Tales From The Empire
Page 6
He never made it. Even as Karrde reflexively ducked to the side, the
Krish's tunic erupted in a brief burst of flame as a quiet blaster shot
caught him neatly in the center of his torso. He fell backward to the
ground and lay 'still.
Karrde turned; but it was not one of his fellow hunters whom he saw
emerging from the cover of the tree they'd just passed. "Don't just
stand there," Celina Marniss growled, lowering the tiny blaster in her
hand as she passed him and headed toward the airspeeder. "My
air-speeder's too far away--we'll take theirs. Unless you want to be
here when those other Krish catch up."
"Nicely done," Karrde commented as the Uwana Buyer cut through
Varonat's upper atmosphere toward deep space. "Nicely done indeed.
Though I must confess a certain disappointment that it wasn't actually
the Morodins finally taking their vengeance."
Beside him, Celina snorted under her breath. "Considering that they
probably can't tell a Human from a Krish, let alone one Human from
another, you should count yourself lucky it wasn't them. They'd have
ground you into the dirt along with Gamgalon and his crew."
"Most likely," Karrde conceded. "Where did you get the recordings of
Morodin growls?"
"Gamgalon took me along on one of his safaris once,"
Celina said.
"Back when he still thought he might have a chance of recruiting me
into his organization."
"So you weren't working for' him. We'd wondered about that."
"I don't like Krish," she said flatly. "Even honest ones can't be
trusted very far, and Gamgalon hardly qualifies as honest. Besides,
all he wanted me to do was play space-port spy for him. Not much
future in that."
"Not anymore," Karrde agreed. "So as long as you were out in the
jungle anyway, you went ahead and recorded some Morodin growls?"
She shrugged. "I thought it might be handy to have something like that
on file. Turns out I was right." She threw him a look. "You owe me
for those three recorders, by the way. Those things don't come
cheap."
"I owe you for considerably more than that," Karrde reminded her
soberly. "Why did you follow us out there, anyway?"
"Oh, come now," she scoffed. "Hart and Seoul? Not to mention a ship
called the Uwana Buyer?. It was all just a little too cute; and I
remembered hearing about a smuggler chief who had a fondness for cute
wordplay. So I took a chance."
"And it paid off," Karrde said. "You've earned a considerable
reward.
Just name it."
She turned to look at him with those green eyes of hers.
"I want a job," she said.
Karrde frowned. It hadn't been the response he'd expected.
"What kind of job?"
"Any kind," she said. "I can pilot, fight, play come-up flector--"
"Hyperdrive mechanic?"
"That, too," Celina said. "Anything you've got, I can learn it."
She took a deep breath, let it out. "I just want to get back into
mainstream society again."
Karrde cocked an eyebrow. "You have a strange view of smuggling if you
consider it mainstream society."
"Trust me," she said grimly. "Compared with some of what I've done,
it is."
"I don't doubt it," Karrde said, studying her face. A very striking
face, with a striking body to go with it. Decorative and competent
both; his favorite combination. "All right," he said.
"You've got yourself a deal. Welcome aboard."
"Thank you," she said. "You won't regret hiring me."
"I'm sure i won't." He smiled slightly. "And since we're now
officially working together--" he held out his hand. "You can call me
Talon Karrde."
She smiled tightly as she took his hand. "Pleased to meet you, Talon
Karrde," she said. "You can call me Mara Jade."
Tinian on Trial
by Kathy Tyers Tinian I'att, the granddaughter and heiress of I'att
Armament's founders, wrinkled her nose and tried not to breathe too
deeply. The factory complex's demonstration room smelled like scorched
meat and chemicals. She could identify five... no, seven formulas by
their odors, a potentially catastrophic witch's brew.
Occasionally, the demonstration explosives detonated harder, faster, or
earlier than anyone anticipated, and even quadruple transparisteel
didn't provide full protection.
Standing beside Grandfather Strephan, Daye Azur-Jamin rested his hand
on a waist-high blast barricade.
Daye's I'att's Armament gray tunic accentuated his air of authority.
So did the management comlink he wore on his belt. A prematurely gray
streak marked the center of Daye's left eyebrow.
"There's nothing patently wrong with stormtrooper armor, your
excellency," he said, and Tinian admired his self-control. She knew
how Daye felt about Grandfather's Imperial connections. "But a good
marksman--or an idiot with a high-powered blaster--can pick out weak
spots. Our field makes it invulnerable."
Imperial Moff Eisen Kerioth slapped a polished ebony swagger stick into
one palm. Tall and lean, Moff Kerioth held his head thrust forward
over an astonishing array of red and blue rank squares.
Tinian, Daye, and her grandparents had expected tech advisors for this
demonstration, and maybe a few army troopers, but never a Sector
Moffwith stormtrooper escort. Kerioth limped, favoring a stiff left
leg and occasionally leaning on the swagger stick.
"Sounds wonderful, boy. So why did your demonstration employee turn
coward?"
Grandfather Strephan's old black Imperial service uniform set off his
thick white hair. Grandmother Augusta fiddled with a side hem of her
long green robe. She'd recently developed a rare degenerative
syndrome, and Druckenwell's top bioimmunal specialist gave her only
months to live unless she sought treatment. It wasn't available here
in Il Avali, or at any other city on Drucken-well . . . and it was
expensive. Behind Grandmother Augusta, the I'att family's Wookiee
bodyguard Wrrlevge-bev lounged against a pebbly gray duracrete wall.
Wrrl rumbled a quick comment under his breath that only Tinian--who'd
studied his language--could translate.
She didn't, but she shared Wrrl's disdain for cowardly employees.
She fiddled with a collection of paraphernalia in herjumpsuit pocket:
neka nut shells, droid adjustment tools, and her secret good-luck
piece.
She would need all her good luck today. If I'att Arma
ment sold its
new armor-protective field, then her grandparents could retire, and she
and Daye would take over the factory.
Kerioth straightened his shoulders and neck, then poked Grandfather
with his swagger stick. "Well, I'att?
Who's going to get into that armor? We came a long way to see this."
Evidently Grandfather had known the Moff years ago. Each man had
chosen his own way to serve the New Order: Grandfather by protecting
Imperial might, Kerioth by wielding it. Kerioth crooked a finger at
Wrrl.
"You. Wookiee. Come down here."
Wrrl curled back his lips fr
om huge teeth and let out a punctuated
howl. Kerioth had demanded that the I'atts disarm their Wookiee during
his visitation, and Wrrl was already irritated. A red-blond stripe
crossed Wrrl's face, fur almost the same shade as Tinian's
shoulder-length hair. It was odd coloration for a Wookiee.
"What did he say, Tinian?" Grandfather's business acumen showed in the
way he measured and accommodated the Moff. By comparison, Kerioth
seemed . . .
Tinian tried to emulate her observant grandfather. Ker-ioth seemed
blunt. And condescending.
She glanced at the shell pieces on the arming table.
Eighteen white units lay beside the limp halves of a two-piece black
body glove. Wrrl wouldn't fit inside the body glove, let alone the
field. "Your excellency, he's too big," she translated. "The field
nodes maximize at one point eight six meters of height and one meter of
width."
Moff Kerioth lifted a narrow black eyebrow. "I'att, tell me again why
your grandchild attends classified demonstrations."
Tinian bristled. She might be small and thin, but she was no child.
Hadn't Kerioth noticed her company jump-suit?
Grandfather laid a warm hand on her arm. "Your excellency, Tinian is
an invaluable team member. She has amazing instincts for
explosives."
One stormtrooper stood at the center of the second
seating row up.
"Sir," he said through his helmet filter, "if the Wookiee's too tall,
what about her?"
Tinian blanched. Her . . . demonstrate? Stand in the wave trap and
get shot at?
"From one extreme to the other," quipped Kerioth.
"Invaluable team member, is she?"
Grandfather backed toward a code panel. From this wall, he could lower
two quadruple-transparisteel blast walls between the wave trap and the
four broad rows of retractable shielded seating. "Ah . . .
yes, but Tinian is not our demonstration volunteer."
Kerioth shifted his weight. "She would fit. Are you totally confident
that your armor is impervious to blaster fire?"
"Totally," murmured Grandfather.
"Then prove it."
"But . . . no. I shall call for a line droid."
"I perceive a certain lack of confidence." Moff Kerioth directed the
taunt at his stormtroopers, but Tinian took it in the gut.
Grandfather and Grandmother must reach that offworld health care
facility. Love focused Tinian's courage, and so did her hopes. The
field worked. She'd seen it tested.
"Grandfather?" She raised a hand. "I'll volunteer."
Grandfather, Grandmother, and Daye stepped forward, speaking
simultaneously: "Wait--" "Tinian--" "No--" Wrrl blinked huge blue eyes
and suggested under his breath that Daye was built more like a
stormtrooper than she was.
Tinian fixed Moff Kerioth with her stare. She was betting he'd act
like a BlasTech Company bureaucrat she'd once met at a party--once he'd
suggested something, no other idea would suit him.
Kerioth's smile spread slowly from his thin lips to cold, dark eyes.
"Very good, ah, Tinian. A true trial of I'att Armament's
excellence."
Before Tinian could change her mind, she dragged Wrrl to the arming
table. "Help me," she ordered him.
Her jumpsuit would easily fit inside the black body glove. She also
selected the upper-body corselet, the carapace and the breastplate,
which armorers dubbed the Body Bucket when worn together.
She shoved them at Wrrl. Rear-mounted on the carapace, in place of the
usual instrument pack, I'att Armament droids had installed a heat
dissipator and the field transmitter. A single new control stood out
on the breastplate.
She slipped off her shoes and slid one leg into the body glove.
She'd never heard so much silence. "Grandfather," she suggested,
"explain how the body glove enhances the field."
"Tinian," Grandfather pleaded.
The glove's leggings sagged on her with wrinkles all down their
length.
She yanked her narrow jumpsuit belt out of its loops and secured the
heavy black fabric. "I've memorized the speech," she insisted.
"Should I deliver it?"
Moff Kerioth rested his swagger stick on one shoulder.
"Please do," he purred.
Suddenly she disliked him. Daye had always insisted that he'd rather
die in a noble cause than earn his living from an ignoble one, and she
hoped this was only her nerves, whining out from the spot where she was
stuffing them (to keep Daye from trying to stop her), that made Kerioth
look suddenly sinister.
Daye was sensitive to an energy field he called the Force. He claimed
that Force-sensitive was not a healthy way to be in Emperor Palpatine's
New Order, and he'd cautioned Tinian and her grandparents that the
Empire had stooped to violent repression in other parts of the galaxy
.
. . but Tinian didn't believe it. I'att Armament had supplied the New
Order for years, profiting handsomely.
She shrugged into the body glove's top. As she smoothed loose black
fabric over the floppy mess at her waist, she drew a deep breath.
"The protective field produces anti-energy bursts just out of phase
with blaster
fire," she began. "Zersium flecks that we've bonded into the advanced body glove--" Tinian pushed up one slack sleeve and ran
the back of her hand over the other forearm "mamplify the field. We
see that as a key element of this new system--" "The entire system has
too often proved vulnerable."
Kerioth's voice rose. "Eight years ago, I had a storm-trooper escort
shot to pieces around me. I've dragged this ever since." He whacked
his left leg with the swagger stick. "Are you comfortable in there,
child?"
I'm not a child. "I'm fine." She squared her shoulders.
"I'm sorry about your leg. May I finish?"
He swung the swagger stick. "By all means."
"We have thus eliminated weak spots," she said, "long known to
insurrectionist elements. I'm ready, Wrrl."
Her Wookiee lifted the breastplate and carapace.
Grandmother Augusta folded trembling hands in front of her long green
robe. Daye took up a position behind Tinian. If she hesitated or even
flinched, she guessed he'd demand to wear the armor.
She hefted the carapace. "There is insulation and a heat dissipator
built into this piece," she explained, raising the back protector so
Moff Kerioth and his escorts could see inside it. A black sleeve
flopped down to cover her other palm. She pushed it up, bunching
fabric back toward her elbow. "For the microsecond it takes for the
field to reach full efficiency, the armor itself handles heat
absorption. Insulation, plus this dissipator, almost eliminate thermal
discomfort."
"Allegedly." Kerioth sounded sarcastic.
Tinian decided that she'd never please him except by demonstrating the
product. Then he'd be impressed.
Then he'd grant I'att Armament the most lucrative contract it'd ever
earned. Thousands of stormtroopers would need this coverage.
"Help me, Wrrl."
Wrrl f
itted the corselet to Tinian's back and front, clamping it
together at her shoulders. Tinian trusted Wrrl completely. Five years
ago, she'd spotted him being
beaten by a slave dealer. Bloody bunches of fur had littered the ground around the huge alien. Tinian--barely
twelve--had dashed forward, disregarding Grandmother Augusta's protests
(she could always move faster than either grandparent). She'd saved
the creature's life. Little had she known that in rescuing Wrrl, she'd
bought loyalty-to-the-death.
The shell pieces hung out over her shoulders. Tinian wriggled until
they balanced.
Daye picked up the shoulder pauldrons, clasping them between long,
sensitive hands. "Put these on, too," he murmured..The gray streak
arched higher than the rest of either of his eyebrows. According to
Druckenwell's strict population laws, she and Daye were too young to
marry until they proved financial independence. Slender and
bookish-looking with lively brown eyes, Daye had come to Il Avali to