Tales From the New Republic

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Tales From the New Republic Page 29

by Peter Schweighofer


  Alerted by her cry, Quarle turned back. Suddenly nauseated, and dizzied

  by the burning pain, she faltered just outside the door and struggled to get

  her bearings. "Which way?" she managed from between gritted teeth.

  Quarle hesitated, but far behind him down the corridor, two stormtroopers

  rounded the corner and the question suddenly became moot. Her arm felt

  engulfed in flames, but she managed to fire a few discouraging bursts their

  way before turning to run. As blaster fire echoed down the corridor, she felt

  more than heard Quarle close on her heels.

  They hadn't gone more than fifty meters before he pushed her firmly to

  the right and slapped at a door panel there. Selby let him guide her, bursting

  into a long, narrow room with no doors other than the one they'd just come

  through. "Where're we going?" she demanded, pain making the question come out

  harsh.

  "Somewhere safe," Quarle said, just as shortly. He felt along the blank

  wall on the far end of the room while Selby restlessly prowled, scanning the

  room for possible avenues of escape. She was relieved to be out of the

  immediate line of fire, but with no apparent way out, that relief was sure to

  be short-lived. And the stormtroopers would be here any moment-

  Turning back to Quarle, she was startled to see an old-fashioned swing

  door in the far wall where she was positive none had previously existed.

  "Hurry up," he said, and proved the door wasn't a mirage by pushing it open

  and stepping into the darkness beyond.

  Selby hastened into the narrow passage beside him, and watched as he did

  something at a panel set in the back of the wall. The light streaming in the

  open door suddenly changed. When Selby looked through it to the room beyond,

  it was like looking through a gauzy curtain.

  She flinched as the door at the far side burst open. One at a time, two

  stormtroopers leapt into the room with weapons at the ready. But

  astonishingly, they spared no more than a cursory glance at the far wall. She

  realized then that they must see the same blank wall she'd seen when first

  entering the room, and looked at the gauzy curtain with new respect.

  Holoflage-some of the best holoflage she'd ever seen-concealed the secret door

  from prying eyes.

  "I'm impressed," she murmured tightly as Quarle shut the door, flicked on

  a glowrod, and led the way down the dark passage. Her arm throbbed with each

  step. "Very impressed. How did you know it was there?"

  "Old family secret." He glanced briefly over his shoulder. "My

  grandfather was Corlin Quarle Deld."

  A moment later, the name clicked. "Verkuylian

  BactaCo's principal owner," she said, and he nodded. Selby nodded, too,

  as the pieces fell more neatly into place. No wonder Quarle masqueraded as an

  Imperial while secretly plotting revolt. His family had owned the whole planet

  before the Empire took it over.

  She thought of the holoflage and felt a renewed stirring of hope. "Got

  any other family secrets I'd like to know about?" she inquired.

  Quarle paused before a door. Beyond, the passage disappeared into

  darkness. Crouching, he shined the glowrod on a dusty keypad and punched in a

  series of numbers. A lock snicked, and he opened the door to reveal a tiny

  room.

  "I might," he said finally, locking the door again behind them. "But we

  need to figure out what we're going to do here. It's obvious that whatever

  plan you and your partner came here with has fallen apart, and my cover's been

  blown as well. At this point, just getting out alive seems the best we can

  hope for."

  "That's not good enough." Selby shook her head. "If I can get word to the

  fleet, there's a chance we can still pull this off."

  Quarle looked at her sharply. "The fleet?"

  "There's a small New Republic battle force nearby waiting for a signal

  from Claris-or rather," she amended, "a signal from me, before jumping in.

  Once it shows up, unless Ein has a Star Destroyer or two hidden in his back

  pocket, he'll have no choice but to surrender."

  "I see," Quarle said slowly. He gazed off a moment, thinking, then

  slanted her a faint smile. "And no, he doesn't." The grin faded as his eyes

  went to her injured arm. "Why don't you tell me what's going on while we take

  care of that burn?" he suggested. "We'll figure out where to go from there."

  The medpac he produced contained only the mildest anesthetic, so Selby

  was just as glad to focus on describing the mission as Quarle gently cleaned

  the burn and slathered a viscous green gel over it. "Unstabilized alazhi," he

  said at her doubtful look. "Not quite as effective as refined bacta, but it'll

  certainly help."

  It did. The cool gel soothed the burn and, as it hardened, provided a

  protective coating which made bandaging unnec. Selby flexed the arm

  experimentally, relieved to find the movement elicited only a dull throb of

  protest.

  "So," she said. "What do you think?"

  "It's your arm." Quarle raised an eyebrow. "What do you think?"

  "The arm's fine," she said, giving him a faint smile in thanks. "I meant,

  what next? Can you get me access to a subspace comm unit?"

  He pursed his lips thoughtfully and sat back. "Probably," he allowed,

  then paused. "One question, though. What were the fleet's orders if it never

  got a signal? Send someone to investigate, orjust go on home?"

  "They wouldn't abandon us," Selby said. "They'd try to find out what

  happened."

  "So someone would eventually show up to find out why the signal never

  came?"

  "They wouldn't abandon us, "Selby said again, feeling a twinge deep

  inside that, on the uncertain chance she could salvage the mission, she had

  basically abandoned Vartos back there in the generator room. She knew that if

  she failed, Intelligence would eventually send someone to investigate, but at

  that point the mission would simply mean extracting the surviving team

  members, if there were any, and pulling out. Vartos and Claris would have been

  lost in vain, the rebelling Verkuylian workers would be purged, and the Empire

  would win-perhaps permanently. Without enough support from the workers who

  were left, the New Republic would probably not return.

  "I see," Quarle said. "So it's call the fleet now, or never get another

  chance."

  "Looks that way," Selby agreed. She hesitated. "I'm sorry-this could get

  a lot messier than originally planned. IfEin starts rounding up workers, using

  them as hostages... we can still win, but victory may come at a higher price."

  Quarle's cheek twitched. "All things worth having usually do."

  "There could be fighting, in orbit or on the ground," she warned. "Will

  it be worth it to you?"

  He looked at her. In his eyes, she saw grim acceptance.

  "I want what's best for Verkuyl," he said. "If bloodshed is what it

  takes-was He looked away. "I'll regret it, but I'll learn to live with it.

  "Now." He abruptly changed the subject. "I can think of three subspace

  comms we might be able to get to. Let's figure out which one would be best to

  try for...."

  If she'd known of all the Hall's hidden passages la
st night, Selby

  reflected as she followed Quarle down a narrow corridor, getting up to the

  Governor's office undetected would've been as easy as shooting mynocks off a

  power coupling.

  The Hall had proven a virtual warren of hidden passages. Quarle's

  grandfather had been a careful, one might even say paranoid, businessman-which

  was fortuitous, given the present circumstances. It meant they could move

  within the Hall with astonishing freedom, only needing to leave cover to call

  the fleet. Selby smiled to think that when the Imperials, no doubt monitoring

  outgoing subspace transmissions, came running to investigate the call, all

  they'd find were unconscious guards in an empty room. She and Quarle would

  slip back into hiding to await the fleet's arrival before confronting Ein.

  "We're almost there," Quarle said quietly, pausing at an intersection.

  "Before we go any further, I want to check the situation outside, see what

  we're up against."

  "Sounds good," she murmured back. "Lead on."

  He hesitated, then turned to look at her. "I'd rather do it alone," he

  said. "I know the passage system. You don't. And this way, if I get caught

  there'll still be one of us left to finish the job."

  Selby frowned. It made sense, but she did not particularly want to split

  up. Quarle didn't have a blaster and would be unable to protect himself if he

  ran into trouble. She felt another twinge, remembering Vartos. Team members

  were supposed to watch each other's backs. She briefly considered giving him

  her own blaster for the reconnoiter, but decided not to. Intelligence had

  taught her to watch her own back first.

  Quarle's eyes dropped to the blaster, too, but when she didn't offer it,

  he didn't ask. "You wait here," he told her. "I shouldn't be gone too long."

  Selby nodded. He looked at her a long moment more, as if wanting to say

  something else, but then merely nodded, too. Turning, he started around the

  corner-

  "Watch your back," she said softly.

  He glanced back, raised that eyebrow. "Always," he assured her, and

  strode away.

  Once he was gone, Selby leaned back against the narrow passage's wall and

  sighed. Alone with her thoughts for the first time since the shoot-out in the

  generator room, she could not get Vartos's face out of her mind. Had it simply

  been incredibly bad luck, his being discovered by the stormtroopers? Or had

  Claris already been "persuaded" to talk about her fellow operatives?

  Which reminded her-

  She reached up, slipping off the now-useless earsculpt. Holding it in her

  palm, she stared at it thoughtfully.

  Claris must have talked, she decided. For the eavesdropper to have cut

  out so quickly and unexpectedly after her arrest, the Imperials must have

  known exactly what to look for. She fingered the smooth curve of the metal,

  feeling it gently flex, then brought it up close to study the intricate

  scrollwork doubling as a tiny speaker.

  When Quarle's voice sounded from it, she froze.

  With hands that suddenly felt like ice, Selby held the device against her

  ear. Silence; only her pulse pounding in her head. She frowned, carefully

  flexed the earsculpt again, and this time whatever weak connection inside the

  receiver that had apparently caused it to cut out now held. She listened,

  growing colder with each word.

  Tafno has promised backup within six hours," Ein was saying. "Two

  Dreadnaughts at least, maybe more. Convince her to delay making the call until

  then. When the Rebels arrive, they'll find a fleet with a little firepower of

  our own waiting for them-not the easy pickings they expect."

  "Yes, of course. Your Excellency," Quarle said. "But how do you propose I

  convince her? We are nearly in position to make the call now. She'll want to

  know why we should wait."

  A long pause. Selby could barely breathe for the tight feeling in her

  throat. "Tell her that we've imposed satellite silence," the Governor finally

  said. "Due to this terrorist threat, I've ordered a temporary ban on outgoing

  subspace comm traffic. Tell her the satellite relays have been shut down-but

  that a very old, unofficial relay placed in orbit by your grandfather will be

  within transmissible range in, oh, about six hours. And that you- - only you-

  know how to access it."

  Ein chuckled dryly. "You know, Daven, you may have hated the old man, but

  you must admit being Corlin Quarle Deld's grandson has put you in a unique

  position to realize his visions forVerkuyl."

  "It's the only thing it ever has done for me," Quarle said. "The rest of

  the time, I'd as soon forget the tyrant ever existed."

  "I shouldn't worry about it," Ein said. "No one holds it against you.

  You've already done more to make Verkuyl the success it is today than your

  grandfather ever could have. Your service to the Empire will long be

  remembered."

  When Quarle rounded the corner, he found Selby waiting for him.

  He stopped short at the sight of the blaster she held pointed at his

  chest. His eyes took in the steadiness of her aim, then brushed past to settle

  on her face. "Trouble?" he asked.

  "How is it," she began conversationally, "that Corlin Quarle Deld's

  grandson ends up on the same side of the Empire that stole his home and

  destroyed his family's company?"

  Quarle moved a few steps closer. Her aim did not waver. He stopped.

  "BactaCo has hardly been destroyed," he said. "In fact, we currently have

  more business than we can handle. And the new refinery will increase both

  production and profits."

  "I see," Selby said. Although determined to remain as cool about this as

  he, she felt her eyes narrow. "Then you don't care what the Empire does to

  Verkuyl, so long as the company gets its share of the credits."

  He raised that eyebrow, and she had to fight back a sudden, violent urge

  to wipe that calm look off his face. "Those credits are what feed and clothe

  the workers, Selby. That's what a company is all about - comproviding goods or

  services for a price. To whom, it doesn't matter. Don't kid yourself that it

  was any different in my grandfather's day, and don't think your New Republic's

  motives are any more pure. When it comes to running a company, the

  accumulation of credits is the bottom line."

  "At least your grandfather came by the company honestly," she bit out.

  "He bought the planet, built the refineries, brought in the workers. He didn't

  steal it from its rightful owners in the name of the Empire and enslave its

  workers. He-was

  "Don't preach that Rebel propaganda to me," Quarle broke in sharply. "He

  did do that-and worse, he did it in the name of free trade. At least when the

  Empire took over, Verkuyl began giving something back to the workers, not just

  producing credits to satisfy my grandfather's greed."

  He stopped, took a breath to compose himself. "Do you know how he got

  workers to come to Verkuyl?" he continued, a little more quietly. "Remember,

  this was before the Empire. People needed jobs, and they were willing to do

  almost anything to get them. To sell themselves into slavery, even. And so

  they did.<
br />
  "In exchange for their passage here and the privilege of working in my

  grandfather's refineries, they signed on for ten-year terms, at the end of

  which they were promised a share of stock of the company they'd labored to

  help build. My grandfather called it indenture," he added bitterly, "but it

  was slavery."

  Selby said nothing. Indentured servitude wasn't like being your own boss,

  free and clear, but it wasn't slavery, either. Both parties willingly entered

  into an agreement, and at the end of the contract-

  "Wlien the contract expired, most of the workers were so deeply in debt

  that even with their share of the stock, they couldn't get out," Quarle said.

  "Once they cashed out and paid off what they owed, there wasn't enough left

  over to leave. So they stayed."

  She frowned. "How'd they get so far in debt?"

  "The Company Store, of course," he said. "Most of the workers brought

  families with them, or married and started families once they arrived. My

  grandfather provided basic food and housing-soup kitchens and barracks-but

  anything else cost extra. A lot extra. It added up. By the time the Empire

  arrived to nationalize BactaCo, ninety out of every one hundred workers were

  so deep in debt they didn't even get credit vouchers on payday. The wages were

  simply transferred straight to their delinquent accounts."

  He gave Selby a bitter smile. "If the Republic really wanted to liberate

 

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