." "Is it conscious?" "It is aware." Lobot opened his eyes and looked at Lando for the first time. "I will need to remember to discuss this with Threepio. I may have better answers for him now." Lando wedged himself sideways in the opening of the side passage. "What kind of conversation are you having?" "It is willing to give me information. It will not give me control." "Ask it where we're going this time." "It is hurting," Lobot said. "I think it is going home." Lando contemplated that information for a moment, then gestured with the beam of light. "What are these--eggs?" "No. These are Qella," said Lobot. "The Ship is the egg." (Chapter 7 Bathed in the brilliant fire of the cluster's many suns, three New Republic warships made their entry into star system ILC-905 in the formation known as triangle-high-forward. On the point, a hundred kilometers ahead of the others, was the picket Folna, with all its sensitive antennae passively scanning in all directions to the limit of their range. Trailing in the flank position was another vessel of the same size, the gunship Vanguard. In the anchor position, flying parallel to Vanguard, was the command vessel for the patrol group--the cruiser Indomitable, under Commodore Brand. Though Folna's sensing officer was reporting all displays clear, both the cruiser's and the gunship's primary and secondary armaments were at combat readiness, with their accumulators half charged, their aiming coils warm, and their crews on two-hour rotations. In addition, three of Indomitable's five squadrons, including Red Flight's K-wing bombers, were fully armed and lined up for deployment, with their pilots standing by. It would take just twelve seconds to bring the gun batteries to full power. Thirty-five seconds after the klaxon sounded in the bays, the first E-wings would clear Indomitable's flight deck. Or if Brand didn't like the odds, a word from him--and ninety seconds to spin up the hyperdrives--would have all three ships wheeling about and jumping out to safety. Despite those precautions, the tension aboard all three ships was palpable. On the bridge of Indomitable, it was excruciating. The patrol group was hunting for the enemy in the enemy's own territory, and it would be just their bad luck, thought Brand, if they should find them. Or, worse still, be found. In any space patrol, there was an irreducible risk of being seen by an enemy they could not see. That risk was multiplied many times over by the richness of Koor-nacht Cluster's starfields. Even with the best available instruments, an Imperial-class Star Destroyer was undetectable against the background of a first-magnitude star at a range of only six thousand kilometers. A ship the size of Vanguard could creep within three hundred klicks without being spotted. Any inattention, any errors of assessment, any deficiencies in the systems, and those margins would narrow still further. Active sensing--a laser pulse, a radar ping--could remove that vulnerability, separating a nearby ship from a distant star. But active sensing created a vulnerability of its own, announcing their presence like a shout in the night. As they had been for the last nine system entries, the active sensors of the patrol group were silent. Brand was counting on the skill of the seven officers seated at the passive-sensing stations in Folna's darkened elint compartment--the bug box, in ship slang. Sharp eyes and clear minds, Brand thought as he restlessly paced Indomitable's bridge. The debacle at Doornik 319 had been embarrassment enough to his command. No more surprises. No more mistakes. "Look after your station, Lieutenant," he barked, stopping behind a Hrasskis officer and leaning in to jab a finger toward the console. "You've got a yellow on your check board." "I'm on it, sir." "Twelfth planet entering our scan radius in one minute," called out one of the cruiser's own elint specialists. Brand straightened and turned toward the forward viewpanes. "Helmsman, how is our velocity?" 'Beginning to pick up some measurable stellar gravity assist now, Commodore. Base velocity is one-third formation standard." "Let her roll," Brand said--altering, on a sudden impulse, the procedure they had used in the past. "I don't care what the engineers at Technical saymI don't believe that the braking thrusters don't light us up," he added. "Let's just be a rock this time." "Infalling in formation, sir?" "Loose formation--we'll let 'em drift. It won't amount to much at this point. Signal the patrol." "Yes, sir." By the time the patrol group was closing on the sixth planet, the gravity of the star ILC-905--with some minor assistance from the system's outer planets had boosted the group's velocity to 41 percent of formation standard. An angry and puzzled Colonel Foag had long since registered his displeasure, signaling Brand from Folna's bug box by means of ship-to-ship laser. "You're shrinking our safety radius," he complained. "The faster we go, the more pressure there is on my people---with the analysis lag and their reaction time, we lose a thousand, two thousand kilometers at least. Why the impatience?" "It's not impatience, Colonel Foag. I'm just adjusting the tradeoffs slightly," said Brand. "I'm well aware that if elint ran the show, we'd make entry at one-tenth formation standard with engines cold and ninety percent of the ship's systems shut down." Later, recording his mission debriefing, Brand could point to the fact that all the ships destroyed during the mass recon of the cluster were making constant-velocity passes through their target systems: --This suggests that the Yevethan sensor grids are capable of detecting even very small vessels when they are following a flight profile requiring the use of braking and maneuvering thrusters-But the truth was that in the moment before he ordered the change, Brand had experienced a sudden, inexplicable spike of fear. Coming from a tribe that respected instinct as much as reason, Brand treated that fear as information. And the only response available to him at that moment was to make the group's system entry as stealthy as possible, even if it hindered the work of Foag's crew. Brand had done the same thing in combat many times before--taken risks to follow an impulse and found justification for it later. It had carried him to the rank of commodore and filled his service record with close calls and commendations. It also guaranteed that he would never rise any higher than that--"too high-strung" and "too erratic to command the confidence of other senior officers" were among the review board's disqualifying conclusions. Even knowing that, Brand could not, would not, change his ways. Honoring his feelings had saved his life more than once--and he had donned his dress uniform for the funerals of a roomful of by-the-book officers, too many of them friends. As the patrol group left the fifth planet behind, Brand left the bridge for a quick, unannounced tour of Indomitable's ready stations. By that time, the crew had been standing at con-flict-yellow alert for fourteen hours straight, and the fine edge of their vigilance had been blunted by fatigue and boredom. As more and more crew members came to the conclusion on their own that ILC-905 was clean, personal chatter, laughter, and even friendly roughhousing crept in to change the atmosphere in the gun batteries and on the flight decks. Conflict-yellow was in danger of being treated just like any other watch--peaceful, routine, business as usual for a warship under way. Brand's visit put an end to that. Sweeping through station after station like a cold shower, he infected them with his own restless apprehension. "Asteroid belt coming up next," he said, peering through a gunsight. "You going to be ready, aren't you, son? Have to be more ready than they are." Extracting a promise, Brand moved on. "Asteroid belt coming up," he said, poking his head into a fighter cockpit. "You have everything you need to do your job, Lieutenant? You know one pilot can be the difference." Collecting a vow, Brand continued down the line. In less than an hour, he was back on the bridge. He left behind him as a residue of the lightning tour the conviction that the commander knew something--that something was going to happen. Brand did not know what was going to happen. But he was not surprised when something did. Like many single-star systems, ILC-905 had an asteroid ring between the outermost rocky planet and the innermost gas giant--the remnant of a planet that never was, torn asunder by the giant's massive gravitational field. Like most asteroid rings, this one's density was low. It was only a minor obstacle to navigation, and a poor place to hide anything larger than a probot. Despite what he said on his tour, Brand did not expect to find an Imperial shipyard cached there. Nor did he expect a Yevethan thrustship to drop out of hyperspace almost dead ahead of them, six million kilometers on the far side of the asteroid ring. Like a giant strobe, the instantaneous flash known as Cronau radiation put the arriving ship not only on the screens in Folna's elint center, but on the other ships' screens as well. Alarms began to keen on every deck as Brand upgraded the alert to conflict-orange. "What was the phase shift?" he demanded, bounding out of his chair. "Phase shift is negative," said the tracking officer. "She's heading away from us." "Going where?" The navigator turned his head to answer. "If I had to guess--third planet, just like us." "What are the chances they've spotted us?" The tactical officer leaned over the plot table and studied the geometries. "Very small, in my opinion. We couldn't have spotted them at this distance if they'd just been cruising along in realspace like we are. Having them fall out of hyperspace like that was an incredible break." "Maybe not," said Brand. He turned toward the viewpane and looked out at ILC-905, crossing his arms over his chest. "If they did move one of the shipyards here, they'll have created some long supply lines for themselves. This could be a pretty popular spacelane." -"That could be, sir," the tactical officer agreed. "If they're trying to use the yard, and not just hide it." Brand nodded. "Comm--" "Yes, sir?" "Signal the Intrepid that we have a contact, one Yevethan T-type, and give our coordinates. Advise them that we're investigating further. Helmsman--" "Yes, sir?" "Let's close the gap a little. Give me ten percent forward thrust until we clear the asteroid ring. Otherwise maintain course, hands off. We're going to follow her in." A little more than an hour later, the Yevethan ship began a long braking maneuver that ended with it disappearing behind the limb of the third planet. By that time, the patrol group had closed to within half a mil lion kilometers, bringing the planet within range of its full array of sensors. "Any sign of anything in orbit?" Brand demanded. "Negative," said the sensor chief. "But we haven't seen complete orbital tracks for anything above two thousand kilometers." "Given its approach, the most probable orbit for the target is three-two-five-zero klicks," the tracking officer announced. Brand walked to the forward viewscreens. "Show me," he said, and a three-dimensional tactical map appeared side by side with the forward view. Indomitable's first officer, Captain Tobbra, had a career book that was unremarkable in every respect, the product of a long habit of erring on the side of caution. That caution had been freshly renewed by a new baby back on Trailan, Tobbra's homeworld. Tobbra was keenly aware that but for a few months' seniority, the flag chair might have been his instead. As it was, he thought of it as a shared command, and saw it as his role to counterbalance Brand's excesses. "Commodore, if we get any closer, that ship's sure to spot us when she comes around," he said in a guarded voice, joining Brand. "I don't doubt it," said Brand. "If we stand off here, even back off a bit, Folna should be able to get everything we need for Five-Tat," Tobbra pressed, using the slang term for the fleet commander's tactical staff. "That's true as well," said Brand. "But right now, we have the advantage--we know where they are, and they don't know we're here. You'd have me surrender that advantage." "We don't have to try to do this alone," said Tobbra. "If there's a shipyard here, Five-Tac will send us some thumpers the moment we send them confirmation." "And if there's a shipyard here, the Yevetha will try to reinforce its defenses the moment we're detected," said Brand. "Can you promise me our ships will get here before theirs?" Tobbra frowned in silence. "I thought not," said Brand: "Detection and destruction of the shipyards is our priority mission, Captain. Let's get on with it. We're going to use our advantage and ambush that T-type. Then we'll take care of whatever it's here to visit." "Commodore, we don't even know what it takes to knock out a T-type." Brand shook his head. "Someone needs to find out. I like the odds." "But, Commodore--" "End of discussion, Captain." Brand turned away from the viewscreen and called out to the comm officer. "Let me speak to Folna." "On your number one," came the smart reply. Brand clicked his comlink on. "Captain Madis." "Yes, Commodore." "We're taking Vanguard in to engage. Break formation and hold station. I want you here to record and relay." "Affirmative, Commodore," Madis said. "We'll get you some good pictures for the scrapbook." "I know you will," said Brand. He switched his comlink so that his orders would be echoed to the gunship, then looked up into a score of expectant faces. "Time to settle up for Doornik Three-nineteen," he said grimly. "Comm, upgrade the alert to conflict-red. Tac, launch the fighter screen. Stand by to launch bombers. Helm, give me eighty percent thrust and an intercept on the hostile's projected orbit. Vanguard, close up and stay with us. I don't want you to miss the first act." The moment the siren began keening through the forward flight deck, Esege Tuketu threw down his tiles and jumped up from his seat. He had been in his flight suit for hours, and had loosened the closures at the neck, wrists, and waist. As he ran toward his bomber, he struggled to close them, giving him a clumsy dance of a gait. Skids was already in the cockpit, strapping in, when Tuketu arrived. He had been triple-checking the releases for the armaments strapped to the K-wing's hard points. "How's everything look?" Tuketu asked as he clambered up the short ladder. "Everything looks clean. Shouldn't have to make any hand deliveries." "They'd definitely have to pay extra for that," said Tuke. "Any change in the load-out?" "No change. One egg, eight CM-five concussion missiles. Packing heavy." "All right. Preflight checklist, from the top--" As Vanguard and Indomitable accelerated toward their rendezvous with the Yevethan thrustship, a thin fighter screen--two dozen fighters altogether, half E-wings, half X-wings--fanned out around them. When the lead ships in the formation came into view on the cruiser's viewscreens, Tobbra was prompted to once again seek out Brand for a private conversation. "You're breaking every rule of engagement in the command codex," he said bluntly. "The standard fighter screen for this ship alone is three squadrons, not two. The spacing is so loose out there that it won't take much for the enemy to break through." "I'm holding back the other two fighter squadrons for escort duty. The bombers are going to need help punching through," Brand said. "We don't even know for certain how many fighters a T-type carries," Tobbra protested, his voice rising. "It could be twice or three times what we saw at Door-nik Three-nineteen." Brand shot Tobbra a frosty look. "Mind your tone and your volume, Captain, or remove yourself from the bridge. I don't intend to carry on a running argument with you throughout the engagement." Tobbra lowered his voice, but his tone was unchanged. "We shouldn't be engaging the enemy, sir--that's the issue. It's my duty to point out--" "That we don't know everything we might? This is no revelation, Captain. I can count, and I can read an Intell report. Give me that much credit." "I mean no insult, sir." "That's not always obvious from your words," said Brand. "Captain, if a smaller force never defeated a superior one, we could just weigh the orders of battle and declare the winner, neatly avoiding all the messy parts. But war's not like that. Throw away your calculator. You can't use it to make the hard decisions." Tobbra frowned, but nodded silently. Brand moved close and dropped his voice to a near whisper. "Then, there's something else at issue, too. Something you won't find in the codex. Which is that if a perfectly hale New Republic cruiser and gunship can't handle a T-type one-on-one, Fleet needs to learn that sooner rather than later. Because all the reports I've been seeing say the Yevetha have a lot of T-types." Exhaling sharply, Tobbra said, "That's why you had Folna stand off." "Apart from the fact that she's too thin-skinned for this kind of roughhousing, yes." Tobbra looked out at the planet, now a distinct disc with a mottled yellow-brown face. "I'd better get back to my station," he said. "It's time to poll the batteries." Fifteen minutes before the projected reappearance of the Yevethan ship, Brand gave the order to launch the bombers and escort fighters. He did not want to risk being surprised with the flight decks full of fuel and high explosives if the Yevethan ship made an early appearance, thanks to settling into a lower-than-expected orbit. The K-wings formed Up in groups of three, each group sandwiched between a trio of fighters above and another below. Brand watched from the bridge as they moved out to their positions twenty kilometers ahead. Though the wings and other surfaces had been darkened for space operations, their engine exhausts glowed like candles in the night. The triple exhausts of the K-wings stood out among them. "I just hope they actually drop their eggs this time," the tactical officer said quietly when Brand returned to the plot table. "They will," Brand said without hesitation. "And not because we changed the combat frequencies and installed scramblers. Because it has to be done." Five minutes before reacquisition, Vanguard detached from the cruiser. It moved out on a trajectory that would both give it a clear field of fire and allow it to spot the Yevethan ship while the rest of the attack formation was still below its horizon. That would provide Brand with a scant few seconds to react to what Vanguard saw and adjust his orders accordingly. One minute and nine seconds earlier than expected, Marauder reported in. "Contact, one--no, two--three--four. Four targets. Analyzing. Contacts are as follows--one, repeat, one, Imperial type two shipyard. Three, repeat, three, Yevethan T-types." "Three!" Brand said in surprise, loudly enough to be heard at most of the bridge stations. "Three," he repeated to himself. "Well, that yanks the rancor's whiskers." "Indomitable, this is Vanguard. We're now taking fire from two of the Yevethan vessels. Shield effectiveness approximately ninety-two percent. May we engage, sir?" Tobbra rushed to the plot table. "Commodore, we have to break off. Order the bombers in so that we can get out of here." "Twenty seconds to reacquisition," said the tactical officer, tracing the electronic lines with a fingertip. "Vanguard, this is Brand," the commodore said, glaring at Tobbra. "Can you say status of the type two?" "Indomitable, she's full up. Looks like six ship-ways with complete or substantially complete vessels, three more at the keel-and-skeleton stage." Brand shuddered involuntarily. "Vanguard, you are free to engage, counterforce protocol. Repeat, free fire--concentrate on the T-types--" Tobbra reached out and grabbed Brand above the elbow. "What are you doing?" With a violent jerk of his arm, Brand broke the first officer's grip. "What has to be done," he said. "Confine yourself to your quarters, Captain Tobbra. Lieutenant Threld, take the captain's station." He turned toward the comm officer. "Let me talk to the attack squadrons." There was a faint crackle on the K-wing's battle comm as the scrambler went active. "Here it comes," said Skids. "Indomitable to all squadrons," said Brand's voice. "I have a revised target appraisal--confirming type two shipyard in orbit, with birds in the roost. Confirming three thrustships in orbit. The patrol has been fired upon. These are your revised targeting orders--your primary target is the shipyard. We'll keep the T-types busy--you're to ignore them unless they get in the way. Flight leaders, commence your attack." After a microscopic pause, he added, "Good luck." "There they are," Tuketu said as the cockpit was lit up by the distant flare of blaster bolts striking ray shields. Moments later, the tactical display in the cockpit showed him the geometry of the battle. One thrustship was preceding the shipyard in its orbit, another trailing behind. The third--most likely the one the patrol had first spotted--was docked at the cargo port on the side of the great structure. "'Good luck'--Tuke, this is crazy," Skids was saying. "How are we going to duck three Fat Men?" "We'll try the low road," said Tuketu. "Red Flight, this is Red Leader. Follow me down to the planet. On the break--now!" The Battle of ILC-905 lasted just eleven furioUs, confusing minutes. In the first moments, Vanguard fell under a fearful fusillade from both the lead and trailing thrustships. Even after it began returning fire, it was clearly out-matched in such a pairing. The only thing that saved the gunship from a quick end was the fact that the individual T-type main batteries were medium-cruiser-class at best. Nevertheless, each thrustship had eight main batteries, spaced in such a way that every approach was covered, and up to four batteries could concentrate their fire on a single target. It would not take long for the concentrated fire of two such vessels to batter down the gunship's shields, and then to destroy it. Then Indomitable joined the fight, and the alignment suddenly changed. "Let's see if we can divide their attention," Brand said. "Vanguard, concentrate your fire on the trailer. We'll take on the lead ship. All batteries, fire." Indomitable's first salvo drew an immediate response from the Yevethan vessel, drawing the fire of half a dozen gun batteries. But the interceptor screen paid the price--two of the forward interceptors exploded, one after the other, as one of the Yevethan batteries targeted the tiny escorts. The brilliant flare of light made Brand momentarily turn away. "Pull the screen back," he snapped. "There's nothing out there they can help us with right now." Before the fighters could respond, a third fighter exploded just off the starboard shield boundary. It was like having a bomb go off at close proximity--the cruiser shuddered, and its shields 'glowed a pale yellow under the assault, signifying a momentary softening at that spot. But the shield firmed up quickly, and the remaining interceptors survived to slip behind the cruiser and hide in its shield shadow. "Commodore," the tactical officer said quietly. Brand looked up. "What?" "We're not getting through the Fat Man's shields. Vanguard isn't doing any better. We may have to redirect the bombers." "No," Brand said, shaking his head. "The shipyard is the priority target." "Commodore, Vanguard's taking a beating. We have to get her some help now." The cruiser shuddered around them. "Retarget Green Flight," Brand said reluctantly. By that time, the lead Yevethan vessel had discovered the flights of bombers trying to slip past. As though contemptuous of the cruiser's ability to harm it, the thrustship diverted its attention to the smaller ships, picking off two X-wings and a K-wing almost immediately. Moments later, it began to launch its own fighters. "Brand to all batteries--target those hostile fighters! Pick 'em up where they clear the shields." "Target is launching missiles," the tactical officer said, drawing a deep breath. "Six--eight--ten articles, all tracking this way." There were more than twenty fast-firing, fast-track-ing antimissile octets arrayed around Indornitable's hull, and those that had a firing solution immediately began filling the missiles' projected path with a cloud of high-velocity metal shrapnel. When the missiles and the cloud met, spectacular flowers of red and yellow fire blossomed silently in the vacuum. But four missiles burst through the bouquet like angry insects, and three survived to slam in close succession against the cruiser's shield perimeter, The bridge lights dimmed as the ship rocked under Brand's feet. "Trading punches," Brand said. "Arm and fire six, count 'em, six CM-nines. All batteries stand by to target the points of impact. Helm, move us closer." Within seconds, launchers on both flanks of the cruiser spat out the high-velocity concussion missiles. They looped toward the thrustship on individual, indirect flight profiles meant to make them harder to intercept. "Number three particle-shield generator is off-line--we now have zero reserve capacity," said the tactical officer. "I count eleven Yevethan fighters under way. Green Flight has lost five fighters and two bombers. Blue Flight has lost three fighters and one bomber. Red Flight--" A brilliant flare of light flooded the bridge, drawing Brand's eyes to the forward viewscreen. "Was that an egg?" "Yes," said the tac officer. "Negative on target. That was Green Two---he must have armed it early, and it blew up under him. Lost three fighter signals at the same time." "Damn." "Commodore, Blue Flight has broken through and is making an attack run on the shipyard." Pointing to the middle of the plot table, the tactical officer identified the two small blue triangles moving toward the red rectangle that was the yard. Brand nodded grimly and studied the plot. "Good. We're running short of pieces," he said. "Send Black Flight to help Vanguard. We can't afford to lose that one." The orbitaLshipyard the ImPerial Navy had called Black Nine was unarmed but not unprotected. In addition to the collision shields needed by any space-based complex, it was equipped with ray and particle shields comparable to those of a Star Destroyer. Its guardian thrustships, Tholos and Rizaron, more than made up for the yard's offensive deficiencies. In addition to eight main batteries, each also carried forty fighters in four bays along the ship's equator, and four ten-tube reloadable missile launchers. With their enhanced Imperial shields, they were formidable warships. The greatest weakness of Tholos was the inexperience of its primate, Par Drann. Like virtually all of his crew, Par Drann had never been in combat--not even to the extent of taking part in the Cleansing. So when the New Republic ships appeared, Par Drann responded out of the old instincts that governed fighting among the nitakka. Those instincts, as inherently contradictory as they were innately strong, said the closest threat is the greatest threat-in a right of unequal numbers, dispatch your weakest opponent first-to discourage others from joining a fight against you, charge a newcomer immediately-hold nothing back when you go to kill-So it was that Par Drann's orders to his gun crews kept changing--to attack the gunship that first appeared, then the cruiser that joined the fight, then the vulnerable interceptor screen, then the bombers as they flew past, then the cruiser again as the bombers retreated. The Yevethan fighter pilots obeyed the same dictums, each singling out the nearest target and attacking it fearlessly, but often breaking off an attack when a closer target appeared. If Tholos and Rizaron had continued their combined attack on Vanguard, they could have destroyed it before the late-arriving cruiser could do either of them harm. If Par Drann had allowed for it, Tholos could have swept the battlefield clean of New Republic fighters and bombers before turning its attention to Indomitable. And if the Yevethan fighters had pursued Blue Flight toward the shipyard or Black Flight toward Rizaron, the outcome of the battle might have been different. But his Yevethan perspective did not allow Par Drann to recognize the threat they posed--not with Indomitable bearing down on him. "Thetan nitakka, ko nakaza!" he cried. "To the strongest of us, glory in the kill!" There was fire aboard Vanguard by the time Black Flight attracted the notice of Rizaron. Battery number eight, a twin-barrel laser cannon, had misfired in a spectacular explosion that gouged the entire gun compartment out of the side of the gunship. Worse, the snapback from a salvo of Yevethan missiles had left the particle-shield generators dead and burning. The next Yevethan missile would explode against the hull, not the shields, and the thrustship's ion cannon were playing havoc with power all over the ship. Captain Inadi viewed the arrival of the bombers with more apprehension than relief. "They'll never get through," she said, shaking her head. "Weapons, keep up the counterfire. Let's help them all we can. Helm, show the enemy our minimum cross section. Systems, give priority to the forward antimissile stations--they have to have power." With the help of telescopic holo and the electronic battle plot, Inadi and the bridge crew watched the bombers jinking at high speed through the rain of laser blasts and ion bolts. An E-wing accompanying Black Two took a direct hit and spun out, burning. Black Three disappeared in a sphere of white fire, its escorts peeling away and narrowly escaping the hurtling debris. Just then, Vanguard shook as though it had been hit. "Damage control is reporting that the fire in the generator compartment has blown through and ventilated to vacuum." "Noted. Weapons, launch all remaining CM-nines," Inadi said with a frown. "Maybe we can set her up for the knockout." Three missiles leaped from the bow launchers, another four from the stern tubes. An eighth, located in a launcher adjacent to the destroyed number eight battery, hung up in the tube, starting a third fire. "Incoming!" shouted the tracking officer. The Yevethan thrustship had answered Vanguard's salvo with one of its own--a cluster of ten more of the swift, powerful missiles that had destroyed the particle-shield generators. "Helm, get us out of here," Inadi said grimly. "I'll do my best." The 190-meter gunship was among the most agile of the New Republic capital vessels, but it could not come close to matching the acceleration of the enemy missiles. Inadi's hope was that running would give the octets at the stern enough time to swat away all of the pursuing missiles. As she watched the gap close she regretted not having turned the ship sooner. "Our CM-nines should reach the target in eight seconds," the tracking officer reported. "Bomber escorts have broken off--bombers are launching their missiles now. Confirming release of an egg from Black One--confirming release of an egg from Black Twenty--" Something struck Vanguard astern with so much force that the tactical officer was knocked to his hands and knees and Inadi was thrown hard against the plot table. "Missile impact," the damage control officer called out. "Everything's dead back of section forty," the systems officer reported. "Engines two, four, and six are gone," said the helmsman. "Thrust now at one quarter and falling." Inadi stared at the plot table as two more fast-moving blips closed on her vessel. "Get to the pods," she said hoarsely. "All stations, abandon ship--abandon ship--" Her answer was a roaring sound, darkness, a fierce light, and, finally, silence. Hovering five thousand meters above the barren, pitted surface of ILC-905's third planet, Esege Tuketu and the other members of Red Flight watched the flashes of light overhead as they waited impatiently for their chance. The order to stand off had come just as they had begun climbing toward the shipyard for their attack run. "Hold your position until we have the results of the attacks underway," said the tactical officer. "I need something in reserve, and you're it." "They'd better leave some for us," Skids said over the bomber's cockpit comm on hearing their instructions. "We come back with the racks full and no scratches on the paint, and we'll never hear the end of it." Tuketu said nothing. His eye had been drawn by the first of several brilliant explosions, above and port-side of them. "That was an egg," he said, marking the distinctive pure white color of the flash. "And another." The third explosion was different--smaller and yellower at first, but longer-lived, and larger and redder at its peak. As it started to fade, there was another series of flashes at nearly the same spot in the sky--three small blue-white flashes, then a blood-red irregular billow. When Tuketu looked back at his tracking display, both the trailing thrustship and Vanguard had disappeared. "What was all that?" Skids demanded. "Did we get one, Tuke?" "Yeah," said Tuketu. "And so did they." Both the successful attack on the second thrustship and the loss of Vanguard went nearly ignored on the bridge of Indomitable. The focus was the last few seconds of Blue Flight's dive toward the shipyard. "Two thousand meters to shield boundary," said the tactical officer. "Fighters are pulling out. Fifteen hundred. One thousand. Confirming release on Blue One--oh, blast, where'd he come from? Negative release on Blue Three. Somebody got 'im." A Yevethan fighter streaking across at right angles to the attack vector had fired on Blue Three, first crippling it and then colliding with the debris. That tiny explosion was swallowed moments later by the detonation of Blue One's egg. "Find out if the shields are down," Brand said grimly. "Battery four, give me three bursts on the secondary target." The laser bolts expended themselves uselessly against nothingness. The shields were still intact. "Commodore, maybe the thrustship that's docked there is protecting it." "No ship that size produces a shield envelope that large," Brand argued. "How did we take out the other ship?" · "Battle analysis says that Vanguard and Black Flight hit that Fat Man with seven CM-nines and ten CM-fives in the seconds before the first egg cracked. That must have pushed the shields close to their limit." "Close to their limit," Brand repeated, then stabbed a finger at the plot table, pointing at the thrust ship attached to the shipyard. "What's the standard radius of an Imperial particle shield?" "Two hundred meters." "What's the diameter of a Fat Man?" "Two hundred forty meters." "So the one that's docked--it's not fully enclosed by the yard's shields." "So what? It has its own shields. Which are sure to be back up by now, even if it did have them down for unloading." "Exactly. Which means that there should be an interference zone between the two shield boundaries," said Brand. "If we can wedge something in there--" "Then the shields will concentrate and focus the blast, multiplying the effective yield." "Can a K-wing targeting computer find the interference zone?" Still trading blows with the lead thrustship, Indomitable shook and groaned around them. "No," said the tac officer, shaking his head. "But the E-wings ought to be able to light it up for them." Brand nodded. "Signal Red Flight. Tell them what we need." Tuketu found it eerily disconcerting to be climbing toward such a huge target and not be receiving any defensive fire. The thrustship docked at the shipyard was completely and inexplicably passive to their approach. "Tactical," said Tuketu. "Has this Fat Man mixed it up at all yet?" "Negative, Red One. We have not seen any activity." "Ignoring us so far, too, Tac." He closed the link and 'called back to Skids, "Maybe it's just a freighter. Or a dormitory." "Doesn't matter to me," said Skids. "You get us there, I'll dent it up the same no matter what it is." They were not to go completely unmolested--that was too much to expect. Five Yevethan fighters screamed in from the starboard, sending one E-wing spinning down toward the planet on a plume of smoke and drawing two others away in pursuit. Tuketu increased both his speed and the rate of his evasive maneuvers, challenging his escort to keep up with him. "Who is that over there, Cover Four?" "They call me Dogo, sir." "Well, Dogo, they tell me that somewhere about a hundred meters wide of that Fat Man there's a seam between two shields. You paint it up so I can see it, and Skids here will do his best to rip it open." "Will do, sir." The E-wing jumped ahead and shortly after began firing its laser cannon at the invisible wall ahead, neatly sweeping his aim back and forth across its face. "There it is," called Dogo. "I've got it--clear out," Tuketu said at the same moment, looking at the line revealed by the E-wing's laser fire. "Looks pretty tight, Skids. Hang on to the egg--see if you can get a CM-five in there." "I don't need any flapping target practice," Skids grumbled, but complied. "Ready to fire." "Clear to fire." "Missile away." Running up the big third engine, Tuketu began a dizzying pullout. "Red Two, what do you see?" "Sorry, Red One--your bird exploded at the shield boundary. Repeat, did not get in. Let me have a run at it." "Negative," Tuketu said, wheeling the bomber around for another pass. "There's something I want to try--" There was a sudden crackle of static, then Red Two came back on, his voice suddenly tight with excitement. "Tuke, that lead Fat Man's coming back this way--Cover Eight just got toasted." "Run for cover," Tuketu said. "Take my escort--I've got the target zeroed. Keep the yard between you and the Fat Man. If I don't get in this time, I want you and Flick to put your eggs right on the seam, one-two. Got it?" "Got it. What are you up to?" "Just get clear and be ready to scamper." Tuketu switched off the combat comm. "Skids?" "Here as always." "I want to take her in and park right on that seam, zero velocity, so you can line it up from ten meters away. If it goes in, I'll get us clear--their own shields will protect us long enough." "You think so." yard. "This thing's full of Star Destroyers, Skids. It's got to go, Can you make the shot? It's up to you." "Yeah, I can make the shot," he said. "Let's do it." "What in the devil is he up to?" Brand demanded. "He didn't drop his egg on the first pass, and now he's just sitting there." "I don't know--his combat comm's down," said the tactical officer. "It almost looks like he's trying to put himself right in the interference zone." Brand looked away from the plot table and out at the shipyard just in time to see it enveloped in an enormous explosion that ripped the thrustship free and sent the yard into a slow, tumbling roll. Swallowing hard, he ordered the mains directed at the mortally wounded structure and watched as they tore through what was left, turning the jumble of vessels inside into a spreading cloud of burned and twisted debris. While the dissection continued, the damaged thrustship slowly fell planetward in a graceful death dive. The lead thrustship followed it part of the way down, then climbed out and away under full thrust, leaving half a dozen of its fighters scattered behind it, abandoned. Brand turned away and leaned heavily on the plot table with both hands, as though he needed support for shaky legs. "Now we know what it takes to beat them," he whispered. "Begin recovery operations." Three thousand kilometers above the plane of the star system, the thrustship Tholos slowed to a stop and turned end for end. During the climb out from the third planet, a full load of gravity bombs had been racked in the central drop chute, and the main batteries had been shuttled along their internal tracks until all eight were located in the ship's upper hemisphere. From there, they could be directed at a single target during the attack dive, Hold nothing back when you go to kill!" "Ko nakaza!" cried Par Drann, his fighting crests flushed and swollen. "Soko darama! for the honor of the viceroy, the Blessed, the All. Now, Proctor--there is our target. Speed! Before the vermin escape us--" Nil Spaar gently caressed the mara-nas hanging in alcove five. In only three days it had more than doubled in size, and the surface had taken on a rich iridescent sheen that foretold a superior nesting. Wrapping his tongue around his finger, he drew in the complex scent and taste of the oily secretions. Nitakka, he thought. A strong young male to Carry my blood. There was a noise behind him, and the viceroy turned to see Tal Fraan standing in the doorway of the cell. Behind him, Nil Spaar caught a blurred glimpse of the keeper as he hurried away, his errand completed. "Darama," Tal Fraan said, taking one step into the alcove and kneeling, his head lowered, his neck bared. "My proctor cogent," said Nil Spaar. With a half stride forward, he reached out and lightly laid his hand on the back of Tal Fraan's head, keeping him in the posture of submission. "Tell me--when you warranted your knowledge of the vermin with your blood, was it sincere, or simply what was expected?" "Most sincere, darama." "Good," said Nil Spaar, tightening his grip on the younger male's skull. His fighting crests were a purplish red and swelling quickly. "Now let us be certain of my memory. Did you promise me that the prospect of an alliance between myself and these Imperial vermin would fill Leia with such fear that she would not dare make war against the Blessed? This was a shadow they feared and would not dare enter--did you say that?" "Darama, what has happened?" Nil Spaar pushed Tal Fraan's head down sharply, until his neck was bent to the breaking point. He made a fist with his other hand, and the long, sharp dewclaw slid out of its retractile casing. "The vermin destroyed Black Nine, at Prildaz." The resistance went out of Tal Fraan's body. "I give you my blood as a gift to your child," he murmured. "You gave me this gift once before," said Nil Spaar. "But this time I will take it." He struck with such sudden violence that Tal Fraan's head was severed completely, coming free in his hand while the body dropped to the floor. Discarding the head with casual contempt, Nil Spaar stepped over the body and left the alcove as the keeper came running. "The sacrifice was unclean," Nil Spaar said. "None of his blood is to go to my children. Make meal of his carcass." "Yes, Viceroy." Taking no notice of the blood spattered on his armor and vestments, Nil Spaar strode through the corridors with long strides and a vengeful countenance, driving those he encountered to flee before him. When he reached his quarters, he shouted for Eri Palle. "Yes, darama," said the attache, coming at a run. One glance was enough to tell him the viceroy's state, and Eri Palle took care to abase himself well out of the viceroy's reach. "How can I serve you?" Send for Vor Duull. Tell Vor Duull to bring his boxes," said Nil Spaar, plunging himself into the deep, comforting folds of his own nesting. "And then bring Han Solo to me--I have a message to send to the vermin queen." For once, there was no craft or subtlety in a transmission from Nil Spaarand for once, there was absolute silence in the conference room. Leia watched it with her arms wrapped tight against her body, one hand covering her mouth. When it was over, she left the room, her face white, her eyes dead. Ackbar was little better off, despite having looked away through the worst of it. Alole was weeping silently, fat tears painting her round cheeks. Behn-Kihl-Nahm wore a scowl of ultimate contempt. Alone in his office, Drayson wore a mask of cold rage. They had seen Nil Spaar savagely beating a bound Han for nearly twenty minutes--not just beating him, but kicking and hurling him about an empty compartment in an animal rage. The beating went on until Han was bleeding freely from his mouth, his nose, from gashes on his face and arms, his chest, his calf. The beating went on until Han's blood was smeared on the bulkheads, the deck, and halfway up Nil Spaar's powerful forearms. The beating went on until Han could no longer stand when the viceroy dragged him to his feet, not even with a wall to support him. For long seconds, Nil Spaar had stood in a half crouch over Han's crumpled form. The viceroy was partly turned away from the lens, and they could not see his face. But they could see his thorax plates rise and fall, and one hand flexing menacingly as a great claw appeared, vanished, appeared, and vanished again. Then Nil Spaar had straightened and turned to face them. They saw that he was bleeding as well--tiny rivulets running from the two enlarged scarlet crests at his temples. Staring into the holocam, he had wiped at the blood with the back of one hand, then sucked his hand clean. Finally, he had made his message explicit, though with unusual economy of words--the only words spoken throughout the entire horror, delivered in a dark, angry growl: "Leave Koornacht now." Chapter 8 Akanah was the first to discover the Yevethan starship orbiting J't'p'tan. As soon as Mud Sloth dropped out of hyperspace on the fringe of the Doornik 628 system, Akanah slipped away to the service compartment. There she entered a deep meditation, submerging herself in the Current and searching for the presence of the Circle. Staying at the skiff's controls, Luke first performed a sweep with Mud Sloth's feeble sensors, then closed his eyes and entered his own reverie, connecting to his new surroundings and searching for local disturbances in the Force. Neither he nor the skiff found anything of note, but when Akanah rejoined him, she told him of her discovery. "How do you know? Can you actually see this ship?" he asked skeptically. "It is difficult to explain. Let me try to show you--" "In a moment," Luke said. "Explain first." "Is this important now? What does it matter how I know? I know." "It matters if you expect us to base what we do on what you've told me," he said. The unspoken tensions dating back to Utharis were fully awakened by then. "Have you become a skeptic, now?" she asked, her expression more hurt than angry. "You no longer trust my gifts?" "Akanah, I know there's more than one source of knowledge and more than one kind of truth--" "Is it that the Jedi are unwilling to share the Force, then?" she asked. "Are you uncomfortable knowing I have a path to knowledge that doesn't require you, that isn't yet open to you? At the same time that you ask me to teach you, you seem to need to doubt, even to discredit--" Luke was shaking his head vigorously. "No, no, that's wrong. The Force is a river from which many can drink, and the training of the Jedi is not the only cup that can catch it," he said. "If we didn't know that before we met the witches of Dathomir, we surely know it now." "That is something, at least." "But the truth lives side by side with lies, and errors, and self-deceptions--with hopeful dreams, and baseless fears, and mistaken memories," Luke added gently. "And we have to try to know one from the other. All I ask is that you help me understand the source of your insight. That will help me know what weight to give it." "Is the damage done at Utharis still with us?" she asked sadly. "I had hoped to receive your trust again." "There's very little I trust in this life, Akanah--myself included." "Too true," she agreed. "Very well--I will try to explain." Akanah frowned as she searched for the right words. "Where the Current touches self-awareness, there is a tiny ripple--as when you sense a presence with the Force. The metaphor is more different than the means." "But I can't feel anything here--nothing more than the energy of the ecosystems on the fourth and fifth planets," Luke said. "Nothing of consciousness--noth-ing of will." "It is not consciousness or will that matters--it is the profound essence of being, nothing more,, she said. "I can perceive the crew just as you would perceive a handful of sand I scattered on the far side of a pool. From a distance, sometimes you can see only the effect, not the cause." She smiled. "But you must be very still to see even that, for you are also of the Current, surrounded by the ripples of your being." "So what you sense is the crew of this ship?" "Whether they are crew, or cargo, or captives, I can't say. I only know that there are many thousands there, orbiting J't'p'tan, and some smaller number on the surface below." "Colonists," said Luke. "They must be here to settle the planet." At her questioning look, he added, "I heard some rumors in Taldaak that the Yevetha were expanding their territory by taking over the habitable worlds." "And you trust these rumors because--" He laughed grimly. "Because they came from the Fleet. I obtained a tactical briefing on the war." "So you already knew that a ship was here," she said. "And said nothing to me of it." "I knew that a ship was here at one time," Luke said. "I didn't say anything to you because I couldn't. I take seriously the oath that allows me access to secure data. I wouldn't tell your secrets to them, either," he added. "Then you weren't testing me just now? To learn if I've spied on you?" "No," Luke said. "I just needed to know how you knew. What about the Circle?" She shook her head. "The essence of concealment is merging with what surrounds you. Not even the best among us could answer your question at this distance, and I am far from the best. I hear only silence--I do not know what the silence means." Pushing Mud Sloth to its navigational limits, Luke began to contrive a spiraling approach that would keep the mass of the planet between the skiff and the Yevethan vessel. "Best for everyone if they never see us at all," he said as he charted the course. "Done," Akanah said, looking on from behind Luke's flight couch. Luke looked up at her quizzically. "It can't be that easy." "Why not?" "Eh--don't you have to know who it is you're trying to hide from?" "Why?" she asked. "So you have a focus. So you know whose thoughts you're trying to deflect. It's done with precision, not brute force." "That's coercive," she said. "And invasive. You reach into another mind and bind its thoughts, or place your own there." "Well--yes," Luke said. "But the use of that power is constrained. The purpose must be important enough to justify the deed and the consequences." "It seems the Jedi are always finding reasons to justify their violence," she said. "I wish you would try as hard to find ways to avoid it." "Violence? What violence?" Luke protested. "More often than not, all that's required is to induce a moment's inattention, or reinforce a suspicion. No harm is involved. A sworn Jedi would never--oh, make someone walk off a cliff thinking there was a bridge there." Akanah shook her head in earnest disagreement. "You, who've immune to your own tricks--who are you to judge the harm done? You do this in secret, to lead a suggestible mind, or compel an opposed one. Do you think that those you've coerced see the morality of it the same as you do? Besides," she sniffed, "it's inefficient." "What?" "Inefficient," she repeated. "It requires your constant attention and involvement." "If you know an alternative, I'm your eager student." "What about the way you concealed your hermitage?" Luke frowned. "That's different. I created it from elemental substances to have that quality--to blend in with the coastline as though it were part of it." "It was a powerful bit of work," she said. "When I saw it, I knew you had the gift of the Fallanassi. But you didn't go far enough and apply the principle to its ultimate conclusion." "Which is--" "To make it not merely resemble its surroundings, but merge with them," Akanah said. Closing her eyes, she drew a deep breath. She let the breath out slowly as she lowered her chin to her chest--and then she was not there. "I'll be a--" Luke reached for her where she had been standing, but his hand grabbed only air. "Cute trick," he said, taking a step toward the refresher, away from the forward deck. "Handy for breaking into libraries, escaping arranged marriages--where are you?" "Here," she said from behind him. He turned to find her sitting sideways in the right-hand seat, wearing a small proud smile. "Did I touch your mind?" "No," he admitted. "Not that I could notice." Akanah nodded. "A long time ago, one of the Circle discovered that when she achieved a particularly profound Meditation of Immersion, she would disappear from the view of others. Much later, we learned how to take an object in with us and leave it there." "Where do you go when you disappear?" "Where do you go when you dream? It's impossible to say. What does an answer from that context mean in this one?" "Well--is it difficult?" She shrugged. "Once mastered, it's no more difficult or mysterious than concealing a cup of water by pouring it in the sea." Then she smiled. "But achieving mastery is much like trying to remove that cup of water afterward." "And you've merged this ship?" "Yes. Some time ago, while I was in meditation." "Will the engines still work?" "Did the floors of your hermitage hold you, and the roof keep out the rain?" Luke wrinkled up his face. "So we're completely undetectable now?" "No," she said. "Nothing is absolute. But we're safe from eyes, and from the machines that are like eyes. Take us directly to J't'p'tan, Luke--as quickly as you can. Trust me in this, at least. I've depended on this art for my survival, virtually from the time I was taken from Ialtra. I promise you that we won't be discovered-not by the beings in that starship." The stone ruins of the temple of J't'p'tan sprawled over more than two thousand hectares. Even scorched and smashed, what remained made the extent of the builders' ambition clear. The ruins filled the floor of a pocket valley with an intricate pattern and climbed the inner walls of the enclosing hills. But it was also clear long before MudSloth landed in the middle of an open diamond that the ambitions of the H'kig had collided with the ambitions of the Yevetha, and the latter had triumphed. Long walls of finely chiseled cutstone had been toppled and shattered. The slope of the hills had been undercut in several places, collapsing parts of the great structure onto itself. The quarries were half filled with water, the quarry sledges burned to charcoal, the quarry road blasted out of existence. And nowhere was there a hint of life. Luke climbed down from the skiff slowly, word-lessly. The destruction assaulted his senses--there was a sick smell on the slight breeze, and before he had gone a dozen meters from the ship his eyes began to pick out the blackened lumps of corpses among the scattered stones. "It's like Ialtra all over again, only worse," he whispered to himself. Then he turned back toward the skiff, looking for Akanah. He found her kneeling on the paving stones near the ship's front skid, bent forward with her head on her forearms. "Akanah--" When she made no response, gave no sign she even heard, he became concerned and moved toward her. But she rose to her feet before he reached her and moved away from him at an angle, climbing over a jumble of stones that had once been a wall and then breaking into a run. Puzzled, Luke stopped and called after her. "Akanah--what is it? Where are you going?" Reaching out with his sense skill, Luke swept his surroundings for threats, but found none. "Akanah!" When she did not even look back, he started after her. But in the next moment, she vanished--as thoroughly and effortlessly as she had aboard the ship. There was not even a tremble in the Force to mark her disappearance or betray her presence afterward. Luke's first thought was of betrayal. She got me here like she was supposed to, and now she's getting herself out of the way. Crouching behind a jumble of broken cutstone, Luke swept the area again, concentrating on the ridgeline of the enclosing hills. The ship's vulnerable--if I were them, I'd take it out first. But there was no blaster fire from the hills, no sudden appearance by troops concealed in the rubble, no patrol flyer swooping up through the entrance to the valley. He found his failure to detect any other life presence-Imperial, Yevethan, H'kig, Fallanassi--puzzling. "Akanah!" he called loudly. There was no answer. Luke stood up slowly, letting his lightsaber fall from his hand to dangle at his hip. Still scanning warily, he walked to where Akanah had knelt, but there were no clues there. Maybe she never was real, he thought. Maybe someone's been playing with my mind. Whether he was alone or not, Luke did not intend to become stranded on J't'p'tan, with only a Yevethan colony eight thousand klicks away to look to for help. There was no place to hide or shelter Mud Sloth, but he knew that the skiffs navigation shields would provide some protection against hand blasters and other small weapons. Luke revisited the cockpit just long enough to activate them, then sealed the hatch and set off in the direction Akanah had been heading when she vanished. When he reached the spot where he had last seen her--or as closely as he could fix it--he sat down on the edge of a giant building stone that was scorched black and cracked in half. "No Yevetha. No Fallanassi. No Akanah," he said aloud. "No Imperial troopers. No Nashira. So why am I here? There's something missing from this picture. What's this all been about? There's something here still not seen." Prodded by his own words, Luke turned his head slowly to one side, then the other. "Maybe a lot of somethings not seen," he said, more loudly. "Finding a cup of water in an ocean, was it? I can do that. All it takes is time, and knowing that it can be done." When there was still no response, Luke stood. "If I have to pick between your being an illusion and your being real, Akanah, I think I have reason enough to know that you're real." He turned slowly in a circle, waiting. "So I know that you're still here--and I'd bet that you can hear me." When waiting was not rewarded, Luke climbed atop the broken stone, making an easy target of himself. "At first I thought you were hiding from whoever did this," he called. "But they're long gone and far away, aren't they? And you didn't run away in fear, did you--no, you wouldn't need to. You told me over and over that you can protect yourself." Jumping down, he began walking slowly in the direction Akanah had been going when she vanished. "Which leaves only one conclusion, Akanah--that you were running toward something. That you found what you were looking for." He felt his throat tighten as envy washed over him, and his next words came out with a hoarse rasp. "That the Circle is here." Ten meters away to Luke's right, three women suddenly appeared, as though they had stepped through an invisible curtain. One wore a sashed white gown with diagonal sky blue bands. Her silver hair tumbled down her shoulders to her waist. A second, copper-skinned and short-haired, wore very little at all--a dusty yellow wrap that started low on her hips and fell only to her knees. Akanah was standing between them, clinging to their hands with fierce possessiveness, her face streaked with tears and lit by a profound joy. "This is Wialu, who marked the way for me," she said brightly, her voice thick with emotion. "And this is Nori--Norika, my friend of long ago." She looked from one to the other, first left, then right, with an almost disbelieving expression in her eyes. Then she smiled a giddy smile and looked toward Luke. "Yes, Luke--I am real, and they are real. And I am finally home!" Wialu released Akanah's hand and came forward to where a stunned Luke stood. "You helped our child Akanah return to us," she said. "We are grateful to you for that. Akanah tells us the burden was taken freely, but the risk and sacrifice were substantial. Is there a debt owed?" "What?" Luke searched Akanah's face. "Not a debt, no." Wialu nodded. "You are the man of honor that she said you were," she said. "Your friendship to the Fallanassi will be remembered." "Thank you," Luke said uncertainly. "Your ship must be removed from here as soon as possible," she said. "It has already been a disruption, and its presence threatens what we do here." "Of course," Luke said. "Just show me where you'd like me to move it to--" "It must leave the planet," said Wialu. "Its presence in the temple is intolerable, but even elsewhere it would be a danger." "It's Akanah's ship." "She has given it to you, in gratitude," said Wialu. "But it is also simple pragmatism that she do so." Luke squinted. "Are you telling me I have to leave?" "I am grateful for your understanding." Luke looked again to Akanah, expecting her to speak out. "I can't do that," he said. 'Akanah isn't the only one who came here hoping for a reunion--I'm searching for someone, too. Her name is Nashira." Walu's expression did not change, but she inclined her head back almost imperceptibly, as though listening to something Luke could not hear. "I am sorry," she said. "I do not say I know the name--I do not say that I do not know the name. I cannot help you." "I can't accept that," Luke said. "If she's here, you have to at least tell her that I'm here. If she isn't--" He shook his head as though throwing off a thought. "I'm her son." Wialu turned her head as though listening to someone behind her. "I'm sorry," she said at last. "My answer must be the same." Luke stepped past her in the direction of Akanah, then stopped and turned back. "It's not a debt," he said, "but it was a promise. Akanah said that she would help me find Nashira. She thought we would find her here with you." "Is this true?" Wialu asked, looking past him to Akanah. "It is," she said. "His loss has been longer and more profound than mine. He has been separated from the Current and ignorant of the Creed. I had hoped to bring him to them." "Reckless," said Wialu, shaking her head. "We will speak of this later." She turned to Luke. "I am oath-bound. None of us can betray another to outsiders, by denial or by affirmation. Akanah cannot make such a promise, and such a promise cannot bind me." "I'm not asking you to betray your oath. All you need to do is tell Nashira that Luke is here, and let her decide what to do." He looked past her, sweeping his gaze across the ruins. "Or let me tell her. Bring her here and let her see. She can choose." "That is impossible," Wialu said. "You speak a name, and if I give that name meaning, I have given you power over she who carries it. I'm sorry. I cannot help an outsider." "He's not an outsider," said Akanah, letting go of Norika's hand and advancing on Wialu. "He asked to learn the ways of the Current, and I have taken him as my student." "This is also impossible," said Wialu, "for you are but an untrained child yourself." Akanah's eyes flashed anger. Her hand shot out and grabbed Luke's wrist. "You do not understand the importance of his presence," she said darkly. "You do not understand the importance of his quest." "Do not do this, Akanah." It was said with sadness rather than threat. "What choice have you left me?" Closing her eyes, she threw her head back and drew a sharp breath. The air trembled. The bodies, the ruins, began to shimmer and dissolve. Akanah let out a little cry of pain, or surprise. Standing beside her, Luke felt her anger drawing on the Force--controlling, not merging, hurling it against something he could scarcely perceive. Then, in an eyeblink, everything before him, everything surrounding him, was transformed. The burned bodies vanished. The scorching was bleached from the cutstone, the shattered stones healed, the toppled walls and towers restored, the scarred hills painted and smoothed. The tragedy of the ruins was transformed into a glorious work in progress, filling the valley in every direction and filled with the vitality of thousands of solemnly industrious H'kig. Akanah gazed defiantly at Wialu, whose answering look mixed gentle reproof and regret. "My stars," Luke breathed. "It wasn't destroyed? You've been hiding this from the Yevetha--" "Yes," said Wialu. "Akanah must have thought this important for you to know." Luke shook his head in disbelief. "The Fleet memorandum called this a cult colony--they have no idea-- look at what they've done! How long have the H'kig been here?" "Not even fifty years," said Wialu. "Just in the time since we arrived, we have seen it grow almost beyond belief. It is a constant wonder." A quartet of H'kig dragging a heavily laden sledge passed between Wialu and Luke. "They're doing this work by hand?" he asked. "No fusion cutters, no droids?" "That is the meaning of it--the purpose in it. The building of it is a way of giving honor. That work cannot be given to a machine," Wialu said. "The temple embodies their vision of the universe, of the mystical essences--the immanent, the transcendent, the eternal, the conscious." "How long until they finish?" "They may never finish," she said. "It is the life's work of a community united by the purpose that defines them." "Is this why you're here?" "Yes," she said. "And it is why you must leave." "You're protecting them. Protecting this." She nodded. "It became necessary." "How long are you prepared to keep doing it?" "Until it is no longer necessary." Wialu stepped closer. "Please-your ship-is resting in what will be the Inner Court of the Transcendent. It is distracting the H'kig, and disrupting the work. It is time for you to go." "Wait," Luke said. "The day of the attack. The bombardment, the planetary blasters--those weren't illusions." "Then what happened here?" "As I have already said. We protected ourselves, and these people, and the others where we could. I will not say more." "Protected them with illusions," Luke said. "Wialu, you know that this isn't the only construction project under way on this planet. There's a Yevethan colony ship in sync orbit on the other side of this planet and a colony city being built on the surface. Akanah knew that, so I'm sure you do, too. The Yevetha think this is their world now." "They are mistaken," said Wialu. "Not necessarily," Luke said. "They claim all the stars in their sky, and all the worlds of those stars. What you were able to prevent from happening here happened on a dozen other planets where there was no Fallanassi Circle to provide a shield and deceive the Yevetha. The bodies on those worlds were real." "We know what happened there," said Wialu. "Then let me ask you what you know about what's about to happen," said Luke, a harder edge coming into his voice. "What the Yevetha did here has been challenged by my sister. Their claim to this planet and all the others will be contested--with force. Two opposing fleets are gathering up there--hundreds of ships, tens of thousands of soldiers. If this war comes, it will be long, brutal, and bloody. And it will come here. He saw that his words had reached her fears. "I have seen it coming." "Will you help me try to stop it?" "We cannot allow ourselves to be used that way. Our loyalty is to the Light, and our way is of the Current. Nothing has changed." "If nothing has changed, then you're divided among yourselves, as you were on Lucazec," Luke said, looking past Wialu, searching for other Fallanassi faces among the H'kig. "There must be at least some of you who believe that you must do what you can do, just as you protected these people." "It is not our war. It is yours, and theirs." "Neither was this your war," he said. "But you intervened, and saved these lives, and this treasure." Then he pointed at Akanah. "She challenged me to put down my weapon and try to find other ways to serve my conscience. What she asked isn't easy for me, but I've seen the worth in trying. Now I challenge you to give up your isolation, and be the water that quenches the flame." At that moment another woman, slender and larger eyed, appeared beside Wialu, surrendering her concealment to take part in the colloquy. "Can this be done?" she asked. "Of course it can," said a voice from another direction. Luke turned to find two more Fallanassi standing by-the temple wall. "The Yevetha are vulnerable to us," said the shorter of them. "If we wished for the invaders to crash their ship into the city they are building, any one of us could accomplish it, at any time." A young Duu'ranh female appeared nearly at Luke's elbow, startling him for a moment. "But can it be done without such violence?" she asked. "The goal is to prevent a war, not to join it, or decide the victor. We cannot choose sides." "You must," Luke said. "It's not enough to simply prevent the fighting--there has to be a resolution to the conflict behind it. You must choose to frustrate the will of one side or the other--the Yevetha, or the New Republic." "The difference between them is immaterial," said a new voice, behind Luke. He turned to see a round-bodied Ukanis woman holding a child. "To build a war fleet is to accept the morality of violence and coercion. They are equally guilty." "When war comes, the price is paid by the guilty and 'the innocent alike," Luke said. "And we are paying the price instead of the H'kig," said Akanah. "We will never be free to leave here so long as the Yevetha remain." "Not unless you're prepared to see these people and this place destroyed," Luke said. "And the Yevetha will never leave of their own accord. They believe that they are the rightful inheritors of all the worlds they conquered--including J't'p'tan." Turning in a slow circle, Luke found that more than twenty Fallanassi had revealed themselves. "You have to decide whether to affirm their belief or reject it," he said. "You must choose." "And what would we be choosing if we chose to involve ourselves?" asked Wialu. "If they are as resolute as you say, how can the will of the Yevetha be frustrated without force?" Luke turned quickly toward her. "I don't know for certain that it can," he said. "What I'm asking is, are you willing to try? Are you willing to use your gifts in an effort to prevent the war--a war that will surely come if you do nothing? There's very little time left. Once both fleets are committed to the fight, any chance there was will be gone. There'll be too much fire, and too little water." "A chance to try what?" asked Norika. "What can we do?" "You can deceive them, as you have here--but on a grander scale." He advanced a step toward Wialu, holding his open hands out before him. "I don't know the limits of your power to project illusions. But if the Fallanassi are capable of creating an illusion of a vast New Republic fleet, a projection with the same depth of reality as what I saw when we first arrived here--" Wialu raised an eyebrow questioningly. "You believe that if the Yevetha face overwhelming odds, they may yield." "I have to think that their lives mean something to them--more, I hope, than their claim to J't'p'tan does," said Luke. "Whether they surrender or just withdraw, many lives on both sides would be saved." "Would the New Republic accept their surrender or simply use it as an opportunity to exterminate the Yevetha?" asked Norika. "Leia would never allow such a thing," Luke said. "I stake my honor on it." "Perhaps we should first see if we can drive one Yevethan ship away with this trickery," said another woman. Luke spun on his heel, searching for the face that belonged to the voice. "No--no, that would be a mistake. Not without at least one real warship available to back up the bluff," said Luke. "We have to give them every reason to believe--and only one chance to decide, with everything at stake." "Then it will be necessary for the fleet commander to be part of this plan," said Wialu. Turning back, Luke nodded hopefully. "Yes." "Do you know where he is, or how to find him?" "I can find the fleet," Luke said. "I can take you to General A'baht." "Then I will go with you," said Wialu. "And we will see how great a fire is burning." She turned and directed a hard look at Akanah. "You will come, too." There were no walls or guards at the perimeter of Mon Mothma's estate in Surtsey. Though she was still under the protection of Ministry Security, their presence on her property was limited to a sensor grid monitored by two fast-response teams based just off the grounds. A special traffic patrol kept the airspace near the estate swept clear of possible threats. Even though Leia had been neither invited nor asked to visit, none of those precautions was any hindrance to her arrival. She landed her orbital jumper neatly on the smaller of the two landing pads in the northeast corner of the estate, then began the long walk through the outer gardens and the tree moat to the house itself. The outer gardens had vivid patches of purple, cobalt blue, and pale orange--intybus, commelina, and anagallis were in bloom, and centaurea pods were everywhere, promising an eruption of pink in the next day or two. The air in the tree moat was cool, shadowed, and rich with complex scents. Leia felt the deep peacefulness of an old forest envelop her. Inside the circle of the tree moat were the house and inner gardens, and both were more modest than what surrounded them might lead a visitor to expect. The low, squarish house had but three rooms, all with transparent walls and ceilings, and the inner gardens were little more than accents for patches of soft ground cover and walking paths. Mon Mothma was inside, sitting in what she called her salon with her feet up and a datapad on her lap. She looked up as Leia neared the entry door, and motioned her inside. "Leia," she said with a smile. "It's been months. Come in." Leia was taken aback by Mon Mothma's appearance. Her short hair was now startlingly silver, and the fine lines around her eyes were visible from across the room. "Mon Mothma," she managed to say. "I hope you'll forgive my intruding--" "It's hardly that," she said. "But you're staring," she added gently. "This is not the mark of Furgan's treachery you see lingering on me." The allusion was to the Caridan am bassador's nearly successful attempt to poison her--an attempt that had precipitated Mon Mothma's retirement. "I've earned every line and white hair, Leia. Just as you are starting to earn some of your own. Now, it's true--I refuse to paint my face and pretend to youth and inexperience. Do you think that vain of me?" "I think you're still full of surprises, Mon Mothma--and still teaching little lessons at every opportunity." A little laugh lit the older woman's eyes. "Get yourself a drink and come sit with me. The afternoon sun will have the thrann tree dripping sap before long, and then the barbary birds will come out to feed. They're so tiny and so swift--I can watch them for an hour and never be bored." Mon Mothma's pantry contained a legendary array of potent and aromatic drinks collected from all over the galaxy, but Leia contented herself with a tall flask of cold fallix water. "So tell me what's driven you away from' Imperial City," Mon Mothma said when Leia had settled in the chair beside her. "I don't keep up with capital affairs these days, but I know it wasn't my gardens that drew you here." "Do you know what's happened to Han?" "That particular bit of bad news has been inescapable, I'm afraid," Mon Mothma said, resting her hand gently on Leia's. "How are the children coping?" "Jaina is angry. Jacen is afraid," Leia said. "Anakin is mostly confused--he can't understand why anyone would want to hurt his daddy. We've managed to keep them from seeing the recording, but I had to tell them--too many other people know, and I didn't want them to hear talk." "And you," Mon Mothma said, giving Leia's hand a squeeze. "How are you doing?" "I'm having trouble seeing my way." Nodding silently, Mon Mothma set her datapad on the floor beside her and sat back in her chair, waiting. "Tomorrow afternoon, I have to go before the Senate to face a recall petition," Leia went on. "The Ruling Council thinks that with Han being held by the Yevetha, I can't be trusted with the power of the Presidency." "How foolish of them." Leia shook her head. "To tell the truth, after seeing that last transmission from N'zoth, I'm not sure they aren't right. My first impulse was to give Nil Spaar what he wants, to recall the fleet if only he'll send Han back to me alive. My next was to go ask Special Operations for the most horrible weapon they have, something I could send to N'zoth to kill every last one of them--preferably in lingering agony." Mon Mothma's smile was full of affection and sympathy. "You would not be human if you were not feeling both of those things right now." "But I can't let either of those feelings guide what I do," Leia said. "And I don't know that I can keep them from doing so. I only watched it once, but I can't stop seeing it." "Leia, dear, surely you haven't told yourself that being President means that you can't listen to what you feel, that all your decisions must be guided solely by what you think. Leadership is more than calculation, or we would hand the whole messy business over to droids," Mon Mothma said. "Kings and presidents, emperors and potentates--the best of them are guided by honest passions as much as by a noble ethic or cool, incisive reason." "Passion and power have always seemed to me to be a dangerous combination," said Leia. "Without reason or ethics, they almost always are. But reason needs a passion for truth, and ethics a passion for justice. Without that, neither is really alive," said Mon Mothma. "What is it you're struggling with, Leia?" "What to do," she Said simply. "What to do to-morrow--to fight or to concede. What to do about Koornacht while I'm still here." "What do you want?" "Han, home safe," she said unhesitatingly. "The Yevetha held to account. And I want to keep this job, because there's still work to do." "And if you cannot have them all, which of those would you surrender last?" The barbary birds had put in their appearance as predicted, and Leia's eyes tracked the darting flight of a black and yellow male. "That's exactly where I have trouble seeing the way," she said. "Do I answer for principle? For myself and the children? For the good of the New Republic?" "But you've been at this very crossroads before," Mon Mothma said. "When the enemy was Emperor Palpatine, you were ready to risk all, and you sacrificed much, for principle and posterity. What mattered most to you was what you believed was right. So it was for all of us--both those who died for the Rebellion, and those of us who sent them to die." "I have more to lose now," Leia realized. "And I am less willing to risk it than I was then." "More proof that you are human, and still no reason for shame. The young think they are immortal," Mon Mothma said with an understanding smile. "Those who do not survive that mistake teach a harsh lesson to the rest of us. And twenty years of war provided enough harsh lessons for all. We cling more tightly to what we have--to life, and to love--knowing its impermanence." Leia stood and walked to the transparency separating her from the darting barbary birds. "It is the same crossroads, isn't it? What will you risk for what you believe--and what is your belief worth if you will not risk anything in its defense?" She shook her head. "I have part of the. answer to your question, at least." "And what part is that?" "I know which of those three things I want that I'm willing to give up first," she said. "The moment we begin to think about staying in power before we think of anything else, we betray the Rebellion. That's the heart of what we were rebelling against." "It was, at the end, the only idea Palpatine stood for," Mon Mothma agreed. Leia turned and looked back at her mentor. "But I still don't know how to choose between the other two." "I think you do," said Mon Mothma. "What you don't know is how to live with the choice. And there I can be of no help to you. That secret escaped you when the clarity left you." "When did that happen?" Leia asked, returning to sit on the edge of the stool at Mon Mothma's feet. "I didn't see it go--did you? Never before in my life have I struggled with decisions, or with accepting their consequences. It's been so strange, watching myself from the inside, wondering why this woman was speaking for me." "Your clarity came from your certainty that our cause was just and our purpose worthy," Mon Mothma said. "But there is little certainty of that kind to be had in a place like the Senate, in a city like Imperial City. Certainty is eaten away by the thousand and one compromises that are the currency of democracy. Causes fall victim to the building of consensus. Accountability becomes so diffused that it vanishes, and agreement becomes so rare that it startles." "I would have said that I understood that--that none of that was a surprise." "Understanding it and dealing with it every day are separate problems," Mon Mothma said. "You have always drawn your map with straight lines, Leia, and in that respect, you were ill prepared for the arcane cartog-raphy of the Senate." She smiled gently, fondly. "You are welcome to blame me for that--privately or publicly." Leia shook her head. "There's no need for such talk. You have nothing to apologize for." She stood and glanced over her shoulder toward the door. "I have to be going, I don't want to leave the children alone for too long." Mon Mothma rose to her feet as well. "There is something your father told me a long time ago, when I was new to Coruscant and its ways were a mystery. It was valuable to me--perhaps you will find something in it as well. He said, do not expect to be applauded when you do the right thing, and do not expect to be forgiven when you err. But even your enemies will respect commitment-and a conscience at peace is worth more than a thousand tainted victories." By the time the recitation was over, Leia's eyes had misted. "That sounds like Bail, all right." Mon Mothma gathered the younger woman into a fond, comforting embrace that lasted fully half a minute. "Draw a straight line, Leia," she whispered as they separated. "You will see where it leads." It was still an hour before the Senate was to dissolve into the New Republic Assembly to consider the petition of recall against Leia, and the session itself promised to last many hours under a rule of unrestricted debate. But both the media and public levels of the Senate gallery were already filled, and the corridors outside were choked with the overflow. Some of those crowding the public areas held a color-coded gallery pass for a later three-hour block. Others had managed to wangle only a site pass and a place in one of the overflow auditoriums. With demand exceeding supply, the going price for a gallery pass had already topped ten thousand credits--if you could find someone willing to sell. And despite the efforts of Palace security to discourage it, there was a brisk and animated swap meet under way among those already holding passes, driven by a series of contradictory rumors about when key events might take place--most especially when Leia would appear at the podium. Session Three passes, covering the period from seven to ten that evening, were presently commanding a three-thousand-credit premium over Session Two and a five-thousand-credit premium over Four and later. Both the commotion and anticipation were more muted in the private back corridors and chambers, but only by comparison to the public ones. The recall was the signal event of the Third Electoral, and no one with a claim to a seat in the great chamber meant to miss it. Crowds and unfamiliar faces were everywhere, and the normally tranquil Council caucus room was hosting a heated shouting match between half a dozen senators who couldn't wait for the session to begin. In such an atmosphere, Leia's unheralded arrival in the Senate anteroom went unnoticed at first. And the first to spot Leia were among the last she wanted to see--Engh's image analysts. She had never troubled to learn or remember their names-she called them the Ventriloquist and the COs tumer. The Ventriloquist, who called her President Solo, was forever trying to put words in Leia's mouth, then critiquing the words that had come Out of Leia's mouth. The Costumer, who called her Princess Leia, treated Leia like a dress-up doll, endlessly worrying about whether her clothes sent the right image for a particular public appearance. They came rushing up to her together and greeted her with a rush of words. "Princess! Where have you been?--" "President Solo! I haven't seen your speech yet--" "--I have your clothing in the diplomatic lounge. There's no immediate urgency, but I need to talk to you about your jewelry choices--" "--thank goodness you won't be the first to the podium. Let's find a room where we can go over what you expect to say--" "--I've opted for a very plain look, not quite widow-in-mourning but moving in that direction, and anything too gaudy would just be jarring--" "--I've scheduled you for interviews with Global, Prime, and ING right after the session--" "Stop," Leia said sharply. "Both of you--just stop." Both stared at her with the same flavor of we're-just-trying-to-help surprise. "Is there something wrong, President Solo--" "I didn't mean to be insensitive, Princess Leia--" "Not another word," she said, interrupting. "Not one more. As of this moment, you're both fired." With two quick movements, she collected their area passes from their clothing. "Report back to the ministry and resume doing whatever it is you used to do--which I can only hope is something more useful than what you've done here." By then, everyone within ten meters was aware of her presence, and a curious crowd had begun to gather around her. Ignoring them, Leia brushed past the Ventriloquist and continued on through the anteroom until she found Behn-Kihl-Nahm. The chairman was with Doman Beruss, huddled over what looked like a chalice of dark brew and a schedule of speakers at a table near the courtesy bar. "Bennie," she said, turning her shoulder to Beruss and ignoring him completely. "Let's go upstairs. We need to talk." There was a sudden murmur--a collective gasp, more truly--from the thousands packed into the Senate chamber when Behn-Kihl-Nahm and Leia entered together and ascended to the upper tier of the podium. When the murmur subsided, all that could be heard were the faint voices of newsgrid commentators echoing through a dozen or more active coralinks scattered across the floor of the chamber. "--was not expected to appear until much later, until called on to make her own presentation. Her unexpected-" "--ueling immediate speculation here of a surprise resignation--" "--was considered unlikely that she would choose to be present during what promises to be a long and intense debate--" But the Senate's protocol officers quickly hunted down the offending devices, and there was barely a rustle as Behn-Kihl-Nahm walked to the podium. "Fellow senators," he said, then cleared his throat twice. "Fellow senators, there will be a change in the published schedule for today's session." Innocuous as they were, his words caused an immediate stir in the audience. He ignored the stir and went on, leaning in toward the. podium's audio scanner. "As provided for under the Senate rules of order, and in respect of the provisions of Article Five of the Common Charter, I yield the gavel to the President of the Senate, Leia Organa Solo, hereditary Princess of House Organa of Alderaan and elect senator of the restored Republic of Alderaan." As Leia rose from the bench where she had been waiting, something unexpected happened--a slow-growing, defiant-sounding ovation. In scattered twos and threes, then pockets of ten and twenty, seated senators rose to their feet clapping and calling out the traditional affirmation of Ho, nuzzan. By the time Leia reached the podium, half of the left aisle and nearly all of the right had joined the impromptu demonstration. There was less enthusiasm from the center aisle, where representatives from most of the human worlds were seated, but even there nearly half were on their feet, with stragglers still swelling that number. Noisiest of all was the public gallery, the occupants of which were ignoring the warnings of the. protocol officers and the architects both and stamping in unison. Taken aback, Leia looked to Behn-Kihl-Nahm for a cue or an explanation, only to find him applauding her as well, with equal measures of determination and dignity. Leia turned back to the chamber and raised her right hand, asking for silence. "Please," she said." Please. I m grateful for your support, so spontaneously and genuinely offered. I accept it as a deeply felt expression of your concern for Han--mirroring the concern that so many people from all over the New Republic 'have taken the trouble to share with our family. I am gratified to learn that his welfare matters to so many of you. We love him dearly, and it's unimaginably hard for us to see him suffering. "But I did not come here today to speak of Han, or to presume on your sympathy," Leia said. "I have come here to make an announcement in a matter of great gravity. I'm glad that so many of you are here to hear it firsthand. "At thirteen-thirty today, in the presence of the chairman of the Defense Council, the first administrator, the minister of state, the admiral of the fleet, and the director of the Intelligence Ministry, I invoked the emergency-powers provisions of Article Five with respect to the crisis in Farlax Sector." A startled gasp from thousands of throats tore the silence. "That is the formal language required by the Charter," Leia went on. "But it can be said more simply-we have declared war on the Duskhan League. "I have taken this step for one reason, and one reason only--because it is the right thing to do. "This is not a personal crusade or a political maneuver. It is a campaign for justice--justice for the victims, and justice for the criminals. "The crimes of the Yevetha are not as well known to you as they should be, nor as they will be. You have seen the faces of two of Nil Spaar's victims: Han and Plat Mallar. But what the Yevetha have done to these two--as much as it hurts those who love them--is among the least of their offenses. "The Duskhan League is led by an absolute dictator whose bloody amorality is the equal of any enemy the Republics have known. They have exterminated, without the slightest provocation, the populations of more than a dozen peaceful worlds. They have murdered innocents by the tens of thousands, without the slightest justification. "Humans, Morath, H'kig, Kubaz, Brigians--no one who stood in their way was spared. Not the women. Not even the children. Their bodies were incinerated. Their homes were leveled. Their cities were bombed back to atoms. "And the last memories of those children, those cities, are now held by the few who the Yevetha spared--spared so that the Yevetha could use their living bodies as shields in battle. "The possibility that the Yevetha may not be finished with their murderous expansion, the prospect that they might next fall on Wehttam or Galantos or another more familiar world, is unnecessary to our response. "If these horrors do not demand our answer, then shame on us. If these tragedies do not enrage your conscience, then shame on you. If we cannot stand together against such a predator, the New Republic stands for nothing of value." Leia paused to drink in the utter silence that reigned in the great chamber. "In consultation with Admiral Ackbar and the Fleet Office, I have ordered additional forces to Koor-nacht to strengthen our position there. I have charged General A'baht, the sector commander, with the task of eliminating the Yevethan threat and reclaiming the conquered worlds of Koornacht. He has the necessary command authority to do so, and he has my full confidence. "We will take away the Yevetha's ability to make war on what they call the vermin. Not only because we, too, are vermin in their eyes, but because they have shown us an evil heart, and evil must be challenged, even though the cost may be great. "Any government that objects to this decision is free to withdraw from this body. And this body is welcome to choose a new President--the day after Nil Spaar is defeated and the Yevetha disarmed." Leia fully expected the silence to follow her away from the podium. But she had not gone two steps before a tumultuous roar of approval washed over her from the floor below and the galleries above. Turning, she saw virtually the entire Senate on its feet, affirming her decision by acclaim. The acclaim was not unanimous--dozens of dissenting senators had remained in their seats or headed for the exits in disgust. But they were a startlingly tiny minority of the whole. Leia stared, barely comprehending the miracle she had wrought. Her words had reached them, and moved them, and united them--for a moment, at least, a moment of principle over politics. She would have been moved to joy, but for the fact that at the end of the straight line she had drawn, Leia saw Han's death. Maltha Obex It was a cold day on Maltha Obex, even by the standards of a planet locked in the grip of a century-long ice age. A brutal storm half a continent wide was scouring the northern latitudes with driving winds and sheets of tiny, hard snowflakes as coarse as sand. The storm had forced Team Alpha to abandon its excavation site on the ice field east of Ridge 80. Team Alpha's cold shelters had been fighting their tie-downs' all night, as though eager to take flight and tumble headlong across the wastes. When team leader Bogo Tragett suited up to check the status of the excavation dome, he found the rip-proof tunnel connecting his shelter to the dome torn lengthwise and shredded to tiny y ellow flags whipping from the tension cables. Visibility fell to near whiteout with the gusts, hiding a bright blue work dome that was no more than five meters away from Tragett. Inside the dome Tragett found an ice-cold heater, a massive drift of crystalline white, and a continuing swirl of snow particles blowing in from under the dome's cartial floor. The heater had chewed through a three-ay fuel supply in something less than ten hours land then quit, surrendering. Tragett did likewise. Crossing to the supply shelter through a still intact connecting tunnel, he hailed Penga Rift and asked for a pickup, then paged the rest of the team and told them to pack whatever personal and team gear they could backpack or carry. Then it was a matter of waiting for conditions to ease enough for the expedition's weather-rated shuttle to fight its way through to them. That wait stretched to three hours, in the course of which Tragett's shelter broke loose from its tie-downs and was thrown against the upwind side of the excavation dome. Before the shelter itself had collapsed and torn free, it had caved in a third of the dome and turned the faces of two team members as white as the landscape. But Dr. Joto Eckels never gave as much as a passing thought to offering Team Alpha a respite aboard Penga Rift. He regretted the loss of equipment and the investment of time at N3, with no return on either--but there were many more sites, and far too little time. Trusting that Tragett would see to the motivational needs of his team, Eckels had dispatched the shuttle to the relatively balmy coastal site S9, where the dawn temperature had been twenty-six degrees below freezing under quiet skies. "We preloaded the shuttle with the entire spare excavation kit, from domes to bits," Eckels informed Tragett as the shuttle turned south instead of skyward. "You can draw whatever replacements you need from there. I'd say you should have no trouble getting set up by nightfall--be ready to go again first thing in the morning." Tragett, a veteran and a pragmatist, understood the issues driving the decision. "Affirmative, Penga Rift. But if that's the plan, I'd like to rotate Tuomis out, bring someone else down. He's been fighting shelter fever, and he's a little shaken right now." "Site setup is half outside' work," Eckels said. "Might turn him around, just being able to see that horizon. And hard work is a lot better for the disposi tion than lying there all night listening to the wind howl. Let's wait twenty and review the options when we see how he is in the morning." With the Team Alpha crisis past, Penga Rift returned to its normal orbital pattern, and Eckels contacted the other teams in turn for their daily updates. Team Beta was conducting a deep-water survey from a camp on a massive slab iceberg; Team Gamma was working the ridges above Stopa-Krenn Glacier in search of post-catastrophe Qella habitations and nomadic artifacts. "You have one more day to wrap things up there," Eckels informed the Beta team leader. "Then I'm moving you to S-Eleven. With Alpha being driven out of N-Three, we still haven't gotten into a city site--which is why I'm making that our top priority for the time remaining." "Understood, Dr. Eckels. No objection here--we're clearly into diminishing returns." Eckels's news for Gamma, delivered half an orbit later, had a similar flavor. "You have a hundred hours to find a no-fooling, hip-deep-in-midden habitation before I pull you off and split you up so we can go double-shifts at S-Nine and S-Eleven. We have all the skin flakes, callus scrapings, scat sheddings, and ice-burned limbs the Institute can use. We're not leaving here without at least a peek at how they lived--before if not after, and both if at all possible." "Acknowledged," said the Gamma leader. "Let me talk to Tia about yesterday's side scans. There's a spot I want her to get a second look at." "Transferring you now." Eckels studied the schedule on his datapad's display a moment longer, then stored it. He knew that he was pushing the team hard, both those on the surface and the analysts and catalogers in the lab. But he saw no real alternative. They had custody of Penga Rift for twenty-nine more days--after which Dr. Bromial's Kogan expedition, already postponed two months, would take over. That broke down to thirteen produc tive days at Maltha Obex and sixteen wasted days in transit back to Coruscant. All that time just to drag our hands and brains from one side of the galaxy to another--the universe is an offense to any reasonable concept of order. Eckels found himself envying his client for having a ship like Meridian at his disposal. The black-hulled sprint that had made the pickup had completed a round trip to Coruscant in less than the time it would take the elderly research vessel to complete one leg. But the Obroan Institute would never invest its precious resources in something as ephemeral as speed. "Archaeology is not a race," Director bel-dar-Nolek would say. "It is a profession for the patient. We, who think in centuries and millennia, can hardly notice a handful of days." But bel-dar-Nolek no longer did fieldwork. The longest trip he regularly made was a twenty-minute walk from his home to his office at the Institute. Leaving the comm booth, Eckels started aft toward the labs. But before he reached them, he found himself paged over the shipcomm. "Captain Barjas, to the bridge, please. Dr. Eckels, to the bridge, please." Eckels recognized the voice of the first officer, who had been with the ship for nine years and uncounted expeditions. Eckels also recognized the note of urgency that made Manazar's words more than a Polite request. Turning, Eckels reversed his steps, adding a jot of haste to them until he passed into the crew section and climbed the triangular ladder to the bridge. Barjas had arrived before him. "Doctor," he said with an acknowledging nod. "What is it?" Barjas pointed at the navigation display, Manazar out the forward viewport. "Incoming ship," Barjas said. Manazar added, "And they don't seem too happy that we're here." Wary of being followed, Pakkpekatt had guided Lady Luck through a series of three hyperspace jumps en route to Maltha Obex. The extra jumps added less than an hour to their travel time, but vastly increased the difficulty for anyone attempting to divine their destination. Having taken those extra precautions to ensure that they would be undisturbed, Pakkpekatt was all the more concerned to discover that though the planet was dead, it was not deserted. "Vessel answers as Penga Rift, registry Coruscant, ownership Obroan Institute for Archaeology, captain Dolk Barjas. Supplementary: Length one-twenty-six, beam thirty-two, no registered armament, rated speed--" "Agent Taisden, can you suppress that vessel's comm ability?" "Local," Taisden said. "Not hyperComm." "Do nothing, then," said Pakkpekatt. "Colonel, you weren't thinking about taking that ship out, were you?" Hammax asked, his face showing concern. "That's not only a civilian boat, but a friendly--and from the size of her, probably berthing upward of thirty." "My concern is that we have sufficient privacy to do our work here," said Pakkpekatt, slowing Lady Luck to give them more time before being detected. will entertain all options." "This entire expedition has been black ops from the start," said Pleck. "Why not just drop the curtain over the whole system, commandeer the ship under NRI authority, and lock in a comm blackout?" "I do not think we have as much authority here as you would like to presume--either in fact or in appearance," Pakkpekatt said. "If you were her captain, would you surrender your command to the crew of a private yacht that showed up without its registered owner? Only the greenest captain would fail to suspect piracy in such circumstances." "Okay, so when we blip in on their sensors, they're not going to be intimidated," said Hammax. "But surely we could get General Rieekan or Brigadier Collomus to have them ordered out of the system. We could even wait out here, out of range, until they've been spanked and sent home." Taisden was shaking his head. "Listen, I did a turn in the Senate liaison office. The colonel's right. Without a native population here, Maltha Obex is an open system, and Article Nineteen of the Charter applies. The Obroan Institute has as much right to be here as we do. The NRI doesn't have the authority to claim territory for itself--not even the Fleet has that power. They have to go to the Senate Defense Council for a presumptive finding of a security interest to support the claim, give public notice to the member nations--" "So how do we get them to leave without telling them who we are and why we're here?" Hammax demanded. "That's another question, isn't it?" asked Pleck. "What are they doing here?" "They are here because we sent them here," said P akkpekatt. That drew puzzled looks. "We did?" Hammax asked. "Effectively. Before the vagabond escaped our control at Gmar Asklion, I asked General Rieekan for Qella genetic material, and for reasons of expediency the agency enlisted the Obroan Institute to locate and retrieve it. But we now have what they came here to retrieve for us--they should be gone." "Well, then, it's simple," said Hammax. "If we sent them here, we can order them to leave. We just have to tell them that we're here to take over the operation and their services are no longer required." "I don't think so," Taisden said. "From the comm traffic, it sounds like they have at least three operations under way on the surface. They're not going to believe that this ship, and the four of us, are here to take over." "Doesn't matter what they believe," said Hammax. "If we hired 'em, we can fire 'em. And maybe this yacht isn't very intimidating, but everyone here knows that the colonel can be. That could turn out to be all the authority we need." "And if they don't go for it?" Taisden asked. "They're civilians, Colonel---even worse, scientists. They don't herd well." "Then there's one other option. Colonel, that's basically a Dobrutz liner," said Hammax. "I know something about the type, because I've spent some time in one. The Alliance had a fistful of them, pressed into service as small troop transports during the Rebellion." "Go on," said Pakkpekatt. "See, that ship down there has a single comm array, mounted outside the nav shields because of the interference from those miserable DZ-nine shield generators," said Hammax. "It was a known vulnerability. I'm sure I could take it out without collateral damage. Shouldn't require more than two shots. Might get it in one." "Thank you, Colonel," said Pakkpekatt, advancing the throttles. "However, I believe I will hold that option in deep reserve. There is something here that still eludes me. Perhaps I can encourage these interlopers to reveal The inbound vessel had remained silent until it was nearly on top of Penga Rift. Then the first signal had come over the emergency comm channel, lighting up several warning bars on the panels at Manazar's elbow. "Penga Rift, this is a priority alert.. You are operating in a restricted area, and your vessel is at risk. Please verify your transponder identification profile." Startled out of inattentiveness, Manazar nearly sent the confirming data without questioning the request. Only at the last moment did he recover his poise and respond, "Unknown vessel, this is Penga Rift. Please identify yourself--this ship is not equipped with an interrogator module." "I say again, Penga Rift, this is a priority alert. You are operating in a restricted area, and your vessel is at risk. Please verify your transponder identification profile." As though to underline the seriousness of the request, a concealed weapons bay had opened on the underside of the new arrival's hull. The retractable laser cannon that emerged cycled through its full range of motion, then locked on Penga Rift. That was the point at which Manazar called for the captain and the expedition leader. Then he quickly checked to see if the transponder had already been interrogated, and sent the requested information when he saw that it had. "I thought since they already have the information and we have nothing to hide, there was no harm in complying," Manazar explained. "But the very next thing, they wanted to talk to the master of the vessel, with full holocomm. I've been putting them off until you got here, but I don't think they like being put off." Barjas nodded. "You did fine, Mazz. I'll take it from here." "No," said Eckels. "On the starlanes, this ship is yours, Captain, but here in orbit, the expedition leader is in command. I will deal with this." He crossed the bridge to Penga Rift's small holocomm booth and settled himself inside it. "Monitor to station one. Record to personal log Eckels. Begin transmission." After a moment's pause, he said, "This is Dr. Joto Eckels of the Obroan Institute, expedition leader. Whom am I addressing?" When the answering holo formed before him, Eck-els felt his body trying to retreat deeper into the seat. The face was not only intensely alien, but both inhumanly large and close enough to violate Eckels's psychological boundaries. It could have been no more than that the other was leaning forward toward his holo lens, but it made Eckels feel cornered in the booth. "I am Colonel Ejagga Pakkpekatt of New Republic Intelligence, said the other, showing teeth that were distinctively those of a carnivore. "My mission in this sector is under the direct authority of the director of operations, and with the knowledge and consent of the Senate Intelligence Council. What is your business here?" "We are conducting a contract survey and excavation of Maltha Obex." "And what is the purpose of your survey and excavation?" "This is an archaeological research vessel," said Eckels, recovering some measure of his equilibrium. "Not surprisingly, we're here to do the things archaeologists do--to retrieve biological samples and cultural artifacts related to the former inhabitants of this planet." "Who contracted for this expedition?" Eckels considered refusing to answer. There were nondisclosure clauses in the standard Institute contracts that offered not only a suitable pretext, but also a reasonable defense of his actions after the fact. But being difficult would not help move the conversation forward to what the visitors really wanted--though Eckels was already sure in his own mind what that was. He had had but one thought since the ship had arrived, only one explanation for this coincidence--this confrontation. "Harkin Dyson, a private collector," said Eckels. "But come, you know all that already. Tell me, what did Dyson do? I should not have trusted him. Men with that much wealth do what they want and let the law try to catch up. Please tell me he didn't try selling the remains piecemeal." Pakkpekatt did not seem interested in Eckels's confessions. "Was this contract the only basis for your interest in Maltha Obex?" "No," said Eckels. The alien's unblinking gaze was becoming an annoyance. "We lost some people here, folks who were working another contract. But I would guess you know all about that, too. The rumor going around the Institute was that it was an NRI job." "Dr. Eckels, I have not asked of you that you tell me only things I did not know already," said Pakkpekatt, somehow managing to loom even closer. "Have you encountered any other vessels since your arrival here?" "Just the other NRI ship--" The holo display suddenly dissolved in a burst of snowy static. "What happened?" "I broke the link," said Manazar. "Doctor, this Pakkpekatt--I just identified his species. He's a Hortek." "And?" "They're supposed to be telepathic. That's why he demanded the holo link. He's probably already found out everything he wanted from you." "Well, I am not telepathic, and I have not found out everything I want," Eckels said frostily. "Restore the link." "There you are, Doctor," said Pakkpekatt a moment later. "Your reply was garbled by the equipment malfunction." Eckels nodded. "It was no malfunction, Colonel just a bit of clumsiness." Pakkpekatt fanned his fingers and gestured dismissively. "You were speaking of an NRI ship." "When we reached Maltha Obex, there was a military vessel here. I presumed it was NRI, though nothing was ever said Openly," Eckels said. "It was the ship that brought our late colleagues here. The pilot guided us to their bodies before he left. That was an unexpected courtesy, to have him wait--I do give you credit for that." "It was no courtesy, Doctor," said Pakkpekatt. "Just a bit of bureaucratic paralysis." "I see." Eckels sat forward in the booth. "It was impatience that killed Stopa and Krenn, Colonel--their own, and that of whoever dangled a bonus worth twice their annual research budget in front of them. It's curious that what was so urgent suddenly became unnecessary. Or did it? I was willing to accept Dyson at face value, as another of the artifact hunters who hover around the Institute. But your arrival here is one coincidence too many. Dyson is one of you, isn't he?" "I don't know who he is, Doctor," said Pakkpekatt. "A meddler who's succeeded in manipulating both of us, it seems." Eckels was taken aback by the unexpected answer, but quickly recovered his momentum. "What is your business here? And what's this about our vessel being at risk? Did you mean that as a warning or a threat, Colonel?" "A warning," said Pakkpekatt. "A ship may be coming here--a ship that has already destroyed or crippled at least five warships from four different navies. Our business here is to intercept it. Your vessel will be at grave risk if you remain here. I suggest you wrap up your work and move on." "That's not possible, Colonel," said Eckels. "We're scheduled for another thirteen days here, and we need every minute of every hour." "It may be possible for you to return at another time," said Pakkpekatt. "But Maltha Obex is not a safe place to be now." "That has been the case for quite some time, Colonel." "Are your people willing to keep working on the surface knowing that you can't promise them you'll have time to come back for them? Are they willing to risk freezing to death with the memory of seeing Penga Rift turn into a very brief bright spot in the sky?" "You are trying to frighten me, Colonel. That shows a disappointing lack of respect," said Eckels. "I am trying to save your life, and the lives of those under your command." "You are trying to protect your secrets," said Eckels. "What kind of ship is coming here, Colonel?" "One that destroyed an Imperial-design cruiser with ease, just two days ago," said Pakkpekatt. "Perhaps you should consult with the captain of Penga Rift and ask him how he views the prospect of commanding it in battle." "I will not cede Maltha Obex to the NRI," said Eckels. "The work is important--and a friend died here. Both of those things matter to me, Colonel, even if they mean nothing to you. Do what you need to here. We won't interfere with your business if you grant us the same courtesy." "It isn't our interference you need to be concerned with," said Pakkpekatt. "Doctor, I cannot offer you protection--" "Oh, yes, from the mysterious ship that's no threat to your vessel, but a terrible threat to ours. The rampaging juggernaut that dispatches warships with ease, yet apparently will cower when confronted by your yacht. I don't believe a word of it. Really, Colonel, couldn't you have invented a more plausible lie? I thought spies were supposed to be good at that--" Pakkpekatt hissed and lunged forward, his threat ruffles unfolding. Eckels startled, sitting straight up. Even Barjas, watching on the flatscreen display, flinched noticeably. "I have spoken only the truth to you," Pakkpekatt said, his voice thick with anger. "The dead will wait for you. Leave this place before you join them." This time, the threat was effective. Only simple stubbornness trumped the sudden flash of fear that showed in Eckels's eyes. "Perhaps you are telling the truth, as you say," he said. "But if you had the authority to order us to leave, you would have already done so. So let it just be understood between us that we're staying. We accept the risks. Others may return here in the future, but this is our time." "You do not know what you risk by that decision, Dr. Eckels." "You remain free to enlighten me," said Eckels. "What kind of ship is coming to Maltha Obex?" Pakkpekatt sat back and folded his hands in his lap. "A Qella ship, Dr. Eckels." Eckels stared, dumbfounded, then cast his gaze downward. Twice he opened his mouth as if to speak. Both times he momentarily clOSed his eyes and shook his head, as though disowning the thought trying to reach his lips. Finally he ran a hand back through his thinning hair and raised his head. "Would you care to come aboard Penga Rift, Colonel?" Eckels said, his voice surprisingly steady. "I believe I owe you an apology, and then we need to talk." "That's what you wanted from the start, isn't it?" Taisden said when the link was terminated, looking at Pakkpekatt in surprise. "I never intended for them to leave," Pakkpekatt agreed. "That ship contains all of the New Republic's experts on the Qella. What they know--however little-mmay be the difference between success and failure." "Sure--and if we can make use of them, better to keep them here than chase them away. But you played him like a kolo-fisher working a record catch," said Taisden. "Chances are you left him thinking he won that showdown, with a chance at the vagabond as his reward for hanging tough." "I had the insuperable advantage of being able to tell the bait from the hook," Pakkpekatt said, rising. "Still, perhaps there's something about sitting in Calris-sian's couch that brings such manipulations more readily to mind and tongue." "What manipulations?" Taisden asked, his expression innocent of humor. "After all, Colonel, just as you said, all you told him was the truth." But they both knew that Eckels had not yet heard all of the truth. Pakkpekatt left Colonel Hammax in command of Lady Luck's flight deck and charged Pleck with making the arrangements with Coruscant for the recall signal to be rebroadcast from NRI stations and vessels operating in the open. Then he and Taisden went across to Penga Rift in the research vessel's skiff. They brought with them a selection of images from Gmar Asklion, a copy of the genetic catalog, and a re quest for one of Penga Rift's orbital relay satellites. Standard equipment aboard research and exploration vessels--but not aboard Lady Luck--the generic hel-met-sized units were ordinarily used in sets of three to give a single ship global comm coverage. "We can and will originate the recall signal from Lady Luck," Taisden explained. "But for obvious reasons, we might not want to be right next to the antenna if and when the vagabond jumps in-system." A profoundly distracted Joto Eckels agreed with a wave of his hand. "Yes, of course. We carry two spares--Mazz will make one available to you." The holos of the vagabond escaping from the armada, juxtaposed with selected views of the destroyed Prakith cruiser, had made a deep impression on Eckels. But the major distraction was the dispatch containing the report on the Qella genome. "This is very good work," Eckels said, studying the sequences on his datapad. "These Eicroth bodies--what an extraordinary discovery. This report is based on the single example I delivered to Harkin Dyson, yes?" "I assume so," said Pakkpekatt. "It appears to be the only Qella material to have left the system." "Then we do not know if these Eicroth bodies are typical of the species, or indicate an abnormal condition, or represent a variant of the species," Eckels said. "With only a single example, no generalizations can be made." "Presumably not." Eckels closed his datapad. "Colonel, we have five additional Qella bodies in the specimen lab. They've all been fully scanned, but the scans haven't yet been reviewed in detail--" "Why not?" Taisden interrupted. "We scan them as soon as we receive them because of the risk of sample deterioration," Eckels said, turning toward the younger man. "Analysis is something we can do on the way home, or at the Institute." He looked back at Pakkpekatt. "Colonel, we did not know about this secondary genetic material. If I could take this data back to the lab for a few hours, I may be able to answer that question, and perhaps some others as well." "That copy is for your use," said Pakkpekatt, "assuming that you will accept one restriction." "Any reasonable one," said Eckels. "This really must be looked at right away." "I ask only that the data not leave this vessel in any form, by any channel, until we better understand it. If what you hold there is in fact the key to stopping and controlling the vagabond--" "I understand. An intact Qella vessel would be a treasure far too valuable to risk. This data will not leave my personal custody," Eckels vowed. "I will do this work myself, under isolation protocols. Will that be satisfactory?" "Entirely satisfactory," said Pakkpekatt. "In the meantime, we will return to our vessel with the relay satellite and continue our preparations." "I'll signal you when I have something," said Eck-els, waggling the datacards. "Can you find your way back to the skiff by yourselves? I want to get started immediately." "Of course." "Thank you. I'll have First Officer Manazar meet you there with the relay satellite." As they waited for Manazar at the skiff, Taisden asked quietly, "When are you going to tell him about the general being onboard?" "When I know that Calrissian is still onboard," said Pakkpekatt. "By now even the most prudent rationing, the most severely restricted activity, will have exhausted their personal consumables. I have been wondering if that might be the explanation for the beckon call to Lady Luck--a last act of desperation by the last surviving member of Calrissian's team, in the last hours of his life." The somber mood set by Pakkpekatt's words stayed with them all the way back to Lady Luck, and cast a long shadow on the work waiting for them there. Instead of signaling, Dr. Eckels came calling. By the time the skiff came alongside Lady Luck, her entire complement had gathered to learn the reason for the change of plans. "Colonel," Eckels said, ducking his head as he stepped through the inner airlock. "Agent Taisden. These other gentlemen I do not know--" Pakkpekatt supplied perfunctory introductions. "Is something wrong, Doctor?" "Wrong? No, quite the opposite. I think I have good news for you. Is there somewhere we can work?" Pleck led them forward to the lounge of Lando's personal suite. "You'll have to go slowly with us, Doctor," said Hammax as they filed in. "Combat medicine isn't long on theory, and I don't think the rest of them have had even that much." "I understand. I'll try to make certain no one needs to be telepathic to keep up," Eckels said. His voice had the faintest hint of a playful lilt. "An excellent policy," Pakkpekatt rumbled. "I follow it myself." Taisden cleared his throat. Otherwise, there was silence as the five sorted themselves into the available seats. "You checked the other cadavers for these Eicroth bodies?" asked Pakkpekatt. "The first thing I did," Eckels said. He ran his hands over the soft leather covering of the padded arms, then looked around the cabin, taking in the luxury appointments. "Are all NRI ships outfitted this way?" "Not generally," Pakkpekatt said. "This is a, uh, special-use vessel," added Pleck. "What use would that be--bordello?" asked Eck-els. "Well, never mind. I've long suspected that I took the wrong career path. Yes, Eicroth bodies. They all had them." "That confirms it then, right?" asked Taisden. "They're normal parts of Qella physiology." "By itself, it would only be strongly indicative," said Eckels. "A common parasitic infestation would still be a possibility. But I have other evidence." Taisden looked to Pakkpekatt. "So we need to send all three sections of the code." "No, no," said Eckels, waving his hands in front of him. "Sending a third of it should be sufficient. Here, I will explain. In your cells, and mine, and even those of the colonel here, there is a universal pattern--a chemical alphabet with four letters, a vocabulary of words two letters long, a grammar of sentences three words long." "Nucleotides, base pairs, and codons," said Pakkpekatt. "This is elementary biology." Eckels's gaze narrowed as he looked toward the colonel. "Yes," he said. "Every sentence specifies a component of a biochemical structure. The instructions for building a particular structure may be hundreds or thousands of paragraphs long." Pleck sat forward. "So are the Qella part of this pattern as well?" "Yes--and no," Eckels said. "Most Qella cells, including reproductive cells, use the same alphabet, vocabulary, and grammar." He smiled and nodded to himself. "But the Eicroth bodies do not. They use an entirely different alphabet with six letters, and sentences of five words. And they use these extraordinary extended proteins to build structures that seem to exist on the dividing line between living and nonliving." "Are you certain?" asked Pakkpekatt. "Why didn't the people who discovered them know any of this?" "Because I have something available to me that they didn't--as do you." Eckels sat back and laced his fingers together in his lap, clearly enjoying their rapt attention. "They didn't have any examples of the finished product to compare with those instructions. I have six hundred of them." "Six hundred?" Hammax said. "Six hundred bodies?" "Artifacts," Pakkpekatt said. dred Qella artifacts--no, we will need a new word for them now. We recorded them as being fashioned from natural materials. Now I know that they were not fashioned but--grown. The Eicroth bodies contain their plans." "You were able to match your artifacts with the sequences we gave you?" "Every one of them," said Eckels. "Do you understand what I am saying, Colonel?" "Yes," said Pakkpekatt. "No," said Hammax. Eckels turned toward the soldier. "Every sentient being inherits its species' memories through both body and mind--the ancient duality," he said, his tone fervent. "Humans found a way to extend our memories by recording our thoughts and collecting them in libraries. Somewhere a long time ago, the Qella found another way. They carried their libraries within their own bodies." "And this helps us how?" "I'm still missing something, too," said Taisden. "From what you've said, it seems to me that it's that much more important to send out the entire database." Eckels's disappointment in their response to his revelations was evident on his face. He had proudly brought them a treasure, but they were too uncultured to appreciate its beauty. "The database has three components," Eckels said with impatient annoyance. "The somatic cells, the lesser Eicroth bodies, and the greater Eicroth bodies. The match for every Qella artifact we recovered can be found in the lesser bodies. Then there's your piece of the puzzle--your dialog with the vagabond. You have two interrogatives and one successful reply." "They appear in the greater Eicroth bodies," said Pakkpekatt. "Yes," Eckels said, looking hopefully at the Hortek as he would at a student teetering on the verge of insight. "That is what the greater bodies are," said Pakkpekatt. "They are the instructions for building a starship from that which is more than inanimate and less than alive. The ship we are chasing was not designed or invented--it was remembered." "Yes," Eckels said, relaxing into his chair and showing a relieved smile. "Yes, Colonel. However you came to it, at least you understand." "Do you think that somewhere in those sequences is a code that will call the vagabond back to Qella?" asked Taisden. "Do you want an expert opinion or a personal one?" "I'll take two for the price of one, if I have a choice." "The expert declines to opine, due to lack of supporting evidence," Eckels said. "But personally--since it has not gone somewhere else in all this time--I suspect that it was intended to come back here." "What are the chances that what we propose to do will just confuse it--like throwing all the switches at once?" Eckels shook his head. "You are asking for reassurances quite beyond my ability to offer--" At that moment, shrill alarms began to sound both in the suite and the corridor beyond. Taisden was the first out of the lounge by two steps and the first to the bridge by five. "Meeting's over," he called back to the others as he slipped into the number two seat. "You'd better get back to Penga Rift right away, Doctor. Colonel, mayhaps we should have been talking more about what to do after the quarry puts a leg in our snare." "What are you talking about?" Eckels demanded. "Colonel, what's happening?" Taisden sent the long-range image to the primary sensor display, then shook his head in amazement as he glanced up at it. "See for yourself," he said. "The vagabond's just jumped into the system--and she's headed this way." Chapter 9 The director of Alpha Blue was nodding off in his chair, his office lit only by the bluish glow of the primary status display. With his shoes off and the top two fasteners of his civilian blouse unbuttoned, he looked like an old bachelor who had fallen asleep in front of the holo. "Admiral Drayson?" Drayson's eyes snapped open and found the face of Major Aama, one of his senior facilitators. "Yes?" "Admiral, you said you wanted to be notified immediately," she said. "We have a tracking update on Millennium Falcon." "She's reached the N'zoth system," Aama said, turning and pointing a controller at the display. "She's standing off at twelve hundred radii below the plane--the best guess is that they're scanning the system before jumping in." "They'd have to, if they're going to try a close-intercept jump," said Drayson, leaning forward and rubbing his eyes. "Is Pride of Yevetha still in-system?" "Still in-system and still in orbit around N'zoth. It's getting a bit crowded in that neighborhood, though four more Imperial types have shown up, and six more T-types have lifted off from the plane. "Include that in the update packet and have it sent immediately." "It's already been seen to." Drayson rocked back in his chair. "So there are sixteen thumpers there now," he mused. "Not the best news for Chewbacca's people. What assets do we have in the area?" "There are four stasis probes on station, and two more moving into position." "Let's take a look," Drayson said, gesturing at the display. "We may have to think about sacrificing one or more of them if it'll give the Falcon a fighting chance to get the job done." "Yes, sir--I think we can probably arrange a timely diversion or two. Sir, are you sure you want to continue the blackout where the Princess is concerned? It could give her a real lift to know--" "Not at these odds," Drayson said firmly. "Even with what we've been able to pass to Chewbacca through Formayj, I don't think they have more than one chance in twenty of getting in and out in one piece. As for finding Han alive--" He sighed. "But that's still probably a better chance than any other rescue effort would have. Is Ackbar still talking about a battle group assault supporting a Jedi retrieval team?" "Yes. They've got the lights on late over at Fleet tonight." "The general will never agree to it," said Drayson. "And he'll be right not to. So let's be creative, Major, and figure out what else we can do from here to shift the odds." Given an unobstructed view and the eight-kilometer length of the Yevethan flagship, the oversized and exceptionally sensitive sensor dish atop the Millennium Falcon had no difficulty picking out Pride of Yevetha from among the many ships orbiting N'zoth. But fixing the orbit of the flagship with enough precision to jump within a thousand meters of it required more than a single snapshot. Chewbacca needed to know not only the flagship's orbital track, but also the tracks of any ships near it or en route to it. The task was complicated by the distances involved--when looking at the tracking data, Chewbacca was looking several minutes into the past. He could only guess about the present and the future, and a wrong guess would mean failure--even sudden death. There was no perfect answer. The closer they were to N'zoth, the more current the tracking data would be, but the more likely it was that the Falcon would be spotted. The longer they waited, the more complete the tracking data would be, but, again, the more likely it was that Falcon would be spotted. Chewbacca's natural impatience with anything other than a direct frontal assault only aggravated the matter. He had to keep reminding himself of the lessons of the Shadow Forest, and the difference between stalking and making the kill. For the first few minutes after reaching the N'zoth system, Chewbacca was alone in the cockpit. Lumpawarrump was in the lower gun turret, Jowdrrl in the upper. Meanwhile, Shoran and Dryanta were checking the equipment that had been mounted in place of the escape pods at Esau's Ridge. The starboard pod had been replaced by a mine launcher loaded with sixteen firecracker mines. The portside pod had been replaced by a hull-cutting ring, a traditional tool of both pirate and police. Both devices were critical--if not to the mission, then to their confidence that they could survive it. When Dryanta was satisfied that the cutting ring was ready, he moved on to the crew quarters and began triple-checking the boarding party's weapons. Because they expected heavy resistance, bowcasters had given way to Draggis blaster rifles and fusion-cutter grenades. When Shoran was finished arming the mines, he came forward and joined Chewbacca in the cockpit. "Everything is ready,] he said. Chewbacca's reply was interrupted by a double chirp from the comm board, signifying an incoming message. The encrypted transmission carried a priority flag and a short holo header. [Formayj,] Chewbacca said. [Curious.] "Chewbacca, hot-blooded friend," said the broker cheerfully. "Mining my archives, I found something else maybe you can use. No charge--tell Solo I will get it back from him at sabacc." By the time the attached data had been downloaded, Dryanta had replaced Lumpawarrump in the lower gun turret, and the youth joined his father in the cockpit. [What are you looking at?] he asked eagerly. [A friend sent something interesting,] Chewbacca said. [Can I see?] Chewbacca waved a hand toward the data display and shifted to his left so that Lumpawarrump could lean in between him and Shoran. What he saw was a Fleet Intelligence assault plan for a Super Star Destroyer--a complete three-dimen-sional technical drawing of the ship with the location of the cell blocks marked, the best breaching sites highlighted, and the shortest paths between them drawn in. [We're sure to find him now, aren't we?] Lumpawarrump asked excitedly. [How does Formayj do it? Where does he get his information?] [Exactly my question,] said Shoran. [Chewbacca, this gift worries me. Would you trust Formayj to guard your back?] [That question does not trouble me,] said Chewbacca. [Formayj can make more money cheating his customers than killing them. Lumpawarrump, call the others down from the turrets--I am ready to make the jump. I want everyone to study this on the way in. Shoran, launch the first string of mines.] [Yes, Father,] said the youth, hastening away. "Yes, cousin,] said Shoran, leaning forward to the controls. Chewbacca did not point out to either of them that, unlike the material Formayj had delivered to him at Esau's Ridge, the assault plan could not have come from any data mine or broker's archive---the timestamp on the document was less than forty hours old. I wonder who this map was drawn for, Chewbacca thought as he set up the jump. And I wonder what happened to them. [Mines are away.] Chewbacca threw the throttles forward, opening up a gap between Falcon and the rocketing mines. When the gap had reached five hundred kilometers, he moved his large, furred hand to the hyperdrive controls. [Set off the string,] he ordered. Shoran sent the triggering signal, and as the first of the mines exploded spectacularly behind them, Chewbacca pushed the ship forward into hyperspace, racing the light of the explosion to N'zoth. By necessity, the plan was simplicity itself: Hit fast and hit hard. When the Millennium Falcon burst out of hyperspace eleven hundred meters off the starboard bow of Pride of Yevetha, the intense burst of light and radiation from the first of the firecracker mines had just flooded the sensors of the Yevethan defense grid, momentarily blinding the operators and scrambling the analyzers. The mines continued to explode at ten-second intervals, effectively masking the Cronau radiation from both ends of the Falcon's microjump. Meanwhile, Chewbacca whipped the transport into a smart half turn, standing it on its tail with the engines at maximum thrust. That maneuver quickly killed off the ship's velocity, at g-loads that tested the limits of even Wookiee physiology. For the gun crews aboard the Yevethan flagship, it was like looking up into the subatomic fury of a fusion reactor. For seconds afterward, the best-positioned batteries could not see to find their target. Those were precious seconds to the Falcon. As quickly as the ship slowed, Chewbacca diverted engine power to the combat shields, reserving only enough to wheel the ship over on its back and match orbital velocities with the great Star Destroyer. By the time the first blaster bolts lanced out from the side of Pride of Yevetha and from the two trifoil fighters closing in, the Falcon was inside the shield radius, and Chewbacca had spotted his landing site. Following their instructions, the moment the Falcon came under fire, Jowdrrl and Dryanta began a savage counterattack with the ship's quad turrets. Chewbacca roared with delight as a Yevethan fighter disappeared in a fireball, and growled at Shoran to launch the remaining mines. When the mines were away, he sent the Falcon diving edgewise toward the many-faceted hull of the Star Destroyer. [Go stand by the cutter,] Chewbacca ordered Shoran as he guided the Falcon low across the face of the flagship. By the time Shoran reached the port pod hatch where the hatch-cutting mechanism was attached, Chewbacca had gently nestled the Falcon against the enemy vessel's hull, allowing the cutting ring's magna grapples to grab hold. By the time Chewbacca rejoined Shoran at the hatch, the cutting ring had already burned halfway through the armored plasteel. Lumpawarrump was there as well, holding both Chewbacca's weapons and his own, ready to take up his assigned task of defending the entrance to the Falcon. [Chewbacca!] Jowdrrl shouted down the access tunnel. Chewbacca collected his blaster rifle from Lumpawarrump, then placed a paw on his son's shoulder. [Go trade places with Jowdrrl.] [Father--] [Hurry.] The nitrogen overpressure pumped into the space between the two ships before the final burn-through caused the metal disc cut from Pride of Yevetha's hull to blow back into the enemy ship as a spectacular half-ton projectile. Chewbacca and Shoran poured through the opening moments later, each wielding a heavy blaster in each hand. Standing back to back, they quickly cut down the half dozen Yevetha who came running at the sound of the breach. As Chewbacca stepped over the bodies he saw that none of the Yevetha had been armed. [Ship's crew,] he said to Shoran. [Troops will be next.] Still back-to-back, they hurried down corridor 278 toward detention block three. Lin Prell, senior tender of the breederies of Viceroy Nil Spaar, paid no mind to the alarms sounding at the monitoring console. They concerned matters outside his realm, and the new hanging in alcove five needed its blood wash. After that, he would check the temperature of all the active alcoves, record the growth of the other fertilized casks, and wet-sweep alcove seven for the mara-nas expected later that night. And when he could find no more work in this breedery, there were four others he could inspect--anything to keep his hands and mind busy, to keep his thoughts away from the castration knife that had been delivered to his quarters this morning, and the example he was expected to set. In that frame of mind, Lin Prell almost welcomed the interruption when two hulking, shaggy-furred vet min blasted through the wall of the monitor room and began shooting up the consoles. There will be much work to do--much work, he thought as he hurried down the narrow corridor toward the commotion. "What is it? What do you want?" he called ahead, catching a glimpse of one of the invaders moving about the outer compartment. The only answer was a horrible growl and another volley of blaster fire around the mouth of the corridor. Lin Prell quickly reexamined his commitment to protecting Nil Spaar's progeny, and then began to back-pedal down the metal walkway. The monsters were apparently incapable of speech, so Lin Prell made no further attempts to communicate with them. When one of the creatures appeared at the end of the corridor, roaring in savage fury, the senior keeper hurled himself into the nearest unused alcove and secured the door behind him. As he huddled in the corner, waiting, he comforted himself with the thought that he might never see the black-handled knife again. [Where are they?] Chewbacca roared. [Where are the prisoners? What are these repulsive things?] Raising the rifle, he blasted the fleshy sac hanging from the cell wall, causing a pulpy explosion. [Honor brother!] he roared. [Call to me!] There was no response, leading to a murderous growl of frustration. With Shoran guarding his back, Chewbacca picked his way down the corridor, peeking into each cell in turn and then laying heavily on the triggers of his weapons. [Come on,] Shoran urged. [This is a hothouse--they're holding him somewhere else. We have to keep moving.] Chewbacca peered through the grating of the cell door at the Yevetha cowering within. He bared his teeth and growled, low and ominously. [Come on!] Shoran said, pulling Chewbacca away. An eerie silence continued to surround the Falcon. From the gun turrets, LumpaWarrump and Dryanta could count dozens of fighters cruising over the hull of the Star Destroyer--obviously searching for the intruder, and inexplicably unable to locate it. One fighter had passed within seventy meters of the ship, so close that Dryanta could see the pilot's face, so close that it was all Lumpawarrump could do to keep his hands off the triggers of the Dennia quad. Even stranger were the comlink reports from Jowdrrl at her station guarding the hatch. [Someone talk to me,] she said. [We're here,] Dryanta assured her. [I just had visitors,] she said. [Nine of them, almost as big as Shoran and armed like stormtroopers.] [Help's coming,] said Lumpawarrump. [No, stay where you are--they're gone now. But I don't know why,] Jowdrrl said. [They looked over the bodies in the corridor, stood around jabbering for a minute or two, then walked right past the cut-hatch on their way out.] [That doesn't make any sense,] Lumpawarrump protested. [I know. I was ready for them to rush me, but they never even glanced in my direction-as if they couldn't see that there was a hole in the bulkhead big enough to crawl through.] [Just like our fighters up here,] said Dryanta, both wonder and worry evident in his voice. [Like we've become invisible. I don't understand it.] Detention block two had been modified as well, though it was empty and deserted. But by the time Chewbacca and Shoran were ready to leave it, their noisy entrance had drawn a small crowd of Yevethan soldiers to the corridor outside. With no more than a glance between them, the two Wookiees plunged through the destroyed entryway, turning back-to-back the moment they were clear of it. By the luck of the draw, Chewbacca had five targets in front of him, Shoran eight. Roaring defiance, Chewbacca sprayed the corridor with crisscrossing blaster bolts. The las of his targets was tottering when he heard Shoran grunt, and felt him sag against his back. A whiff of burnt hair and fresh blood reached Chewbacca's nostrils. Whirling, Chewbacca caught Shoran up with one hand before he could fall and dispatched the last two Yevetha with a flurry of shots from the blaster in the other hand. Then he turned his attention to the limp weight cradled in the crook of his arm. And what he saw drove him to howl with fury and scatter a dozen more blaster bolts into the corpses littering the floor. "Shoran has fallen,] he called over the comlink when the impulse was spent. [Dryanta, come for him.] Lumpawarrump was the first to the cut-hatch, beating Dryanta by three steps. [I'm going,] he said to Jowdrrl. [I know the map. You don't need me in the gun turret. And Dryanta shouldn't go alone.] Jowdrrl saw the determination in his eyes, the eagerness in his stance, and did not argue. [Go,] she said. [Just remember that the Yevetha can see you perfectly well.] Glancing down at his hands, the youth clicked his blaster's lock to off and checked the power level. [We'll remember,] he said. [Dryanta?] She nudged him from behind. [Take the lead.] They met Chewbacca halfway to detention block two. Dryanta took Shoran from him without a word and hurried away back toward the Falcon, leaving Lumpawarrump with his father. The two stood looking into each other's eyes appraisingly, one searching for strength, the other for approval. Then Chewbacca grunted and turned away. [Follow,] he said. [Protect my back.] Detention block one was being guarded by half a dozen armed Yevetha, which raised Chewbacca's hopes. But when he and his son had blasted their way through the interference, all they found were more of the grossly distended fleshy sacs hanging in the cells. [This is taking too long--there are too many places he could be,] Chewbacca fumed. [They will have killed him or moved him by now.] [Father, when I think about Han, I do not see him in a place like this--] [Be quiet--I have to think.] [I keep seeing him in a room full of people--a large room, and all different species. I don't know where this picture comes from--] [I do not believe this,] Chewbacca said. But Lumpawarrump's words had put the picture in his mind as well. [And yet I see what I see, Father. It comes to me without imagining. Is it a deception?] [When did this vision present itself to you?] [While I was in the turret--and it will not leave me. It is most insistent.] Chewbacca growled and blasted the ceiling at random. The thought of Han was now inextricably connected to an oddly detailed vision of a high-ceilinged compartment half filled with a zoo of species. The image would not leave his mind either, and he could not see Han in any other surroundings. [This is powerfully annoying-and I do not understand it.] [Father, what if the enemy' has taken many hostages? What if Han is just one of hundreds? Where would he be then?] There were noises in the outer corridor, and Chewbacca moved to the ruined security door. [In your mind, as you see Han,] he called. [Are there any markings, any numbers or words?] Lumpawarrump squeezed his eyes closed. [Yes. Yes, on the wall--D-two.] It was the same as what Chewbacca saw--bold black lettering high on the bulkhead above the prisoners: CARGO [The mass detention holds,] Chewbacca roared. [Come!] Back to back, Chewbacca and Lumpawarrump fought their way forward to cargo hold D2. Strangely, the resistance seemed to weaken rather than strengthen as they went, almost as though they were moving too fast for their pursuers to find them---or as though the carnage they left in their wake discouraged other Yevetha from getting in the way of a headlong Wookiee charge. But the guards and patrols they did encounter fought tenaciously, never flinching or fleeing. Armed or unarmed, alone or in groups, the Yevetha confronted the intruders with a foolish courage that made them easy targets and persistent threats. Chewbacca and Lumpawarrump were forced to fire on anything that moved and to keep firing until it stopped moving. By the time their objective was in sight, the gauge on Lumpawarrump's hand blaster was nearing the POWER LOW mark, and the gauges on both of Chewbacca's were closing in on POWER CRITICAL. Ahead of them was one final hurdle. Unlike with the detention blocks, blowing a hole in the bulkhead with a grenade threatened the occupants of the cargo hold. But the sectional doors of the hold were guarded by half a dozen Yevetha deployed behind a pair of Imperial portable shields. The waist-high curved panels contained both ray-shield generators and energy absorbers, and the Yevetha had nothing to fear from hand blasters so long as they stayed behind the arc of the shields. Worse, the doors to the hold were on the other side of a hundred-meter wide flight deck--a deck that normally housed some of the fighters now searching for the Falcon, and offered no cover whatever when they were gone. "Your bowcaster,] Chewbacca said as they crouched in the hatchway. Lumpawarrump unslung the weapon and began to surrender it to his father, but found to his surprise there was no hand extended to take it from him. Instead, Chewbacca was offering him slug cores--the nuclei of the explosive quarrels. [First, the shields,] Chewbacca said, gesturing with his blaster. [Then go for your enemies on the extreme left and right. That will likely freeze the others and keep them bunched up for you. You must fire as quickly as your bowcaster allows--as when trying to take fiarion before the flock scatters into the cover.] [Yes, Father.] [I will divide their attention, as one gives the thar-riarr a morsel to distract it,] Chewbacca said. [Try to keep your quarrels out of my back, son.] Lumpawarrump laughed easily. [Try not to run in front of my sights, Father.] Chewbacca thumbed his comlink. [Jowdrrl.] [Here, cousin.] [Prepare to make a pickup from the flight deck which is directly forward of your position.] [I will seal the hatch and be ready for your call.] Chewbacca looked back at Lumpawarrump. [This is your brrtayyk.] [I am ready.] Chewbacca gestured, and Lumpawarrump stood up into the hatchway, bringing the bowcaster up to chest height as he rose. The first explosive quarrel was away before he was fully erect, the second before Chewbacca had taken his first long stride out onto the flight deck. The twin explosions that came an instant later were compact and focused. One shield was driven violently backward, knocking two of the Yevetha off their feet. The other shield simply shattered, pelting the deck, the bulkhead, and the guards with sharp-edged fragments. Tracking his targets through the smoke as though they were shadows in the underbrush, Lumpawarrump kept firing. One quarrel burned out the thorax of a Yevethan guard, and the next spun his nearest companion around like a ragdoll. Just then, Chewbacca loosed a blood-chilling howl and began spraying the flight deck with his blaster. The howl contained all of Chewbacca's grief over Shoran and his fury over Han, and it riveted the attention of the surviving guards. With Chewbacca's hunger for vengeance driving his long legs, he crossed the open deck with stunning speed. None of the few blaster bolts directed his way came anywhere near him. By the time Chewbacca reached what was left of the guard station, the return fire had ceased. Every one of the guards had fallen victim to Lumpawarrump's steady hand and hunter's eye. True, three guards still had some fight left in them, despite massive bowcaster wounds--but Chewbacca did not object to that. He crushed the chest of one who was trying to rise from the deck, then threw himself on the back of another and broke his neck with a savage twist. Spinning away from the toppling corpse, Chewbacca found himself face-to-face with the last guard. The Yevetha was bleeding profusely from gaping shrapnel wounds in the shoulder and right cheek, and his thorax plates were scorched and bubbled. He slashed the air with his claws, and Chewbacca roared a challenge. They charged each other, meeting in a collision that would have leveled lesser creatures. Their short struggle ended with Chewbacca hoiSting his huge attacker overhead and hurling him against a structural column. The Yevetha slid heavily to the deck and never moved again, his back broken. Standing over the body, Chewbacca tipped back his head and made the Wookiee triumph-cry echo to the farthest corners of the flight deck. Then he turned away and waved Lumpawarrump across to join him. Only then did Chewbacca see that his son was injured, dragging his right leg as he ran. When and how seriously Lumpawarrump had been wounded, Chewbacca did not know--he only knew that his son had not uttered a sound in complaint, and that when the moment had come, he had faced the katarn without flinching, and his aim had been true. The woman called Enara crouched beside where Han Solo lay dozing and lightly touched an unbruised spot on his forearm. "There is fighting on the ship," she whispered. "Your friends have come for you." Moving awakened a thousand pains and brought a sharp wince to Han's face, but he struggled to a sitting position nevertheless. "For me? How do you know?" "I know," she said, her face drawn. "I have called them to us, and they have finally heard me. Come, we must move you. It is not safe to be close to the walls." "I don't understand," Han said. But he allowed Enara to help him limp to the center of the hold. The effort left him weak, making it necessary for him to lay himself out once more on the uncomfortably hard surface. "I don't hear anything." "They are a long way from here. I cannot hide them--it is too much for me. But I will try to Help them find you." Enara sat down beside him, arranging the folds of her scorched brown caftan around her as though it were a fine gown and she was expecting to receive guests. Then she cupped her hands lightly around one of his and looked away toward the locked loading doors that sealed them in. Han did not question her words. She was a puzzling woman, given to curious pronouncements and long periods of distraction marked by a faraway gaze and an aversion to company. But of all the prisoners in the hold, Enara was the only one to step beyond her own fears and needs to befriend him. She had been the first to speak to him when he had first arrived, and hers had been the only compassionate face he had seen when he awoke in agony after the beating at the hands of Nil Spaar. But the tenuous promise of a rescue was not enough to keep Han from dozing. Pain quickly exhausted him, and his bruised organs, his torn and battered muscles, assailed him relentlessly when he was conscious. Sleep was his only relief. "The fighting is close now," Enara said during one of Han's wakeful moments. "If you need to walk--" "If those doors open, I can get to them. But I still don't hear anything." "Soon," she said. He saw that her face was pale, and he felt her hands trembling, the skin that was usually soothingly cool now hot against his. "Enara--what's wrong?" "I cannot keep them apart. So many dying--your way is so hard, so much chaos," Enara whispered. "Are you some kind of empathY' "It is not hard to feel death," she said. "They are coming. They are almost here." It was at that moment that Han began to believe that something truly was happening aboard the starship. He struggled to a seated position just as Enara pitched forward, whimpering loudly, her palms pressed to her forehead, her tousled hair hiding her face. Moments later, there were noises from beyond the doors--cries, blaster fire, thumps against the bulkhead, and a grating, unnerving sound that Han was certain he knew but which his pain-drugged mind could not identify. Then the small hatch inset into the large loading doors was flung open, and a towering Wookiee frame filled the opening. "Chewie!" With a piteous wail, Chewbacca rushed across the deck and scooped Han up into his arms. Throwing back his head and roaring delight, he spun Han in circles--a dance of joy. "Ow--not so rough. What kept you?" Han answered gleefully. "Where's my ship?" Then Han yelped as Chewbacca juggled him in an effort to reach his comlink. After barking into the device, Chewbacca slung Han over his shoulder and started back toward the hatch, now guarded by another giant. "Wait--wait--the others--wait, Chewbacca, the others. We have to take them, too--Enara, Taratan, Noloth--stop, you thick-headed furball," Han bellowed. "Put me down, I'm not dead yet. Enara!" As Chewbacca reluctantly complied, Han saw that Enara was Still seated where she had been, though no longer doubled over. "Come on," he called to her. "There's room for you, too, isn't there, Chewie? How many of them can we get--" His words trailed off as he looked around the hold. None of the other prisoners had reacted at all to what was happening--they were scattered in their usual haunts and gatherings, sleeping, talking, sucking water from the drip-pipes. "What's happening?" he asked, taking two unsteady steps toward Enara. "Come on--our reservation here's expired." "I cannot go," Enara said. "Go, please--i am at my limit." "I don't understand." Enara shook her head sharply. When she did, the rest of the prisoners vanished, leaving only Enara, Han, and Chewbacca. Chewbacca whined unhappily and tightened his grip on his blaster. "Now you are inside," she said, "seeing as I do." "Where are the others?" "They were never here," she said. "They escaped at the transfer camp and were picked up by Star Morning. They are elsewhere now, safe. You can go." Chewbacca whined again and tugged at Han's shoulder. "That was--they were an illusion?" Han said, ignoring Chewbacca's urgings. "You were covering their escape? Never mind, it doesn't matter--you can leave now, too. There'sno one here to protect." "I must stay," she said softly. "Denied his prizes, Nil Spaar would try to replace them. Denied the security of their protection, he would seek security through the death of his enemies. Go, Han--I am not a prisoner here. I have chosen this freely. Go now." Turning away from them, Enara lowered her chin to her collarbone. An instant later, the hostages reappeared--including a crippled, dozing Han Solo, lying on the deck beside Enara. There was a cry from the Wookiee at the door, and then the achingly familiar roar of the Falcon's engines. "Enara--" Han said plaintively. Then his legs buckled under him. Chewbacca caught him cleanly before he hit the deck, and would not listen to his protests as he carried him away. Enara never looked up. Han's last glimpse of her was of a tiny woman with tangled hair, sitting crosslegged beside the man whose life she had just helped preserve. At just about the same time that the Millennium Falcon was roaring away from Pride of Yevetha behind a curtain of exploding firecracker mines, Mud Sloth was dropping out of hyperspace in front of the Fifth Fleet's flag group. Even as the forward pickets were relaying the contact to Intrepid, the gunship Warrior surged ahead, breaking formation to place itself on an intercept course. "Contact ahead," the tactical officer announced to the bridge. "Type not identified. Size class, F--possibly a probe of some sort. She came right out of the heart of the cluster." On the other side of the room, a blank display at comm three suddenly lit up with a string of numbers. "Receiving transmission from the contact--they're attempting to authorize a link." That drewWarrior's captain over to peer at the screen. "Sender code is valid, but it's coming over the air, unsecured--that's not a military transmitter," said the comm specialist. "Same with the authorization code--checks as valid but not current. Someone's trying to get in the front door without a key." "I'd like to know who," said the captain. "Identify the sender code." "Sir, it returns as classified." "Really," said the captain. "Take us to level two alert and authorize the link." The numbers vanished from the display, to be replaced by Luke Skywalker's face. "Captain," said Luke's holo. "Do you recognize me?" "I recognize who you appear to be," said the captain. "I have no information that that person was known or expected to be in this sector." "Very good, Captain. By now you should have an identification on this ship and an assessment of its threat potential." The captain looked away toward the tactical officer. "Transponder says it's civilian, yacht, skiff class, unarmed now confirming from direct scans. It's a Verpine Adventurer, sir." There were several snorts and chuckles around the room, "'Unarmed' is not confirmed, Lieutenant," the captain said, turning back. "A ship of that size could easily carry tactical munitions in its passenger compartment." Luke nodded in agreement. "I'd appreciate it if you'd rendezvous with me and have your people inspect the ship. Once you've satisfied yourself that I am who I appear to be, and that we haven't replaced the refresher with a fusion bomb," he said lightly, "I trust you can arrange for a ride or an escort to the flagship. I am carrying some extremely important information for the fleet commander." The captain was well disciplined or stubborn enough not to bend. "Continue on your present course," he said. "Keep this channel open. We will rendezvous with you shortly." But when the link was closed, he turned to comm one. "Signal Intrepid, secure. Notify the general that Luke Skywalker is inbound." When the message had been sent, comm two craned his head around toward the captain. "This is good news, right, sir?" "I hope so, Lieutenant," the captain said grimly. "I dearly hope so." By the time Mud Sloth came to rest in slots thirty-nine and forty on Intrepid's forward flight deck, everyone in that section of the ship--and many elsewhere, in every other section--knew that Luke Skywalker was coming aboard. No official announcement had been made. The scuttlebutt spread among the officers and crew via two distinct chains of friendships and contacts--with equal rapidity, but slightly different flavors of meaning. Among the officers, it was styled as "Heard the big news?" To the crew, it was definitely good news. Luke could see it in the grins of the deck crew as they tied down the skiff and in the jaunty thumbs-up they offered to him as he clambered down out of the ship. When he turned and helped first Wialu and then Akanah down, the mood around him changed for a time. But soon he felt the focus shifting back to him again--a focus for hope and reassurance, for belligerent pride, even chauvinism and xenophobia. It's as though they think I'm here to win the war for them, Luke thought as he followed their escort off the flight deck. But it's the people they're nearly ignoring who I'm hoping can do that. He had wanted and asked for a private meeting with A'baht, but that was perhaps too much to expect. Either he was too much of a magnet, even among the officers, or A'baht's idea of "private" automatically included two spare colonels and an extra captain. Luke dealt with them by ignoring them. "What's the status of the conflict, General?" he asked; offering no introductions for his own companions. "The President has declared war on the Yevetha," said A'baht. "As a first step; we're preparing to return to Doornik Three-nineteen and take it away from them. We've also gotten more aggressive in searching for the remaining shipyards. And planning's underway for deeper penetrations of the cluster, all the way to the Yevethan homeworlds." "Are any of your forces currently engaged in hostilities?" "No. This is the lull before the storm," A'baht said. "Now, can I ask you to explain your presence? I assume that if you had been sent here by the President, we would have been notified in advance." "I've come here from J't'p'tan. On your charts, Doornik Six-twenty-eight-E. Before that--well, the full explanation would take too long, and I'm not prepared to share all of it in any case," Luke said. "But the part that matters is simple and straightforward. I'm here to offer you a chance to take that first step in a different direction." Even for someone with Luke's status, Colonel Cor-gan, Colonel Mauit'ta, and Captain Morano were a tough audience-especially when what was being peddled had the look of magic. "Do I need to defend the Jedi to you as well?" Luke snapped in response to the most recent expression of skepticism. "The nature of the universe transcends the definitions of science, and the possibilities of the universe exceed the limitations of technology." "I am not eager to risk the lives of my crew on tricks and invisible forces that cannot be measured," said Morano. "You're apparently not eager to save the lives of your crew, either." "I prefer to trust what I know. We can win this war with the weapons we have." Loose objects were scarce on a ship rigged for combat, so Luke found it necessary to create some. Reach ing out with the Force, he ripped the decorations from the three officers' uniforms and deposited them in neat rows on A'baht's desk. "Now you know a little more about invisible forces," Luke said. "This is not helping," General A'baht said with a sigh. "I'm simply trying to remind them that the Force is as real as anything in this room--it's a mystery, but not a fantasy," Luke said. He pointed a finger in the direction of Morano, who was still staring wordlessly at the naked fabric where his service bars had been. "His way of winning this war means thousands, tens of thousands, of deaths on both sides--needless deaths." "Needless only if your trick fools the Yevetha," said Corgan, gathering up his decorations with a cross expression on his craggy face. "And you can't know if it will fool them." "What Wialu is offering us is no 'trick,' "Luke said with studied patience. "Her instrumentality is older than the technology of that blaster you wear, and more powerful. But it's more difficult--it takes a life commitment, not just a squeeze of the trigger." "Perhaps she could tell us more about how it works," said Mauit'ta. Luke turned away, raising his hands in the air in disgust and frustration. "Reflection," said Wialu, "from the surface of the Current." "I'm afraid that's not very useful to me," said A'baht as Luke turned back. "You must realize that you're asking us to mount a major military operation around something we've never experienced. Would it be possible to have a demonstration?" Luke expected Wialu to refuse that imposition, but she surprised him. "You are asking me to create a major projection of something I have never experienced," she said. "It seems it would be to the good of all if you would demonstrate first, and then you can judge my practice." A'baht glanced at Corgan. "Colonel?" "Well, there are about twenty ships from the Fourth due to join us in"--he glanced at his chrono--"about half an hour. Would that do?" "I would like to be as close to the phenomenon as possible," said Wialu. "There's an observation bubble on the maintenance rover," Marano offered. "I think we can probably squeeze the seven of us in there. If you don't object to the presence of skeptics, that is--" "Your beliefs are irrelevant to me," Wialu said. "I am empowered by mine." When the rover had reached the fifty-kilometer boundary of the arriving task force's jump target, General Etahn A'baht tapped the driver on the shoulder from behind. "That's close enough, son," said A'baht. "And drop us a few kilometers below the entry track. I don't wish to have the command staff erased by a navigational error." "I'm more worried about being erased by an error of enthusiasm by some gunnery lieutenant," said Cor-gan. "Those ships are jumping into a hot zone, and they're not going to be expecting us to be sitting here waiting for them." "Akanah will address that," said Wialu. "The ships will not see us." "What do you mean?" asked A'baht. "General, just take her at her word," Luke said. "If I had wanted it that way, you wouldn't have known Mud Sloth was in the neighborhood until I'd parked it in your space." Corgan shook his head disbelievingly, but there was no opportunity to pursue the issue. "Here they come," said Maiut'ta. One after another, the great ships emerged out of the center of overlapping white flashes of radiation, like new stars winking on in the night. Cruisers and attack carriers, Star Destroyers and gunships, all quickly closed the distance to the rover, roaring by overhead in a spectacular display. "Are we allowed to talk?" asked Corgan. "Patience," said A'baht, gazing up with his fingers laced together behind him. "Patience and attentiveness will both be rewarded, I suspect." "I don't take your hint." "How many ships were we expecting?" "Twenty-two." A'baht nodded. "I have counted thirty so far." Corgan and Morano stared, gaping, as the broad hull of a fleet carrier sliced the vacuum above their heads. "That has to be a mistake." Luke caught A'baht's faint smile. "I'm confident I can still count to thirty," he said. "I suggest you check with Tracking." Maiut'ta was already reaching for his comlink. "Sweep the arriving ships," he ordered. "Give me a count." "Thirty-eight-- forty-- forty-one-- still clicking over." "Are they all normal tracks?" "Everything as expectedwwait a minute, some of the IDs are duplicated. Colonel, do you want to tell me what's going on now?" "No, Lieutenant. Stand by," Mauit'ta said, switching off the comlink. A'baht turned to the other officers. "Well, gentlemen, we have our demonstration." He gestured with his hand as a gunship rumbled by just a kilometer away. "Which ones are real? That one? The next? I can't tell--I suspect even Tracking can't." He turned back to Akanah. "Thank you. I am quite satisfied." In the next moment, half the battle group passing in review vanished. Wialu sagged noticeably and sought her seat immediately afterward. Akanah settled beside her protectively. "General, what did I just see?" the rover driver asked in an awestruck voice. "Nothing, son," said A'baht. "Officially and literally nothing." But--" "Don't ask about it and don't think about it," the general said. "Just get us back to the barn as quickly as you can." He glanced at Luke. "We all have a lot to do." They were on final 'approach to Intrepid when they were waved off for the launch of a flight of fighters. Morano's face immediately took on a worried expression. "What's that about? Patrol rotation isn't for another hour." He got an answer from the flight controller after the rover landed. "Outer patrol is moving out on an intercept," the controller advised them. "We've got a ship coming in from the interior, high speed, no proper ID, nothing but some kind of jammer or scrambler signal in response to our hail." Morano wheeled around to face Wialu. "Is this part of your demonstration, too?" "No," she said, shaking her head. "This one belongs to you." "General, Commander Jarrou has taken the group back to a level' two alert," the controller continued. "Captain, you and the general are wanted upstairs, flank speed." Luke raced to the bridge at General A'baht's heels, then anchored himself in front of a tracking display. The image was still small and two-dimensional. His head cocked to the side, Luke studied the image as it slowly grew larger. "Specialist, how fast is that ship moving?" "Eight sublight, sir. She's cooking." "Can you let me hear that jammer signal she was transmitting?" "Still transmitting," said the specialist. "On the headphones, sir. Watch the volume--it's an eardrum killer." Luke slipped the earpieces in place and listened. Almost at once, he laughed. "Sir?" "That's not a jammer. That's Shyriiwook. Wookiee-talk," he said, tearing off the headphones. "It's Chewbacca, and he's upset about something." Luke peered at the display again. "He wants those pilots to get out of the way. General A'baht!" A'baht looked up from a huddle with the tactical officer. "What now?" "Better tell those fighters they're on a rendezvous and-escort, not an intercept," said Luke. "That's the Millennium Falcon coming in." Shoran and Han were both carried off the Falcon on medevac stretchers. By appearance alone, they looked to be in equally dire straits, but the indicator lights on the stretchers' monitor panels foretold their different destinations. The indicators on Shoran's stretcher were static and mostly red, and he was taken directly to Intrepid's morgue. The indicators on Han's stretcher were jumpy and mostly yellow, and he was taken directly to a bacta tank in med ward one. There was no chance for Luke or anyone else to talk to Han before he went into the tank. He had apparently been unconscious since before the Falcon jumped out from N'zoth, his already fragile state aggravated by the stresses of the rescue, particularly the high-g escape. And even if Han had been conscious, there was Chewbacca to contend with--the Wookiee hovered over Han so protectively that he got in the way of the doctor and the medical droid, and ultimately had to be dragged back from the triage table by two of his companions. The four Wookiees made an impressive sight, and their presence in the med ward drew a great deal of curious attention. Luke thought he recognized the injured one as Lumpawarrump, a thought confirmed when Chewbacca made him the next object of his anxious hovering. Lumpawarrump had limped off the ship under his own power, but the second-degree blaster burn on his right calf was ugly with leaking blisters and needed care as well. A translator droid arrived in time to assist K-1B to negotiate with his patient. "Skin and hair cell damage is serious. Underlying fat and muscle damage is limited," said K-1B. "All damage is repairable. Prescribe immersion, one session, ten hours." Both Chewbacca and his son looked at the prep table where Han was being fitted with his breather and monitors. Chewbacca drew his upper lip back over his teeth in an expression of disgust, and Lumpawarrump shook his head vigorously as he growled an answer. The droid's translation was diplomatic. "The patient has expressed an unwillingness to be immersed." K-1B's head swiveled in a distinctively mechanical fashion. "Topical treatments are of limited effectiveness. Grafts are contraindicated for species with body fur. Scarring is likely without immersion." Both Lumpawarrump and Chewbacca answered at once, and their growls had sharply contrasting timbres. "The patient says that he finds scarring socially desirable. The patient's guardian expresses his concern that if the injury is not effectively treated, K-1B will experience serious malfunctions and system disruptions." Despite the shadow of concern for both Han and Chewbacca's son, Luke could not contain a chuckle at the droid's obvious paraphrase. The sound led Chewbacca to look up and in Luke's direction--the first time their eyes had met since the Falcon had docked. The Wookiee gestured angrily toward Han, and voiced a sharp-edged rebuke. No translation was necessary. The look said, Where were you? "I didn't know, Chewie," Luke said. "It wasn't even in the TBM. The General says there was a complete blackout on the news. I was away, and no one told me. Not even Leia." He looked across the room at Han, who was at that moment being transferred from the prep table to the bacta tank. "I just didn't know." Technically, the camp on Pa'aal, the primary moon of the fifth planet of the N'zoth system, was not a prison. Slaves are not housed in prisons. The camp was the permanent residence of the surviving members of the former Black Sword Command occupation force under Governor Crollick. At its peak, it had housed nearly three hundred thousand--mostly human, and mostly from the crews of the Star Destroyers Intimidator and Valorous, captured intact by Yevethan raiders on what was to have been the final day of the Imperial occupation. The captives had purchased their lives with service to the viceroy, and in the beginning, that service had been essential. They had taught the Yevetha both the operation of a capital warship and the final secrets of their construction. They had served aboard their renamed vessels under new, alien captains and labored in the shipyards under new, alien overseers. The knowledge in their heads and the experience in their hands made them valuable enough to keep alive--at least until the Yevetha had wrung every last secret from them. In the first and second year, only the uncooperative were removed from the population on Pa aal. But in the third year, their keepers began to thin their holdings in earnest. By that time, the overseers had a clearer idea of who had specialized technical skills and who did not. The latter could be replaced in their duties by Yevetha, and were--many trained their replacements before being executed. The former were kept without regard to need, as spare parts for the war machine the Yevetha were building. Half the population of Pa'aal disappeared during the third year--most at the hands of the Yevetha, but no small number through suicide. Conditions on Pa'aal were desperate and miserable, and hope of rescue had collapsed as the coldly calculated winnowing wore on. Those who survived to see the fourth year were in many ways a select groupssmart, tough-minded, in-ured to the privations of their existence, astute in the politics of their status. And they had found a replacement for hope, in the form of a leader and a plan. In the long years since, every slave taken from Pa'aal for a day's, a week's, a month's service tO the Yevetha had gone willingly, with a purpose and a mission beyond mere survival. The more useful they were, the more opportunities there would be to advance the plan. They needed access to the ships, to materials and tools, to unsupervised time--all of which could only be obtained through guiltless and systematic collaboration with the enemy. Despite their efforts, there had come a time when the Yevetha seemed to no longer need them, and Pa'aal had become not a storehouse but a dumping ground. An entire year would pass with no measurable progress and no promise of change. Suicide and the carelessness that went with profound depression once more began to thin the numbers. But seven months ago, the slavemasters had started coming to Pa'aal again. For the first time since the end of the winnowing, there were Yevetha in camp for more than a few hours, observing, questioning. The additional scrutiny was more than balanced by the additional opportunity, as more and more of the population was called to service and carried off in the parade of shuttles. Before long, Pa'aal seemed primarily populated · by ghosts. Word of the reasons for the change filtered back with returnees--new ships being launched, new crews being trained, new problems with cloned drives and weapons. Gradually the whole story was pieced together, until the prisoners on Pa'aal were more aware of the coming war than the Yevetha themselves. And through it all, the work went on, at an intense-even dangerous--pace. "There is a moment coming," Major Sil Sorannan had told his secret command, "a moment of opportunity that will never be repeated in our lifetimes. If we are not ready when that moment comes, we will all die on Pa'aal." Sorannan remembered his words as he gazed at the four tiny pulse-transceiver chips that had just been delivered to him by a courier from a returning work party. "Major Neff said to tell you that they'd passed all the tests with generous margins," said the courier. "He has very high confidence that they're good." Nodding, Sorannan gestured to the other man in the room. "Have the controllers brought here." From four different parts of the compound, four very different--yet commonplace--objects were rounded up and placed before Sorannan. Using an engineer's loupe, 'an improvised jig, and a handheld microwelder, Sorannan added one of the chips to the circuitry concealed inside each of the objects. The chips were the last pieces missing from the controllers, and Sorannan irreversibly sealed the clever access slides and panels before handing each object over to a courier. "Deliver this to Dobbatek. "See that this reaches Jaratt on Valorous. "This is for Harramin. "I want this delivered to Eistern on Intimidator. Tell him I will be there soon. Tell him to pass the word that it is almost time." Chapter 10 While Han slept in the healing bath of the bacta solution, the command staff analyzed the latest data from the stasis probes deep inside the cluster, and the Wookiees prepared the Falcon for the battle ahead. Not included in any of those activities, Luke found himself alone and with time on his hands. He went by Wialu and Akanah's cabin, intending to reopen the subject of Nashira. But Wialu was not there, and Akanah would not tell him where he could find her. "She will be in deep meditation until the time comes, preparing herself," said Akanah. "This will be very difficult--she must be strong enough to hold the projection even if fighting begins." "Will you be helping her?" "She has not asked that of me." "Do you think that I can?" "Ask me, or help her?" "Help," he said. "No. You have great power, Luke, but this is not a work of power. When you lay your touch on the Current, it is still a thousand times too forceful." He digested that in silence. "Did you know that there's a Fallanassi aboard Pride of Yevetha? At least, that's how I sort it out, going by Chewbacca's account. A woman named Enara." He shook his head. "They had to have some kind of help. Going in there like that was crazy. Wookiee-crazy, the kind that comes from an excess of courage and a shortage of patience." "Yes, I know," Akanah said. "Will she be able to help Wialu?" "I do not think so." Luke frowned. "You seem to have gotten a lot more reluctant to talk to me since we reached J't'p'tan." "Circumstances have changed," Akanah said with a small, rueful smile. "Because Wialu is watching and listening?" "We have lost more than privacy," she said. "We are no longer moving in the same direction." "If you know that, you know more than I do about where I'm headed," Luke said, pulling a chair toward him and sitting down on it backward. "I have more questions now than ever." "You must be greatly tempted to try to force Wialu to answer them," Akanah said. "An occasional, resistible temptation," Luke admitted. "I know better." "It would be an immeasurable mistake." "I know that, too," he said. "But you could answer some of my questions--as my teacher." Eyes downcast, Akanah shook her head. "I don't think so, Luke." "Because of what Wialu said about your not having the right to? She said you were a child yourself--" "She was right," Akanah said. "I told you on the day we met that I was incomplete--that there was a weakness, an empty space, in me--that the loss of what my mother would have taught me had left me less than whole." "I suppose you did," Luke said. "I guess at the time, I paid more attention to what you were saying about me." "It was easy enough for me to forget myself," said Akanah. "But even a short time with Nori was enough to show me how far I have strayed without guidance. These days in Wialu's company have shown me how far I have to go to return to the path." "Your mother--Talsava--is she with the Circle?" "No," Akanah said. "When we are finished here, I will ask Norika to be my teacher." Luke folded his arms on the back of the chair and rested his chin on them. "So your journey is over." She shook her head. "It is just beginning. I know that I must go back and unlearn before I can move forward again. Do not envy me too much, Luke." Luke answered with a tight-lipped smile. "A momentary self-indulgence," he said. "Well, I suppose I can't ask you to work with me on the skill of concealment." "You will need another teacher if you choose to follow this path and become an adept of the Current," she said, her expression earnest. "I hope that you will. You have great strength, Luke, but you hunger for lightness. That is part of the gift that you have been denied." Frowning, Luke straightened his back and caught the top edge of the chair in his hands. "Maybe you can answer this question, at least--if Enara could conceal the Falcon and create phantom hostages, why couldn't she protect Shoran?" "I am sorry for your friend's loss," Akanah said, then paused. "I do not know the limits of Enara's skill. But creating a reflection from the surface of the Current and merging nearby objects with the Current are very different tasks. It is terribly difficult to do both at the same time. And there is something else--a person does not stay settled in the flow the way an object without volition will." Luke's eyes lit up. "Is that why the Circle is still at J't'p'tanmwhat you meant when you said they couldn't leave?" he asked. "Because it sounds as if the Fallanassi could hide the temple from the Yevetha and go away, and it would stay hidden--" "Yes. Objects which are at rest, or which follow the current without resisting it, will remain merged until they are disturbed," she said. "All of the effort comes at the beginning, and a single adept can manage it. But hiding the community of H'kig requires the constant attention of a great many adepts, and the effort is never-ending." As he listened to her, Luke experienced a flash of intuitive insight. "Yes. Yes, that's the only way it could be. Do you--" "I have already said too much," she said, shaking her head. "Please, Luke, ask me no more questions. Answering you and refusing you bring me equal burdens of guilt." "I'm sorry," Luke said. "I understand." "You understand, and you used it to get your answer," Akanah said sharply. Then she showed a quick smile, taking the sting out of the rebuke. "Please, Luke--go now." "All right," he agreed, standing and replacing the chair where it had been. But when he reached the cabin door, he stopped and looked back. "I'm sorry. I have to ask one more." She nodded wordlessly, as though she had expected it. "Did you see Nashira on J't'p'tan?" "No," Akanah said with regret. "I do not know where she is." It was decided early that the "phantom fleet" bluff should be played where it would have the most impact--in the light of N'zoth's sun, over the capital of the Duskhan League and the home of Viceroy Nil Spaar. "It's the strongest Yevethan fleet we've located especially in the wake of the rescue of the commodore," Corgan explained at the strategy session where the assault plans were first disclosed "If the Yevetha are still monitoring developments on Coruscant through their spy network, they know that the President's sending us reinforcements, and that'll help sell the bluff. "We've planned a feint at Doornik Three-nineteen for the day before, just to keep them jumpy and maybe draw off a ship or two from somewhere else. And on the big day, we'll turn out in strength at Wakiza, Tizon, and Z'fell, plus go after the shipyard that just turned up near Tholaz. But the big play is at N'zoth--that's where we have to break them, one way or another." Taking Intrepid to N'zoth meant a transfer for Hang from the flagship's medical ward to a medical frigate delegated to stay behind with the other noncombatants. The transfer, in turn, meant the first conscious moments for Han since he had come aboard. Both Chewbacca and Luke took advantage of the opportunity. The Wookiee had an emotional reunion With Han while the doctors and K-1B gave him a quick but thorough hands-on exam. Luke did not intrude on that time, waiting instead to hitch a ride with Han on the transfer shuttle. "Hey," said Han, craning his head at the sound of Luke's voice. "I used to know a guy who looked just like you." "Whatever happened to him, anyway?" Luke bantered back, finding a perch beside the stretcher and catching Han's right hand in his own. "How are you doing?" "You know you're getting old when you start wondering about what it is that's finally going to kill you," Han said with a pained grin. "I guess I'm gonna have to sit this one out, eh?" "Unless we have a sudden need for underwater commandos," Luke said. "They tell me you're due for another five days in the tank." Han's countenance darkened with concern. "Say, do you think you could use your powers of persuasion to get 'em to let me talk to Leia before they dunk me back under? Has anyone told her--" "Already set up for you, Commodore, as soon as we reach the frigate," said the doctor seated at the head of the stretcher, monitoring the readouts. "Of course she was told," Luke said. "The general sent a message as soon as you were aboard, and Chewie talked to her later." Luke saw that Han noted the omission. "Well, when you talk to her, make sure you mention I was bothering the lady doctors---otherwise she'll worry," he said. "Say, how about Chewie's kid? He sure hit his growth, didn't he? Chewie said this was some sort of rite of passage, and he's taken a new name--Lumpawaroo, I think it was." "With Waroo as the familiar," said Luke. "I think it means 'son of courage."" "Well, that fits--both ways," Han said. "They said back there that Waroo will be coming over to the frigate, too. I think that leaves the Falcon one hand short." "I don't think I'm welcome to sign on," said Luke, squeezing and then releasing Han's hand. "Chewbacca seems to think I abandoned you to the Yevetha." "Aw, he'll get over it. He's still wound up, that's all. I couldn't talk him out of going back to N'zoth with you--figures he owes it to Shoran." "There's no arguing with a Wookiee," Luke said. "He'll be all right. There won't be enough shooting to worry about." "Why's that?" At that point, the doctor saw on his displays the same fatigue Luke was seeing on Han's face and ordered an end to the conversation. They completed the trip to the frigate in silence, save for the off-key humming of the shuttle pilot and the wheeze at the end each time Han exhaled. The last third of the run, it seemed as though Han was asleep. But when the hatch had opened and the orderlies were unstrapping the stretcher to carry Han out, he opened his eyes and found Luke with a steady gaze. "Hey--kid." "What?" "You'd have come for me if you knew, right?" "You know I would," Luke said. Then he grinned crookedly. "It's a bad habit from the old days." Han let his head loll back and his eyes close. "You can keep that one," he said. "Give the bastards hell, kid. They've earned it." The final tactical conference for Strong Hand included not only the commanders of all sixteen battle groups--by hypercomm holo link, as the groups were already staged to their jump points--but also Luke, Wialu, and A'baht's five senior aides. "Here's the good news," said Colonel Corgan. "Not only did the feint at Doornik Three-nineteen go off without any losses, but we got a free shot at an outbound Fat Man in the bargain, and made the most of it. Primary credit for the kill goes to Captain Ssiew and Thunderhead, and I'd like to tip my hat to them for showing us the way." "Here's the interesting news," said Colonel Mauit'ta. "Looking at the data from today's action together with the clash at ILC-Nine-oh-five, we now believe that the Yevetha have their own game of where's-the-candy under way. That is, we are now ninety percent convinced that there are two versions of the Yevethan T-type--one a capital warship, and the other an unarmed transport. At this point, we're still looking for tip-offs to provide to your sensor crews. But we believe the risks would justify following a simple rule of thumb: Don't bother firing on any targets that aren't firing on you." "Here's the bad news," said General A'baht. "The last survey of the N'zoth and Z'fell systems show that the Yevethan fleets there continue to be reinforced by ships coming in from elsewhere in Koornacht Cluster. N'zoth is now at forty-six capital ships and Z'fell thirty-four. That means that if they call our bluff and we end up in a tussle, we'll have only about a six-to-five edge--which could go to even odds by the time we get there. We will get one more snapshot from our stasis probes just before the jump-out." He looked down the table at Wialu. "A lot's riding on you, madam. If there's any reason to think---" "I am ready," she said quietly. "Then we go at the times established in revision nine of the coordinated plan," said A'baht. "Good luck to us all--and if luck disappoints us, then good hunting to us all." As the holos began dissolving, one after another, A'baht leaned toward Luke. "Can I talk to you for a moment?" This conversation truly was private--just Luke and the general, alone behind the closed door of A'baht's office. "I've been holding off saying anything about this, thinking I'd let you come to me on your own and let me know what sort of role you wanted to have in this," said A'baht. "But we're getting close to the end of the talking, so I'll get right to the point. If this comes to a shooting war, I'd like to have the benefit of your experience and leadership. "I know there are some strictly bureaucratic issues about your status, but I don't care about them. I'd like to offer you command of Red E Squadron. That's twelve of this ship's best E-wing pilots, and I know there won't be any hard feelings about your coming in at the top. You can use my personal fighter--the crews keep it zeroed in--" "I'm sorry," Luke said. "I appreciate your confidence, but I have to say no." A'baht frowned. "I'm not sure I understand. What, uh--what are your plans, then?" Luke stood. "I intend to be with Wialu and Akanah on the observation deck. My obligations to them come first." Squinting unhappily in Luke's direction, A'baht said, "If it's their security you're worried about, I can put as many armed men up there as you want, so you'd be free--" "Armed men will not contribute to their sense of security," Luke said. "The answer is no. I'm sorry if that answer disappoints you." "It confounds me," said A'baht. "The choice is yours, of course--but I would appreciate an explanation, if there is one." Luke felt the heavy weight of expectations settle on his shoulders. If you don't let them make your choices for you, they demand that you justify yourself to them--ah, Ben, how did you ever learn to refuse them with a tranquil conscience? "The obligations I spoke of don't involve protecting the Fallanassi," said Luke. "I can't stand with one foot in their world and one foot in yours. I asked them to involve themselves in our conflict as a matter of principle. Now I have to show that I respect that same principle myself." "Where exactly do your loyalties lie, then?" "That's a deceptively simple question, General, and we haven't the time to explore it," Luke said. "It does need to be explored I suspect it's the question that eventually led to Palpatine's purge of the Jedi." "I did not intend to question your honor," said A'baht. "I know that, General," Luke said. "In the end, it comes down to this--there's far more to be lost by my limbing into that cockpit than you could possibly gain from my doing so. You have good pilots, good crews, and leadership enough to offer them. I'll celebrate a victory with you no matter how it comes. But my part in it will not be as a warrior." The heralds of the coming armada were stasis probes 203, 239, and 252. They were the last remaining survivors from more than fifty such probes Alpha Blue and the Fleet had sent into the N'zoth system. The others had either been hunted down by Yevethan patrol ships, or had expired under the stress of their mission profile. Undetectable in hyperspace, a stasis probe would drop into realspace only long enough to take a sensor snapshot, transmit the data to its controller, and receive the interval instruction for its next appearance--alto gether, a matter of no more than twenty seconds. Only passive sensors were used. Stealthiness was essential to the probes' survival. Ordinarily, the most severe challenge to stealthiness was the Cronau radiation from the entries and exits. But with the probes' zero space velocity, the Cronau radiation collapsed into a narrow wave cone, which was carefully directed away from enemy sensors. But the last instructions received by the three probes were far from ordinary. They were unprecedentedly strange---strange enough that probes with more sophisticated system droids might well have refused them. The probes were to orient themselves gyroscopically so that on their next entry, the Cronau wave cone was pointed at N'zoth like a spotlight. Next, they were to begin active sensing, sending out optical and radar pings at ten-second intervals. Finally, they were to remain in that mode for the next hundred minutes. Taken together, the instructions guaranteed that the probes would be found and destroyed long before that hundred minutes had elapsed. The flow of new data would be cut off--the probes' missions would be cut short, in failure. But the three probes were not meant to survive. The data they were transmitting was now considered inconsequential. They were being sacrificed to draw as many Yevethan eyes as possible upward and outward--to assemble the audience for the show that was to follow. And as heralds, they succeeded marvelously well. Nil Spaar's highest priority that day had been replenishing the breederies. Nearly all of the new marahas had been destroyed during the vermin's clumsy and unsuccessful attempt to rescue Han Solo. The losses left Nil Spaar both grieving and aggrieved, and he had closed himself away with the most select marasi in order that the alcoves of the undamaged breederies be filled with all haste. But the news delivered to his quarters with great timidity by the second proctor of defense was urgent enough to excuse the interruption. "Darama--ten thousand apologies. But alien vessels of an unknown type have appeared in defense zones nine and eleven," the proctor said, flinching. "Our fleet is being scanned. Primate Dar Bille has called the ship to readiness, and begs your counsel." When Nil Spaar reached the bridge, he found a disagreeable amount of confusion. Multiple alarms were sounding, and the new proctor of defense for the spawnworld was engaged in a loud clash of dominance with the ship's primate. But the viceroy's arrival resolved the hierarchical crisis, as both Tho Voota and Dar Bille knelt before him and then pressed their cases on him. "Show me what has happened," Nil Spaar said, waving away their words. He watched earnestly as the logs of various monitors and pickets were replayed for him on the main viewscreen. Three alien probes had appeared within moments of each other--probes of the same size, perhaps even the same type, as those the outer patrols had been destroying with some regularity. They marked the corners of a lopsided triangle, the longest side of which spanned fifteen degrees of the sky. The probes were persistently hurling radionic and light energy in toward the fleet, accounting for most of the alarms on the bridge. "Dar Bille's judgment is correct," said Nil Spaar. "The meaning of this is that more ships are coming. We will move toward these probes at once." "But darama, please consider--if this proves another false showing, as there was at Preza yesterday--" the proctor said in protest. "Then they will not pass close enough for us to engage them from this orbit," said Dar Bille. "Their purpose could be to draw us away, and leave the spawnworld unprotected." "There are ships enough for both duties," said Nil Spaar, cutting short the argument. "But the flagship of the Protectorate need fear no enemy. We will move to intercept." Dar Bille spun away. "Signal our companion vessels that we are breaking orbit. Helmsman! Set course for the anomalies, and make quarter speed when the way is clear." With a slow grace, the boTtoM of the great Star Destroyer swung out and upward, bringing the triangle of enemy probes to the center of the main viewpane. As Nil Spaar settled into his command lounge, he settled his gaze on that triangle and thought heartening thoughts about revenge for his lost children. It was night in Giat Norwa night like most nights on N'zoth, of quiet air and clear skies under the splendor of the All. But a sentry had called Ton Raalk to the courtyard of the city proctor's hall-and quarters with a report of a curiosity: three bright flashes in the sky over N'zoth's northern latitudes. "One after another they were, like one word following another," said the sentry. "And bright--brighter than any of the All. I only saw the third of them directly, but it left me half blind for minutes after." There were others of Ton Raalk's family and staff in the courtyard as well, having glimpsed the sky or the ground lit up though a window or door. The proctor was well aware of them as he answered loudly, "I see nothing here, and no reason for concern. Most likely it was part of our glorious fleet, going hunting for the vermin." The sentry would not relent. In his post, he had seen many ships jumping in and out of N'zoth's skies, and that light was only a flicker by comparison. "Could it be that there is fighting here, etaias? Perhaps for safety the families should be moved" Then someone cried out, pointing skyward. Ton Raalk turned at the sound, then craned his neck upward. He stared wonderingly with the others as a small area of the sky, barely larger than his hand at arm's length, began to roil and dance with light. As warship after warship appeared within the triangle marked out by the alien probes, Nil Spaar edged forward in his chair with eager glee in his eyes. "Yes, come, come," he urged. "What a glorious victory you will give us. What a splendid sky, full of targets for our guns. There will be honor for every Yevetha today, and vengeance for every lost child." But at that moment, both fleets were well out of the range of each other's weapons. There was time for the game masters on both sides to array their pieces for battle, jockeying for advantage in the clash to come. The slow grace of the ballet belied its murderous purpose. Dar Bille ordered the interdictor Splendor of Yevetha forward into the lead spot, to protect the flagship from any sneak attacks from hyperspace. Tho Voota held the flagship and its companions at a crawl while the balance of the home fleet rose from orbit to catch and join them. Meanwhile, the count of the approaching armada continued to climb, topping two hundred before the entry flashes finally ceased. Then the formation began to spread, breaking into squadron-sized units spaced in a one-deep array that brought every ship into view. Their slow, almost stately approach declared an arrogant confidence. "Darama, there is a signal from the vermin," announced the proctor of communication. "I will hear them, for my amusement," said Nil S paar, rising from his couch. "Let all hear, Proctor--these words will confess our enemy's weakness and impotence. They will boast and threaten and then conceal their cowardice as mercy." "This is General Etahn A'baht, commander of the New Republic combined forces in Farlax. This is my final warning to the citizens and worlds of the Duskhan League. You are called to account for your crimes against the peaceful peoples of Koornacht. You must give up the territory you illegally seized by force. You must surrender all hostages unharmed-" Sil Sorannan witnessed the arrival of the New Republic fleet on the three-dimensional monitors in the flagship's fire control center. It was from that room that Pride of Yevetha's individual batteries would be assigned targets. Those decisions were in the hands of the three Yevethan officers seated at the consoles in the pit. Sorannan's responsibility ended at maintaining the data server for the target registry and its electronic links throughout the ship. Still, he studied the holographic image-map with as much intent devotion as did the fire control proctors. As the first warships appeared, his hand slipped into his pocket and found the hard-toothed comb. He rubbed its spine like a worry-stone as the New Republic fleet grew. His respect for the attackers grew as well as he listened to their commander's warning. "--Your past aggressions will not be tolerated: Future aggression will not be permitted. I call on the captains of all Yevethan vessels: Stand down your weapons. Lower your shields. Maintain your current orbits--or be destroyed. I call on Viceroy Nil Spaar: Order the immediate surrender of all Yevethan forces everywhere. Yield your claim to authority and your post as viceroy, and your cities will be spared. Resist, and you invite the total destruction of both your fleet and your way of life." A frontal assault with overwhelming force--that is the way war was meant to be fought, thought Sorannan admiringly. Strength against strength--not the weak and cowardly tactics of the Rebel Alliance. You have grown some since I last knew you. As A'baht spoke, Sorannan slid toward the leftmost section of his station and opened one of the several small service panels in its instrumented face. But he did not yet pick up the hand-built blaster pistol resting inside atop the circuits. He was waiting for Nil Spaar's answer, even though he had little doubt what it would be. Standing with arms crossed and feet set apart, Etahn A'baht frowned deeply as he watched the Yevethan fleet form up. The bridge of Intrepid had fallen under a suffocating silence as he sent his ultimatum, and the silence was growing more uncomfortable by the second. "Anything?" he asked finally. "Not unless you count continuing toward us as a reply." "That may be all the reply we get," said A'baht. "Time to weapons lock?" "Six minutes twenty." A'baht nodded. "All right," he said with a sigh. "Get the pilots into their cockpits. Start locking down the shield doors. And let's have about twenty of our thumpers light up that Super with range-finder lasers. Let's remind the estimable viceroy that we know where he lives." As the minutes dragged out and the distance between the fleets continued to shrink, Sil Sorannan brought the comb out of his pocket and ran it through his thinning red hair. He knew that Nil Spaar's silence was an expression of contempt for his adversaries, but he was also confident that the viceroy would not be able to resist expressing his contempt directly. Sorannan waited calmly for it to come. But when the most powerful weapons on Pride of Yevetha---on Intimidator, Sorannan reminded himself--were only a minute away from being able to deliver an effective blow to the nearest of the New Republic vessels, he could wait no longer. Holding the comb before him in both hands, he twisted it sharply, and it came apart in his hands. One of the pieces was a thin wand with three small buttons--it had been hidden inside the comb's hollow spine. Keeping his eye on both the proctors and the holo tracks, Sorannan moved the wand to his right hand and picked up the blaster in his left. As he did so, Nil Spaar began to broadcast his answer of defiance to both fleets. "You are low and impure creatures, and your threats mean nothing to me," the viceroy said. "Your presence fouls the perfection of the All and offends the honor of the Blessed. I will rip the soft white bellies of your ships open and spill their disgusting entrails for all to see. Your lungs will thirst for air. Your vigorless blood will boil in your ears. Your pleas will go unanswered, and your screams will go unheard. Your bodies will fall into the sun and be consumed. You will be forgotten by your offspring, and your mates will bring new blood to their beds." Fool, Sorannan thought. They have your fleet out-' gunned three to one--soon to be five to one. Without a flicker of change in his expression, he pressed the first two buttons on the wand with his thumb, then raised the blaster to shoulder level and began to fire. A'baht listened to Nil Spaar's screed with his jaw set in a grim expression and the last flickers of hope dying in his eyes. "That's that," he said. "Get those people down from the oh deck--it's not safe up there. Break the Showcase formation, and bring all the batteries up to full power." "General!" called the tactical officer. "The Yevethan flagship is slowing." A'baht nodded acknowledgment. "That's a small break for us, if he's decided to let the rest of his fleet do the fighting." "Sir, all of the Imperial types are slowing--the Super, the interdictor, the SDs--all of 'em. They're stopping in a hurry, too--just sitting there. I can't figure this tactic--the T-types are hard for us to knock out, but the Imperial designs have more punch." A'baht stared at the tactical display. "Signal the armada to slow to one. eighth--let's give ourselves a little more time to sort this out. Are any of the T-types holding off?" "No, not one of them--they're still coming on," said the tactical officer. Seconds passed. "General, the Imperial types are definitely veering off now. I don't know--maybe the viceroy's having an attack of good sense." A'baht's thoughts leaped at once to the officially discounted claim of a treaty between the League and something called the Grand Imperial Union. "Or someone else is," he said. "Maybe there's a falling-out between friends under way over there. Let's see if we can aggravate it. Task Forces Blackvine, Apex, Keyhole--the leashes are off. Pursue and engage." There were 513 Black Sword Command veterans aboard Pride of Yevetha and more than 15,000 Yevetha. Those proportions did not trouble Major Sorannan. His contingent was armed with more than blasters and a profound motivation. The ship was already under their control; dealing with its last owners was a mere detail. There was a precious irony, Sorannan thought, that the principle instrumentality of their freedom was something called a slave circuit. Within three minutes of his pressing the button that turned the ships away from the New Republic fleet and toward Byss, he was joined in the fire control room by Captain Eistern and three other men whose former duty stations had been elsewhere in the engineering section. "Looks as though you managed without us, sir," said Eistern, observing the carnage in the pit. Tendrils of smoke were still rising from the consoles where three blackened corpses were slumped. "They gave me no trouble," Sorannan said with evident satisfaction. Eis'tern glanced up at the targeting holo. "Wish you could say that about the Alliance," he said. "It looks like they're coming after us. We're not ready to fight this ship, you know." "We will be gone before they catch up," said Sorannan. "They don't know what's happening here. Maybe they wouldn't even bother with us if they did." "I intend to tell them, but not for that reason," said Sorannan. "I want them to know who they owe their victory to." He climbed back to his station, pulled out a pair of system boards, and replaced them upside down. The monitors flickered as the displays changed to reflect the new functions being controlled from that location. "General A'baht, can you hear this transmission?" "This is A'baht." There was curiosity in the tone. "Please identify yourself." "Proudly, General. This is Major Sil Sorannan of the Black Sword Command, Imperial Navy--acting captain of the Star Destroyer Intimidator and commodore of the Camp Pa'aal Squadron." "I am not familiar with your unit, Major." Sorannan laughed stiffly. "It's newly commissioned, General--sorry you couldn't be here for the christening." "If your intentions are not hostile---" "It is not that we have any more love for you now than when we last faced you," said Sorannan. "But we won't fight to defend our enslavers." "Heave to, and you won't be harmed." "Oh, no," Sorannan said. "We've been here too long already--nearly thirteen years on a nine-month detail. No, General. This is good-bye. We are taking back what is ours, starting with our freedom and these ships. We leave the Yevetha to you." He pressed the middle and third buttons on the wand, and an unjammable hypercomm signal leaped across the emptiness to slave circuits buried deep in the command architecture of every Imperial warship de ployed at N'zoth and its daugher worlds across the cluster. Autopilots calculated jump vectors, and hyperdrive motivators called on the immense power of solar ionization reactors. Space trembled, twisted, and yawned open around the accelerating warships. Moments later, Black Sword Command's withdrawal from Koornacht Cluster was finally complete. Cheering broke out on the bridge of Intrepid as the heart of the Yevethan fleet vanished from the tracking displays, but A'baht quickly put a stop to it. "We have no way of verifying what we just heard. Those ships could jump out half a light-year and return on our flank," he said. "Moreover, there are still forty-four T-types out there, and none of them have broken off yet. This is not over." There was very little time left before the fragmented Yevethan formation and the New Republic fleet met. A'baht used most of it to broadcast another appeal for surrender, directing it at the individual captains of the approaching vessels, emphasizing the superior numbers of his force. But there was no reply, and no change in the Yevethan fleet's disposition. Whatever orders Nil Spaar had given before disappearing were apparently still in force. That, more than anything, convinced A'baht that they had not seen the last of the Imperial contingent. "I cannot believe that a unit that has been decimated-no, worse than that--before the battle begins, which has lost its senior commanders before a shot has been fired, and which faces a vastly superior force, would not collapse," the general said. "By all manner of reason, those commanders should be thinking of surrender or retreat." "Well, they're not," said Colonel Corgan. "Targets eighteen, twenty, and twenty-one just opened fire on the phantom elements of Task Force Token." "So I am led to conclude that none of those things has happened," said A'baht. "Their force has not been decimated, only divided. Their command structure remains intact--and they have other forces not yet committed to the battle zone. Therefore We can infer that these are low-value assets meant to occupy us, to disrupt our formations, and to soften us up for a planned counterstrike." "I concur that the evidence can be read that way," said Colonel Corgan. "So how do we play it now, General?" A'baht studied the tactical display. "We must neutralize this force without compromising our unit integrity or our mobility," he said at last. "Pass the word as follows: Hold back the bombers. Keep the patrol screens close, and launch the A-wing interceptors only in response to direct threat from other little birds. Our operational unit for this engagement is to be the fleet squadron, and squadron commanders now have operational autonomy. All units, pursue, engage, and destroy all targets of opportunity. Since they insist on a fight, we'll give 'em one." "What about the hostages, sir?" A'baht shook his head. "Pray for them, Colonel. That's all we can do." A great conflict is nothing more than the aggregate of many small struggles, and so it was with the Battle of N'zoth. There was no single vantage point from which its entirety could be grasped not even the observation deck of the New Republic flagship. Luke and Akanah had turned away the lieutenant who came to remove them from that spot. The commencement of hostilities had not meant the end of Wialu's efforts--to Luke's surprise, she continued the illusion of the phantom warships even as ion and laser cannon began to light up space all around them. "She told that she would maintain the projection as long as she could, even if the Yevetha did not surrender," Akanah whispered. Luke nodded. "If the phantoms draw their share of the Yevethan fire--" "She said that no one would die aboard a ship that wasn't there." But it was obvious to both of them that the effort was taking a toll on Wialu. As the battle wore on and broken and burning warships began to dot the starry backdrop, Wialu began to sag visibly. Finally, moments after a New Republic light escort blew up spectacularly just a few kilometers away, Wialu slumped forward on the deck where she had been sitting, and the phantoms vanished from the New Republic formations. Even then, she surprised Luke again by declining to be helped from the observation deck. "I will watch to the end. No matter what path you follow, it is important to be reminded what war means," she said, letting Akanah guide her to one of the empty semireclined chairs. Luke had been holding a question for hours, and the urgency of it had grown in the waiting. He crouched beside Wialu, his back to the fighting. "Wialu, I have to know--are there Fallanassi aboard any of those vessels?" "Yes," she said. He drew a deep breath and released it slowly. "Is Nashira among them?" "I cannot hear your question," Wialu said. His frustration sharpened to the point of pain, Luke turned angrily away. "I can tell you only that they are not hostages," she went on. "They chose this service for themselves, on the last morning that the Current scalded as it does now--the day the Yevetha came to make their claim. Many, many died that day. But some were saved by those who placed themselves between. I did not ask it of them, but I honor them and their sacrifice." Staring out at a burning Yevethan thrustship, Luke found he had no choice but to respect that sacrifice with silence. In reality, the outcome of the Battle of N'zoth had been foreordained from the moment Sil Sorannan departed with the Black Sword vessels. But it was no less brutal or difficult for that. The Yevethan thrustship shields were superior to New Republic shields, and the spherical symmetry of the thrust-ship design made them even more effective. And though they were not heavily armed by Imperial standards--the combined output of the eight batteries was less than that of a gunship, to say nothing of an escort or a heavy cruiser--the ability to focus all of that energy on one small area gave them the knockout punch of a much larger ship. Under attack by three and four New Republic vessels each, one after another of the Yevethan warships succumbed. But it was a war of attrition, with nearly as many losses as there were victories--Thunderhead. Aboukir. Fulminant. Werra. Garland. Banshee. Nor were all of the losses among the smaller vessels. Commodore Farley Carson's Yakez was caught between two thrustships and broken in two by the detonation of the forward magazine after its bow shields collapsed. The fleet carrier Ballarat took a brace of Yevethan missiles just forward of the number four flight deck, and the chain of explosions that followed hurled three squadrons of shattered E- and X-wings out into space. Ballarat's misfortune gave Plat Mallar his first chance to do something more than watch from the yawning maw of a flight deck. All of the fleet's launches, gigs, and shuttles had been outfitted for rescue and recovery work and distributed among the task forces. Mallar and his shuttle had been assigned to the cruiser Mandjur, which was part of Ballarat's squadron and the closest vessel to it when the missiles struck. While Mandjur dueled with the Yevethan warship, Mallar brought back one live pilot and two dead ones in three trips through an intense field of fire. But despite the painful losses scattered across the entire battle zone, the trend was clear. There were only two points at which that trend threatened to reverse itself. The first was when the phantoms vanished, allowing the Yevethan ships to focus their fire on the real threats. The second came near the end, when the last eleven thrustships began launching their trifoil fighters--fighters that screamed toward the New Republic vessels, diving through shield gaps opened for them by the Yevethan batteries and hurling themselves against their targets as suicide missiles. In a matter of only five minutes, half a dozen of the vessels engaging the remnant of the Yevethan fleet were either destroyed or forced to withdraw. Mandjur was among the ships that came to fill the gaps, but it was struck twice near the stern before it could launch even half of its interceptors. It began to drift, crippled and vulnerable, its engines dead and its aft shields gone. In the moments after the twin impacts rattled the cruiser, Mallar ran to join a group of pilots, deck crew, and droids who were trying to clear a damaged E-wing from the mouth of the flight deck. Their chatter told him what was happening outside the ship and decided his course. Ever since coming aboard Mandjur, he had been eyeing Captain Tegett's X-wing. Painted a vivid red, it sat in a reserved tie-down slot under the broad transparencies of the flight control office. And when the debris was finally cleared and the undamaged interceptors began to move forward to launch, Mallar ran to the red X-wing instead of back to his shuttle. When the flight operations chief cleared him to start engines instead of trying to chase him away, Mallar knew just how dire the ship's plight was. Using the power of his ship's signature appearance, he edged into line between two E-wings, and not long after got the green ball to launch. "Four coming in!" Mallar heard over his cockpit comm as Mandjur fell away behind him. "This is Blue Five--I need help back here!" Hauling the X-wing around sharply toward the cruiser's stern, Mallar had a moment of dizziness. He heard Ackbar's voice echoing in his thoughts. Don't try to turn with them--use your speed, know your strengths and your limits. He saw Polneye burning before his eyes. Thanks for the lessons, Admiral, he thought. Thanks for the chance. As Mallar thumbed the squawk button he saw an E-wing turning with him and another coming up from behind to settle on his starboard wing. "This is Red Leader," he said with quiet confidence. "On my way, Blue Five, with company. Take the first one---we'll get the rest." Then he pushed the throttles ahead, and the fighter leaped forward with an eagerness that matched his own. The reports that came in from the intelligence sources scattered through the outer regions of the cluster all mirrored each other: The ships that had been orbiting the destroyed colonies were gone. Asset analysis would later show that those same ships were among those that had reinforced the fleets at N'zoth, Wakiza, Z'fell, and the other large-population worlds. The reports that came in from the task forces sent to those worlds mirrored the experience at N'zoth: The Imperial ships turned and jumped out without apparent cause or explanation, but not a single Yevethan vessel surrendered or fled. Every last thrustship had fought relentlessly, taking the fight to the Fleet as the aggressor, until it was destroyed. A'baht had never seen the like of it in thirty years of soldiering, and it left him shaken. "It has always been enough, in the past, to defeat the enemy," he said to Morano in the privacy of the now-quiet situation room. "I've never known an enemy who forced me to utterly destroy him. By the end, I was looking for ways not to have to destroy those last few ships. If they had given me any chance to spare them, shown any hesitation, even just broken contact and fallen back--" "They never gave us a Chance," said Morano, shak ing his head. "You can't show mercy to someone who's going for your throat." "No," A'baht said. Tapping a key slowly with his index finger. A'baht began paging through the casualty summaries. It took a long time. "This is an error," he said, pausing at one point. "Tegett never left Mandjur--it was someone else in his fighter. They still don't know who." "Too bad. Spoils a grand heroic story for the news-grids," said Morano. "Captain saves his ship by ramming a suicide bomber--" "There's still a story there," said A'baht, tapping the key. "A lot of stories here, and they won't all get told." Tap--tap--tap-A'baht shook his head. "What a terrible price we paid for this one." "Second thoughts, General?" "No," he said firmly. "Oh, no. What I said earlier, about wanting to spare them at the end--I'm lucky I didn't have that chance. It would have been a mistake." "I don't understand." A'baht gestured at the screen before him. "Can you imagine if they'd had the patience to wait another ten years or so, studying us, building up their fleet? No, no regrets, Captain. I'm glad for what happened today, even though doing it made me sick at heart. I'm glad we did this before the Yevetha got any stronger, or any smarter about us." The general closed the casualty file and pushed his datapad away from him. "I just hope we're smart enough now to figure out a way to see that they never build a starship again." Nil Spaar's arms were bound at his sides, his claws locked helplessly against the restraining bar. His ankles were manacled together with a short plasteel cable. Even so, he tried to lunge at Sil Sorannan when the Imperial officer appeared in the bridge's escape pod access tunnel. The lunge did not carry him far. It was not even necessary for anyone to shoot the viceroy--Lieutenant Gar, one of the four witnesses, simply hooked Nil Spaar's ankle cable with his own foot, bringing the Yevetha down hard on the deck. "For twelve years of torture, and too many friends, there isn't enough I can do to you," said Sorannan, stepping closer. "I already know that killing you won't be satisfying. No matter how I do it and how long it takes, I'll wake up tomorrow and see the face of someone who didn't get to go home with us, and I'll know in my gut that you got off too easy. "But still, you deserve to die. And the only thing I can think of that will help me answer those faces that come into my mind is to make you wait for it--and make sure that my face stays in your mind while you wait. "So here's something you should know about me. Before I joined Black Sword Command, I was detailed to the Research Section as a pilot for the experimental hyperphysics team. We were trying to learn how to drop bombs from hyperspace. We never learned how." Sorannan crouched by Nil Spaar's head, and his voice grew soft. "You see, it turns out that no matter which way you go through the magic door, you need a hyperdrive to open it. Anything that we released in hyperspace just stayed there. We even took a drone and blew it up in hyperspace, to see if that might open the door. None of the wreckage ever appeared again in realspace." As he stood up again, he gestured to Captain Eis-tern, who stepped to the hatch of escape pod 001 and unlatched it. "It's really too bad the project didn't work out," Sorannan said, stepping back while Gat and another witness dragged Nil Spaar to his feet. "Because it turns out to be very easy to release an object in hyperspace. One good shove will do it--like the ejection charge of an escape pod, for example." The viceroy stood tall and silent, his expression one of contempt and haughty pride. Sorannan leaned his face close to Nil Spaar's, so that the breath of his whisper kissed the viceroy's cheeks. "I don't know how long you will survive there," he said. "I do know that you will die there." Stepping back, the major watched as the others forced Nil Spaar into the escape pod and sealed him inside. "Die slowly," Sorannan said hoarsely, and slammed his hand down on the firing switch. With a roar, the escape pod hurtled away into oblivion. Rendezvous Joto Eckels stared at the sensor display with a degree of awe approaching the religious. In a lifetime of archaeological fieldwork, Eckels had never faced a moment like this one, when a functioning instrumentality of a dead race had appeared to bridge the centuries. It was an event on a par with the greatest finds of the modern era--the Shadow Traproom on Liok, the Nojic Beanstalk, the Great Subcrustal Tubeway of the Pa Tho, the Foran Tutha star probe. But at first, there was no joy in it--only the sudden, numbing weight of responsibility. Dreiss and Mokem had died in the Shadow Traproom. Bartleton had watched helplessly as the Foran Tutha probe was gutted by a fire his own people inadvertently triggered. But Pakkpekatt's team did not appear burdened by thoughts of either history or posterity. With matter-of-fact efficiency, they immediately began to deal with the surprise. "What message should I send to HQ, Colonel?" asked Pleck. "A contact report only," said Pakkpekatt. "Let us see what sort of greeting she has for us first. Is the satellite prepared for deployment?" "I'm finished with it. It's set up on the fantail and ready to go," said Taisden. "Recommendation?" "Penga Rift needs to move to the far side, keep the planet between it and the vagabond until they've collected their people and cleared orbit. If we place ourselves and the satellite a hundred and eighty degrees apart in geosynch, we can get complete coverage of the approaches plus maximum separation." "Deploy the satellite," said Pakkpekatt. "Doctor?" Looking slightly bewildered, Eckels shouldered his way forward. "May I speak with Penga Rift, Colonel?" "Of course. Colonel Hammax, get the doctor set up at station three." Eckels gave the recall order, then apprised Captain Barjas of the situation. "Get everyone aboard and everything locked down," he said. "Have Mazz monitor everything that goes through our satellite. See what you can get on the incoming ship. But don't risk the arti-facts-at the first sign of any direct threat, jump out." Then he turned his attention back to the others, who seemed to have forgotten him for the moment. "Let's do one more test cycle on the auto-responder," Pleck was saying. "When that interrogative comes--" "No," said Pakkpekatt. "The earlier tests were satisfactory. The interrogative could come at any time. Bring it up and put it online." "Yes, Colonel," Pleck said. "Satellite is away, active, and moving to position," said Taisden. "Fourteen minutes to station. We can make our station six minutes after the skiff clears." Pakkpekatt turned toward Eckels and eyed him curiously. "Doctor, shouldn't you be going?" "Where?" "Back to your ship-to Penga Rift." "To hide on the other side of Maltha Obex? I don't think so, Colonel. I think you can make more use of me than that." ment. But the only detectable dialog took place between his determinedly steady gaze and Pakkpekatt's sharply inquiring one. Against the possibility of an undetected dialog, Eckels held one thought in his mind: I accept your authority. Let me help. Let me be there when the door is opened. Pakkpekatt grimaced in a manner reminiscent of a yawn. "If Penga Rift does not need you, then we will take advantage of your presence," he said. "Agent Pleck, take Dr. Eckels to the observation deck and familiarize him with the equipment." Lobot found sharing his interface with the vagabond a seductive preoccupation. After as little as twenty minutes, he began to lose both the will and the ability to respond to Lando or the droids. It was not that the link was so rich and easy that he experienced what cyborgs spoke of among themselves as "falling down a hole into heaven"--much the opposite, in fact. The link was so difficult, communication so painfully slow, and the data structures so alien that staying in contact with the vessel gradually absorbed all of his attention and resources. Even switching to Basic to process aural input or formulate and voice a response gradually became an insuperable burden. For the first time in his memory, Lobot found himself single-tasking, surrendering his own internal processes and thinking in the base-six binary algorithms of the vagabond. The cyborg community called that loss of boundaries "turning inside out" and viewed 'it as a danger to systemic integration--one step away from dissociative collapse. Lando knew only that Lobot was connected to a machine with the power to take him away and no apparent inclination to return him. After observing the phenomenon the first time, Lando set strict limits and appointed himself the enforcer of them. Throughout the duration of the hyperspace jump, Lobot spent no more than an hour at a time linked, with at least two hours between sessions. Even allowing that much was 'a concession to Lobot, who insisted that the most productive part of a session was the part when he was insensible to anything but the vagabond's data structures. That assertion was one Lando had to take on faith. So far, Lando hadn't seen enough in the way of useful results to justify risking any contact at all. The insights Lobot was gleaning from contact with the vagabond seemed far more meaningful than the ones he was managing to communicate to Lando. "It doesn't know what it is," Lobot had explained. "It only knows what it does." But even within those parameters, what the vagabond "told" Lobot seemed all too changeable, subject not only to interpretation but to Lobot's errors of enthusiasm. The ship was a protect against-harm, a shelter-and-nurture, a heal-and-succor, a flee-from-predators, a maintain-and-preserve, and a welcome-and-teach--which Lobot variously interpreted as egg, mother, creche, repository, and chrysalis. The rounded bodies in the inner tubules were sleepers, keepers, corpses, creepers, sacrifices, and directors--with half of those designations suggesting they were part of the vessel and half suggesting they were something apart. "I don't think it knows any more," Lobot had said at one point, responding to Lando's frustration. "Its · reflexes are complex and elegant, and it has great power at its command. But it lacks even a child's self-awareness or sense of purpose. It does what it knows to do, by stimulus and response, by instinct--it is conscious of those processes but nothing beyond them. I don't think it even realizes where it is, any more than a seed buried in the ground does." "If you and it make up your mind about anything, make a point of sharing that with me," Lando had answered in disgust. "If it won't obey us, I don't see that we're getting anything useful out of this. So if you're going to keep communing with it, at least keep Working on that point." Even as Lobot had found a new focus, Lando seemed to have lost his. They had access to the entire ship now, but Lando had shown little interest in making use of it. He had powered down both droids, and spent most of his time floating in chamber 229. The near exhaustion of his propellant was only a pretext concealing his loss of heart. Lobot made one attempt to talk to Lando about what he was seeing. "In our travels together, I have only seen you leave the table twice," he said. "Once when you found yourself in a rigged game, and once when that woman, Sarra Dolas, came and sat at Narka Tobb's side instead of yours. I have only seen you fold your hand in the face of a game that could not be won, and a game that you no longer cared about winning. Which is it this time?" "Neither," said Lando. "I've done everything that I know how to do. None of it's done a thing to improve our position. Now you say it's headed home. I'm just waiting for the last hand to be played." But the unprecedentedly violent shaking of the vagabond as it exited from hyperspace shook Lando out of his indifference. "Lobot, where are you?" he called over the suit comm. "In the interspace, aft," Lobot replied. "Did you hear what just almost didn't happen? On my worst mornings after my worst days, I don't sound that bad trying to get up," Lando said. "Yes, Lando," said Lobot. "The exit growl was extraordinarily loud and extended here--I had the distinct impression of hearing it from behind, from the stern first, and then a fraction of a second later from the bow. And I could see an oscillation wave with an amplitude of at least a decimeter traveling along the outer hull." "You're lucky there still is an outer hull," Lando said. "I've figured out why the jumps keep getting rockier. thing I need you to check on. I'll explain while you're en route." "Coming," Lobot said. "Please continue." "I don't know why I didn't realize it sooner. The ship's power reserves--whatever it's been drawing on--must be way down. Either it's been out too long without topping off the tanks--just like you, me, and the droids--or the damage from the last attack affected either the reserves or the generators." "The vagabond does not have generators." "Whatever," said Lando. "Take it as a metaphor. The ship manages to store and transform energy somehow, for weapons, and motive power, and light, and all the little gadgets in the chambers." "Granted." "So whether the tanks are empty or the converters are below minimums, there isn't enough to go around. That's why it opened all the portals and left them open. That's why none of the gadgets have worked since the attack, and why the lights went out on us. We're in some sort of energy-conservation mode. It's not just hurting--it's tired." "Yes. The ship and I have talked about that." "You might have shared that part with me," Lando said with a touch of annoyance. "Lobot, the transitions have been getting rougher every time out because the ship's right at the edge--at least as far as opening a big enough hyperspace portal, and opening it fast enough to minimize the stresses. It's a matter of being able to focus enough energy in a small enough space in a short enough time. And one of these days, it's not going to be able to do itand either the middle of the ship will jump out and leave the rest behind, or the portal will snap back and crush it." In the middle of Lando's exposition, Lobot rejoined him in chamber 229. "That is something I would prefer to witness from a distance." "Get in line behind me," said Lando. "That's why you have to link up with your friend. We need to know where we are and what's going to be happening--if its home is that planetary system depicted in the orrery instead of next-to-nowhere deep space, maybe we have a chance." "What is it you want me to ask it?" "I was thinking that maybe it could be persuaded to, say, let us have a viewport--under the general heading of being willing to provide us with information." "I can try," Lobot said, and began stripping off his suit so he could enter the inner passages. "Do you want me to go in with you?" "No," Lobot said. "But come in after me if I have not returned in twenty minutes." While he waited, Lando reactivated Artoo and, for the first time since the incident with the beckon call, Threepio. "Good day, Master Lando," Threepio said brightly, with no apparent awareness of Lando's lingering grudge. "My word, but my circuits are clear this morning. I haven't felt this way since my last defrag-mentation diagnostic. I hope you are feeling well. Where is Master Lobot? He hasn't been harmed, has he? I see his contact suit, but I don't see him anywhere. Artoo, my dear friend and companion--how have you been? Please tell me everything. Master Lando, my system controller is still showing a low-power alarm. Have you located a power coupling yet? This ship has a distinctly droid-hostile design, not to have made them more readily available--" "Threepio," Lando said sharply. The droid's head swiveled toward him. "Yes, Master Lando?" "Shut up." "Of course, sir." Artoo loosed a wheep that might have been an expression of relief. Lando turned to him and asked, "Artoo, will you scan local space for comm traffic? We just might be back somewhere near civilization." "Oh, I do hope so, sir--" Threepio began, until Lando silenced him with a glare. Before long, Lobot emerged from the forward inner portal and rejoined them. "Any luck?" "I am not certain," said Lobot. "It said we should go back to the auditorium. At least, I think that's where we're to go--as best as I can translate, it called that chamber the Reflection of the Essential Infinities." "But the orrery was destroyed." "Perhaps not rebuilding it was a choice, not a necessity." "All right," Lando said, gesturing with both hands. "Let's go find out." When all four members of the quartet were clinging somewhere on the auditorium's inner face, the chamber's outer face once again underwent the transformation to a great transparent panel. Once more they found themselves suspended in space, looking down on the sphere of a planet, and beyond it to the disc of a blue star. "What's going on here?" Lando cried in dismay. "Lobot, what did you ask for? This is a different planetary system. I don't want a tour of the astrographic catalog." "I believe your first impression has misled you," said Lobot. "This is the same system." "The hell it is. Look, that planet is an iceball," Lando said. "It looks like Hoth." He shook his head. "Oh, blast--this must mean the vagabond didn't make it home." "I think you are mistaken," said Lobot. "Artoo, scan and analyze. Compare with your recordings of our first visit to this chamber." "Oh, come on--the other planet had two moons," Lando said. "I don't have to have an analysis module to see that there aren't any moons." Lando squinted at the orrery. "But there is something there, in orbit. Something tiny." "The moons could both be eclipsed from our perspective." The astromech droid squawked briefly. "Pardon me, Master Lobot," Threepio interrupted. "Artoo-Detoo says that the principal elements of this display are identical in both absolute and apparent size to the one we previously viewed." "I told you," said Lobot. "Lando, what we saw the first time was Qella as it was when the vagabond last saw it. What we see now is Qella as it now appears." Threepio resumed his report as soon as Lobot stopped speaking. "Artoo also says that there is no correspondence in size, number, or orbital configuration between the minor elements of this display and the earlier one" "That's what I was trying to tell you," said Lando. "If that's Qella, where are the moons? This isn't of any use to us. It's a one-size-fits-all planetarium show." Artoo began chirping more urgently. "Artoo says, however, that he can identify four of the minor elements," Threepio reported. "The largest and closest of them is--" "--is this ship," Lobot exulted. "Lando, it's a real-time tracking display--a scale model of the neighborhood, including this vessel." "What? Artoo, illuminate this object you're talking about with your laser pointer." "It's right there in front of your eyes," Lobot said. "It's just small--I said scale model. Threepio, what are the other objects Artoo can identify?" Threepio nodded formally. "Of course, sir. The other objects are all orbiting the planet. In increasing order of size, they are a New Republic Engineering orbital relay satellite, a SoroSuub PLY-Three-thousand, and a Dobrutz DB-Four starliner--" "Just a--SoroSuub Three thousand? That's Lady Luck!" Lando shouted, punching the air with a fist. "I can't believe it--we're going to get out of here! Where is she? Artoo, illuminate Lady Luck--show me where my lovely lady is--" The request was lost in the sounds of exuberant rejoicing coming from the droids and reverberating off the faces of the chamber. Only Lobot did not join in the celebration. "Lando, please--wait," he said. "There's still something very wrong." "What are you talking about?" Lando said, letting go of his handhold and drifting down in front of Lobot. "Our ride is here. All we have to do is ask the vagabond to sheathe her claws and then call Lady Luck alongside. Food, a hot shower--gravity--" Lobot shook his head. "Lando, please listen--you were right. If this is Qella--if this model is accurate enough to show us objects the size of an orbital relay satellite, in enough detail for Artoo to identify it-- where are the moons of Maltha Obex?" "What's our strategy?" asked Colonel Hammax, studying the tracking display over Pakkpekatt's right shoulder. "Given that she's a hundred times as large as we are, and considerably more than a hundred times as powerful, it seems to me the real question on the table is, what's her strategy?" "How close are you going to let her get?" Pakkpekatt pawed his chest. "That, too, depends on her." "The effective radius of the vagabond's defensive zone at Gmar Askilon was twelve kilometers," said Taisden. "Given the size of this orbit, we shouldn't have any trouble keeping a cushion of twelve hundred kilometers, which I hope would be more than sufficient." "Shouldn't we at least try to contact General Calrissian?" asked Hammax. "I don't want to spook the vagabond," said Pakkpekatt. "We got along very well with her at Gmar Askilon so long as we were sitting still and in a passive sensing mode. Let's stay that way until we have a better idea why she's here." "Sure seems like it'd be nice to know if anyone's alive," said Hammax. "If I'm going to have to go inside--" "There will be time for that," said Pakkpekatt. "For now, I want silence. Can you reach Penga Rift with a directional comm signal?" "For another minute or so. She's about to go over the horizon to nightside." "Notify them what we're doing--instruct them to observe a comm and sensor blackout, and to stand by." Pakkpekatt studied the tracking display. "Patience will serve us best now." "Look, this isn't that complicated," Lando said impatiently, squeezing into the tubule beside Lobot. "Tell it we want to leave. Get it to promise not to fry my yacht when it tries to come alongside. That's all we want that's all we're asking. Then we'll be gone, and it can go where it wants and do what it wants." "If it tries to go anywhere, it might destroy itself," said Lobot. "I have to make it understand that first." "As long as we're not on it when that happens, what do we care?" Lando demanded. "For all I know, those droids are back there plotting to duplicate the beckon call signal I wouldn't put it past either of them to take things into their own hands." "Your response to these developments seems to have an alarmingly narrow focus," said Lobot. "You are indifferent to the fate of this vessel, to the mystery concerning the planet's moons, to why Lady Luck is even here--" "That's right. All I care about right now is getting out of here alive," said Lando. "And if you're worrying about anything else, I say you're the one with the problem. Come on, I can already taste the tranna nougat and doth brandy waiting for me in my suite. Say 'pardon me' and then palaver your persuasive head off until you have a docking permit for our lifeboat and exit passes for us." "I will see what can be done," Lobot said with a frown. "But I don't know why you think anything has changed. The vagabond will not take instructions from me." "If you care what happens to this ship, you'd better hope you're wrong," Calrissian said. "Because if Lady Luck's here, the rest of the task force can't be far away. And if Glorious and Marauder have to break us out, it's not going to be gentle or pretty." "I will try," said Lobot. Lando clapped him on the thigh. "That's the fellow. I'll be nearby." The vagabond made its approach to Maltha Obex at high speed, slowing only at the last to settle into a retrograde high equatorial orbit. Orbiting more slowly than the planet turned, the vagabond would linger on the dayside for nearly thirty hours while the planet seemed to slowly spin backward beneath it. "What do you think this is about?" Pakkpekatt asked. "Anyone?" "A very detailed surface scan," said Taisden. "She's looking for something." "Or she's sunbathing," said Hammax. "It's cold where she's been," he added when the others looked at him quizzically. "Dr. Eckels said it's a biological, didn't he?" "Let us be careful not to anthropomorphize," said Pakkpekatt. "Agent Taisden, it appears that the vessel's present orbit will bring her very close-to us shortly before she crosses the terminator." "Sixty kilometers," said Taisden. "And within sixty kilometers of Penga Rift nineteen hours after that. How comfortable are we with that spacing, Colonel?" "I would prefer not to be that close." "There's no way we can change our own orbit without calling attention to ourselves," said Taisden. "If she stays where she is--" Pakkpekatt hissed and shook himself. It went against both habit and nature for him to take the initiative in such a situation. "We may have no choice but to call attention to ourselves in one way or another," he said, sitting back in his couch. "And if we must do so, it is better done when the vagabond is still a generous distance away." "She'll never be farther away than she is right now." Pakkpekatt reached forward and cradled the flight controls lightly in his hands. "Notify the others what we are doing. Then page Calrissian on the frequency he was using for his suit comm at Gmar Askilon. Bounce the page through the satellite." "Wait--what happens if the yacht's slave circuits are activated again?" asked Hammax. "We seem to be assuming they won't be. Even if the general and his aide are out of it, couldn't one of the droids send the signal?" "We will have to trust that they will not do so if it is not safe to do so," said Pakkpekatt. "Send the page." Moments later, they heard Lando Calrissian's voice, shaky, hoarse and impatient, saying, "Yes, what is it, Threepio? What's happening now?" "Sir, I did not--" "Calrissian!" Pakkpekatt roared. "What are you doing alive?" "Pakkpekatt!" Calrissian answered in kind. "What are you doing on my ship? And why are you just sitting there?" "Hey, General--we're still waiting for our invitation," said Hammax. "Hammax? Is that you?" "They kept telling me you were dead, but I told them they were being overly optimistic." "Spoken like a man on the wrong end of a gambling debt," said Lando. "Tell you what, Colonel--I'll forgive half of it for a ride back to Imperial City." "Better sweeten that offer--I can get clear of the whole thing if we take you back in a box." Even though his own outburst had triggered the torrent of animated familiarity, Pakkpekatt made an ef fort to reclaim and restrain the conversation. "General Calrissian, please advise your status." "Status? Let's see, what don't you know? The ship's empty---completely automated, bioengineered. No one else is aboard. We're all more or less well. Lobot, haven't you gotten anywhere yet? Are you hearing all of this? What's your status, Colonel? Where's the task force?" "We are the task force now," said Pakkpekatt. "The rest were recalled to other duty, and you and your party were written off." "That's not funny, Colonel," said Lando. "The admiral would never do that." "Which admiral? Coruscant is overrun with them," said Hammax. "General Rieekan redlined the mission after you ran off with his date." Pakkpekatt rebuked the colonel with a glance. "General Calrissian, we've been looking for you ever since your escape. We believe we have a complete Qella genetic sequence, and we have an autoresponder set up. Rather than force the issue, I'd like to wait and see--" Laughing tiredly, Lando said, "Predictable. Isn't this where we started, Colonel?" "--if we can't get, as Colonel Hammax said, an invitation," Pakkpekatt continued. "I understand you must be eager to get out. But can you hold out a few more hours so we have a chance to--as someone once suggested I might. consider--pick a lock rather than blow one up?" Lando sighed. "I bow to the indisputable wisdom of your advisor. We can hold out a bit longer." Hour after hour, the vagabond searched the surface of Maltha Obex, listening for the sign it had been told to wait for, waiting for the cue that would tell it what to do next. Five times before, it had come here, obediently following the plan built into its very substance, trying to keep an appointment with those who had shaped it and sent it into the void. Five times it had lingered, searching, waiting, bathing in the rich energies of N'oka Brath, the glowstone. Five times it had gone away again, not aware enough to be disappointed, but knowing that its purpose was unfulfilled. Never before, though, had it arrived here crippled-burned and poisoned by the intense energies that had poured in through the same aperture through which N'oka Brath fed it. The burns had healed, but the poisons lingered, and with them a memory of the form and action of the attacker. And never before had it found others waiting--tiny creatures sharing the circles above Brath Qella, the homestone, the place of beginning. They were unfamiliar in form and did not sing. But they did not move toward the vagabond, or reach out to touch it, and so it left them alone, no imperatives having been invoked. Still, it noted them and watched them closely. After the appointed time for waiting, the vagabond began singing. And for the first time in all its journeys home, an answer came. But the answer did not come from Brath Qellamit came from one of the tiny eggs sharing the circles. And the answer was sung harshly, without the gentle strength of Brath Qella. The vagabond searched its memories and knew the answer to be form without substance, a deception, a predator's lure. And there were imperatives concerning predators. When the vagabond finally broke its-silence and broadcast a fourteen-second interrogative, only Taisden was on the flight deck to hear it. Hammax was napping in his cabin, wearing all but the boots and gauntlets of a combat suit. Pleck was on the observation deck trying to coax what he considered a more realistic measure of the vagabond's displacement from what he suspected was a faulty magnetometer. Pakkpekatt and Eckels were behind closed doors in Lando's suite, engaged in a heated discussion prompted by Eckels's belated discovery that an NRI team was aboard the Qella vessel. Taisden's alarm roused all of them from their other pursuits, and brought all but Pleck running forward to the flight deck. "Don't know what the question was, but we are responding," Taisden told them. "And the target is changing orbit and accelerating." "Toward us?" "Toward the relay satellite." "She sure can motor when she wants to," Hammax said, shaking his head. "Is this good?" Eckels demanded. "Is this what you expected?" "Maybe," Taisden said. "If she's going over there to make nice, next time we can transmit our reply directly from Lady Luck--" At that moment a blue glow appeared at the vagabond's bow, making it suddenly bright both through the viewscreens and on the monitors. "The scythe," said Pakkpekatt. "Impossible," said Taisden. "The satellite's three thousand klicks away from it--" Three slender but brilliant beams of energy slashed across the darkness and came together at a point 3,409 kilometers ahead of the vagabond. Where they converged, there was a small explosion intense enough to leave an afterimage in their eyes. Then the glow vanished, and the lances disappeared, leaving a spreading cloud of atomized plasteel and metal glittering in the light of N'oka Brath. "She did not go there to make nice," Hammax said in awe. "What kind of weapon is that?" Even before the vagabond turned back, Taisden had shut down the autoresponder. At the same time, Pakkpekatt pulled the throttles back, dropping them into a lower, faster orbit that would carry them away from the vagabond and over its horizon. "She could have taken out the whole task force at Gmar Askilon at any time," said Taisden, shaking his head. "Give me voice to Calrissian," said Pakkpekatt. "Run it through one of Penga Rift's regular satellites." "Ready," said Taisden. "Comm two." "General," said Pakkpekatt, "this is Lady Luck. Why are you firing on us?" "It wasn't our doing," Lando said. "What did you say to it? Why are you running away?" "If your yacht has a sensor cloak or a shield of invulnerability, General, this would be a very good time to inform us." Lando's answer was lost in a blast of static as the vagabond reached across nearly eight thousand kilometers and vaporized Penga Rift's ORS-2. "Going over the horizon from that thing looks better all the time," said Pakkpekatt. "Six minutes." "Colonel---" Eckels's voice had a tremble. "Perhaps it is time to transmit it all while there is still an operational satellite that can be used to relay it. Whatever message we sent just now was not taken well. Perhaps we need to be more convincing--or more confusing." Pakkpekatt looked to Taisden. "I have no better ideas, Colonel." "Then do it," he said. "Doctor--" "Yes. Let me speak to Penga Rift." Captain Barjas's voice answered the hail. "Doc-tor-thank goodness. We're showing two satellites have suddenly gone dead, and we were concerned." "The vagabond has turned hostile," Eckels said. "Is everyone back on board?" "Except for you. We just got the last of them up." "Good. I order you to leave orbit immediately, and jump out to the agreed coordinates for rendezvous one." "Very well, Dr. Eckels. Good luck, sir." "We'll be all right. Get out of here--take care of my people." "Eight minutes to horizon," said Taisden. "What? How are we losing ground?" "The target is accelerating toward ORS-One, which is currently relaying the Qella database." Hammax shook his head. "Keeping the rock between us and it might not be all that easy to do." "Penga Rift is getting under way," said Taisden. "Perhaps the reply should be coming from the surface--" Eckels began. Pakkpekatt ignored him. "Is there any spare bandwidth on ORS-One?" "I can make some," said Taisden. "I want to talk to Calrissian." The agent's fingertips danced over the controls. "Ready on two." "General, this is Pakkpekatt." "Colonel," said Lando. "Looks a little warm out there. Is this a good time to mention that my yacht's uninsured? Perhaps you might consider running away just a little faster--" "General Calrissian, I don't know how long we'll be able to talk. Is there anything you can do to put a stop to this?" "I don't think so," said Lando. "We just had a little mutiny over here--about ten minutes ago, my good friend Lobot drained the power cell on our only blaster into one of the droids. The droids are backing him up." "Do you know of any weakness or vulnerability of the vagabond that we can exploit?" "Yes. Blaster cannon, cruiser-weight and up. The hull's not armored, and there don't seem to be ray shields, at least not at those frequencies. You can hole it and hurt it. But you have to get in the first shot, and make it good." They could hear a second voice saying, "Lando, it does not deserve this--" Then Eckels found his voice in protest, drowning out Lobot. "This is completely unacceptable, Colonel. This artifact is unique, irreplaceable--" "And deadly," said Pakkpekatt. "Acknowledged, General. Stand by." He gestured to Taisden. "Hyper-comm, secure, to Rieekan and Collomus." "Go." "This is Colonel Pakkpekatt, commanding, Teljkon task force at Maltha Obex," he said. "Confirming: We've found the vagabond and made contact with the team aboard. But the target has turned hostile, and we can't get anywhere near--" The flight deck was suddenly and momentarily flooded with light, marking the precipitous disappearance of the third satellite. "--it. I believe we could jump out using the planet as our shield, but only at the cost of losing contact with the vessel. I am opting to try to maintain contact, and requesting immediate assistance and support to secure the target and recover our people." He paused as though listening, then added, "Don't bother with a cruiser--send a Star Destroyer, or two. We're going to need a heavyweight to stop her." Chapter 11 The morning after the Battle of N'zoth, the Kell 1 Hath Corporation liner Star Morning entered the . system and requested a rendezvous with Intrepid for the purpose of picking up passengers. Since the news did not directly involve Luke, he knew nothing of it until Wialu sent him a message requesting that he come to the cabin she and Akanah had been sharing. He found the women putting the cabin in order, preparing to leave. Akanah greeted him with an eager embrace. "Did you hear? Our ship will be here in about an hour." Luke turned to Wialu. "You're going back to J't'p'tan?" "We are going away," she said. "It is time for us to find a quieter place. We need to grieve, and heal--and-to absorb the lessons of J't'p'tan, and find a new focus." His gaze narrowed; "Then the rest of the Circle--they're on the ship already?" "We are no longer needed at J't'p'tan," she said. "And so the Fallanassi disappear again." "We do not require or desire the attention of outsiders," said Wialu. "And events have already cost us much privacy. We will go away long enough and far enough to earn it back." "I don't suppose I was expecting an invitation to come along," Luke said, turning his gaze on Akanah. "I wish there were more time," she said, showing a sad smile. "I wish that I could finish what I started. It was unfair to you for me to make that promise, not knowing if there would be a chance to keep it." "Unfair," Luke repeated. "I'm not sure that's a strong enough word. Because when you made me another promise, the one that brought me on this journey, you must have known that you couldn't keep it--that I'd run into a wall of silence if we found the Circle." He looked back toward Wialu. "Unless you asked me here to tell me more than good-bye." "You can't ask that of her, Luke--" "Why not?" he said, his gaze hardening. "She went to the trouble of scattering signs and markers across five sectors so that one child could come home. But she won't even come to the door when another one's standing outside knocking. Can you explain that to me, at least--why Akanah is welcomed back, and I'm being turned away?" "Akanah is of the Fallanassi, by blood and affinity both," said Wialu. "We do not claim you, Luke Skywalker." "You do not claim--what are you saying? That Nashira isn't my mother? That my mother wasn't of the Circle?" Wialu nodded toward Akanah. "This is the one who must provide your answers." Blinking, Luke stared at Akanah questioningly. She looked away uncomfortably, then sank down onto the edge of the bunk as though it were something fragile. "I know nothing about your mother, Luke," she said in a small voice. "And I have not told you the truth about mine." All of Luke's emotions save for curiosity were numbed by her words. "What does your mother have to do with this?" "You remember what I told you of how it was for me, living on the underside on Carratos, and how my caretaker took my money and left me there--" "Talsava," Luke said. "I remember." Akanah looked up and met his eyes. "Everything I told you about her is true, save one--her name was Isela Talsava Norand, and she was my real mother," she said in a whisper. "And she was the one who brought the Empire down on the Circle." Wordlessly, Luke sank into a chair. Wialu took up the narrative. "We could not allow Isela to remain with the Circle after her betrayal," she said. "We could not trust her to know where we were bound when we left Lucazec. She was banished from the Circle before that decision was made. But Akanah was not banished--we would have kept her with us, cared for her, continued her training. She would have been loved. "But Isela refused our offer, and took Akanah away with her. Isela's decision distressed us all. She was punishing Akanah for her own transgression. There was much grief and anger in the Circle on the day they left. And in my own grief, I made Akanah a promise--that the way back to us would be marked for her, so that when the choice was hers, she could rejoin the Circle." She looked at Akanah with an affectionate smile. "So many years went by that I thought we would never see her again." "And I thought I would never leave Carratos." "Why didn't you?" Luke asked. "What I told you of my life there was the truth. The war came, and then I was left alone, with nothing," Akanah said. "I had to learn the way of a world run by different rules, with no one to guide me or protect me. I have already admitted to Wialu how I misused what they taught me, to survive. How I became like the ones who had what I needed." Akanah looked down at her hands and smiled as though at a fond and tender reminiscence. "Then there was the miracle of Andras, who created a safe place for me, and brought love back to me--and though I could have left Carratos then, I did not want to." "So why did you make me part of it when you finally did leave?" Luke asked. "You didn't need me to find the Fallanassi, or to get to them--though you tried to make me think that you did. The Imperial agents on Lucazecmthey were another lie, weren't they? We were never being hunted." "No!" she admitted. "They were never there. It was a test. I had to know who you were--what I could expect from you, where to begin." "The blood," Luke remembered. "A mistake," she said. "I felt your surprise and thought I had betrayed myself. I had never seen a light-saber strike flesh. I had to draw your attention to me, to Nashira, or I would have lost you then." "Lost me for what? I still don't understand. What was the deception meant to gain you?" Sad-eyed, Akanah shook her head slowly. "It was not for me, Luke. What you gave me, what this has meant to me-that just happened, unexpected-that wasn't planned." "Then why?" "Because I have been afraid of you," she said simply. "I don't understand." "Luke, I have seen the underside of war, where there are no heroes, only victims. I've seen what power is about, how it's used, what it means not to have it in a world where that's all that matters." The weight of her words was echoed in her sad eyes. "I was ten years old when the Emperor's stormtroopers swept across half the galaxy--I had a childhood in paradise and an adolescence in hell. I have good reason to fear power." "You thought think I'm the same kind of threat the Emperor was, the same as the stormtroopers?" "It is not just you," Akanah said. "You are training others to follow your path. Where there was one, there are now many, and there will be many more. I had to know you. I had to see what inside you balances the power you have--I had to see what I could give you of what the Circle had given me. I did not lie to you about my purpose. Something has been missing, something of the Light, something of peace, of acceptance. I tried to help you find it." "By lying to me," Luke said, his restless emotions bringing him to his feet. Akanah smiled ruefully. "As you have seen, the Fallanassi are not above using deception." "So Nashira was nothing but your fantasy? A reflection of what I wanted her to be?" "No," said Akanah. "She was more than that." "Akanah--" Wialu said in a cautionary tone. "I have to tell him," Akanah said with sudden anger. "A secret is too much like another lie." She stood and took a step toward Luke. "In the second year, a woman came to see Isela on Carratos. She was Fal-lanassi, but I did not know her--she had not been with the Circle on Lucazec. She stayed with us for five days, and spent hours alone with my mother, talking." Then she turned toward Wialu. "I think that she was sent by the Circle to try to persuade my mother to let me go. Perhaps she would even have taken me away with her when she left, if my mother would have agreed to it. I've wondered if my mother got her to agree to something else--a sum of money to be sent later, perhaps, to buy a child's passage, and a child's freedom. Who would expect that she would take the money and leave the child?" Wialu's impassive face offered neither confirmation or apology. After a long moment of staring expectantly into her eyes, Akanah turned back to Luke. "This woman's Circle name was Nashira," she said. "She was beautiful, and kind to me--enough to remind me of everything that Isela was not. She talked to me as if I mattered, and she shared her heart with me. When I asked her why, she said that the Emperor had taken her children from her-a boy and a girl. And all she could do was try to love the children who were near her, and hope that someone was doing the same for hers. When you asked me about your mother, I pictured the woman I wished had been mine. I told you about Nashira." "But it was all about you," Luke said, shaking his head. "Your pain--your fantasies--" "Are they so different from yours?" she asked. "I have seen inside your heart, too, Luke Skywalker. I could only deceive you by knowing you. I could only deceive you with the truth." Luke backed slowly away from her, toward the cabin door. "Enough," he said. "I've heard enough. I can't believe anything you say. I can't believe anything that's happened since Coruscant. There's more truth in her silence than in your words." He gestured toward Wialu as he spoke the last, then looked to her. "You must think me a fool, chasing after the phantom she created. Thank you for the wake-up call. I wish you luck in coaxing her off Isela's path, and onto yours." Then Luke turned and left the cabin, missing Akanah's honest tears. "Is he coming?" Akanah asked anxiously. Etahn A'baht frowned and looked across the loading bay to the open entryway. "Let me check with my people again," he said, reaching for his comlink and stepping away from the foot of the boarding ramp. Akanah looked to Wialu as a Star Morning porter passed between them, carrying their bags aboard. "I have to talk to him. I can't leave like this." "How long would you have us wait?" Wialu asked gently. "The damage you have done--" "I know," Akanah said. "But I have to make him see that it wasn't all lies." "There can be one star of deception in a galaxy of stars, but if that is the star before you, you can see nothing else--and if you stare at the deception, you will be blinded by it," said Wialu. "It will take time, Akanah--more time than we have." Akanah sent an anxious glance toward A'baht, who was returning to them. "If you can't wait, then I'll have to stay here." "Akanah, you cannot force the flow to come to you," said Wialu. "You can only ride it where it goes." The general rejoined them then, his frown deeper than before. "Luke's not answering. No one seems to know where he is," said A'baht. "I don't understand it he brought you here, and I'd think he'd want to see you off. We owe you a debt--" "There is no debt," Wialu said firmly. "The choice was mine, and I ask for nothing." A'baht grunted. "I still feel I should apologize--" "He is here," said Wialu. The others looked toward the entryway, but Wialu directed her gaze toward an empty corner of the compartment. A moment later, Luke appeared there, as though walking through a door no one could see. "What the--" A'baht said, then shook his head in disgust. "Jedi." Akanah ran to meet Luke, but stopped a step short of the embrace she wanted, and looked into his eyes for a cue. "I came to say good-bye," Luke said. "I'm not sure that I'm leaving." Luke shook his head. "Your place is with them. Wialu is right. Even I can read that in the Current." "There's something I have to say before I can go," she said fervently. "Please--don't judge us by my example. I beg you not to reject the truth because of the lie that preceded it. There is something gentle, and beautiful, and healing in the Fallanassi way--and if I failed to put it before you, the weakness was in me, not in the way of the Light, or the path of the White Current. There is depth there beyond what I've mastered, and worth there beyond what you've seen." "I've seen deception, manipulation--" Stepping forward bravely, she touched his breast-bone lightly with the flat of one hand. "It is not a way of power, but a way of peace--and I dearly wish for you to have that peace within you. I wish for you to add that strength to the great strength you already possess. I always wanted that for you--I never wanted anything from you." A tremble entered her voice as she added in a near whisper, "I never wanted to add to your pain." Luke covered her hand with his own and lowered his eyes. "It seems I must choose what to believe," he said at last. "I will try to believe that first, and perhaps it will guide me through the rest." She looked up at him gratefully. "Then I can go now," she said, and kissed his cheek softly before backing away. He stood and watched as she accepted a final word of thanks from the general, then moved up the boarding ramp past Wialu, who turned and followed. Akanah hesitated for just a moment before vanishing through the inner airlock, looking back to him with a final apology in her eyes. Somewhere he found a forgiving smile for her, and then she was gone. By then A'baht was approaching Luke. "Comm shack has some messages for you, Luke---a couple of priority flags that came in this morning--" he began. "Luke Skywalker." Looking up at Wialu's voice, he found her standing at the inner airlock. "Yes?" "There is one small service I ask of you." Luke cocked his head. "What's that?" "Tell your sister," Wialu said, "that when she is ready to follow her own path, she would be welcome among us." Then she turned away, needing no reply and inviting no questions. By the time a startled Luke could find his voice again, Star Morning was moving away from the dock, continuing its journey. There was no message from Leia. The chief librarian's office on Obroa-skai advised him that his pending request for a contract researcher had moved up to number five on the waiting list, and he should be certain he had the research subject clearly defined and all supporting materials ready to transmit. The senior rehab therapist on board the medical frigate High HaVen passed on the word that Han was being transferred again, this time back to the Fleet hospital on Coruscant. "It's not that he's in any danger he's doing pretty well, better than a lot of the folks in here now. And it opens a space up on our ward, which we can use," said the therapist. "Given that the commodore had his own transportation available, it seemed like the best course." After a pause and a frown, he added, "Besides, the Wookiees insisted." The third message was from Streen, who had compiled an overly conscientious report on activity at the academy on Yavin 4. In his present mood, Luke found none of it of enough interest to read closely. The final message was from Alpha Blue. "Hello, Luke," said Admiral Drayson. "Now that things are a little quieter where you are, I wanted to tell you that I've located your missing droids. You can have them back whenever you want, in fact. But, as you'll see, I'm afraid you're going to need to pick them up yourself." "Are you sure about this?" asked the senior crew chief, following at Luke's heels as he carried out his preflight check of the exterior of Mud Sloth. "Even with the losses, I'm sure Captain Morano would be more than willing to put you in most anything else we have---" "I'm sure," Luke said, ducking under the tail plane. "I mean, after all, you Jedi swung the fight our way, driving off all those Star Destroyers with your phantom fleet," the chief persisted. "It just doesn't seem right to send you away in a low-budget--" "That isn't what happened," Luke said as he reached the boarding ladder. "And this ship serves my needs right now." The chief scratched his head. "Well, if you say so." He stole a glance back over his shoulder. "I guess the general'll be down to see you off, eh?" "He doesn't know I'm leaving," Luke said, throw ing his bag up through the open access hatch. "I'd appreciate it if you weren't in a hurry to tell him." "That's a bit of a problem," the chief said, frowning. "Nothing's supposed to leave the flight deck without authorization from the hot room." "Not my problem," Luke said, climbing the ladder. "Civilian pilot, civilian ship. Shouldn't even be here. Clear me through the patrol screen, will you? She's not real strong on flash breaks or roll-and-run." "Sure," said the chief dubiously. "Sure, for you, I can do that. But, look, I have to at least be able to tell the booth where you're going--you know, for the log." "You've never heard of it," Luke said as he reached for the hatch closure. "Just log me out, Chief--and thank the gang for prepping her so quickly." Not long after, Luke and Mud Sloth plunged into the welcome solitude of hyperspace for the long jump to Maltha Obex. By the end of that journey, Luke could feel himself changing. The ship was like a tiny chrysalis, and it was his metamorphosis that was underway. He had wanted time where he and Akanah had spent so much time. He had wanted to hear the echoes of their conversations, feel the residue of the emotions. Luke spent the journey in silence, alternately reflecting and playing with reflections. He inventoried his memories of the last months, discarding some, rewriting others. And he collected a set of drill objects, and spent hours honing the one Fallanassi skill he grasped in its wholeness. The work was not yet finished when the galaxy reappeared around him and Maltha Obex appeared be fore him. He did not know at that moment quite who he was becoming, or what would presage the transformation. He only knew that he welcomed that moment of reconnection, and the possibilities that it offered. For days, Lady Luck had been fleeing before the Teljkon Vagabond, staying over the horizon from the powerful and unpredictable Qella artifact. Two tasks had occupied them during that time keeping tabs on the vagabond by means of the equipment at the abandoned surface camps, and scanning for what they hoped would be a task-force-sized entry into the Maltha Obex system. But the ship that did finally appear on the scanners was so small that Joto Eckels felt a rush of disappointment rather than relief. "Perhaps it's some sort of probe," he suggested at Pakkpekatt's shoulder. "Don't you usually send a probe in ahead of the main body?" "It's a civilian skiff," said Taisden. "No military comm." "Then we have to warn it away at once," Eckels said. "Colonel, once the vagabond spots it, half an orbit from now--" A display screen above their heads flashed on as he spoken "This is Mud Sloth, hailing the Lady Luck. Lando, report your status, please." Eckels began to look more hopeful as he recognized Luke's face. "Lando's not here, Luke--" But Pakkpekatt rose from his seat, blocking Eckels from the holocomm as he leaned forward to reply. "Mud Sloth, you are entering an NRI security zone, and you are at risk. Turn your ship about at once and leave this system." "You'd be Colonel Pakkpekatt, I take it," said Luke. "And was that Dr. Eckels? Is Lando still aboard the vagabond, then? You haven't been able to get to him? I need an update covering the last five days." "You are not authorized for that information," said Pakkpekatt. "You are not cleared for this security zone." "Colonel, I'm all the assistance you're likely to get for a while, given the demands on the Fleet at the moment. And I know Dr. Eckels doesn't want to see this expedition end with a shoot-out, anyway--" "Absolutely correct," Eckels said, pushing his way into the holocomm's field of view. "--so let's see if we can't work together and make something better happen." "Do you have any ideas about what that might be, Luke?" said Eckels. "The artifact has been notably un-cooperative so far--even more so than the colonel." "I know. I've reviewed your reports--yours and his both," Luke said. At that news, Pakkpekatt threw his hands in the air in disgust and turned away from the flight console. "I will demand an investigation of this entire operation," he muttered. "The breaches of security--the complete disregard for the lines of authority--" '2 think I can get the team off the vagabond," Luke went on. "But I'm hoping for more than that. Why don't you tell me what you think happened here, Doctor?" "May I ask first if you're planning to board the vagabond yourself?" "Yes, I am, Dr. Eckels." "Then would it be possible for you to collect me before you do? I will likely have better answers for you once I've seen it for myself." "I was hoping you'd offer, Doctor," Luke said. "If you and the colonel would locate some power packs for the droids and put together a mercy basket for the men, I'll rendezvous with you on your next orbit." "Very good," said Eckels. "We'll be ready." As the vagabond grew outside Mud Sloth's cockpit viewpanes, Eckels looked nervously from it to Luke's face. "How will you know if it's working?" "We'll know if it isn't," Luke said, closing his eyes. "Shouldn't we at least alert General Calrissian that we're coming in?" "No signals," Luke said. "No sounds. No thrusters. Nothing that will disturb the flow. Nothing that will announce our presence." Eckels looked back toward the alien vessel. "But can't it see us just as easily as we can see it?" Luke shook his head slowly. "You're aboard a submarine, Doctor, not a spaceship. We're five hundred meters under the surface and just floating with the current. They won't know we're there until we bump up alongside." The scientist received Luke's reassurances with a dubious expression. "You've done this before, I trust?" "No, never," Luke said. "Oh, my--" "But I saw it done, not too long ago." Eckels swallowed. "I trust that you've been practicing since then, at least." Eyes still closed, Luke smiled. "All the way here. Relax, Doctor. I learned this trick from people who were at the top of their class in the business of hiding." He paused. "But even so, you might want to let me concentrate." Pressing his lips together in a line, Eckels slumped against the back of his seat and stared at the vagabond, which now filled half the sky ahead. "Lando." At the sound of his name, Lando stirred and reached slowly for his comlink. "What is it, Lobot?" "Someone is here." "Where here?" Lando said, suddenly shaking off his sleepy lassitude. "Outside, near the bow." Lobot paused. "We are puzzled. There is a touch, and yet we cannot find the source." "They're knocking on the door," Lando said impatiently. "Open it up and see what comes in." There was a long silence. "The visitors are in the interspace," Lobot said at last. "So who or what are they?" "We do not recognize them." "I'll check it out," Lando said gruffly. Fatigue and hunger had left him in a state of permanent annoyance. "Artoo, let's go--power up. Artoo--" The droid remained inert like Threepio days before, its power supply was finally exhausted. "Sure," he grumbled. "Make me be the one to check out the noise in the dark. It'd serve you both right if I never came back." "Ahoy the ship," a new voice crackled over the comlink. "Anyone home?" Lando blinked, trying to force his mind to recognize what it was hearing. "Luke? Luke, is that you? What are you doing here?" "I could leave, if it's not a good time--" "You leave without me, and I'll hunt you down and kill you one cell at a time," Lando warned, with no trace of humor in his voice. "Stay where you are. I'm coming out." "We're already in," Luke said. "The vagabond's hull opened up and swallowed us whole." "Nooo" "It's all right. We're in some sort of zero-g hangar area between the outer and inner hulls--we even seem to be tethered. I'm suiting up to come to you," said Luke. "Stay put and talk us in." Grabbing a liter of water from Dr. Eckels, Lando drained it so fast that his stomach balked and threatened to reject it. "Luke," Lando said, flipping the container away. "Can you believe it? This whole monstrosity is nothing but a museum--" He stopped to swallow the bitterness climbing his throat, and started coughing when the taste reached his mouth. "Go easy, Lando---" Lando waved off the concern. "A museum! And when--when have you ever known me to go near a museum?" He laughed hoarsely. "And you don't even know the funny part--none of the treasures is real. It's all just modeling clay--nothing of any value." "Do you know what he's talking about, Dr. Eckels?" "Possibly," Eckels said, digging in the supply pouch for a FirstMeal food pack. Lando continued to babble, his tone turning sorrowful, almost maudlin. "Can only look--can't take anything with you. No souvenirs. What a waste of time, Lukewhat a miserable waste of time. Like picking flowers. Pretty today, dead tomorrow--" He suddenly noticed the food pack and snatched it away, turning his back on them as though protecting it against poaching. "Lando, where's Lobot?" The answer came after a long draw on the food pack's straw. "He has new friends." Lando shrugged. "He hardly talks to me anymore." He chortled abruptly. "He's lost his mind. You'll see." "Take us to him," Luke said firmly. "We need to take care of him, too." Somersaulting slowly, Lando waved a hand absently toward the interior. "In there. Left, left, right, right, center, right, center. Something like that." The food pack expired with a sucking sound. "You can't miss him. He's the one with legs." Luke and Dr. Eckels found Lobot curled up in a side tubule, floating, his eyes closed, his hands cupped against the side of his head. The transparent leads of his split interface tethered him to the rounded mass at the far end of the tubule. "Do you have any idea what we're looking at here, Doctor?" Eckels peered into an adjacent tubule for an unobstructed view. "These are the size and geometry of the Qella remains we recovered from the ice," he said in hushed awe. "These don't feel like remains to me," Luke said, entering the tubule where Lobot was floating. "Lobot--it's Luke. Wake up, fella--your relief's here." "Are you saying that they're alive?" Eckels demanded. "I had discounted those reports as unreliable." "Why?" "Why, it's unprecedented--unthinkable--" "This whole ship feels alive to me, Doctor," Luke said· "Though with a different quality than I'm used to." "Different how?" "Usually this much power is matched with much greater awareness. It's almost like--sleeping. Just like Lobot here seems to be sleeping." Frowning, Luke reached out and dug his fingernails into Lobot's elbow. "Hey--talk to me." "But these bodies have no limbs," Eckels protested. "The creatures on the surface were quadrupeds." "I'm not trying to tell you what they are, Doctor. I'm just telling you that what Lobot reported is true--these things are alive, and this ship is alive· I'll let you tell me the relationship between them." Lobot was stirring by then. "Waiting," he murmured in a trancelike monotone. "Waiting for what?" Luke asked. "What question is that an answer to?" Behind him, Eckels was frowning. "Physically, the relationship mirrors one that exists inside the Qella, between the Eicroth bodies and--" His eyes widened in surprise. "Luke, I must see the rest of this vessel at once. I must see these exhibits Lando spoke of." "Lobot, talk to me," Luke was saying. "What do you need from me?" "We wait," Lobot said dreamily. "What are' 'we'?" Luke asked. "Answers," said Lobot. "Yes, I need answers," Luke said. "What are you waiting for? What do you need?" The words came haltingly. "We wait... for · . . the thaw." Luke looked questioningly back at Eckels. "I must see the ship," he insisted. "I will not make wild guesses When there is evidence at hand." Nodding agreement, Luke said, "I think we need to break up Lobot's new friendship, anyway--I can hardly find a boundary between his mind and everything else. Know anything about neural interfaces, Doctor, or should I just pull the plug?" Eckels grimaced. "Do what you think best. I'll wait outside." It was nearly an hour before either Lando or Lobot was fit for their final duties as host and guide. For Eckels, it was an hour of maddening impatience. For Luke, it was an opportunity to bring the droids back online and begin repairs to Threepio's damaged arm. "I'm very glad to see you, Master Luke," the droid said. "You won't believe the stories I have to tell you. I don't know why i was sent on this mission in the first place. Why, I was nearly vaporized by the vagabond, and then we were attacked by an entire fleet of warships. Master Calrissian abandoned me to be captured by intruders--" Luke grinned. "It's good to see you, too, Threepio. And I promise to let you tell me all the stories, later. Twice, even, if you need to." "That's very kind of you, sir." When the droids had been moved to the skiff, Luke went off to explore with Lando, while Lobot led Eckels on a separate tour. But before long Lando decided the familiar comforts of a starship, however humble, had greater appeal than Luke's company, and excused himself from sight-seeing. By then Luke understood the geometry and instrumentality of the vagabond well enough to manage on his own. The "museum" rooms and the interspace gallery were equally astonishing, but Luke found himself drawn back to the interior, to the maze of tubules and the clusters of what Luke had begun calling Eckels bodies. They were the center of the vagabond's limited consciousness, the focus of the flow of energy through the ship. Four hours vanished in an eyeblink before Luke even thought of rejoining the others. Another hour and a half passed before he actually did. They were all there--Lando asleep in the bunk, Lobot stretched out on the floor of the systems compartment, Threepio strapped into the right-hand seat, and Artoo contentedly plugged into both the data port and the power port at the interface board. Eckels was in the pilot's seat, bending forward over the ship's small data displays with a frown while keying the datapad on his lap fluidly by touch alone. "I believe I have an answer for you now," Eckels said without looking away from his work. "Shall we wake the others?" "No," said Luke. "They've done their part let them rest. Let's compare notes first. If we find we have questions for them, we can take care of that later." "I was able to get the benefit of Lobot's thoughts while he showed me around," said Eckels. "He has an admirably disciplined mind." "People have been underestimating him for as long as I've known him," Luke said. "So what do you have?" Eckels sat back in his seat and pointed to the data display. "Lobot was right," he said. "The moons are the key." "The moons they saw in the orrery." "Yes," said Eckels. "With the assistance of Colonel Pakkpekatt, we've analyzed the recordings Artoo-Detoo made the first time the expedition reached the auditorium and viewed the diorama. The orbits depicted for the moons turn out to be unstable." "Check me if I've missed something, Doctor, but Maltha Obex has no moons." Eckels nodded. "But Qella did. Unremarkable moonsmnothing to inspire a grand mythology. At least not until one of them fell from the sky." "The ice age is the result of a moonstrike," Luke said, his expression gravely thoughtful. "Yes, it would appear so," said Eckels. "The smaller moon was a capture moon, with an irregular orbit. Working backward from Artoo's recordings, we found that the gravity of the larger moon disturbed the capture moon into a decaying orbit--a hundred years, in round numbers, before the fall." "And the Qella saw it happening. They knew what lay ahead for them," Luke said. "And they used the warning, and the time they had left, to build this vessel." "The ultimate and supreme achievement of their species," said Eckels. "Judging from what I saw, they did not have the means to destroy or repulse a moonm even the small moon of Maltha Obex dwarfed this vessel and its power. Nor did they have the means to evacuate a populous planet--the culture depicted in these serographs numbered hundreds of millions, if not more." "It would have taken thousands of vessels this size," Luke said. "An impossible task in the time they had." "But they could build one, and send it away before the end came," Eckels said. "When the expedition looked at the orrery, they saw this system as it was when the vagabond had last seen it--before the moonsrike, the destruction of the Qella, and the death of their planet under a blanket of ice." Eckels gazed out the front of the cockpit at the faces of the gallery. "Your friend Lando was wrong," he went on. "What's here is very real. This ship isn't a collection of objects--it's a collection of ideas. We may never know why, but the Qella valued these ideas more than their lives. And that which we value is that which gives meaning to our lives. What a grand gift they have given us what a gloriously defiant futility." "Futility?" Luke asked. "What about those things in the interior? Lobot keeps wanting to call them Qella. You said that they looked like the Qella. And now the ship has brought them home." Frowning, Eckels looked down at his datapad. "But there are only a few thousand of them, on a vessel that could have held many more." Eckels shook his head. "No, it cannot be. This is not an ark, or even a lifeboat. Those bodies are the controllers and protectors of this vessel, not its treasure. The real treasure of this vessel is in ideas and memories--a thousand years of history, a thousand years of art, this splendid bio-mechanical science. No, this is no museum. This is a monument, Luke." "No," Luke said stubbornly. "There's something more here." Turning away, he dropped gracefully through the open entry hatch. Catching a handhold on the hull, he catapulted himself forward, away from the skiff and into the silence and darkness of the interspace. There, drifting slowly in front of the Qella gallery, Luke extended his senses to the planet below. He found only a great stillness. There was no halo of life energy, no reservoir of the Force. The ice-encased surface had the same profound quiescence as the mass of rock below it. "What are you looking for?" "A reason to wait for the thaw," Luke said. "So it can finish its journey," Eckels said. "It meant nothing more than that." "Shhh," Luke said. He had drifted close to the outer skin of the vagabond, and he reached out and drew himself to it. He listened to the complex rhythms of the ship and allowed them to resolve into the deep, fundamental pulse of its being. He listened only to that pulse until he had absorbed it. completely, knew it utterly. Then he extended himself toward the planet once more, this time quieting his own urgency and desire, seeking that most profound state of egoless connection in which everything could be heard without distraction or distortion. And suddenly there they were, like millions of grains of sand falling slowly to the surface--a collective heartbeat so faint and so languid that the slightest whisper of impatience would obscure it. With an exultant cry, Luke pushed himself away from the wall in a backward somersault. "What? What is it?" Eckels exclaimed. He jetted across the open space to intercept Luke, catching him just before he reached the gallery. But Luke twisted away from Eckels's grasp, turning to trace the lines of a Qella face with both hands. "The bodies you found--the Qella Who roamed the iced those weren't the survivors," Luke said. "They were the dissenters." "What do you mean?" "Exactly what I said. We were all wrong. This ship isn't a museum, or a temple full of treasure, or a lifeboat--or a monument, either. It's a tool kit, Doctor--a tool kit for rebuilding a destroyed world." Turning, Luke grabbed both of Eckels's hands in a fervent grip. Joy and wonder together animated his smile. "They had time to do more than prepare this ship, Doctor--they had time to prepare themselves. That planet is not dead--there are millions of Qella buried in the ground, awaiting the thaw. And we can give them that." As soon as Mud Sloth cleared the opening the vagabond had created for it, Luke gave the thrusters one hard kick, then turned the skiff around so that all could watch the Qella vessel fall away behind them. "Are you sure you don't want to cloak us, like you did before?" Eckels said worriedly to Luke. "I'd really rather not contribute personally to the warming of Mal-tha Obex." "The vagabond will not harm us," Lobot said with quiet assurance. "Don't worry, Dr. Eckels," said Lando. "Lobot here spent so much time in the tubules that he got promoted to honorary egg." Luke chuckled. "If you want something to worry about, Doctor, worry that your friends back at the Institute reversed two digits and dropped a decimal." "Our very best planetary climatologist personally supervised the modeling of the Qella glacial epoch," Eckels said with stiff professional pride. "If Lobot communicated his recommendations accurately--" "It understands," said Lobot. "The task required the building of a new strand of memory code, but it understands." "I'm still surprised at how small an energy input it's supposed to take," Luke said. "I thought at first we'd have to bring. in half a dozen Star Destroyers and keep them here a month." "Small inputs, and time," said Eckels. "This planet teetered on the edge--it would probably have recovered on its own, as the Qella must have expected it would, but for the orbital wobble caused by the loss of the second moon." "Look," said Lando. "It's starting." The hull of the vagabond had begun to glow, crawling blue snakes of energy snapping along its length as the capacitance charge built up to a cascade. Then triple beams of energy stabbed downward from each end of the ship, creating ionized tunnels through the atmosphere in which precious chemicals began to be renewed. The beams converged at the surface of the half-frozen ocean below, creating massive explosions of steam, with towering, scalding plumes rising amidst the ice floes. "Pretty good light show," Lando said lightly. "Kind of a shame there's only the six of us to see it." "Quite the contrary, General Calrissian," said Eck-els. "That soup will have to simmer a long time, and it would be best for the Qella if it did so undisturbed." The bombardment of the planet went on throughout Mud Sloth's long climb toward its rendezvous with Lady Luck. When the two craft finally met and docked, Lando and Lobot both eagerly escaped the crowded skiff for the luxury accommodations of the yacht. Threepio went with them, chasing a promise of an oil bath. But Luke and Eckels lingered, looking down on Maltha Obex as the vagabond, now a small thing in the distance, fell silent. Neither man spoke of his thoughts, but they shared a single mood of lingering awe and curiosity. When Luke closed his eyes and began breathing in deep, slow waves, Eckels noted it without comment. But he was not wholly surprised when, a short time later, the vagabond disappeared completely from view. "You have been practicing," Eckels said, clapping Luke's shoulder approvingly. "I confess I want to stay and document it almost especially the day when the Qella begin to emerge. But this is best, to leave them alone. Tell me, what will you have done last?" "I don't know how long it will last," Luke said, gazing down on the planet. "Maybe not long at all. The forces affecting the ship are complex, and my teacher said that my touch is still too heavy. I had to try, though--try to draw the curtain and give them back their privacy, give them some time to heal, to build." He looked toward Eckels. "But I want to come back, to meet them. I wonder how long we'll have to wait." There was more than a touch of sorrow and regret in the archaeologist's answering smile. "Give them a hundred years," Eckels said, knowing as he spoke that that meant he would never return to Maltha Obex. "Or a thousand. We will let this place stay on the charts as a dead, frozen world with nothing worth stealing or exploiting. The Qella will not miss us. Their lives will be full without us. You have given them a great gift, Luke-a future." He looked out toward the pale white disc of the planet. "Somehow I know they will make the most of it." Coruscant, Eight Days 'Later A damp, cold wind blowing out of a broken sky buffeted Luke Skywalker as he stood on the cliff above his seacoast hermitage. He stood there a long time, thinking Of all the reasons he had raised it from the rocky sands, of the work he had thought to do there. He had taken the broken pieces of his father's fortress retreat and tried to remake them into something that could redeem them from their history. But he saw now that all he had managed to build was a prison, and that he had been fortunate to escape it. Extending his hands and his will, Luke found the points of greatest stress within the structure and pressed upon them, found the points of greatest fragility and sundered them. With a roar that momentarily rivaled the wind, the hermitage collapsed in on itself, crushing the fighter still sealed within it. But that was not enough to satisfy Luke, not enough to forever erase the temptation. One after another, he raised the pieces of the ruined hermitage, the broken ship, up out of the sand and into the air, crumbling them with the force of his thoughts, until it was a dense, swirling cloud of pebble-sized fragments and metal bits. Then, with a final, explosive effort of will, he hurled the cloud of debris far out beyond the breakers, where it rained down on the churning water and vanished from sight. "It's not time yet for me to go away," he said to the wind by way of explanation. "And when the time comes, there will be a better place for me than this." Guiding her three children through the gate ahead of her, Leia nodded to S-EP1 as she passed by. "You can lock down the perimeter, Sleepy," she said. "We're in for the night, and everyone else can stay out till morning." "Yes, Princess." Jacen and Jaina ran on ahead along the flower-lined path, and unexpected laughter and delighted squeals came back to Leia moments after they were out of sight. Leaving Anakin ambling on alone, she hurried toward the house to see what the cause of the commotion might be. But after only a few long strides, she was brought up short by the sight of Luke carrying Jaina in one arm, with Jacen at his other elbow. The three of them were all smiles, though Luke's faded quickly when he saw Leia's expression. "Been to the Fleet hospital, I hear," Luke said, making room on the other arm for Anakin. "How's Han doing?" "Better," she said. "He's out of the tank now, and looking more like himself. This was the first time I took the children. What are you doing here?" "Belatedly accepting an invitation," he said, showing a rueful smile. "Help me get the children to bed," she said. That took some time, for Luke's surprise appearance had swept away any hint of sleepiness. The children would literally not let go of him without a promise that they would see him in the morning. "But right now, your mom and I need to talk," Luke said firmly. "So it's lights out and eyes closed for you. Think about your father and send him healing thoughts, so that he can come home as soon as possible." Leia watched and listened with a passive curiosity. When she and Luke were finally alone in the warmly lit family room, she asked lightly, "Who are you, and what have you done with my brother?" He laughed. "I haven't changed as much as you probably wish." "Did you find what you were hoping to?" The laugh faded from his eyes. "No," he said. "But as happens sometimes, I found something else. I don't know if I can explain what." "I can feel a difference in you," Leia said. "You feel--calmer." "A lot happened," he said. "I learned from some of it. Leia, I still want to know who our mother was, and what she gave to us. That still matters to me. Not knowing is an empty hole inside me, and some of what Akanah told me would fill it so well that I still want to believe it." "But you came back." "It's the one little piece that maybe I did find that brought me back," Luke said. "A lesson about love and family from a woman I never met, and probably never will. Leia, it's crazy for me to be chasing a hope from Core to Rim when you and these kids are right here, real as can be. And if you'd still let me be part of loving them, and teaching them, and sharing your delight at watching them grow-well, I'm the Jedi uncle you're looking for." Her eyes misting, Leia went to him and gathered him into a long, fiercely glad embrace. "Welcome to my family, Luke," she whispered, both offering and accepting the familiar and comforting warmth of connection. "Welcome home." About the Author Michael P. Kube-McDowell* is the pen name of Philadelphia-born novelist Michael Paul McDowell. His highly praised prior works include the star-spanning 1985 Philip K. Dick Award finalist Emprise and the evocative 1991 Hugo Award nominee The Quiet Pools. Both of the preceding "Black Fleet Crisis" books were New York Times, USA Today, Publishers Weekly, and Washington Post bestsellers. In addition to his ten previous novels, Michael has contributed more than two dozen short stories to leading magazines and anthologies, including Analog, The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction, After the Flames, and Alternate Warriors. Three of his stories have been adapted as episodes of the horror-fantasy television series Tales from the Darkside. Outside of science fiction, he is the author of more than five hundred nonfiction articles on subjects ranging from "scientific creationism" to the U.S. space program. A popular guest at SF conventions throughout the Midwest, Michael is also a member of the cheerfully amateur folk-rock group The Black Book Band, in * "Kube" is pronounced "CUE-bee." which he plays guitar, keyboards, and viola. A live album, First Contact, was released in 1995 by Dodeka Records. Michael resides in central Michigan with artist and model-maker Gwen Zak, children Matt, Amanda, and Gavin, cats Doc and Captain, and "entirely too much stuff." Passions he will admit to publicly include the Philadelphia Phillies, Michigan State University, New Jersey soul food (birch beer, pork roll, and Tastykakes), the Hammond B-3, and the Oregon coast. At various times he has called Fairview Village (Camden), New Jersey; East Lansing, Sturgis, and Lansing, Michigan; and Goshen, Indiana, home.