The Unifying Force

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The Unifying Force Page 48

by James Luceno


  Jacen! Uncle Luke! she called through the Force.

  When she reached out for them, her mind was assaulted with scenes of violence. Jacen and Luke had overcome great odds, but both of them were injured. Except through their minds, she couldn't perceive the warriors, but she grasped that most of them were dead.

  Abruptly, the twisted figure turned from the console to face her, almost as if he had read her mind.

  "I know you can hear me," he said in a guttural Basic, "because I gave you only a taste of the poison encapsulated in my fang. Just enough to render you inert."

  With a glance at the console he enlivened additional living instruments and systems. It was obvious that he was preparing the vessel ror launch. When the bridge began to vibrate with anticipation, tne Shamed One nodded in satisfaction and turned to her once more.

  "I'm grateful you elected to pursue me, Yun-Harla," he said. "At •c have an opportunity to meet on a level battlefield. Both of us - ntivity- You, hostage to my paralytic toxin; me, to the half-a-life-of injustices you saw fit to heap on me." Jaina forced herself to speak. "I'm not—

  "Who was more faithful to the gods than Onimi?" the Shamed n e ranted at her. "Who was more faithful to Shimrra's domain than he shaper who discovered the truth that the eighth cortex was empty, nd that the species Yun-Yuuzhan and the rest of you created was doomed to extinction? Yes, our ancestors utilized the gifts you supplied to make war on those who would have vanquished us, but instead of rewarding our attempts to rid the galaxy of such infidels and machines, you drove us from the ancestral homeworld, bled us of further kinship with you, forced us to wander for generations in search of

  a new home."

  Hatred gathered in his uneven eyes and shook his curled hands. "In your omniscience, you know that's why I risked grafting yam-mosk cells to my own neural tissue: in the hope of being able to discover some way to escape the rack on which you had mounted us! But instead of rewarding my having the courage to emulate your bold works of creation, you condemned me. You granted me the powers to speak through the mouths of others, to manipulate them at will, to control remotely, as your yammosks do, and yet you punished me with physical deformities that shouted to one and all that my attempt at self-escalation had failed. You Shamed me so that I could no longer consort with nor move among the elite. Not only did you deny me the rank of master shaper, you prevented me from being able to contribute to the salvation of my species.

  "That was when I chose to turn against you, Yun Harla. I was not alone in this rebellion, and yet, as if to increase my torment, you rewarded the others, while you left me to suffer in silence through the Years of drifting. The long years of watching our society crumble; our creche-born starve; our warriors turn on one another . . . and then YOU dangled before our eyes a galaxy, filled with habitable worlds. At "rst it seemed a blessing—proof that you had not abandoned us in our

  vn the corridor that led to the Citadel's south entrance, where a porary bridge linked the fortresses to the public square in which scraped, scratched, and dented Millennium Falcon sat on her hard-nd Heading for the freighter, Harrar, Tahiri, and Captain Page • Iked point through groups of nonplussed Shamed Ones. Elsewhere uads of commandos, resistance fighters, and YVH droids were dis-

  ~~ "nA ^f frw reotoid slave-troops tha

  time of need. But I soon realized that you were merely settin stage for a new form of torture."

  Again Jaina tried to respond, only to be shouted down.

  "Only by means of the powers you conferred on me was I abl reach out for Shimrra and make him my puppet! My most auda ' act yet. But when I saw that you were either powerless to prevent' welcoming the opportunity to do open battle with me, I knew th was right to attempt to overthrow you in the same way.

  "I compelled Shimrra to announce that a galaxy had been found for the taking. I bade him to install me as his familiar. And as my tele pathic abilities increased, he disappeared—except of late, when mv preoccupation with defeating you allowed what remained of Shimrra to re-emerge.

  "When Zonama Sekot was found once more, and this time made to appear to have been bestowed on the Jedi, as a weapon, I believed for a moment that you were actually testing me. But I soon grasped the greater truth—the same one that had already been glimpsed by the heretics and some of our priests: that because I had grown past your control, you had decided to topple me."

  Onimi looked hard at Jaina.

  He's seeing me through the Force! she told herself. As much as die realization shocked and confused her, it gave her hope.

  "Even now I can see the glow of the divine in you, Yun-Harla. As Yun-Yammka glows in the Jeedai called Skywalker; Yun Shuno in the Jeedai called Jacen; Yun-Ne'Shel in the Jedi called Tahiri . . ."

  Onimi allowed his words to trail off, and grew introspective. When he looked at Jaina again, his lolling eye was narrowed, as if in amusement.

  "Shimrra is dead," he announced. "Your god-cohorts have killed him, Yun-Harla. Now let us hope they will pursue me, as well. Then not only will I have the satisfaction of outwitting you at Zonama Sekot, but I will also have the pleasure of killing you, as my first act u exterminating everyone and everything in this foul galaxy."

  Arms draped over Mara's and Kenth's shoulders, Luke was carne out of the Hall of Confluence through the warrior's membrane, then

  uads of commandos, rcMSLcmv.- ii& ,

  sqii;

  ming captured elites, warriors, and the few reptoid slave-troops that had survived the assault. To all sides rose piles of coufees, tactical njiips and crab armor. Three hundred amphistaffs were stacked like

  grewood.

  Smoke was drifting across the sacred precinct and the sky was a

  patchwork of contrails and missile tracks, but the area surrounding the Citadel had been secured. On the far side of the square, huge armored beasts were resting quiescently.

  Cakhmaim, Meewalh, C-3PO, and R2-D2 were waiting at the foot of the Falcon's landing ramp. On seeing Luke—chin resting on his chest and booted feet dragging behind him—the astromech

  mewled plaintively.

  "Master Luke has been wounded!" C-3PO cried in distress.

  "Someone call for a medic!"

  Mara and Kenth lowered Luke to the paving stones to check his status. "Force trance," Mara said. "He's trying to heal himself." Turning to the Noghri and the droids, she told them to get the

  falcon primed for launch.

  No sooner had the four disappeared than Jag Fel pushed his way

  through the crowd and hurried forward.

  "Where's Jaina?" he asked no one in particular.

  "Somewhere inside with Jacen," Kenth said. "Han, Leia, and Nom Anor are looking for them."

  Jag put his hand to his brow and gazed up the summit. "I'm

  going in," he said.

  He hadn't moved before Mara stretched out her arm to restrain him. "No, you're not, flyboy. We don't know what's going on in there. We've got to get Luke to one of the hospital frigates, so if you to help, the Falcon could use an escort."

  Jag looked from Luke to Mara and nodded. "I'll brin?

  „ , . „ ° Tly

  starnghter around.

  As Jag ran off, Harrar turned to face the knot of elite captive the front, High Priest Jakan and Master Shaper Qelah Kwaad being restrained by the Yuuzhan Vong warriors who had defected the side of the heretics—if not the side of the Alliance.

  in a morose

  "Supreme Overlord Shimrra is dead," Harrar said

  voice.

  The announcement met with shouts of celebration from th Shamed Ones and bellows of dismay from the captives. Shocked and demoralized, many of the priests fell to their knees and began to mutter incantations and prayers. Genuflecting, the weaponless warriors snapped their fists to their opposite shoulders and lifted their blood-smeared faces to their captors in unabashed pride.

  "Congratulations, Jeedai" Jakan said to Mara, Kenth, and Tahiri while the heretics were chanting for Yu'shaa, the Prophet. "You hav
e brought down our civilization."

  Mara answered for the three. "As you intended to do to ours."

  Harrar looked at Jakan. "It wasn't the Jeedai. It was the gods themselves."

  Kenth glanced at Harrar. "What's going to happen when Nas Choka learns of Shimrra's death?"

  The priest shook his head in uncertainty. "The sudden death of a Supreme Overlord is ... unprecedented."

  Mara and Kenth raised Luke and began to move him into the ship. They had just stepped onto the ramp when someone among the heretic contingent called out to them. Harrar's gaze found the male Shamed One who had spoken.

  "He says that, if you would allow it, he can prolong Master Skywalker's life. There exists no antidote to effect a complete cure."

  "Is it true?" Mara asked, disconsolately.

  Harrar squinted at the heretic. "That one is a former shaper. He 1) be of more benefit to Master Skywalker than I can be—perhaps or more benefit than bacta."

  Jakan began to denounce the shaper who had volunteered. Harrar

  nslated for Mara and Kenth. "The high priest says, 'You're ready to rd your beliefs like a worn-out robeskin, over a mere military vic-A,' " Harrar listened to the heretic's reply. "The Shamed One lSvers, 'Only those beliefs that supported this war.' '

  Jakan wasn't through. Harrar heard him out, then said: "The high riest says that he hopes to hear the Shamed One repeat his words •hen the Alliance finds him guilty of war crimes, and a machine intelligence is charged with executing him."

  The former shaper heaved his shoulders in a sad shrug. Harrar's voice broke as he translated. "The Shamed One says that death will be a tar better place than any he has known on Yuuzhan'tar."

  Without warning, the ground started to shake. For a moment Mara thought that the Falcon's repulsorlifts were the cause; then she realized that the Citadel was the source. Frightened faces raised to the worldship fortress, the heretics began to retreat to the far side of the square, where the great beasts were on their feet and lowing in fear. As the shaking grew more violent, cracks formed in the facade of the Citadel and huge hunks of yorik coral began to avalanche down its sheer sides. Paving stones under the Falcon heaved, then sank, dropping the starboard landing gear disk a meter into the fractured ground. Anakin's lightsaber slipped from Tahiri's grasp and rolled into a crevasse. She tried to call the lightsaber to her, but it had fallen

  too far.

  "Leave it!" Mara said sharply, when Tahiri almost scrambled after it.

  A rending sound thundered through the air. Then the bullet-shaped crown of the holy mountain slowly separated from the base

  and lifted into the sky.

  Steadying herself and Luke on the Falcon's trembling ramp, Mara whirled to Tahiri. "Jaina and Jacen are in terrible danger." Her features warped by sudden anguish, she glanced at Luke, then at Kenth. "We're not letting that ship get away."

  Jacen was halfway up the ladder-stairway that led finally to the command chamber when he realized that the escape vessel had parted the worldship Citadel. While the liftoff came as no surprise, it

  couldn't account for the mix of emotions that began to whirl thr him. Shimrra's familiar wasn't only lifting them out of the bat away from roiling Coruscant, out of reach of his parents and man his fellow Jedi. It was as if he were also launching them outside s and time, into a separate engagement.

  Jacen kept climbing. On reaching the last few high-risered stai he leapt through the well and landed in a defensive crouch on th' deck of the vessel's immense bridge. Shimrra's familiar stood opposir him, his disfigured body listed to one side, his twisted hands wavin commands at the throbbing control console. Jaina hung between them, suspended a meter above the deck by horns of yorik coral that protruded from the inner bulkhead, surrounded by intricately rendered religious statues. Jacen perceived that she was paralyzed but conscious; warmly alive amid the cold yorik coral and bone of the bridge.

  She touched him through the Force, her voice little more than a whisper, but clear enough for him to grasp that the Shamed One's name was Onimi. Khalee and Tsavong Lah had been set on pitting Jaina and Jacen against each other in battle. Onimi wanted nothing more than to kill them.

  He was observing Jacen from across the bridge, even while guiding the vessel through the tattered sky. Willing it through the tattered sky, Jacen realized. Directing it the way a yammosk might.

  "You will find no integrity in me, Jeedai" Onimi said in Basic, as if mimicking something Vergere had told Jacen when he was in the Embrace of Pain. "Trust that everything you perceive about me is a lie."

  Jacen realized the truth. Onimi had overseen the warriors in the throne room below. Onimi, not the dhuryam, had been responsible for the quakes that had nearly toppled the Citadel—

  "Shimrra was Shimrra," Onimi said, anticipating Jacen's next thought. "I am I."

  "The Supreme Overlord," Jacen said.

  As the realization deepened, he recognized that his Vongsensf was allowing him to see Onimi in a profound way. Onimi was open t< him, and in an instant Jacen understood how the Shamed One, a

  mer shaper, had attained such power. But even Onimi didn't

  derstand that through his experiments he had also found a way to

  .verse the damage that had been done in the distant past to the

  Yuuzhan Vong.

  He had regained the Force!

  "Vergere told Nom Anor that you are the most dangerous Jeedai f all," Onimi said. "And well you should be, since you carry Yun-Shuno within you—the betrayer of all I have sought to create. But soon, when I have killed you, you will be my passage to godhood. All you hold dear will have been be destroyed. The species that gave you its blood and died to bring you worshipers. Most of all, the living world you returned from the Unknown Regions. Even now it anticipates its own death. It gasps for breath. Can you feel it? Our vessels are plunging through the shields you tried to create, coming closer and closer to the surface. The consciousness of that world is crying out that you have failed to protect it!

  "How is this so? you ask yourself. How did it come to this? Because your military created a poison that was to kill my people, and instead I have sent it back to kill the very world you persuaded to join you in the fight against us. Is there not in that the hand of a new god, Jeeddi Yun-Shuno? Where is your precious Force now—the lingering exhalations of Yun-Yuuzhan—that this has been allowed to happen?" Jacen understood that Onimi was referring to Alpha Red. The toxin had to have arrived on the vessel that had escaped Caluula. He reached out for Sekot, but the voice of Zonama's planetary consciousness was indistinct. Something had changed. Was Sekot deliberately concealing its presence from him or—

  Jacen experienced a moment of insight. He could see Onimi through the Force. Was it possible that he would be able find Sekot

  through his Vongsense!

  Again he reached out, touching Sekot this time, and the astonishing truth struck him like lightning.

  Why hadn't he see it earlier?

  But there was no time to dwell on it.

  Onimi was eager to train his awesome powers on Jacen, and to do that he had no need for an amphistaff or coufee. He was capable of

  manufacturing paralytic agents and lethal poisons. And in the way the World Brain oversaw Coruscant, Onimi controlled the ronment of the living vessel, and could turn any or all parts e • against Jacen.

  Jacen realized that he was about to engage in a battle that w be decided not by knowledge of the Force, so much as fealty to ' will. This was not a duel, but a relinquishment.

  Once more he heard the voice of the vision he had had on Dur Stand firm . . .

  His heart told him that it was the voice of his grandfather, Anakin Skywalker.

  L

  «,_.,...,.., ando's urgent comlink transmission from Errant Venture found Wedge in the chaotic situation room of Mon Motkma, where a holographic image of Zonama Sekot rotated slowly in a cone of blue light, and bezels of various colors showed the deployment of Alliance and Yuuzhan Vong vessels.
Technicians and droids were busy at every duty station, and the scrubbed air was filled with the din of voices and the incessant toning of damage- and threat-assessment screens. In the thick of the righting, enemy mataloks and yorik-vec were blinking out at the rate of one every five minutes, but closer to the living planet, coralskippers and yorik-akaga had swept through portions of the Hapan line and were strafing the boras and inhabited canyons of the Middle Distance. With Zonama's mountaintop defenses either incapacitated or determined to be ineffective against the small craft, Mon Mothma, was speeding for the planet.

  Separate conversations among the tactical officers surrounding the holoprojector table made it impossible for Wedge to hear Lando clearly, so he moved to a corner of the vast room and slipped a headset

  over his ears.

  "The battle at Muscave was nothing more than a diversion," Lando was saying. "Nas Choka was hoping to keep us too occupied to notice the poisoned vessel he's trying to get to the surface of Zonama

  465

  Sekot." He snorted. "One small ship, slipping past all the defe Does that sound familiar?"

  "Vaguely," Wedge lied. "Do you have information on why th Jedi fighters have gone to ground?"

  "Negative."

  "Could the Vong have already delivered the Alpha Red?"

  "That's as good a guess as any," Lando said. "Unless Sekot' decided to surrender."

  "If that's the case, then it's grown weaker over the past fifty years "

  "Or the Vong have gotten stronger." Lando paused, then said-"Booster's going to take Errant Venture as close to Zonama Sekot as possible. We'll evacuate as many of the Jedi and the Ferroans as we can "

  Wedge grimaced. "Lando, you can't do that if the planet's already been poisoned. I realize Alpha Red probably doesn't pose a threat to humans or Bothans, but, after Caluula, we can't be sure that it can't be spread by other species."

 

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