Champions of the Force

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Champions of the Force Page 28

by Kevin J. Anderson


  fragile skin.

  Cilghal opened her mental doors, freeing

  her thoughts, allowing currents of the Force to flow

  into Mon Mothma's form. She let the

  nictitating membranes slide over her

  Calamarian eyes as she began to see with an

  inner vision, traveling through the cellular

  pathways of Mon Mothma's body.

  She found herself in a strange universe of

  rushing blood cells, electrically firing

  neurons, contracting muscle fibers, laboring

  organs that could no longer perform their functions.

  Cilghal couldn't exactly comprehend what she

  saw, but somehow she understood instinctively which parts

  were healthy, which molecules were sustaining Mon

  Mothma, and which were the black scourge.

  With the Force, Cilghal could touch with fingers

  infinitely small, infinitely precise,

  to grasp one of the nano — destroyers and send it

  careening out of the dying body.

  Cilghal found other microscopic destroyers

  and nudged them, pushed them, herding the poison

  away from healthy cells, preventing further

  damage.

  The task was incomprehensibly large. The

  poison had spread and replicated, scattering

  itself through the billions and billions of cells in

  Mon Mothma's body. Cilghal would have to search

  and remove every one of them.

  After succeeding with the first one, Cilghal sought out

  another.

  And another.

  And another.

  And another.

  "Has there been any change?" Leia

  whispered at the doorway. She had just returned

  from a meeting where General Wedge Antilles,

  Doctor Qwi Xux, and Han Solo had

  given a detailed debriefing on the entire

  Maw assault.

  Leia had listened with fascination, making eyes

  at her husband Han — whichom she had seen too little

  of in the past several days. But always in the back of

  her mind was a pressing concern for Mon Mothma.

  "No change," Ackbar said in a tired

  voice. "I wish we understood what Cilghal

  is attempting to do."

  The female Calamarian had not moved in nine

  hours, kneeling beside Mon Mothma's bedside,

  flippered hands resting on the dying woman's skin,

  deep in a trance. The medical droids had not

  expected Mon Mothma to live for this long, so the

  mere fact that she still had not succumbed to death meant

  something.

  From outside the door Leia peeked in to see

  that nothing had changed. The leader's hand

  lay in a crystal dish as droplets of an

  oily grayish liquid emerged from the tip of her

  index finger. The process was too slow to watch,

  but over the course of half an hour a small

  droplet would gather at the tip of her finger,

  dangling, until gradually gravity pulled it

  off into the dish.

  Terpfen walked slowly down the tiled

  corridors dressed in a dark — green

  close — fitting uniform that bore no insignia.

  Even after his full pardon Terpfen had refused

  to accept his rank again. He had sequestered himself

  in his rooms for much of the time since returning from

  Anoth.

  The scarred Calamarian stopped several

  meters away from them, reluctant to go closer to the

  room that held Mon Mothma. Leia knew that

  Terpfen still blamed himself for the dying woman's

  condition, and he refused to let the guilt be

  assuaged. Though she understood his misery, she was

  getting impatient with his withdrawal and hoped he

  climbed back to his feet soon.

  Terpfen bowed ponderously, displaying the network

  of scars on his disfigured head. "Admiral, I

  have reached a decision." He drew a deep

  breath. "I wish to return to Calamari and

  continue your work — if our people will have me. I wish

  to assist in rebuilding Reef Home. I fear

  ..." He looked up to stare at the intricate

  mosaics on the walls of the Imperial

  Palace. "I fear that I will never be comfortable on

  Coruscant again."

  "Believe me, Terpfen," Ackbar answered,

  "I know exactly how you feel. I would not try

  to talk you out of your decision. It is a fair

  compromise between your need for healing and your desire

  to make amends."

  Terpfen straightened, as if some measure of

  self — esteem had been returned to him. "I would

  like to depart as soon as possible," he said.

  "I will arrange a ship," Ackbar replied.

  Terpfen bowed again. "If I have your leave,

  Chief of State?"

  "Yes, Terpfen," Leia answered. She

  turned once again to watch the motionless tableau

  inside the medical chamber.

  At a forgotten hour in the depths of

  Coruscant's night, Cilghal emerged from the

  medical chambers. She staggered,

  cradling in her right hand a shallow crystal bowl

  half — filled with the deadly poison from the drink that

  Ambassador Furgan had thrown in Mon

  Mothma's face.

  The two New Republic guards stationed at

  the door snapped to attention and rushed to help

  Cilghal. She was so exhausted she could hardly

  place one foot in front of another. She

  leaned against the stone doorway, drawing strength from

  the solidity of the rock.

  Her arm trembled as she extended the crystal

  dish to one of the guards. Cilghal barely had enough

  strength remaining to lift the small

  poison — filled container, but she did not dare

  drop it. She felt a deep, bone — melting

  relief when the guard took it from her.

  "Be careful," she said in a husky, utterly

  exhausted voice. "Take this ... and incinerate

  it."

  The second guard scrambled to the intercom

  system and signaled for all Council members

  to come immediately.

  "Do you have news of Mon Mothma?" the first

  guard asked her.

  "She has been cleansed and she will heal." The

  lids dropped over Cilghal's glassy eyes.

  "But for now she must rest." Her flowing robes

  whispered against the tiled walls as she slid down

  to collapse on the floor.

  "As must I," she said, falling immediately into a

  Jedi recovery trance.

  The Star Destroyer Gorgon limped through

  open space like a wounded dragon, leaking radiation

  from a thousand damage points.

  Only one of the Gorgon's primary

  sublight engines still functioned. Admiral

  Daala's engineers assured her it would be many

  days before they could attempt to enter hyperspace.

  Life — support systems were down for the lower

  twelve decks. But Admiral Daala's

  soldiers were accustomed to harsh and difficult

  conditions. Cramped living quarters might

  encourage them to make repairs faster. Heating

  systems were low, giving the air a frigid edge,

  making spoken words emerge from her lips

  accompanied
by a plume of steam.

  Her precious flagship had been

  grievously wounded, Daala knew; but she

  realized she did not need to make the Gorgon

  into a top — flight fighting machine again. Not

  anymore. This time she merely needed to complete

  sufficient repairs to crawl back

  to Imperial — controlled territory, where she could

  start from scratch.

  Daala's best advantage was that the Rebel

  forces must have assumed her ship had been destroyed

  in the explosion. Their sensors would have been blinded

  in the eruption of the reactor asteroid.

  Watching Maw Installation vaporize,

  Daala had ordered full shields and full

  speed, throwing caution aside as she drove the

  Gorgon straight to the walls of the Maw,

  seeking her own way out. Now, crawling away from

  the energetic outbursts of the black hole cluster,

  the battered Imperial battle cruiser would not be

  noticed on any Rebel scopes.

  Half the consoles on her bridge remained

  dim, unable to function after sustaining so many

  overloads. Technicians tore open access

  plates, bundled in heavy uniforms to keep

  warm, rubbing their numb hands together as they tinkered with

  electronics. But they did not complain, at least

  not while Daala was watching.

  A significant percentage of her

  stormtroopers had been killed in sudden hull

  breaches or explosions beldecks. The sick

  bays were filled with injured personnel. Many of the

  computer systems were off — line. But they had

  survived.

  Commander Kratas stepped up to Daala and

  saluted. His face looked devastated, smudged

  with grease and smoke from his attempts at hands — on

  repair work.

  "The news is not good, Admiral," he said.

  "I want to know our true status," Daala

  said, forcing her concern back inside, where it could

  increase the pressure in her heart,

  crystallizing a diamond of her own resolve.

  "Tell me, no matter how bad it is."

  Kratas nodded, swallowing. "We have only

  seven functional TIE fighters remaining in the

  hangar bays. All others were lost."

  "Seven!" she cried. "Out of — was She

  gritted her teeth and shook her head so that her

  hair whirled like an inferno around her face. She

  drew a short, controlled breath and nodded.

  "Yes. Continue."

  "We don't have sufficient spare parts

  to repair the damaged external weapons

  systems," he said. "Our starboard turbolaser

  batteries have been wrecked, but we may be able

  to get two guns functional again."

  Daala tried to be optimistic. "That might

  be enough to defend ourselves if we are attacked. But

  we must hope not to encounter such a situation. We will

  not initiate any aggressive action at this

  point. Is that understood?"

  Kratas looked relieved. "Understood,

  Admiral. We can repair most of the hull

  breaches and repressurize some of the decks, although

  ..." He hesitated, and his thick eyebrows

  knitted together like a giant furworm. "But I

  don't really see the point in that, Admiral,"

  he finished. "We don't need those quarters, and

  it would only tax our resources at this point.

  Our repair crews are working around the clock, and

  I suggest we devote our efforts to completing

  only the systems critical to life support and

  those necessary for us to be on our way."

  Daala nodded slowly. "Again I agree,

  Commander. It is a difficult decision, but we

  must be realistic. We have lost this battle — but the

  war continues. We will make no excuses for

  ourselves but continue to give our best effort for the good

  of the Empire."

  She drew another controlled breath of the frosty

  air, staring through the bridge viewport at the lush

  starfield that waited ahead, crossed by a wide

  swath like a milky river. Looking through the disk

  of the galaxy toward the dense core, she saw the

  stars appear to stream like a wide river. The

  Gorgon headed toward the luminous bulge of the

  galactic center.

  "Commander" — she lowered her voice — "what is

  your opinion of the overall morale on the ship?"

  Kratas took a step closer so he could

  answer in a soft voice. "We have good people,

  Admiral, as you know. Well trained and well

  drilled. But they have repeatedly suffered grievous

  defeats. ..."

  "Have they lost faith in me?" Daala asked.

  Her face was chiseled in stone. She made herself

  strong and tried not to show that Kratas's answer could

  devastate her. She averted her emerald eyes,

  afraid that he might see something in them.

  "Absolutely not, Admiral!" Kratas

  answered with a tinge of surprise. "They

  have the utmost confidence in you."

  She nodded to cover her long sigh of relief,

  then raised her voice, turning to the communications

  lieutenant. "Give me an open — ship

  channel," she said. "I want to address all of

  our troops."

  Daala gathered her thoughts until the

  lieutenant nodded to her. She spoke in a loud,

  firm voice that reverberated through the damaged

  ship.

  "Attention, all crew members of the

  Gorgon. I wish to commend you for your efforts

  against overwhelming odds, against a foe that continues

  to gain the upper hand through treachery and uncanny

  luck. We must now prepare for the next phase in

  this battle, however. We are making our way to the

  Core Systems, to the last strongholds that still

  swear loyalty to the Empire.

  "It was not originally my intention to join with one

  of the Imperial warlords struggling for dominance, but it

  now appears that we must fight the larger fight.

  We need to convince them of their real enemy and show

  those still faithful to the Emperor that we must be united

  to be strong."

  She paused before raising her voice. "Yes,

  the Gorgon has been damaged. Yes, we have

  suffered severe losses. We have been wounded — but

  we will never be defeated!

  "Trials such as these only strengthen us.

  Continue your efforts to make the Gorgon powerful

  again. Thank you for your service." She signaled

  for the communications lieutenant to stop the

  transmission. She looked out again at the moving

  stream of stars.

  The Gorgon's computer banks held all the

  information Daala had pulled from Maw

  Installation's classified computer banks. The

  weapons designs and new concepts alone would

  help the Empire win the next phase of the war.

  As she stood on the cold bridge with gloved

  hands clasped behind her back, she watched the

  universe unfold in front of her.

  The Star Destroyer Gorgon sailed on

  toward the Core Systems. Through persistence she

  coul
d become victorious. One day.

  43

  The Lady Luck cruised low over the

  jagged surface of Kessel. Bleached sunlight

  washed across the alkali flats. The sky

  scintillated with intermittent streaks of light,

  flaming trails of meteorites — chunks of

  Kessel's destroyed moon burning down through the

  thin atmosphere.

  "You know, this is all kind of beautiful,"

  Lando said, "in its own way."

  Beside him in the space yacht's overly padded

  passenger seat, Mara Jade frowned

  skeptically. She looked at him as if she thought

  he was crazy — not a new thought. "If you say

  so," she said.

  "Of course, it'll take a lot of work,"

  Lando admitted, lifting one hand off the controls

  so he could rest it on the arm of her chair. She

  flinched at his move ... but not too much.

  "First order of business will be to get the

  atmosphere factories up to full capacity

  again. I'll have to bring in specially modified

  droids. I've already talked to Nien Nunb,

  my Sullustan friend, who says he'd love

  to make his home down in those tunnels. I think

  he'll make a great crew boss."

  Lando raised his eyebrows and flashed her his

  most dazzling smile. "Defense will be

  difficult without the moonbase, but I'm sure

  with the help of the Smugglers' Alliance we can put

  together a great system. You and I will make quite a

  team, Mara. I'm really going to enjoy working

  closely with you."

  Mara sighed, but it was more of a resigned,

  tolerant noise than actual annoyance. "You

  just don't give up, do you, Calrissian?"

  He shook his head, still grinning. "Nope.

  Giving up is not my style. Not ever."

  Mara slumped back in her passenger chair and

  stared out the Lady Luck's front

  viewport. "I was afraid of that."

  Overhead in the white skies of Kessel,

  shooting stars continued to rain down.

  Two medical droids supported a

  recovering Mon Mothma. She stood dripping as

  she emerged from the bacta tank. She wavered a

  little and held on to the smooth shoulder plates of the

  droids. Finally she stood on her own again,

  took a deep breath, and lifted her

  head to smile.

  Leia stood watching, impressed at the

  rapid improvement. "I never thought I'd see

  you stand again, Mon Mothma."

  "Neither did I," the former Chief of State

  admitted with a rueful shrug. "But my body is

 

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